Tag: BUHARI

  • Buhari, a benevolent dictator?

    SIR: In its classical form, a benevolent dictator is a leader, usually of a political entity, who is autocratic/dictatorial in his leadership style but ensures that the developmental needs of the populace are met. Popular examples include Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia, Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew, Muammar Ghadaffi of Libya. Interestingly, irrespective of their leadership styles, these individuals are celebrated widely and have assumed the status of demi-gods. Singapore today represents a lighthouse for countries hitherto referred to as third-world countries in the development discourse. Late Lee Kuan Yew played an indispensable part in Singapore’s success story. Lee Kwan Yew recognized that an imposed conception of democracy and its tenets promoted by Western countries could not guarantee the development of Singapore.  Hate him or like him, Ghadaffi steered Libya to the apogee of being the pride of the continent in terms of development. Healthcare, education, electricity, among other social services was free under Ghadaffi. Numerous tales abound of Nigerians migrating to Libya for better living conditions. Irrespective of the autocratic/dictatorial toga, strong leadership is an indispensable component of the character of any benevolent dictator.

    Coming to Nigeria, a country stuttering in its democratic voyage, strong leadership is needed to right the many wrongs of the past administrations. The present leadership led by President Muhammadu Buhari and Prof. Yemi Osinbajo offers a ray of hope in this regard. This combination without doubt is one of the very best we have had till date to govern our affairs as a nation. Their fascinating background will come to bare as they navigate the affairs of the country for the next four years.

    Their actions thus far are a pointer that governance at the federal level is no longer business as usual. In the early days of the administration, the President rejected the proposal for the purchase of new vehicles for the presidential fleet. This is quite significant in a country where materialism has assumed the order of the day. Another pointer to the strong leadership exuded by President Buhari and Prof. Osinbajo is their offer of 50% pay cut. This considerate action in the light of the country’s ailing finances is remarkable.

    The required strong leadership is further exemplified in the improved power situation in the country traced to safer gas pipelines with reduced incidences of pipeline vandalism as well as the availability of petroleum product and its sale at the regulatory retail price.  The NNPC which was gradually becoming a ‘parallel government’ now has a clear sense of direction. It is no longer business as usual at the institution which hitherto had been a cash cow for Nigerian leaders.

    One conspicuous area we have seen strong leadership is the war against corruption. Corruption according to the World Bank (1997) is “the abuse of public office for private gain”. The indecisiveness of the last administration’s fight against this endemic social malaise was brought to the fore in one of the presidential media chats where the former President noted that corruption in Nigeria is glorified as most of the instances of corruption are mere ‘stealing’. Today however, anti-corruption agencies are up and running pursuing their mandate; civil societies are not left behind in revealing the identities of those who have milked our commonwealth dry over the years.

     

    • Ishola Ebenezer,

    Lagos. 

     

  • Our Girls; Buhari: Beware of NAPTIN & ‘Energy mis-advisers’, Go Solar; SenateGate On/Off?

    Our Girls are still missing and our IDPs face conditions unsuitable for ‘Fellow Nigerians’ in the camps. Nigeria must not fail its IDPs who need financial empowerment for self-employment, improved self-worth even in the IDP camps and not handouts from uniformed NEMA strangers from around Nigeria.

    WARNING: The frightening headline on page 15 Sept 3rd in The Nation screams ‘Why Nigeria cannot use renewable energy’ in which the writer Akinola Ajibade reported the views of the Director General, National Power Training Institute of Nigeria [NAPTIN]  and the Managing Director of Ikeja Electric. The DG said that ‘Nigeria is not ripe for renewable energy’, urging ‘government and other investors to concentrate on hydro and gas powered plants for growth. It is impossible to grow the economy with renewable energy’ arguing that ‘conventional sources of energy are the best and widely acceptable means of generating electricity globally’. His colleagues in mega-misinformation, the MD said ‘solar, biomass and coal provide insignificant quantum of electricity megawatts, and as such, cannot meet the needs of the masses’. To add salt to our wounds on the same page – better called the ‘Energyless Page’, the Group MD of Aiteo Power said ‘Power will stabilise by the end of 2018’ and again ‘let us give power companies 60 months, five years, to execute their business turnaround plans.

