Tag: BUHARI

  • ‘Key into Buhari’s change mantra’

    Lagos State Man O’ War Commander Charles Mba has charged his men to key into President’s Muhammadu Buhari’s change agenda.

    Doing this, he said, would help bring the president’s wish into fruition.

    He spoke at the swearing in of the executive for the Mushin area command.

    Mba called that Man O’ War played a “pivotal role” in the war against indiscipline when Buhari was military leader, adding that the organisation’s rebranding has started to at achieve such feat again.

    On the appointment of the executive, he said: “The set of people constituting the new executives are going to lead the area command into the new drive we are pursuing.

    A testament to this is the course we did for them where they passed excellently.

    “Apart from this they are people with visions, well enlightened and also well educated.

    Among them we have one working in one of the foremost banks in the country. I know they won’t want their names stained,” he said.

    The newly appointed area commander Ojo Olayinka, on his part, promised to empower his men, make them independent and also help change people’s negative views about the organisation.

    He said: “My administration will look at empowering members. Before now, I discovered that most of our members struggle to make ends meet, which makes some people see us as bunch of irresponsible people. We are coming on board to change this perception”.

    “We will empower them in the area of education and business ventures. In the area of education, we will give out scholarships to deserving members, through university level. Even if you don’t win the scholarship if it’s a token we can give we have a plan to give support them”.

    He noted that the organization would partner with the two local government under his jurisdiction, Odi olowo and Mushin local government in a bid to carry out this and other plans of his, urging those finanicially boyant to extend their hand of generosity to support their programmes.

  • As we finally enter the regime of change

    As we finally enter the regime of change

     In the manifesto that Buhari and his party waved as contract with the electorate last March, the section on Reform states unequivocally the commitment of Buhari and his party to bring fundamental changes to the way governance is organised in the country.

    Our change slogan is not a campaign gimmick but a promise that must be kept. We are determined to bring about tangible changes in the lives of our people.—President Buhari

    With a new budget that is fully Buhari’s and his ministers already in the saddle, Nigeria appears finally poised for change that is expected to bring the country’s dark past to an end. And with clarity of evidence of serious efforts of the Buhari presidency to fight Boko Haram and to recover stolen funds from corrupt public officers, other areas of Buhari’s manifesto that are yet to be given attention deserve to be highlighted by citizens. Today’s piece is an effort in that direction.

    As this column had observed several times in the past, it is not Jonathan’s regime that created the culture of corruption, despite the reality that Jonathan’s administration worked to become the poster child for venality in governance across the globe. While it may be a waste of resources—financial and emotional—to go and probe every government that had ruled the country since 1960, it is proper for those holding the levers of power to address political and social behaviours that have brought Nigeria to its current state of anomie.

    But as the Buhari regime sets out to reconfigure our institutions in a way to make corruption unattractive, this column seeks permission of its readers to bring back a recurrent theme that has been discussed almost ad nauseam in the column: re-designing the architecture of governance in a way that will bring more input from citizens into the way they are governed. Using the end of 2015 to repeat or re-open the discourse of re-federalisation may not be out of place at a time that the country’s Change Regime is poised to be at full throttle.

    It is entertaining and also depressing to learn about Dasukigate and Rice-gate that capture nuances of how big men charged with the responsibility of securing the country as members of executive or legislative branch of government wantonly rape the country. Citizens seem to be enjoying the naming and shaming drama of Dasukigate in particular while some are salivating ahead of what is likely to come out of the new revelation about a new crisis: promoting rice farming through rice smuggling. It is one thing for citizens to take joy in the naming, shaming, and even jailing of those who have been caught for sabotaging the country in various ways in the last four years. But it is another thing for citizens to be encouraged to worry about how our country came about this mess and how to get out of it.

    Surely, citizens in large numbers are already expressing support for no holds-barred attack on corruption and corrupt individuals. There is no day that citizens and groups do not express support for the efforts of Buhari’s government to fight corruption. Such support may be in a way a reflection of citizens’ anger and desire to get back at those they have perceived to have functioned more as enemies than leaders of state and its citizens. Just as it is with circuses, citizens are also likely to get tired of watching the video of corruption or of trial for corruption before long. They are likely to get more ‘long-termist’ in their search for solution to a problem that has been an abiding aspect of the political culture of the country for about half a century. Indeed, citizens are already asking why they are ruled under a political system that is centralised to the point of robbing the average citizen of the space to participate in how they are governed, especially at the grassroots level. They are worrying about a political system that has taken the opportunity of easy revenue from petroleum to alienate them from governance at both local and state levels.

