Tag: BUHARI

  • Buhari condemns killing of Kolade Johnson by SARS

    *Promises prosecution of perpetrators

    President Muhammadu Buhari has regretted the recent unfortunate action of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) operatives from the Lagos State Police Command, which led to the avoidable death of Mr. Kolade Johnson.

    In a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, the President commiserated deeply with the family of the deceased.

    He acknowledged the genuine outrage regarding the activities of SARS and reassured the public that swift actions have already been taken.

    “Suspects are in custody and an orderly room trial is set to commence immediately, following which indicted officers will be prosecuted in court.

    Read Also: Buhari congratulates Chief Odeyemi at 80

    “Government will not tolerate in any way the brutalization of Nigerians or the violation of their rights. Any officer of the law enforcement agencies or any other government functionary caught in this act will certainly be visited with the full weight of the law.”

    Recall that following directives from the Presidency in 2018 to overhaul the management and activities of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, steps were taken by the Police leadership to restructure and reform SARS.

    The President recognized that a lot more remains to be done and this effort must be sustained.

    He reassured that this administration will continue to ensure that all officers in the Police and other law enforcement agencies conduct their operations in strict adherence to the rule of law and with due regard to International Human Rights and Humanitarian law.

  • Buhari congratulates Chief Odeyemi at 80

    President Muhammadu Buhari has congratulated the Chairman Board of Trustees of Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry and one of the founding fathers of Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), Chief John Odeyemi, who clocks 80 on April 4.

    According to a statement by the President’s spokesman, Mr Femi Adesina, in Abuja on Wednesday, the president joined the business world in celebrating the consummate businessman, industrialist and philanthropist.

    President Buhari noted that Odeyemi’s zeal to serve God had continued to speak in his service to the nation and humanity, while his dedication to success had inspired and produced huge gains for individuals, institutions and communities.

    According to him, Odeyemi, who holds many titles, including Obasewa of Ife, typifies the virtues that any nation should be proud of seeing in a citizen, which include the fear of God, disciplined and focused lifestyle, and a penchant for excellence through diligent work.

    Read Also: Buhari turns down $1b Ajaokuta completion fund bill, seven others

    As a Fellow of Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria and member of many blue chip companies within Nigeria and beyond.

    President Buhari also saluted Obasewa of Ife’s visionary leadership qualities and his entrepreneurial spirit, urging him to keep sharing his wisdom of prudence and propriety with fellow citizens, public and private institutions.

    The President, who shared in the joy of the milestone with family members, friends and business associates as Chief Odeyemi turned an octogenarian, prayed that the Almighty God would remember his investments of love in people and the nation.

    He also prayed that God would grant him longer life, good health and more wisdom.

  • Buhari turns down $1bn Ajaokuta completion fund bill, seven others

    President Muhammadu Buhari has declined assent to the Ajaokuta Steel Company fund Bill transmitted to him by the National Assembly in February.

    The Bill stipulated the Federal Government should set aside $1 billion from the Excess Crude Account for the immediate completion of the moribund Ajaokuta Steel Company.

    President Buhari also withheld assent to seven other Bills passed by the National Assembly and transmitted to him for assent.

    Senate President, Bukola Saraki, on Tuesday read separate letters, which informed the upper chamber about the decision of President Buhari to withhold assent to the Bills.

    Buhari cited several reasons including infractions on extant laws, duplication of responsibilities of existing agencies, to financial constraints for his decision to decline assent to the Bills.

    In a letter dated 19th March, 2019, he explained he declined assent to the Ajaokuta Completion Fund Bill because “appropriating $1billion from the Excess Crude Account” as decided by the National Assembly, “is not the best strategic option for Nigeria at this time of budgetary constraints.”

    Buhari said: “The nation cannot afford to commit such an amount in the midst of competing priorities with long term social and economic impact that the funds can be alternatively deployed towards.

    “Bills, which seek to make appropriation of revenues to fund public expenditure should be consolidated in the annual Appropriation Act such that these proposals pass through the traditional scrutiny that budget proposals are subjected to by the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Budget and National Planning and the National Assembly.