    These are ‘protectionist not progressive’ energy views. I find these views dangerous ’backward’ thinking and irresponsibly  out of step with ‘Buhari Change’ and shameful coming from a supposedly forward thinking training institution leader and ‘key actors and planners in the energy field’ at the time of world is talking and acting ‘renewable energy’.

    I was comforted to read a contrary view in The Africa Report N0 73 Aug-Sept 2015 sent to Educare Trust by Dr Pat Alabi. In it on page 60, Nicholas Norbrook writes under the title ‘Business: The Third Revolution’ that ‘Solar power is lighting up more off-grid villages as the price of a solar watt continues to plunge’ and ‘Renewable energy, the sharing economy and transportation innovation are reshaping economies across the world. Will Africa be able to leapfrog in its development to build revolutionary electricity, manufacturing and transportation networks?’ He quotes Jeremy Rifkin the author of ‘The Third Industrial Revolution’ and ‘The Zero Growth Marginal Cost Society’-essential reading for the Buhari government and universities and NAPTIN. Rifkin quoted Kofi Annam saying that ‘it could take to 2080 for Africa to be adequately powered.’ Rifkin sees the African opportunity ‘as with mobile telephones, to leapfrog legacy infrastructure in the power sector…and [get] a decentralised network of small-scale renewable energy generation.’

    In reality, there is an increasing percentage of power from renewable energy including solar even in countries with poor sunlight. In Germany renewable energy is 28% of supply. President Obama is in Alaska campaigning for renewable energy.  Can Buhari and Nigeria afford to be left out of this energy revolution? Why should President Buhari be advised any differently by NAPTIN? Nigeria needs power now, not in five years. It can harness the sun and also use emergency power supplies just as the Japanese replaced the 10,000MW nuclear plant within three months from emergency power companies. That 10,000Mw is a dream for Nigeria along the way to the 100,000Mw required, but it is a fraction of Japan’s usage. Power today is a human right from village to Villa and will change every Nigerian.

    A $2-5billion CBN SOLAR ENERGY FUND single digit loan spread over 2-3 year using the latest 2015 solar technology, high efficiency/low cost/long-lasting will immediately Solar-Revolutionise Nigeria in power and also power millions off-grid. God gave Nigeria oil. We abused it and the money from it. God also gave us the Sun. We cannot afford to abuse or we may lose it. PMB should ‘change’ the power sector, initiate a POWER EMERGENCY, CHANGE and implement serious SOLAR FRIENDLY POLICIES before God take the sun away and gives it a country which wants it. The internet has 20 reliable emergency power supply companies. Several large power generating ships berthed at ports and up the River Niger would IMMEDIATELY next month provide the 10,000 Mw needed in a short 6-12 month contract while the GENCOs/DISCOs catch up.

    The suit against the Senate leadership on ‘Forgery of Senate Standing Rules’ has not been dropped or has it? Strangely, those who were said to have dropped this ‘ball of political fire’ have been ‘praised’ by the ‘opposition’ for their ‘political maturity and sagacity’. Observers, myself included, had looked forward to the results of the police investigation as a test of the ‘new Police’ to be publicly corroborated in court. The court case verdict would have been a landmark against political corruption. It would have cleared up this murky ‘who-done-it Senategate’ case on which result the locus standi of [self-]serving officers of the Senate depend, some prancing around the UN Buildings and pontificating of migration and terrorism issues. Indeed the integrity and potential of the political process of ‘change’ depended on this court case, so let it go on.

    It can never be ‘political maturity and sagacity’ to accept a ‘wrong’ as a ‘right’. It is a sell-out. Indeed we have suffered from the compromised positions forced on the citizenry by a selfish political class, one bad decision at a time these last 50 years. We want and voted for ‘change’. True ‘Change’ does not accommodate court compromise or short-sighted selfish, backward thinking advisers.

    ‘There is an increasing percentage of power from renewable energy including solar even in countries with poor sunlight. In Germany renewable energy is 28% of supply. President Obama is in Alaska campaigning for renewable energy.  Can Buhari and Nigeria afford to be left out of this energy revolution?’

     

  • My fears for Buhari (1)

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s 100 days in office is a paradox of mixed feelings. While many people believe his administration is on the right path towards moving the country to greatness, others believe the first 100 days of the president has not brought much hope for a greater future for the country. Whereas everybody is entitled to his or her opinion, we must be careful not to jump into any hasty conclusion on the president’s avowed determination to right the wrongs of the past and put the nation on a new political and economic pedestal that will enable it to compete favourably among the comity of nations.