    It is instructive at this point in Buhari’s administration to recall sections of his manifesto that are designed to make the country better governed than before. In the manifesto that Buhari and his party waved as contract with the electorate last March, the section on Reform states unequivocally the commitment of Buhari and his party to bring fundamental changes to the way governance is organised in the country. The section on Reform includes several visionary statements: We will not only clean up our government, we will reshape it—reforming and strengthening the law enforcement agencies…. We cannot achieve these reforms without strengthening our public institutions away from the “Strong Man” model, which has devastated our economy and institutions. In another statement, the manifesto says: We will devolve more revenue and powers…We pledge to bring the government closer to the people through fiscal and political decentralization, including local policing. And with special reference to the constitution, the manifesto adds: APC government at the federal level will initiate action to amend our constitution with a view to devolving powers, duties and responsibilities to states and local governments in order to entrench true Federalism and the Federal spirit (My emphases).

    Quoting copiously from Buhari’s contract with the electorate is to demonstrate that President Buhari in his manifesto gives as much attention to the structure of governance as he places on national security, corruption, and national development.  The recent decision of the 8th Senate to establish a special committee on constitutional amendment signals that the legislature is also ready to move to the governance component and constitutional aspect of the APC manifesto. It is instructive that the Senate’s decision to re-open the issue of constitutional amendment was made on the day that the federal government announced its success in ending the territorial thrust of Boko Haram’s terrorism. This move by the Senate appears indicative of the APC government’s readiness to focus on the Good Governance component of the Buhari/APC manifesto. As the Senate moves in the direction of amending the constitution, it is necessary to invoke the call by Buhari in his manifesto on the need for “all Nigerians to collectively chart our future as a people and our destiny as a nation,” by providing a space for participation by citizens in creating a constitution that citizens will feel happy with across the length and breadth of the country.

    The process of amending the constitution under the federal government of APC must be different from what obtained under the PDP regime. Citizens were not sufficiently included in having input in the process when the two houses were dominated by PDP members. There was a public hearing in six regional centres for half-day interaction between lawmakers and citizens who could afford to travel to and pay for accommodation at such centres. Even when President Jonathan convened a national dialogue, the PDP-dominated legislature was not able to provide any covering legislation for the national conference before and after. In fact, Jonathan’s party did not openly endorse the conference, delegates to which were handpicked by Jonathan and his supporters who were largely not openly affiliated with the PDP. In addition, the PDP refrained from making any formal reference to the 2014 national conference during and after the exit of Jonathan from power. If anything, it was groups and individuals that were not in the PDP that have been promoting recommendations of the Jonathan conference since the last election.

    Since amending the constitution “to entrench true Federalism and Federalist spirit” is a noticeable part of the Buhari/APC manifesto, it stands to reason for citizens to expect that the party of change will take the opportunity of being in power to encourage an inclusive process for constitutional amendment or review. Citizens at the level of federal constituencies should be mobilised by the ruling party to get involved in making suggestions to their legislators on what type of federalism they desire. It is up to citizens to choose the method they prefer for preparing suggestions for their representatives before constitutional amendments are forwarded to state assemblies by the federal legislature. Similarly, state assemblies should give their constituents opportunities to think along with them before ratifying such amendments.

    Unlike the former ruling party, APC came to power with a clear manifesto to devolve power to the states and local governments and in the process enhance the process of citizen participation in governance at the grassroots. Consequently, APC has no reason to be afraid of adding options of referendum on critical matters to the new constitution, as it is done in advanced democracies.

  • Letter to President Buhari

    Letter to President Buhari

    A guide to PMB’s New Year Resolutions

    Dear PMB,

    This time last year when we witnessed the last Sunday of the year 2014, things were still somewhat fluid about who would lead our dear country, Nigeria. To the discerning few though, it was clear the then President, Dr Goodluck Jonathan, would not return because of his abysmal failure to lead the country aright, as well as his government’s unholy romance with corruption. Some of us said so directly; some others did indirectly. Some others were too blind to see the handwriting on the wall. One thing was clear though; many of those who felt the former president would find his way back did not credit him with much by way of performance. Rather, they hinged their optimism mainly on what they termed the ‘power of incumbency’. Some of us felt well, if incumbency was that powerful such that we would not be able to remove a non-performing leader, then there was no point holding elections. We jolly well would have told the former president to carry on.