    Read Also: Buhari greets Diya at 75

    “Furthermore, as the Excess Crude Account Funds belong to the Federation, it would be proper to consult with the National Economic Council where the States are represented.

    “Relevant stakeholders such as the Ministries of Mines and Steel Development, Industry, Trade and Investment were not fully consulted.

    “The inputs of key stakeholders are necessary to create the optimal legal and regulatory framework as well as institutional mechanism to adequately regulate the steel sector.”

    In another letter dated 27th March, 2019 Buhari cited provisions of Section 32 of the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency Bill 2018 as reasons for his refusal to assent to the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency Bill.

    He said: “Section 32 of the Bill, introduces (I) a 2.5% levy on the profit before tax of the target companies which will increase the tax burdens of the companies while offering no direct benefit to them : (ii) a1% levy on imports which will also add to the cost of doing business in the country , (iii), a 5% levy on luxury goods which duplicates efforts by the Federal Ministry of Finance to raise excise on such goods in a more sustainable manner to the benefit of the Federal Government treasury “, he said .

    He noted that if signed into law, the Agency will have similar objectives to the Bank of Industry particularly with regard to the funding of Small and Medium Enterprises.

    He said: “Accordingly, it is important to streamline its functions to avoid a duplication or overlap of functions with other government institutions performing similar functions aside the likelihood of increasing public re-current expenditure by the proposed creation of new public sector bodies. ”

    Other affected Bills include the Nigerian Aeronautical Search and Rescue Bill 2018, Chartered Institute of Training and Development of Nigeria (Establishment) Bill 2018 and Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria Bill 2018.

    The National Housing Fund Bill 2018, National Institute of Credit Administration Bill 2018 and National Bio- Technology Development Agency Bill 2018, were also affected.

    On each Bill, President Buhari gave reasons for his decision to withhold assent.

  • Atiku far better than Buhari, Obasanjo insists

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has defended his endorsement of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar.

    He said despite the fact that Atiku lost to President Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC), he remains “far better” than the incumbent.

    The elder statesman spoke on Sunday evening when the Southwest PDP leaders led by the party’s National Vice Chairman (South West), Dr Eddy Olafeso, visited him at his Pent-House Residence within the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    In attendance at the meeting were Senate Minority Leader, Biodun Olujimi; Senators-elect Oyo South Kola Balogun; Ondo Central Ayo Akinyelure; Rep-elect (Ibarapa North and Central), Hon Ajibola Muraina; former Osun State Governor Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola; former Minister for State for Defence Erelu Olusola Obada and PDP gubernatorial candidate in Ekiti State 2018 election, Prof Olusola Eleka.

    He said: “Politically speaking, you can’t be my friend if you don’t buy into the Nigeria’s project. For me, till death, I will continue to push for a better Nigeria.

    “I said if you compare the two of them (referring to Atiku and Buhari) with what I know and all I have written about the incumbent, which they have decided to cover up, Atiku is better than the incumbent by far. That’s the point I am making. And nobody is perfect.

    “I am not a perfect person. I have my shortcomings. If I deny my shortcomings, it means I am not being truthful to myself.

    “But, my shortcomings have nothing to do with my love for Nigeria. It has nothing to do with being greedy or selfishness.”

    Obasanjo told his guests Nigerian situation demands a vibrant voice and opposition in PDP to engender a virile democracy.

    The former Head of States also bemoaned the failure of leadership, saying Nigeria can’t move forward “if we continue the way we are.”

    He urged the PDP to purge itself of “bad eggs and hypocrites,” whom he said, lacked commitment to return the opposition party to its lost glory.

    Obasanjo lamented many of the PDP leaders are still preoccupied with what ministers to “their pockets and stomach,” wondering why some of them left the party while others lost hope the seconds the results of 2019 Presidential election were announced.

    Obasanjo, whose Coalition for Nigerian Movement(CNM) failed to provide a formidable force to unseat President Muhammadu Buhari and his the All Progressives Congress(APC) at the centre, advised PDP to purge itself of “hypocrites and bad eggs.”

