Tag: BUHARI

  • NASS caucus defends Buhari’s appointments

    A group of lawmakers in the National Assembly has defended the various appointments so far made by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Coming under the aegis of the Northeast caucus, the lawmakers, made up of senators and members of the House of Representatives, enjoined critics of the appointments to exercise restraint.

    At a press conference held at the National Assembly on Wednesday, the leader of the caucus, Senator Danjuma Goje, said the President still has thousands of appointments to make.

    The lawmakers assured that subsequent appointments would be spread across the six geopolitical zones, to reflect the federal character principle. Of the 31 appointments made by the President so far, 24 were picked from the North, with the south getting seven.

    A text from the press conference jointly signed by Senators Goje and Isa Hamma Misau and read by Goje urged Nigerians to dwell less on sentiments, statism and zoning.

    Such tendencies, he said, tend to divide the people along ethnic, religious and other primordial lines.

    “Fellow Nigerians, it is high time we got it right. It is not about where a man comes from but about what he can deliver, especially in the interest of his people.

    “President Barack Obama started with over 20 of his Harvard classmates and David Cameron of Britain started with most of his schoolmates. This has in no way made the news in those countries because they had their eyes set on the bigger national picture.

    “If Nigeria must move forward, we need to make a choice, either we decide on an ethnic free future and move on to greater heights, or we continue to hold on to ethnic sentiments, statism and zoning and remain backward. We must shun all recessive agents and embrace change in the interest of democracy.”

     

     

     

  • Buhari wades into retirement benefits crisis

    Buhari wades into retirement benefits crisis

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday waded into the problems preventing some retirees from accessing their retirement benefits.

    He directed the Pensions Commission (PENCOM) to urgently look into such complaints.

    The Director General of PENCOM, Dr. Chinelo Anohu-Amazu, disclosed this to State House correspondents after briefing the President on the affairs of the pension Industry.

    She said: “The President has also directed for immediate resolution because you also have to be mindful of the situation we live in, most of them who are not able to access their benefits, had to do with accrued rights. The problems involved those who were federal government workers and had moved to the contributory pension systems midway into their career.

    “So they have accrued right coming from their past service under the defined benefit under the federal government and what you have is because our budget is not as robust as we would wish, we have dwindling resources and every sector of the economy is affected.

    “But the President has also directed that this matter be looked into and prioritized so that those who have retired receive their payment benefits as at when due.”

    According to her, President Buhari also directed PENCOM to work with the National Economic Council (NEC) to ensure that all the states are in full compliance with PENCOM as soon as possible.

     

  • Buhari’s open agenda

    Way back during the last electioneering for the presidential election which President Muhammadu Buhari won clear and square, the major campaign stunt against him was that “once a dictator, always a dictator”. The President’s party, the All Progressives’ Congress (APC), fought tooth and nail with all the ammunition at its disposal to shed this toga. In fact, that was what led to the President’s declaration at Chatham House in London, that he is, indeed, a converted democrat. But barely 90 days in office, the self-acclaimed converted democrat, has left nobody in doubt that the leopard may not be able to change its spots.

    Reason? If his actions and utterances since he came to the saddle of power are anything to go by, then one may be tempted to say that the president has little or no democratic blood flowing in his veins. The problem is even more compounded because it appears that the ruling party, the APC, is just papering over some of the unimaginable actions of the president. Although the president is trying his best to see that things are going on smoothly in the country, so far, it appears the country has been placed in auto-pilot mode. Or what do you call a situation where governance has been reduced to the whims and caprices of just one man and only one man?

    From the earlier appointments of Service Chiefs and other security heads, to the one-sided appointments into key cabinet positions that took place at the tail end of last week, the president has, again and again, demonstrated that he is, indeed, in charge. Remember that the loud whispers that dominated former president Goodluck Jonathan’s era were that the former president was not actually in charge at all. This was simply because many times when he was expected to put his foot down, he was found wanting. That was an era of super-ministers and super-advisers who were busy lining their pockets with our common patrimony, while the president looked away. It was like the famous saying that “Nero looked away, while Rome was burning”.

    Now, Nigeria has a president that is not only in charge, but also ready to bark and bite. But while this is a welcome development, there are some aspects of his moves that may be dangerous to the polity viz-a-viz the peaceful and harmonious co-existence of all the various tribes in the country. Just last Saturday, a National Daily carried on its front page a graphic depiction of the nature and pattern of appointments since President Buhari took over the reins of governance. The graph showed that most of the appointments had, in fact, favoured the northern part of the country, with 24 appointments to a miserable seven in the south. Even at that, the northwest where the president comes from, has the lion share with both the north central and northeast trailing dejectedly behind neck and neck.