    Then came the 2015 elections in which you roundly defeated your predecessor and he had to concede defeat in March. But President Jonathan did not lose the election the day he conceded defeat; he lost it the day you were successfully chosen as the All Progressives Congress’ (APC) presidential candidate on December 23, last year. Some of us told the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) then to begin to pack its bag and baggage in readiness to vacate Aso Rock while the then president should join the unemployment queue. Former President Jonathan has since returned to his home town, Otuoke, in Bayelsa State, while your humble self has since May 29 taken his former position.

    Since then, there have been a few things you did which Nigerians felt you should have done otherwise, or you should not have done at all. Mr President, some of your comments have not particularly gone down well with many Nigerians. One was your statement to the effect that even without you doing anything, there has been noticeable changes in the country. In other words, your ‘body language’ has been working wonders. This was true to a large extent, at least initially. But, whether in terms of power supply which dramatically improved on your assumption of office, or fuel supply which similarly witnessed relative stability after the initial hiccups then, things have nosedived in both sectors as I write. Electricity supply has returned to its epileptic past even as fuel queues have not only returned but have done so with an uncommon obstinacy.  What these tell us is that ‘body language’ cannot last forever. It seems to have lost its potency  and it can only continually get eroded as more and more people notice this weakness.

    Although you have apologised to Nigerians for the fuel scarcity and they have accepted your apology (I guess I am speaking the minds of many of them), but beyond the apology is what happens next. How do we get out of the fuel scarcity conundrum? That is the main issue now as we prepare to usher in a new year.

    Aside the temporal efficacy of your ‘body language’, the import of your statement, Mr. President, is that the country is on auto-pilot and this did not go down well with many people. Even if it was true that a few things knocked themselves into shape when you assumed office, one would have expected such statement to come from the people themselves. I am not even sure it is something to celebrate by your top aides. I may be wrong here, though. But certainly the statement ought not to have come from you directly.

    Mr. President, we are beginning to see what your policy thrusts are. Your maiden budget of N6trillion appears ambitious, given the downturn in oil prices. Your government’s intention to downplay oil in the government’s revenue profile is good, at least on paper. Whether it is realistic is a different matter entirely; but it is worth giving a trial because that is where we should be going. There are some salient aspects of the budget which appear good on the surface; again, whether they are attainable is the issue. For instance, the proposed creation of about 500,000 jobs for teachers is good, just as the social safety net of N5,000 monthly proposed for the indigent elderly. One can only hope that these have been well thought-out so they do not end the way of the Poverty Alleviation Programme (PAP) of the PDP which was alleviating poverty in reverse by pumping hefty sums of money into the pockets of the party’s wealthy chieftains.

    Many Nigerians are also not happy that your government’s major policies are announced abroad. It was in Iran that you first announced that some past public officials who stole public funds have started returning part of the loot.  You were also outside of the country when you said that Nigeria was broke and also that the Federal Government was considering negotiating with Boko Haram insurgents. The same thing applied to your announcement that you would appoint your ministers in September, 2015.

    With regard to the anti-corruption war though, we are beginning to see some action, especially with the arraignment of some of the big suspects involved. It has been fascinating as it is revealing so far; but when we realise that the shared arms fund that has given us so much shock was only a fraction of what was stolen in the oil sector where Diezani Alison-Madueke held sway, then we can only see how callous some of our so-called leaders can be, given the millions that go hungry daily and the countless others that were dying and being displaced because some people had stolen the money that was supposed to be used to buy arms.

    We are also hearing a lot of speculations about plea bargain. I guess with time, some people would start talking of state pardon, even as the case proper is yet to begin. For me, though, what is most important is the recovery of our common patrimony that was stolen. But that should not be a reason to start giving the impression that things have to be done differently only because those involved are big thieves. Will a poor man who stole a goat or cow have the opportunity of plea bargain if he returns that goat or cow? Although plea bargain is used in some parts of the world as a way to resolve disputes and save valuable time and money on litigation, it is not done the way we do it in Nigeria. So, the president has to be wary of the kind of plea bargain he would allow for the unconscionable looters. Justice must not only be done; it must be seen to have been done.

    Dear Mr. President, it is not that you are not aware of some, if not all of these issues; but it is important to put them together in a way that they would attract your attention and enable you decide which of them you may want to rethink in the coming year. You may also be compiling a list of your New Year resolutions. This may as well serve as a guide.

    Happy New Year in advance, sir.