    He noted the purging exercise would put the party on a higher pedestal to scout for those he called “critical mass of committed people,” who “would be ready to stand with the party come rain, come shine.”

    Obasanjo said: “I knew PDP would lose election in 2015 because it was clear. And I knew PDP will need to be rebuilt after losing the election.

    “You need what I call critical mass of committed people, and come rain, come shine they are committed. With that, you can make Nigeria better.

    “You see peoples’ faces beautiful but you don’t know what each person harbours inside of him.

    “If you discover a bad egg, remove such a person. And if such person has learnt his or her lessons there can still be room to accommodate the person.”

    Also at the meeting were former Lagos Deputy Governor Kofoworola Bucknor-Akerele; former Deputy National Chairman Shuaibu Oyedokun; PDP Governorship candidate in 2017 Ondo State Governorship election, Eyitayo Jegede SAN among others.

  • I’ll do my best for Nigerians in my second term, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday in Abuja assured Nigerians that he will put in all efforts to ensure the best for the country and her citizens when he begins a second term in office on May 29, 2019.

    He also appreciated all those that voted him during the elections.

    Buhari spoke while receiving the Board of Trustees and Advisory Council of Gidauniyar Jihar Katsina (Katsina State Development Fund) led by Justice Mamman Nasir at the State House, Abuja.

    According to him, his campaign to all states of the federation was an eye opener.

    “Thank you for supporting me. I assure you that I will do my best during the second term. We will work for Nigeria and her people,’’ he said.

    The President said the crowd that welcomed his campaign train in each state was more than anyone can possibly “induce’’, attributing the turn outs to people’s appreciation of the efforts of his administration.

    President Buhari noted that he was the chairman of the Katsina State Development Fund for 17 years, during which period a lot was done to support education, healthcare and agriculture in the state, especially for those that were less privileged.

    In his remarks, the Galadima of Katsina, Justice Nasir, said the foundation returns gratitude to God and all Nigerians for giving President Buhari the opportunity to serve another term in office.

    “We are most grateful to almighty Allah for bringing you back for another term in office. Our happiness and gratitude goes to Nigerians for electing you,’’ he said.

    Justice Nasir said the foundation also remained grateful for the years the President served as its chairman.

  • Buhari, Okorocha meet in Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday met behind closed doors with the outgoing Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Okorocha had arrived the President’s office around 1pm.

    Due to alleged anti-party activities, the National Secretariat of the All Progressives Congress had suspended him.

    He was also yet to receive his certificate of return to the 9th Senate from the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Okorocha was still at the President’s office at the time of filing this report.

  • Buhari to attend inauguration of Senegal President

    President Muhammadu Buhari will depart Abuja on Monday for Dakar, Senegal to attend the inauguration of Senegalese President, Macky Sall, following his re-election for a second term.

    Mr. Femi Adesina, the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, who confirmed this development in a statement in Abuja on Monday, said the President’s trip followed an invitation from his host.

    According to the statement, President Buhari, who is ECOWAS Chairman, will be Special Guest of Honour at the ceremonies, to be attended by other African leaders at the Diamniadio Exhibition Centre on Tuesday.

    It stated that the Nigerian leader would be accompanied by Governors Mohammed Abubakar, Nasir El-Rufai and Tanko Al-Makura of Bauchi, Kaduna and Nasarawa states respectively.

    Others on the Presidential entourage include the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Geoffrey Onyeama; National Security Adviser, Maj-Gen Babagana Monguno (rtd); Director-General, National Intelligence Agency, Ambassador Ahmed Rufai, and other top government officials.

    “The President is expected back in the country at the end of the inauguration ceremonies,” the statement said

  • APC, Buhari and 2023 (1)

    IN his response last Friday to the demands by the visiting Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) leaders that he should run an inclusive government in his second term in office, President Muhammadu Buhari spoke guardedly of focusing on merit and national spread “in the area of allocation of political offices”.

    If newspaper reports captured the president’s thoughts and statements well, he is unlikely to mean that the inclusiveness he has in mind would spread to other sectors of national life as counselled by the CAN.