    In the southern part of the country, while the south-south geo-political zone seems to have produced more appointees, the southwest is lagging behind with just a sprinkle of appointees, while the southeast appears to have been forgotten totally in the political equation. However, it was the latest appointments of key cabinet members such as the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), the Chief of Staff (COS), the Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Customs Service, and the Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Immigration Service, that were all domiciled in the north, that is currently creating ripples and misgivings in the polity.

    The appointments made so far, have undoubtedly completely placed the North in the driver’s seat of the Nigerian Presidency as regions of the North are dominating the Principal Offices in the Villa, a marked departure from the past when positions were largely shared along geopolitical lines. To make matters worse, reports have it that following a good showing in the series of appointments made so far by the President, the North appears unrelenting in its bid to sweep the major ministerial positions considered as key to the development of the North. They are said to be eyeing such lucrative ministries as those of Defence, Agriculture, Works, Finance, Transport and Petroleum, among others.

    ‘Nobody is against the war on corruption, but the fear is that no area or areas of the country should be stigmatised or made a scapegoat while the other area or areas are being courted as the beautiful bride’

    When confronted last week, a presidential aide said though the juicy appointments may have eluded other parts of the country as they have been concentrated in the northern axis, the president will certainly make amends in other appointments yet to be filled. According to him, service is service. Hmm! That may sound like robbing a soothing balm on a festering sore. Without mincing words, the deed has been done and cannot be undone. With the SGF and COS positions gone, the CG of Customs and CG, Immigration gone, now, tell me, what is left to balance the unbalanced equation?

    As for the southeast, the situation is very precarious and lamentable in that there had been wide speculations that the SGF position might be zoned to the area. And Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, a long time acquaintance of the president himself, might clinch the post. Onu was with the president in the All Nigerian Peoples’ Party (ANPP), which fused with the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), which also later fused into the All Progressives’ Congress (APC). Another person whose name came up for consideration as SGF was Rotimi Amaechi, the immediate past governor of Rivers State, who is believed to have worked tirelessly in cash and kind to see to the emergence of Buhari as president. Though the ex-governor is currently embattled in his state, the fact that Onu himself was sidelined shows that there is more to these appointments than meets the eye.

    Buhari has consistently said that nobody that is tainted with corruption will serve in his government. With the naked imbalance in the appointments made so far, does that mean that the northern part of the country is an island of saints, while the southern part, particularly the southeast, is a corruption-infested zone? If this is the assumption, then there is every reason to disagree because those who have brought this country to its knees are evenly distributed across the country; and that is, if they are not numerically more in the north. It is these same people who have contributed significantly to the backwardness and poverty currently sweeping across major parts of the north. It is the reason for the insecurity that has pervaded the place these past six years with wanton destruction of lives, property and the economic well-being of the people.

    If the president had nursed a hidden agenda as he came into office that agenda may have now become an open agenda. Wherever you find two or more people locked in deep discussion since last week, they are most certainly discussing or reviewing the recent appointments. Simply put, what has happened so far in terms of the lopsided appointments is a great injustice done to certain parts of this country and a big threat to the corporate existence of this great nation. Nobody is against the war on corruption, but the fear is that no area or areas of the country should be stigmatised or made a scapegoat while the other area or areas are being courted as the beautiful bride.

    The talk that most of the people appointed so far into positions were not personally known to the president is bullshit. Those who recommended them had their reasons for doing so. At least, they knew them and so they went all out to sell their candidacy to the president. But then, the president himself, in his wisdom, should have thought about the political implication of concentrating his appointments in one particular area of the country when he got his votes across the country. Nigerians, shine your eyes!

     

  • Buhari made no promise on 100 days, says Presidency

    Buhari made no promise on 100 days, says Presidency

    The Presidency on Tuesday denied reports that President Muhammadu Buhari promised to achieve specific things within his first 100 days in office.

    It also claimed that the document tagged ‘One Hundred Things Buhari Will Do in 100 Days’ and ‘My Covenant With Nigerians’ did not emanate from the authentic channel of the campaign’s media department.

    The Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu made the clarification while responding to the criticisms that followed the denial that the President made such promises.

    He urged Nigerians to ignore the claims from certain quarters that the president specifically made promises of achievements within his 100 days in office.

    The Presidential aide said that he never authorized or signed any document in this regard in his capacity as the director, media and communications of the Buhari campaign organization.

    According to him, what the public should be talking about in respect to President Buhari’s 100 days in office are milestones reached within the period under review, rather than achievements.

    He said: “We prefer to talk about milestones instead of achievements. Whether the milestones represent achievements or not, that is left for the people to decide. Milestones have been achieved which is important for the country”.