  • Buhari: no group’ll hold Nigeria to ransom again

    Buhari: no group’ll hold Nigeria to ransom again

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday warned that any threat to Nigeria’s peace woud not be tolerated.

    “We must never again allow any group to hold the nation to ransom under whatever guise,” the President said in his Christmas message.

    There has been an upsurge in the activities of separatist pro-Biafra groups, especially the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), which has coordinated protests in Southeast state capitals and other places, calling for Biafra State and the release of detained underground Biafra Radio director Nnamdi Kanu.

    Islamic Shiites and soldiers clashed in Zaria where they blocked a road on which Chief of Army Staff Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai was travelling. Many sect members were killed and their leader Sheikh El-Zakzaky detained.

    Besides, the Boko Haram insurgency is still being tackled.

    The President said: “I felicitate with all Nigerians, especially our Christian brothers and sisters, on the joyous occasion of this year’s Christmas. On this occasion of the commemoration of the birth of Jesus Christ, let us all rededicate ourselves to the virtues of peace, love, honesty, justice, equity, piety, humility and service to others which he taught.

    A greater manifestation of these virtues and ideals in the lives of Nigerians, he said, will immensely help Nigeria to become a more united, peaceful, secure and progressive nation.

    The President also urged Nigerians to reach out in love and compassion to fellow Nigerians who are in distress.

    He added: “I particularly urge you all to remember victims of terrorism and insurgency in the country, especially Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

    “The Federal Government will continue to collaborate with state governments and other stakeholders to ease the harsh conditions in IDP camps, while the ultimate objective remains to quickly put an end to insurgency and return the IDPs to their homes.

    “This administration has taken a number of measures to restore hope to our people. The 2016 Budget defines our commitment to giving Nigeria a new lease of life. Our change slogan is not a campaign gimmick but a promise that must be kept. We are determined to bring about tangible changes in the lives of our people.

    “In this regard, efforts will be intensified to recover stolen funds, block revenue leakages and enthrone due process, transparency and accountability.

    He described public office as a public trust that must be held to the highest ethical standards.

  • President Buhari, beasts of ‘Naija’ etc…

    Another year gone; let us begin to intuit its truths. Are we different from what we signified and who we were? We have President Muhammadu Buhari. He is the shining beacon of our hope. With Buhari, we hope to cross our threshold of tragedy, death and plunder, come 2016.

    Until then, our roads will remain cratered and ditched with death. Our youths will remain unemployable and bereft of hope. Our hospitals will remain corridors of death. Are our schools functioning yet? Are our lawmakers mature now? Has the executive grown in wisdom, the judiciary too? Have we wizened with age and grief as a people?

    Change is here, and at its dawn we encounter truth as we hardly knew it. What really is the tenor of the truth? Our truths? Shall we continue to weep like the fanatic, over our dying dreams and the faded fantasies we struggle to forget? Shall we begin to rejoice despite all odds, in spite of misery and death; our lives’ constant staple?

    There is not yet a Nigeria of defined, stable boundaries, and economies. There is not yet a sense of shared destiny save our unity of the downtrodden and the damned. The most prescient portrait of the Nigerian character and our ultimate fate as a nation shamefully played out over the last few months and in the last few days. It plays out even as you read; the persistent fuel scarcity and outrageous hike in pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), reveals our murderous obsessions, violent impulses, moral bankruptcy, our hubris and inevitable self-destruction.

    The tiresome avarice and predatory lust that drove proprietorships of filling stations nationwide to hike fuel price from N87 to N500 per litre at the twilight of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s regime recalls very sadly to mind, that violence of the wild that holds motionless for endless hours, the kidnapper in his lair, the assassin in his ambuscade and the public officer in his plunderous perch – this violence belongs primarily to the predator while it hunts its prey.

    In the last few days, of his administration, it manifested in uncontrollable spasms that saw us brutalise the helpless and enable our worst. As the fuel scarcity persisted, Nigeria gradually sputtered to a standstill, businesses shut down, banks cut short their work hours to midday, families starved – particularly those whose livelihoods depended on daily use of PMS- and the queues got longer like photographs of civil death in our homegrown dystopia.

    It became clearer at some level that Nigeria was gradually hitting rock bottom, many of us groaned that we were damned—just as some of us know that our citizenship culture founded on a national enterprise that survives on  corporate greed, limitless exploitation and the continued extraction of crude oil is doomed.