    The Christian leaders, the reports indicate, want no exclusion of any kind, and mean no focus of a particular type, in their admonition to the president. In one of his foreign trips early in his first term, the president had some problems comprehending the concept of inclusiveness when foreign reporters drew his attention to it.

    But Nigerians must reassure themselves that since then, the president has had a better understanding of that concept, even if he is still wary of its full import.

    Since the All Progressives Congress (APC) won the presidency a second time weeks ago, a feat, considering the noticeable dysfunction in the ruling party, neither the president nor the party has embarked on the characteristic spadework winners in major elections undertake before assuming office. This spadework was not done in 2015 when President Buhari won his first term, thus leading to the confusion and wrangling that typified the last four years of his presidency. Party leaders and the rest of Nigeria will hope that beyond correcting the mistakes of the party in electing National Assembly principal officers, the APC and the president will adequately and expertly address the more germane issues of policy and political culture in the next four years.

    President Buhari’s predecessors had the opportunity between 1999 and 2015 to lay a solid democratic foundation for the country and an even more solid political cum economic structure, but they were too carried away by their repeated victories and the trappings of power to notice the more fundamental things needed to build a great nation. Though he was distracted by poor health in his first term, President Buhari still had the chance, assuming he paid attention to the things that mattered, to take a closer and futuristic look at the country’s weak and faltering foundation. Repeatedly, however, and influenced by his uncritical and grossly mistaken view of the country’s politics and economy, he spoke glowingly of the political givens and denied the existence of the unresolved fissures threatening the fabric of the country.

    So far, neither the president nor his party has indicated they wished to address the country’s fundamental problems beyond the ad hocism they have promoted for four years. They even make light of the problems, and have disingenuously tried to reframe them in cultural, moral and religious terms. A look at the margin and spread of the APC/Buhari win suggests that the country is merely reposing some faint hope in the ability of the ruling party to find a way to address the factors that afflict the society, stymie growth, and give a false sense of peace and stability. Whether the president and his party have the competence and understanding to address these fundamental problems or not, they must be reminded that their course of action in the past four years led to nowhere but a cul-de-sac.

    The APC had the upper hand in the 8th National Assembly, though that advantage was naively frittered away. That they found the legislature unmanageable during that period was due more to their incompetence and incomplete understanding of democratic principles than to the selfishness and recalcitrance of legislative leaders who prised power loose from the feeble hands of the ruling party. They could still have handled the legislature very robustly; instead they sulked, damned the world, and resigned to fate. With such an appalling mindset, what is the proof that their unquestioning and overwhelming dominance of the 9th National Assembly would ineluctably translate into a robust and engaging lawmaking culture? None whatsoever. Indeed, with a little more naivety, such as they are perfectly capable of producing, the ruling APC and their president could move to the other extreme of treating the legislature, particularly their own lawmakers, with condescension. Despite their protests to the contrary, none of the aspirants to the principal officers positions in the legislature has exuded the conviction and independence required of effective legislative leaders.

    The APC stopped just short of securing the overwhelming two-thirds majority needed to dispense with the stalling tactics and filibustering of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). But their dominance is nevertheless still suffocating. President Buhari and his party gave the impression that their efforts at reforming the country was hamstrung by an uncooperative 8th National Assembly. It is not true. Their efforts were undermined by a lack of reformist agenda, one which the country could identify with or own. If they still do not produce a great reform programme in their second term, the unchecked power of a president who seems above everything else to love power for its own sake will reinforce the supineness of a legislature eager to surrender its powers of oversight. The outgoing legislative leadership duo of Bukola Saraki in the Senate and Yakubu Dogara in the House of Representatives actually gave a semblance of how a legislature should function. Had the independently-minded Dr Saraki not been offensively self-centred, he would, together with the reflective and even-tempered Mr Dogara, have given Nigeria the most effective legislature since 1999.