    On what the president said during his lecture at Chatham House in London, he said, “The president never promised anything to anyone. It is on record in that lecture at Chatham House they asked him a question relating to expectations and what he specifically would do in relation to certain documents that were flying around committing him to this thing or that thing within 100 days.

    “In that lecture- the video is already now viral on the web- he (Buhari) said ‘it contained falsehood and I am not going to be engaged in deceit. I will go in there, I will see what is there and then get the intelligence – the knowledge of things that are going on- and I will fully commit myself to serving Nigeria’”.

    “My point is that as the director, media and communications of that campaign, I was responsible for internal and external communications and these so called documents that are been flown around didn’t have my signature.

    “I didn’t fund them and I didn’t authorize them. From what President Buhari himself had said at Chatham House, he had no iota or knowledge of those documents. So, people cannot hold him to account on something to which he did not commit himself, ” Shehu stated.

    Responding to the question regarding the claim that the APC had posted the documents on its website, he said, “APC had a campaign in which there were so many centres of public communication and unfortunately there were some among those centres that were more or less on the loose. Yes, it was possible that things were being done without the knowledge or the usage of the proper channel of communication.

  • Photo : Buhari at swearing-in ceremony

    Photo : Buhari at swearing-in ceremony

     SPECIAL ADVISER TO THE PRESIDENT ON MEDIA AND PUBLICITY, MR  FEMI ADESINA; NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER (NSA), RETIRED MAJ.-GEN. BABAGANA MONGUNU; VICE-PRESIDENT YEMI OSINBAJO; PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI AND   SECRETARY TO THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERATION (SGF), MR BABACHIR LAWAL, AFTER  THE SWEARING-IN OF ADESINA, MONGUNU AND LAWAL, AT THE PRESIDENT VILLA IN ABUJA ON MONDAY
    SPECIAL ADVISER TO THE PRESIDENT ON MEDIA AND PUBLICITY, MR
    FEMI ADESINA; NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER (NSA), RETIRED MAJ.-GEN. BABAGANA MONGUNU; VICE-PRESIDENT YEMI OSINBAJO; PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI AND
    SECRETARY TO THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERATION (SGF), MR BABACHIR LAWAL, AFTER THE SWEARING-IN OF ADESINA, MONGUNU AND LAWAL, AT THE PRESIDENT VILLA IN ABUJA ON MONDAY
    SPECIAL ADVISER TO THE PRESIDENT ON MEDIA AND PUBLICITY, MR FEMI  ADESINA (L) AND THE NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER (NSA), RETIRED MAJ.-GEN. BABAGANA MONGUNU, TAKING OATH OF OFFICE BEFORE PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI AT THE  PRESIDENT VILLA IN ABUJA ON MONDAY.
    SPECIAL ADVISER TO THE PRESIDENT ON MEDIA AND PUBLICITY, MR FEMI ADESINA (L) AND THE NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER (NSA), RETIRED MAJ.-GEN. BABAGANA MONGUNU, TAKING OATH OF OFFICE BEFORE PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI AT THE PRESIDENT VILLA IN ABUJA ON MONDAY.
  • Buhari orders increase tempo against polio

    Buhari orders increase tempo against polio

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday ordered increase tempo against polio virus in Nigeria.

    He gave the directive while receiving polio high level advocacy team at the Council Chamber of the State House, Abuja.

    Efforts, he said, should be doubled in order not to allow any gap that might prevent Nigeria being certified polio free by World Health Organization (WHO) by the year 2017.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the closed-door meeting, the Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Health, Linus Awute said: “As it is now there is no polio in our country but then we still need to monitor that throughout a period of two years.

    “That is why we need to intensify routine immunization, ensuring that there is no leakage, no gap until 2017 when we shall be certified a polio free country having arrested the transmission for upward of one year plus.

    “The president directed us to sustain the tempo that has led us thus far after 17 years and how to do that is clearly developed in the template upon which we are going to work in collaboration with the state governors,” he said.

    According to him, there is need to interface and make further pronouncements that would boost the gains so far recorded in polio eradication in the country.

    He added: “In doing that, the stakeholders are required and that is why a strong advocacy group, a high level advocacy group that happens to be the pillar and foundation of this tremendous effort was led down here to interface with President.

    “We also needed that one to happen at the instance of the governors of the 11 states where polio before now was endemic.

    “So, the gains of it, is that we have a consensus on what we must or must not do to be able to cherish the gains that we have made,” he stated

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Jonathan, ministers versus Buhari…and the battle ahead

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan may not be enjoying a blissful retirement. Outside power, he is left in the cold. The presidential privileges are gone. But, the public perception about him as a former leader is also giving him a headache. Critics are asking him to render a proper account of the administration he presided over for six years.  They blame him for poor governance, national economic adversity and a legacy of incompetence.