    Nigeria has come a long way in terms of decadence and retrogression such that the nation has not only become a laughing stock all over the place, it is also a country that was almost being avoided globally when it comes to discussing serious political or economic matters. That was the dire straits the nation was until May 29, when Buhari stepped into the nation’s number one spot as President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. Since then, a ray of hope seems to have appeared on the horizon as the country is now being refocused by its new leader.

    But if anyone is projecting that President Muhammadu Buhari will encounter strident opposition from only the ousted Peoples Democratic Party, then such pundit is not taking into consideration the lurking baggage of intractable bumps and roadblocks that will either assail him or stunt or truncate some measures of successes he may reap from his present presidential engagement. The almagamation of the legacy parties – the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, the Congress for Political Change, CPC, the All Nigerian Peoples’ Party, ANPP and fragments of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, PDP and All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA, resulted into the new party now on the block, the All Progressive Congress, APC. Those who projected that, that political tsunami will be seamless may have been caught napping by the series of intra-party crises which had exposed the soft underbelly of the ruling party. The fact that this interplay of forces have come soon after accessing governance on May 29, signposts the parlous nature of the political contraption that was hurriedly assembled by a phalanx of politicians with disparate ideological bents.

    Once the main objective of snatching the presidential diadem and by extension, the reins of power was achieved, the sharing of other positions and booties of “war”, turned contentious when certain political camps went Oliver Twist in an arrangement that lacked a sharing formula in the first place. This was responsible for the power-play that dominated the affairs of the National Assembly right from the inception of the 8th Assembly in June and almost polarised it along primordial lines. The division set tongues wagging over whether the APC, the ruling political party, was actually ready for governance. Until concessions were made here and there, it took quite a long time of political blitzkrieg, before finally the current peace of the graveyard now prevailing in the two chambers of the National Assembly was achieved.

    Now, except for the resilience of Buhari, the nation’s number one man, in steering the affairs of the country through the assistance and cooperation of his able deputy, Akin Osinbajo, a professor of law, also a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and a former Attorney General of Lagos State, the story would have been different in the first 100 days of this administration. Unfortunately, it is not yet a smooth sail for the president. It is glaring that Buhari’s present travails are, invariably, caused by some elements in his own party, who have agenda that counter-balance that of the mother party, the APC. From the various insider crises that have ruled the activities of the APC since May 29, it appears that the party has not been able to manage its monumental and unexpected successes at the general elections where it uprooted the 16-year–old PDP octopus political machine.

    Many factors are combining to present a hazy picture of a political group that have been ripped apart by crass internal desperation for its control and usage for some selfish personal or group interests. For a president who has governed for more than three months without the constitutionally- required accompaniment of a cabinet of ministers as political heads of the various federal ministries, all cannot be said to be well. The fact is that there is an emerging and growing cadre of APC party men and women, high and low, who are neither happy nor comfortable with the reward system in the party. They might not be too relaxed with the formula being adopted by Buhari, which is solely-based on a person’s Corruption Index that is of prime importance to the President before any consideration is taken for any political appointment. No cognizance is taken of whether such a person or persons worked for the success of the party at the elections or not. It is believed, within the APC’s various strata, that this stringent “angelic” requirement has thrown spanners into the loyalty base of the ruling party.

    In actual fact, more than anything else, this singular factor of searching for “angels” to occupy government positions may have shaken the APC to its foundation as the foot-soldiers now believe that “The Baboon Worked and the Monkey is Now Eating”. There is no doubt that without the current holistic approach to wiping out the hydra-headed monster called corruption from all facets of our body politic, it is impossible for the country to achieve meaningful progress and development. And by extension, there is no way the change mantra of the APC can be realised without tackling the behemoth that corruption has become in our society. The only problem now is, considering the fact that the APC is a patchwork of very strange political bedfellows and groups with disparate Ideologies and socio-economic back drops, it is imperative that one will expect a cacophony of diverse and tightly-held opinions, actions and reactions, that have consistently exposed the Coat of Many Colours contrivance that the APC is, truly, is.