    If by a miracle the National Assembly can find the character to be independent, they should be able to nudge the rather staid and conservative President Buhari into recognising the divisions in the country which the outcomes of the recent elections reflected. This hope may be far-fetched, but it is not unrealistic. The APC must understand that increasingly an iron curtain is being drawn roughly between the North and the South, and between ethnic and religious groups. There are of course other pockets of disasters waiting to happen, in addition to the ubiquitous but needless conflicts laying the country waste in all the six geopolitical zones of the country. But if the APC can stop living in denial and find the discipline to study all the factors predisposing the country to instability, and if they can rein in their monarchical tendencies, they should be able to grapple with the country’s existential problems, problems which need fundamental solutions far beyond the tinkering and pussyfooting both the ruling party and the president have deployed in the past four years.

    The APC under the excitable Adams Oshiomhole is a little more disciplined than it used to be. But though Mr Oshiomhole is capable of flying off the handle at short notice, the party must thank him and his executive committee for finding the boldness to confront and contend with the fiefdoms some of the party’s notable state leaders had created. By unhorsing the feudalists in the states so unceremoniously, but with implacable resoluteness, the party gives itself a fighting chance of running more optimally and very successfully than it has done so far. But this also implies that more battles lie ahead, for the party’s leaders have made more enemies in one year than they made in five.

    The 2019 elections exposed the political ineffectiveness of the cabal around the president. While they are adept at manipulating, and sometimes misusing, power, they lack the shrewdness to face up to the machinations of the political opposition, not to talk of running the ruling party with the brutal and fierce efficiency needed for these times. On Thursday, the APC celebrated one of their party leaders, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in Abuja. They are fortunate to have someone in their midst whose instinctive grasp of Nigeria’s political dynamics helps them to anticipate and checkmate the plans and calculations of the opposition. Exiled shortly after the party first gained office in 2015, he was restored only when it became clear that those built to replace him had neither his savvy nor his connections and reach. In fact, had there been no such reconciliation at the time it happened, the 2019 elections would have been lost altogether, for Asiwaju Tinubu, both in 2015 and 2019, virtually held the party together, sharpened its focus, and inspired their victories. He is much criticised, often unfairly, but he takes consolation in the fact that he evokes so much passion around the country, and neither his friends nor his enemies are indifferent to him.

    The political reverses in Imo, Oyo, and to some extent Osun and some other states provide lessons for the APC in how a party can easily lose influence or power. If the APC is to avoid disaster in 2023, they must learn their lessons. They must encourage the ongoing restoration of party supremacy, separate party dynamics from the executive arm of government, retain faith in the party’s internal conflict resolution mechanisms, reform and expand party finances, and embark on large-scale recruitment of new members. They must also sharpen their ideological focus, gradually weed from their ranks the conservatives and reactionaries who have diluted their worldview, and generally run a better, tighter and more disciplined party. They must resist the temptation to view the opposition PDP from a haughty and moralistic pedestal. Nigerian democracy needs the opposition. The PDP, despite the president’s many pejorative statements and the anti-graft bodies’ excitableness, not to mention commentators’ unreasoned descriptions and stigmatisation, is a partner in building and sustaining democracy. The opposition must be accorded the respect and cooperation needed to sustain their confidence in the system. After all, sometime in the future, the APC will find itself again in the opposition; and if they do not institute a great culture of tolerance and cooperation, they could one day be hoisted with their own petard.

    More importantly, as the country moves in the coming years towards engaging the factors and issues that will shape the 2023 elections, it is important for the president to set the right tone if the initiative is not to be taken away from him before 2021 is over. He enjoyed only a limited and qualified success in his first term. In fact, by most considerations, that success was so slender that it had no pretence to be described as a success. The economy is still not out of the woods, and there is nothing to suggest that the president understands the workings of a modern economy. He must, therefore, assemble a first-rate economic team to grapple with the country’s many socio-economic challenges. In his first term, he surrendered the presidency to a cabal, probably out of his own lack of surefootedness, and ran an insular and ineffective security system that proved a woeful failure in enthroning peace and stability in the country. That insularity was undergirded by opaque and jaded cultural prejudices. He must trust his instinct to open up, recognise the power of ideas which openness and representativeness facilitate, appreciate that the ideas and successes that could sustain his legacy can only proceed from a qualitative assemblage of close aides and advisers, and if he can manage it, begin to recognise that indeed he is president of the whole country, including president of those who voted against him and still loathe him.