    The most frightening facets of the horror story unfolded in our filling stations and spilled over to our streets and neighbourhood mini-marts, utility service providers and  grocery stores. As fuel station managers hoarded fuel and closed shop in desperate bid to make a killing by selling it at outrageous prices to helpless motorists and folk whose survival depended on it, the neighbour next door on whom several families and businesses depended for supply of certain crucial products like cooking gas, kerosene, engine oil and so on, joyously inflated prices of the essential products, to the chagrin and discomfort of patrons in need.

    Consider for instance, the case of a notable pastor and gas dealer in Agege; the family promptly closed shop and hoarded gas for two days even as neighbours and friends thronged their doorstep pleading with them to resume business and sell gas to them. Of course, they did after effecting a hike in price of the product. The ‘godly’ family dispassionately sold gas to friends and neighbours at N6, 000 per gas bottle. That was an astonishing hike from the product’s initial N3, 000 price before the fuel scarcity.

    Friends and neighbours of the family grumbled under their breath as they paid for the product; those that couldn’t recoiled to seek kerosene, accusing the pastor and his family for their ‘lack of sensitivity,’ ‘amorality’ and fraudulent claims to godliness. Of course, pastor and wife responded in kind, claiming that they were duty bound to separate business from holiness. “Na holiness we go chop?” said the pastor. The latter, a Lagos State civil servant erstwhile paraded himself as a noble businessman and compassionate ‘man of God.’

    There is little difference between the family’s bestiality and the savagery of the ruling class and fuel station managers who accentuated the scarcity by hoarding fuel in order to sell it at N500 a litre. While their variously savage peers may advance arguments to support their monstrosity citing certain dreadful norms of commerce and industry, it need be told and understood that it is desperate, savage acts like theirs that ruins nations and enable the perpetual dominance of the haves over the have-nots.

    A similar malady manifests even as you read as fuel station managers persistently hoard fuel to sell at higher pump prices despite President Buhari’s directive that PMS pump price remain at N87 per litre.

    What is happening in Nigeria is a precursor to a dreadful war between the country’s elites and the impoverished, a war caused by diminishing resources, chronic unemployment and underemployment, overpopulation, declining crop yields caused by climate change, and rising food prices; capital and operating costs belie hope and prosperity for industry. The unfolding doom has nuances, put precisely, it has a thousand meanings.

    A recent Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report generated ripples over its summations on Nigeria. No thanks to the Economist magazine’s sister publication, the Nigerian newborn may arrive knowing he has come where the sun dies everlastingly for the bliss of the fig. The EIU report ranks Nigeria 80th out of 80 countries assessed in its ‘Where-to-be-born’ index.

    The 2014 Human Development Index (HDI) report ranked Nigeria amongst countries with low development index at 153 out of 186 countries that were ranked. Life expectancy in the country is placed at 52 years old while other health indicators reveal that only 1.9 per cent of the nation’s budget is expended on health; 68.0 per cent of Nigerians are stated to be living below $1.25 daily while adult illiteracy rate for adult (both sexes) is 61.3 per cent.

    ”As the population is growing, the resources that we all depend on, the food, energy, water, is declining. The demand for these resources will rise exponentially by the year 2030, with the world needing about 50 per cent more food, 45 per cent more energy and 30 per cent more water,” noted Dr. Aisha Mahmood of the Central Bank of Nigeria.

    She said: “In Nigeria, there is the issue of youth and employment; 70 per cent of the 80 million youths in Nigeria are either unemployed or underemployed. We are all witness to what happened recently during the immigration recruitment exercise and this is simply because 80 per cent of the Nigerian youth are unemployed.”

    This will inevitably lead to a class war as the deprivation of the working class will eventually morph into violence. In the background, a severe and scarier grotesqueness emerges; it is the acquiescence of presumably humane folk to the bemusement of prosperity. This blunts the sense, inflates the ego and inspires disdain for the less privileged. It is the affliction of the ruling class, fuel station managers and the gas-dealing pastor and his family.

  • Can President Buhari be for everybody, really?