    That it has survived, till this moment, from blows to its solar plexus by external traducers and internal power and lucre seekers, is due to the avuncular nature of the President. The point is whether he will continue to do damage control and fire-fighting that has continued to distract him from his constitutionally-assigned schedule of duties. Rightly or wrongly, the generality of Nigerians are beginning to (mis)interpret the current blame game disposition of the new ruling party and its arrow-head, President Buhari, as possibly, an admission of APC’s inability to find urgent or long-term workable solutions to the problems and challenges inherited from the Jonathan administration and the PDP. Like I said earlier, without clearing the Augean-stable, it may be impossible to move the nation forward in a deserved direction where all citizens irrespective of tribe, race or class, will have a sense of belonging and equal opportunities to aspire to whatever level they may desire. That, I think, is the vision of the APC.

    ‘The emergence and the meteoric rise to power and reckoning of the APC, is, in the first place, necessitated by the people’s belief that the party’s mantra of “Change” will, like an “Open Sesame” change everything for the better’

    The emergence and the meteoric rise to power and reckoning of the APC, is, in the first place, necessitated by the people’s belief that the party’s mantra of “Change” will, like an “Open Sesame” change everything for the better. This was further reinforced by the general over-expectation and “reality” of Buhari’s “messianic” involvement. Nigerians are a people in a great hurry and because of this, the people may be tempted to see the current government as symptomatic of unpreparedness and lacking initiative with the constant staple of laying of all manners of blames on the past PDP administration.

     

    • To be continued
  • 100 days: Buhari is on track, says Osun lawmaker

    A MEMBER of the Osun State House of Assembly Olatunbosun Oyintiloye has described the activities of President Muhammadu Buhari government within his 100 days in office as a demonstration of his sincerity to return Nigeria to the path of progress.

    Oyintiloye, representing Obokun State Constituency, said the activities of the President have so far shown that he is not only meticulous and mature but full of insight.

    He said President Buhari intellectual and managerial wherewithal to take Nigeria to the Promised Land.

    Speaking at political meeting in Ibokun, the lawmaker said the input that has been made in the fight against insecurity, corruption, as well as economic developments were visible.

    According to the lawmaker, the President’s mien and steps have shown that insecurity can be subdued, corruption tamed, bad economy addressed and hope restored.

    He said: “The machinery that President Buhari has been able to set in motion to fight security challenges deserves applause of Nigerians. The area of note is the order for the relocation of Military Command Center to the Northeast, which is the theatre of the insurgency.

     

    “The goodwill established by the President in the diplomatic arena and willingness of the international community including the United States (U.S.) to cooperate with Nigeria in the area of economy, insecurity and corruption indicated the giant strides of the President Buhari-led administration.”

    Oyintiloye pointed out the template and tempo set by President Buhari in fighting corruption as another testimony that he has been on the right track, saying his body language alone has triggered a paradigm shift in the public service.

    The lawmaker said: “He has been able to harnessed resources through the single account remittance, which to a large extent had improved the revenue of the federal government and a proactive measure in curbing corruption.

    “Due to series of strategic intervention, more funds are coming to the federal government treasury and by extension deepening and developing the economy. For instance, the nation’s foreign reserve rose by 1.12 per cent in August from $31.08 billion to $31.43 billion which is a positive sign for the economy.”

    He said the repositioning of the refinery ?and the hiring of 10,000 more hands to strengthen the police cannot but steps taken in the right direction.

    “Nigerians can clearly see that the country is already moving in the right direction, it is now getting the deserved respect from the international community, our country is no longer a pariah state and it is crystal clear that the President is sincere, believable and focused”, he said.

    On the bailout for cash-strapped states, Oyintiloye said the presidential intervention will stimulate economic activities in the benefitting states.

    He dismissed those accusing the President of not recording any success within his first 100 days as being   economical with truth.

    “President Buhari is too mature and experienced to be stampeded to take rash and irrational decisions or continue in the old track of waste and inefficiency”, Oyintiloye said.

     

  • Buhari demands list of ex-govt officials with diplomatic passport

    Buhari demands list of ex-govt officials with diplomatic passport

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday called for the record of former government officials and other persons still using diplomatic and official passports illegally.

    He called for the record during briefing by the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Bulus Lolo, at the State House, Abuja.