    Whether President Buhari likes to hear it or not, and no matter how ruthlessly he may want to proceed against his foes in the coming months, by late 2021, the county will be looking beyond him. If the legacy he has in mind is to be a two-term president just to obliterate the humiliation of his 1985 deposition, he will largely get his wish. But if his desire is to have a lasting and more noble impact on Nigeria, not on a section of it, he will have to inspire himself to do a complete turnaround in his policies and ideas, whether they are grainy or glossy, or original to him or not, and by seeing every section of the country as one, herdsmen and farmers alike, Igbo and Yoruba, Tiv and Ijaw. Then, he must find a way to kick-start restructuring, a concept that has alarmed and discomfited him in equal measure, a concept he does not want to hear about at all, but a concept that is indispensable to the country’s peace and progress. And he must abandon the ossification that makes him spontaneously suspicious of new ideas and paradigms.

    If the salary agitation he is contending with does not tell him that the present country’s structure is unsustainable; if the education crisis the country is embroiled in does not indicate to him a terrible alarm bell ringing; if the massive insecurity overwhelming the security agencies does not show him something evil is afoot; and if the 2019 elections which were far less efficient than those of 2015 do not alert him to the steady and relentless decay and decline of the country, then he is incapable of understanding any obvious messages, let alone hidden ones. He has promised to leave the country better than he met it. But fine words butter no parsnips. Let him walk the talk by also promoting constitutionalism and the rule of law, which are today in far worse shape than when he assumed office. He will leave office in a few years, and his party will not always rule the country. It is, therefore, urgent that both the president and the APC design a national system that will allow them survive and flourish even out of office.

  • Going back to the archives – will Buhari’s anti-corruption war be an exercise in futility?

    I go back to this article – first published 6 February, 2016 – today simply because no time can be more opportune than now to draw attention to the unfortunate fact that our politicians are becoming progressively worse. Elections now over, it is obvious that no member of the National Assembly, old or new, indeed not even the predominantly APC members, who love to call themselves progressives, would see how unthinkable it is that at a N30,000 minimum wage, (N360,000 per annum), it will take an average Nigerian worker 982 years to earn a Nigerian senator’s yearly salary of  $2,183,686   (N353,756,988.00).

    No corruption is greater than this and I ask: will President Buhari confront this monstrosity head-on, or do we, M u m u Nigerians, just look on helpless at this gross reality? No, should the president do nothing about it, Nigerians should just storm the National Assembly like the Algerians are doing against a recalcitrant president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika,

    I digress.

    “What component of our education is missing in the upbringing of our political leaders who  loot the national treasury so much about 500  of them take 25% of the resources meant for 150 million Nigerians? What component of our education is missing in the development of our governors who, when caught in the net of EFCC, plea bargain or run away or use the court to cut the rest of us to pieces? I ask, what component of our education is missing in the training of our civil servants and contractors that make them inflate contracts, execute budget in the real sense of EXECUTION, and fiddle with documents to filch our finances? Finally, what component of our education is missing in the upbringing of our pastors and preachers that make them defecate on the altar of celestial adulation?” – Professor Oyewale Tomori, FAS, former Vice-Chancellor, Redeemer University.

    One needs not be an economist to know that Nigeria’s current economic circumstances demand a meeting of economically literate minds to clinically interrogate our problems and plot a way out, at least in the short term, since only a fundamental restructuring of Nigeria can cure its many ills.

    It is obvious that corruption, and our skewed structure, sit atop whatever has brought Nigeria to its present circumstances. A good reading of our history spanning the regimes of Ibrahim Babangida  right down  to President Goodluck Jonathan’s, will affirm the view that dealers, rather than leaders, ruled Nigeria throughout that long period.