    I am for everybody; I am not for anybody, so rang out what became the defining words of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari at his inauguration as Nigeria’s president on May 29. It was a quotable quote, an emotive sound bite that stood out in the inaugural address and got everybody’s attention. It apparently sought to sell a populist myth of a president beholden to no one. However, there is also the interpretation that it is a targeted statement aimed at a political financier and aspirant godfather. An extension of the President’s I am for all and for no one is the populism of non interference with the two other arms of government – legislature and the judiciary – as demonstrated by his laissez faire attitude to the National Assembly leadership crisis that saw Senator Bukola Saraki and Honourable Yakubu Dogara romping to Senate Presidency and House Speaker-ship respectively against the position of their party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). But separation of powers is in theory, just a myth of democracy as the President must assent to legislative bills to become law while he also appoints judicial officers, including judges of the Supreme Court. Where, then, is the separation, in practical terms? However, it would seem that President Buhari is striving to live down his image of the draconian military strongman of yesterday and swinging to the other extreme of being the idealist democrat, the evangelist of separation of powers in a democratic polity.

    But, really, can President Buhari, a presumed reformist president and change agent, be for all and sundry?  Can the all include those beneficiaries of the rotten past, the avowed opponents of change scheming to truncate it? Can President Buhari, in a real world situation, play the utopian democrat when needed legislation would have to drive change and yet hope to succeed with the Change Agenda?  And the change mantra – what is the operational definition of CHANGE by the APC, the party that runs the federal government?  What are the articulated strategies to achieve that defined change? Posers.

    Seven months into his tenure, President Buhari and the APC are manifesting a failure of intellectual and philosophical rationalization of the change they sold to the Nigerian electorate. It would seem that there was no intellectual vanguard to articulate the specifics of the desired change and a reasoned pathway to achieving same. The outcome is that both the Presidency and the APC are getting hobbled by the enormity of the problems they inherited and groping, apparently without anticipated and coordinated plan to tackle such emerging challenges. Taking advantage of the situation, various pressure groups, including violent criminal gangs, cult groups, religious extremists as well as militant ethnic irredentists are having a field, having taken a measure of the federal government’s resolve at maintaining public order and concluded it is tepid. It is a perception, but is reality to its holders. So, before the CHANGE mantra becomes a joke, the Presidency must articulate the CHANGE VISION and offer a roadmap to that destination. As public governance, what people see today is more of the same – No substantive change, so far. Even the President’s flagship crusade, the war against corruption, is being prosecuted  by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)  in its usual format of old as a titillating drama of extra-judicial disclosures about mind boggling multi-billion naira bazaar of graft with journalists providing support as drummer boys!!  The EFCC seem to relish its posturing in the court of public opinion better than the court of law.

    Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, captured the essence of President Buhari’s challenge and what could be articulated as his vision for Nigeria with his piece on a New Sheriff in Town. The sheriff was a folksy American frontier hero, the tough guy, who rode into lawless frontier towns in America’s Wild, Wild West, guns blazing, to restore order in a showdown with outlaws.  So, President Buhari’s main challenge is to restore public order in what is turning out a lawless, violent, anything goes Nigeria. It is a modern version of an uncompromising Showdown with Outlaws. A sole focus on anti-corruption campaign, with emphasis on theft of public funds, may therefore be misplaced because corruption is simply a symptom of a much, deep-rooted general decadence and collapse of values in the society that demands more than the mechanistic anti-corruption police method. The architecture on which corruption is built – the family, church, institutions of learning, civil society – need to be comprehensively re-oriented and revalued and its deviants sanctioned, without let up. The civil service and the Nigeria Police are two key institutions of state one had expected would be given a drastic shake up, early in the administration, under the CHANGE DOCTRINE, given their collaboration and connivance in the rotten state of affairs the Presidency is seeking to redress.  But what fundamental change can we expect in these institutions when even the President seem to give kudos to civil servants while deriding ministerial positions and where a Mike Okiro remains as chairman of Police Service Commission, Okiro under whose tenure as Inspector General of Police, a principal suspect in the killing of the Apo Six, in Abuja, escaped right at Police Headquarters in Abuja! It took the intervention of then President Olusegun Obasanjo for the killing of the Igbo traders to be investigated because, as is usual with Police cover up, the victims had been labelled armed robbery suspects! The case is still unresolved. That is the state of Nigeria today and why President Buhari cannot belong to all, but to only those ready to join the Save Nigeria Brigade.

    So, as we enter the year 2016, we expectantly wait for the SHERIFF to ride into town, blazing.

     

    • Dr. Olawunmi, a Senior Lecturer, Department of Mass Communication, Bowen University, Iwo, is former Washington Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria.
  • No group will hold Nigeria to ransom – Buhari

    No group will hold Nigeria to ransom – Buhari

    In apparent warning to the Biafra agitators and other groups, President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday declared that no group in the country will be allowed to hold the country to ransom.