    Buhari, according to a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said that his administration will take necessary action against such officials illegally carrying the passports.

    He said: “Something has to be done so that we can get back our respectability as a country. Some people carry official passports and get involved in all sorts of negative acts. We need to do something about it.”

    He also said that his administration will undertake a review of Nigerian foreign missions to determine those that are really essential.

    A Presidential Committee, he said, will soon be established to carry out the review.

    The President said the review will determine the number of essential missions Nigeria needs to maintain abroad so that appropriate standards and quality can be maintained.

    According to him, there was no point in Nigeria operating missions all over the world “with dilapidated facilities and demoralized staff” when the need for some of the missions was questionable.

    “Let’s keep only what we can manage. We can’t afford much for now. There’s no point pretending,” President Buhari stated.

  • FG to review number of Nigerian foreign missions

    FG to review number of Nigerian foreign missions

    President Muhammadu Buhari said on Tuesday that his administration would undertake a review of Nigerian foreign missions to determine those that were really essential.

    Buhari said this Abuja after being briefed by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Bulus Lolo.

    He said that a Presidential Committee would soon be constituted to carry out the review.

    According to the president, the review will determine the number of missions Nigeria needs to maintain abroad so that appropriate standards and quality can be maintained.

    The President said that there was no point in Nigeria operating missions all over the world “with dilapidated facilities and demoralised staff’’ when the need for some of the missions was questionable.

    “Let’s keep only what we can manage. We can’t afford much for now. There’s no point in pretending.’’

    The president also called for the record of former government officials and other persons still using diplomatic and official passports illegally, saying that his administration would take necessary action against them.

    “Something has to be done so that we can get back our respectability as a country.

    “Some people carry official passports and get involved in all sorts of negative acts. We need to do something about it,’’ the president said.

    Lolo had informed the president that the challenges facing the ministry included the absence of a Foreign Service Commission, poor funding of foreign missions, policy inconsistencies and training deficiencies, among others.

  • Buhari, Obasanjo meet at Aso Rock

    Buhari, Obasanjo meet at Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari and former President Olusegun Obasanjo met at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Tuesday.

    The two leaders met behind closed-doors for about one hour at the President’s office.

    Details of the meeting were unknown at the time of filing this report.

    Obasanjo declined to speak to journalists when Buhari accompaigned him to his vehicle at 4:17pm.

    He simply told journalists that approached him: “comot joo.”

    But Buhari had on August 21 named Obasanjo as his Special Envoy to mediate and help find a solution to the crisis brewing in Guinea Bissau.

  • Buhari orders review of foreign missions

    Buhari orders review of foreign missions

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday directed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to review the size and number of Nigeria’s foreign missions abroad.

    The Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Amb. Paul Bulus Lolo, spoke with State House correspondents after making presentation to President Buhari on the ministry’s activities.

    According to him, Nigeria needs to review the number of its present 119 missions abroad based on Nigeria’s capacity, especially as the economy is looking down.

    To this end, he said a committee will be set up to look at the whole issue of Nigeria’s representations abroad.

    He said: “We also talked about the state of our embassies abroad. All of these in the context of what Nigeria aspires to be at home, in the sub-region, in the continent and across the globe.

    “Mr. President asked the ministry to be realistic in terms of our representation abroad. We have 119 missions. He asked the questions whether we need to have that number or we rationalized based on our capacity. Right now, the economy is looking down. We are trying to revive and revamp. It is a matter of time.

    “The specific directive that he has given is that a committee be formed to look at the whole issue of our representation abroad, the size and the number of missions on whether or not the number should remain the same or we do something about those numbers.”

    On the time frame, he added: “that will be done as soon as possible. No specific time frame, but he said the sooner, the better. Action needs to be taken.”

     

     

  • Buhari: I’ll name my ministers this month

    Buhari: I’ll name my ministers this month

    President Muhammadu Buhari  yesterday  in Aburi, Ghana reassured Nigerians and the international community that he will name his cabinet before the end this month.

    Buhari spoke at a joint news conference with Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama.

    The President said: “After I was sworn in,  I said I will have my cabinet in September. I expect that Nigerians should ask me questions after the 30th of September if I do not do so.”

    He also told reporters that the military, in close collaboration with the Multi-National Joint Task Force, has recorded remarkable progress in the fight against Boko Haram since he assumed office as President.