    In the first place, these are a people who, in their years in office, neither diversified the Nigerian economy nor moderated their greed. Rather, they luxuriated in, and mercilessly frittered away, the billions of petro dollars that poured endlessly into the country’s coffers. Rather than encourage investment in agriculture and solid minerals, their greater concern was to amass huge personal fortunes that today see them living in stupendous luxury in hilltop mansions. Yet, despite their bulging wealth, they are so much without conscience they still collectively earn billions in pensions, and sundry benefits, at the expense of the majority poor.

    But that is not even half the story.

    As Dr Jide Oluwajuyitan recalls in “Dealers as Leaders”, (The Nation, Thursday, 3 March 2016): “the real tragedy is that Buhari is yet to start the war on corruption. All he has done so far is attacking the symptoms of a deep rooted malaise unleashed on our nation through Babangida’s Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) and Obasanjo’s mismanaged privatisation programme. The former allowed his ‘army of anything goes’, to pillage our land like a conquered territory. Part of the fallout of that was the depreciation of the naira from the pre-SAP N1 to $1, to today’s over N300 to the $1. Obasanjo, in turn, in cahoots with Atiku, presided over the sale of N100Billion assets, acquired over a period of 50 years (1958 – 2008), for a paltry $1.6b, to dealers and wheelers, their fronts and acolytes who, in turn, embarked on asset stripping to buy private jets and build skyscrapers instead of efficiently running the industries they bought at next to nothing”.

    President Buhari cannot close his eyes to these, if he wants to win the anti corruption war.

    In like manner, their subalterns, as military governors etc, did no less harm to the country’s financial and economic well-being. Several other individuals, banks inclusive, have been used to steal the country blind as every penny of the stolen trillions went through banks. Nigerians can no longer wait to see some of these banks get heavily penalised and their directors hauled into jails if President Buhari really wants to make a success of the anti corruption war that has clearly defined him.

    The same day Oluwajuyitan wrote, a usually very restrained Emeritus Professor Jide Osuntokun could not help writing as follows in his own column in the same newspaper: “The kind of looting we are being told happened is enough to depress any sane and patriotic Nigerian.

    The level of looting poses existential threat to this republic. In China, some of what happened in the recent past would have attracted the ultimate punishment (death). Some of the stories sound like they are from Ali baba and the 40 thieves. People walk into the office of the National Security Adviser, sign a piece of paper, and walk out with a mandate to go to the CBN or banks where government has money to go and collect billions for some spurious work for government or the ruling party, or even for no work at all! Nigerian crude was sold without the treasury being credited with the proceeds. Billions, if not trillions, were shared among party bigwigs as if people were playing the game of monopoly with the nation’s money.

    Government’s decision to bring the guilty parties to book had better been speeded up before people lose their patience.

    Another reason for the lingering fear that informed the title of this article is what Stephanie Findlay of AFP calls: “the Goodluck Jonathan Alibi”. This alibi, already pleaded by Olisa Metuh, PDP’s erstwhile Publicity Secretary, in his money laundering ‘no case’ submission, and which, according to informed sources, the former National Security Adviser, Col.  Sambo Dasuki, would also plead, is that both men were obeying President Jonathan’s orders.

    It would appear that President Buhari is shielding the former president from being invited to testify, even if only as a witness. This is said to be on account of a so-called pledge to Jonathan on account of his election concession as if, with the President Gbagbo example, he had a choice.

    I just hope that  the president is aware that should these people go scot free, there goes his anti-corruption war (which some U.S state officials, for yet unknown reasons, recently tried to undermine by heavily under reporting its  number of  convictions which are now in the high hundreds).

    However, whichever way President Muhammadu Buhari chooses to be remembered by history is strictly in his own hands. Nigerians have just gifted him a tabula rasa on which to write his own epitaph.

    I wish him well.

     

    As Professor Adelabu delivers UNIFE 334th Inaugural Lecture

    If anybody should be absent at this  Inaugural, it shouldn’t have been me. What next could I do other than try to make up, a tweeny little bit, with this letter  to her straight from the heart.