    The President said this in his 2015 Christmas Message to Nigerians.

    He urged Nigerians not to allow the current socio-economic and security challenges facing the country to dampen expectations for a better Nigeria.

    He said: “We must never again allow any group to hold the nation to ransom under whatever guise.

    “I felicitate with all Nigerians, especially our Christian brothers and sisters, on the joyous occasion of this year’s Christmas. On this occasion of the commemoration of the birth of Jesus Christ, let us all rededicate ourselves to the virtues of peace, love, honesty, justice, equity, piety, humility and service to others which he taught.”

    A greater manifestation of these virtues and ideals in the lives of Nigerians, he said, will immensely help Nigeria to become a more united, peaceful, secure and progressive nation.

    The President also urged Nigerians to reach out in love and compassion to fellow Nigerians who are presently in distress.

    He added: “I particularly urge you all to remember victims of terrorism and insurgency in the country, especially the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

    “The Federal Government will continue to collaborate with state governments and other stakeholders to ease the harsh conditions in IDP camps, while the ultimate objective remains to quickly put an end to insurgency and return the IDPs to their homes.

    “This administration has taken a number of measures to restore hope to our people. The 2016 Budget defines our commitment to giving Nigeria a new lease of life. Our change slogan is not a campaign gimmick but a promise that must be kept. We are determined to bring about tangible changes in the lives of our people.

    “In this regard, efforts will be intensified to recover stolen funds, block revenue leakages and enthrone due process, transparency and accountability.”

    He reiterated that public office is a public trust that must be held to the highest ethical standards.

  • Boko Haram technically defeated – Buhari

    Boko Haram technically defeated – Buhari

    Nigeria has “technically won the war” against the Boko Haram militants, President Muhammadu Buhari has said.

    Buhari told the BBC that the militant group could no longer mount “conventional attacks” against security forces or population centres.

    It had been reduced to fighting with Improvised Explosives Devices (IEDs) and remained a force only in its heartland of Borno State, he said.

    Boko Haram has been described as one of the world’s deadliest terror groups.

    The group’s six-year insurgency in Nigeria’s northeast has led to the deaths of some 17,000 people, destroyed more than 1,000 schools and displaced more than 1.5 million people.

    President Buhari has given the army until the end of this year to defeat the group – a deadline that is likely to be extended as Boko Haram is still bombing some areas despite losing towns under its control.

    Critics of the government argued that it has exaggerated the scale of its success against the militants, and that each time the army claims to have wiped out Boko Haram, the militants have quietly rebuilt.

    But President Buhari told the BBC that the jihadists had been forced to cut back on suicide bombings as a result of the military action against them.

    “Boko Haram has reverted to using improvised explosive devices (IEDs),” he said. “Indoctrinating young guys, they have now been reduced to that.

    “But articulated conventional attacks on centres of communication and populations, they are no longer capable of doing that effectively.

    “So I think technically we have won because people are going back into their neighbourhoods,” the President added.

  • Buhari greets Muslims at Eid-el-Maulud

    Buhari greets Muslims at Eid-el-Maulud

    President Muhammadu Buhari has felicitated with Muslims as they celebrate the birthday of Prophet Muhammad.

    This came as Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode as well as his counterparts in Kwara State, Dr. Abdulfatah Ahmed and Oyo State, Abiola Ajimobi, yesterday called on the citizenry to offer prayers for the country’s peace, unity and progress at Eid-el-Maulud and Christmas.

    The governors advised Nigerians to be their brother’  keeper as they celebrate the birthdays of Prophet Muhammad and Jesus Christ.

    The President, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, called on Muslims to use the opportunity of Prophet Muhammed’s birthday to reflect on his teachings and life of piety, prayer and service to God and humanity.

    Buhari urged adherents of the Islamic faith to rededicate themselves to upholding the injunctions of the Holy Quran in their personal life and in their relationship with others.

     He wished the citizenry happy Eid-el-Maulud celebrations.

    Ambode, in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Habib Aruna, enjoined Muslims to follow the exemplary leadership of the Holy Prophet by promoting peaceful co-existence among the society’s segments.

    Imploring Nigerians to shun ethnic, political and religious differences and work towards building a safer and better Nigeria, the governor said the celebration of the birth of Prophet Muhammad should renew the faith and bond of unity among Nigerians as one people and one nation.

    Ambode urged Muslims to internalise the virtues of honesty, selflessness, charity, tolerance, good neighbourliness, justice, equity and fairness, which Prophet Muhammad preached, saying such would engender national development.