    He said: “The first thing I did after I came into office was to reorganise the military and clear orders were given to them in terms of retraining, re-equipping and redeployment of troops.

    “In the northeast, the military is gaining ground and Boko Haram has been limited to the Sambisa forest.

    ”Internally Displaced Persons are gradually moving back home and they are being reintegrated into their respective communities,” President Buhari said.

    On the declaration of assets, the President affirmed that it was a constitutional requirement that all public office holders in Nigeria should declare their assets before and after their term in office.

    The President said: “I recall that in 1975 when late Murtala Mohammed became the Head of State, we were lined up – governors, ministers, members of the Supreme Military Council.  Officials of Ministry of Justice were brought and every individual was made to declare his assets.

    “All Heads of States and Government, governors, ministers, permanent secretaries have to declare their assets because it is a constitutional requirement.

    “I have declared my assets four times. When I was governor in 1975, I declared. After being Minister of Petroleum and as a member of Supreme Military Council, I declared. When I was Head of State and now as a President, I have also declared.”

    Speaking earlier, President Mahama said both leaders had fruitful discussions on how to enhance bilateral relations and improve regional security.

    President Mahama said that Nigeria and Ghana will soon begin the process of reviving their joint commission for cooperation.

    The Ghanaian President added that both leaders also agreed to encourage closer cooperation between the intelligence and anti-graft agencies of both countries.

    He thanked President Buhari for his visit and assured him of Ghana’s support in the fight against terrorism.

     

  • Why civil service is declining, by Buhari

    Why civil service is declining, by Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday gave reasons why the Nigeria’s civil service had been declining over the years.

    He blamed it on the inability to clearly articulate a vision and inability of the service to develop the required capacity to implement various components of the vision.

    Buhari spoke at the launching of the Capacity Building Programmes for Public Servants, Structured Mandatory Assessment-based Training Programme (SMAT-P) and Leadership Enhancement And Development Programme (LEAD-P) at the Old Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He said: “Many who mourn the decline of the civil service today from its days as ‘primus inter pares’ in the Commonwealth to one which has earned a reputation for inefficiency, low productivity, corruption and insensitivity to the needs of the public fall into the error of thinking that the problem is a poverty of ideas and capacity on the part of the civil service; whereas, it is the inability to clearly articulate a vision, ensure that the service develops the required capacity to articulate and implement the various components of the vision.

    “Here, we’re launching capacity building initiatives designed to strengthen the leadership at all levels in the service and build a new performance management system. But the fundamental questions are: what is the ethos, the ethical and ideological world view that the service is to deliver? To what purpose do we deploy leadership skills and for what ends? How can we measure performance when the

    objective itself is unclear?

    “Without clear answers to these questions, the service will grope in the dark and take the government and people along with it on a blind-leading-the-blind voyage. So, what sort of country do we envision?

    “We want to build a nation with the citizen as its reason for being and thus its sole focus and responsibility. The citizen regardless of station in life must be respected by the governing authorities and treated with dignity. Flowing from these is the imperative that our society must be governed by the rule of law administered by a trustworthy, fearless, impartial and efficient judiciary”. He added

    Stressing that the nation was standing on the threshold of a great future, Buhari woh was represented by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo noted that the federal civil servants were the foot soldiers in Nigeria’s march to a great destiny.

    He was optimistic that the federal civil service would not fail Nigerians.

    The President, however warned that like an army, the service, can not afford indiscipline, inefficiency or lack of focus as the hopes and aspirations of the society rest on its shoulders.

    The civil service, he said, must see itself as servants and facilitators of commerce and entrepreneurship, designing policies and removing obstacles to doing business in Nigeria.

    He also advised the service to cultivate the habit of scoring itself not in enforcing processes and procedures but as to how efficient and expeditious they have enabled businesses to be.

    He queried: “What are the strategic and financial planning initiatives important in a strong private sector led, free market economy but with a robust social protection system for the poor majority?

    “What are the crucial communications to make to the people in a season requiring sacrifice and perseverance on account of falling revenues or for that matter communicate the position that our anti-corruption, zero tolerance stand, is not merely a moral or ethical stand but a developmental construct that recognizes that corruption if not apprehended will destroy all institutions, the economy and eventually our society?” he added.