    My dear Professor Dupe Adelabu,

    Nothing would have gratified me more than being present at your inaugural tomorrow, 26 March, 2019.

    Unfortunately, I had contacted a very bad cough at a nearby petrol station where I had been playing drought for some years, inhaling, unknown to me , oil fumes and smoke, albeit imperceptibly.

    Over the last weekend, I began to cough and soon completely lost my voice. Diagnosis: fume induced cough. .

    I have, since Saturday, communicated only by text messages, and signs, at home. Not a single phone call.

    Really, really terrible.

    I heartily congratulate you on this huge occasion, appreciating the gargantuan effort, and the amount of self denial, that must have gone into making the exemplary scholar we have in you today. Not only papa and mama, but my egbon, your darling sweetheart, and better half, now at the bosom of our Lord Jesus Christ, as well as the children, and your grandchildren, must be beside themselves with joy on this your great occasion.

    I salute your industry, your incomparable caring heart and your inimitable public service. I deeply appreciate your being an untiring prayer warrior, as prayer has been your greatest tool, of helping Ekiti state but more importantly, the governor, and his family.

    The good Lord will continue to be your guide and guardian as he upholds you, and all yours.

    So shall it be in the mighty name of Jesus.

    Amen.

    Tinuke sends her warmest congratulations.

  • Imams, Islamic scholars to Buhari: wipe out terrorist activities in Nigeria

    Imams and Senior Islamic scholars from the 36 states of the Federation at the FCT on Friday called on President Muhammadu Buhari to leave no stone unturned towards wiping out terrorists activities in the country.

    The group, who was led to the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa, Abuja by Professor Shehu A. S. Galadanci, the Murshid, National Mosque Abuja, noted that apart from terrorists activities in the North East, there have been increasing kidnapping, raping and illicit drug consumption in other parts of the country.

    At the closed doors meeting, he also congratulated the President on his reelection as President of the country.

    A copy of the presentation to the President reads “In this verse Almighty Allah has clearly told the Believers; that it is He and He alone that gives power (Mulk) to whom He likes and strips off power away from whom He pleases.

    “He does what He likes and nobody has power to prevent the happening of what He does.

    “We thank the Almighty for gracefully and graciously placing Your Excellency in this exalted and elevated position as the leader, the President of this country. Thanks be to Him also for giving us this wonderful country with numerous bounties such as fertile land, minerals and human resources.” he said.

    Read Also; Buhari meets Imams, Islamic scholars in Aso Rock

    He went on “This group of ‘Ulama’ who represent the entire ‘Ulama’ in this country are here today to congratulate Your Excellency Sincerely for your overwhelming victory at the Presidential poll that took place a few weeks ago.

    “This victory, no doubt demonstrates that the desire of the majority of Nigerians is to ensure the continuity of your administration to the next level.

    “We pray that Almighty Allah will grant you the ability to continue with the excellent work you have been doing in the country

    “Your Excellency Mr. President praise be to Almighty Allah for giving you health, power, wisdom, courage, determination and fear of Allah to make possible for you to bring many changes in the country. The many projects you started have already yielded fruition.”

    According to him, many Nigerians, a few years, were only sleeping with one eye opened.

    Noting that they now sleep with both eyes closed due to the achievement of the administration in securing the nation, he said that there is still more to be done.

    He said “We thank you for these remarkable achievements. It is true, however, that there are still some pockets of terrorist activities in some remote areas, and we pray that Allah will continue to give you power to annihilate them and wipe them off completely.

    “We wish to request Your Excellency that a few additional terrorist activities that have started to spread in this country such as kidnapping, raping and illicit drug consumption, should be dealt with.

    “We hope you will deal with them in the same way you are dealing with Boko Haram.” he stated

    Noting the achievements of the administration in Agriculture, he said “We now produce what we eat and we eat what we produce.

    “What your government has been able to achieve are indeed numerous, and time may not permit mentioning them at the moment.

    “But a few more must be mentioned in passing: these are fighting against corruption providing infrastructural facilities such as roads, railways and waterways among others; these are conspicuously seen by all.