    But Ahmed advised Nigerians to be their brother’s keeper as they celebrate the birthdays of Prophet Muhammad and Jesus Christ even as we march towards a new Nigeria of religious stability and economic prosperity.

    In his Eid-el-Maulud and Christmas messages by his Chief Press Secretary, Alhaji Abdulwahab Oba, the Kwara State governor said Nigeria should walk the part of humility, moderate disposition, self-denial and brotherliness, which he described as hallmarks of both religions.

    Ahmed, who also advised that the period should be used as a time to show love and affection, especially to the needy, said the citizens should be prepared to make sacrifices in the nation’s trying times.

    He hailed Christian and Muslim leaders in the state for promoting religious harmony and encouraged them not to relent in their efforts to build a better society.

    The governor assured the people that his administration remained committed to the well-being of all.

    To Ajimobi, this year’s celebrations of the birth of the “holy ones, which follow in quick succession, was a rare coincidence and a momentous occasion that should be accordingly savoured by adherents of Islam and Christianity”.

     He urged Christians and Muslims to use the occasion to rededicate themselves to the worship of the Almighty and to emulate the sterling lifestyle of both the son and messenger of God.

    The governor advised the people to remember the less-privileged in orphanages, homes, hospitals and prisons during the season by extending love to them through visits, gifts and money.

    He urged the state’s residents to embrace modesty in celebration and to be security-conscious during the season, which, he said, always witnessed upsurge in criminal activities.

    Ajimobi hailed the fighting spirit of the citizens and workers in the face of biting economic realities, assuring the people that the state government was working hard to turn around the state’s fortunes.

    The governor admonished the citizens, especially the youth, to shun fireworks and explosives, as well as careless handling of combustible materials.

    Ajimobi urged Christian and Islamic religion faithful to pray for the nation’s sustained peace, progress and economic revival.

    Assuring citizens of adequate protection, the governor said the “full weight of the law would be brought down on troublemakers and outlaws that might attempt to test the resolve of the police and other law enforcement agents during the Yuletide”.

  • Buhari directs immediate payment of December salaries

    Buhari directs immediate payment of December salaries

    President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered the immediate payment of December salaries to Federal Government workers.

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun, who spoke yesterday in Abuja at the end of the monthly Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) meeting, said salaries were already being paid in response to the Presidential directive.

    She said salaries were being paid, and that people have already started getting alerts. “We are very conscious of the need that people are paid in time for the festive season,” she stated.

    Mrs. Adeosun said the balance in the Excess Crude Account (ECA), was $2.258 billion as at December 22, adding that the amount remained unchanged from what it was in November. She said $150 million dividend from the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) was also shared at the meeting.

    While giving the breakdown of what was shared for  November among the three tiers of government, Mrs Adeosun lamented that there was revenue decline of N103.95 billion, indicating the difference of the N473.83billion for October and the N369.88 billion shared in November.

    Yesterday, the three tiers shared a statutory revenue of N297.45 billion, Value Added Tax (VAT)-N61.18 billion, exchange gain-N4.92 billion and refund made by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) for debt owed the Federation Account-N6.33 billion.

    From the statutory revenue of N297.45billion, the Federal Government after deducting the cost of collection to the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) and the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) received  N139.5 billion; states N70.76 billion; and local government areas- N54.55 billion.

    Also, N25.6 billion was allocated to the oil producing states as the 13 per cent derivation fund. For VAT revenue of N61.18 billion, the Federal Government, after deducting cost of collection of  FIRS got  N8.8 billion, while states pocketed N29.36 billion and local governments got N20.55 billion.

    The finance minister attributed the decline in allocation to reduction in revenue which was caused by shutdown and shut-in of production at various terminals during the period.

    She however painted an optimistic picture when she said: “Even though the revenues were currently down, non oil revenue is beginning to make up for the shortfall in oil revenue. Ongoing maintenance and the shutdown and shut-in of production for repairs at different terminals during the month continued to impact crude oil and gas revenue negatively.

    “We don’t have to rely on oil with its price going down and very unstable. We are focusing on revenue from non-oil and you can see impressive N369.882 billion compliance with tax.”

    Apart from repairs and maintenance, members of the FAAC were told that there was also a revenue loss of $19.43 million as a result of reduction in export even though the average price of crude oil increased from $46.96 in September to $49.58 in October while non oil revenue also decreased by N114.2billion in November in comparison to the previous month of October.