    However, the politician from Otuoke, Bayelsa State, is taking an exception to what he described as media trial. He is now fighting back.   Dr. Jonathan is trying to mobilise his army of former ministers, advisers and personal aides for battle. It is a collective resistance by the former men of power, some of who are now in the bad book of his successor, President Muhammadu Buhari, for alleged corruption.

    As Jonathan’s men regroup, the criticisms against them become more intense. Regressing to a tactical defence mechanism, the former leader seeks to lift the burden of accountability by diverting public attention to some sorts of achievements, hoping to achieve a relief. But, according to observers, Nigerians who endured the lean years of his rule are not assailed by “collective amnesia”.

    Irked by the persistent call for the probe of his administration, especially some ex-ministers who held sensitive portfolios, Jonathan, according to reports, met his successor for 20 minutes. He made two requests: the subjection of his team to media trial should stop and election petition tribunals in Rivers and Akwa Ibom should not be hindered by interference by the Department of State Security Service (DSS). President Buhari’s response was unknown. But, sources said that the President will not compromise his anti-corruption crusade.

    Instructively, Jonathan cried out, barely two weeks after the activist-priest, Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese Dr. Mathew Kukah, who lauded Jonathan’s performance in office, advised the Federal Government against what he described as selective trial and lack of due process.

    For President Buhari, there is no going back on the promise to recover looted funds and try culprits in court. On the campaign podium, he had made the promise to Nigerians. Any attempt to look back after placing his hand on the plough may backfire. There are startling revelations by Permanent Secretaries and other ministry officials who merely operated under the shadow of powerful ministers and special advisers. The rot, sources said, has not motivated the President to immediately settle down for work by appointing ministers. The National Publicity Secretary of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said doing that would be tantamount to building a neat edifice on a flawed foundation.

    Public anger has not been doused. Under Jonathan, Nigeria had become a fragile nation; a stepping stone to a failed state. To observers, there should be explanations for billions of naira that went down the drain as the infrastructure battle failed. If Nigeria has suffered from power outage for years, if the National Assembly has blown the whistle on oil subsidy scam, if money earmarked for arms to fight insurgents were not properly utilised and billions that should be in the government purse developed wings, some people must be ready to accept responsibility.

    The trial of suspected corrupt officials has not commenced fully. Investigations are still on. But, the sack of government officials appointed by the past administration underscored President Buhari’s resolve to maintain a clean break from the past. Clearing the Augean stable is a major priority. The President has appointed new helmsmen for the Armed Forces, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Customs and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA).

    In the first 100 days of Buhari in office, Nigerians have been heaving a sigh of relief. They have invested hope in change. Electricity is becoming more stable. Even the refineries are being revived. Also, despite the fall in oil earnings, the country can boast of improved revenue. The Federal Government has embarked on the proactive measure of bailing out distressed states from their financial mess. Civil servants are turning a new leaf. The government is sharpening its arrows against fraudulent public officials. The President has said that there will be no sacred cows.

    What the Jonathan forces have resorted to is to pre-empt the Commander-In-Chief’s move to bring erring officers to book. Reminiscent of the presidential campaign days, a battle signal has been given. The approach is to move from the defensive to the offensive position. A respected priest has reminded Nigerians that former President Jonathan’s performance was spectacular in some ways. Thus, in few weeks time, when the  new opposition cabinet assembled by the former leader swings into action, there will be a sort of media war. Ahead of their investigation by the anti-graft bodies, the former ministers will render accounts in the people’s court to swing public opinion. They will tell Nigerians that Jonathan was the architect of the relatively stable power supply, the notable success recorded in the anti-terror war and the improved revenue base. Ethnic voices in the South will be recruited to criticise the President over his silence on the report of the defunct National Conference. Critics will challenge the President to tell Nigerians what he has done differently in three months.

    Also, Jonathan’s men will beam a searchlight on the political appointments made so far by President Buhari, to demonstrate their lopsidedness and violation of the federal character principle, and to the detriment of the Southwest and the Southsouth.

     

     

     

  • NIG urges Buhari to force down internet access cost

    The Nigeria Internet Group (NIG) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to force down the cost of internet access in the country, adding that it is only by doing this that more people will use the internet and tap from its immense benefits.

    Its President, Bayo Banj, who spoke during its yearly conference and exhibition in Lagos, said the government should limit itself to policy and regulatory matters but must intervene in pricing to allow more people to benefit.

    He said the Nigeria Communications Commission (NCC) should also be prevailed upon to force internet service providers to make a distinction between local and international internet traffic.

    “This is the first step. It will also allow groups to host their servers incountry. NCC must force internet providers to make a distinction between internal data and international data. They should also be forced to take services to other parts of the country. They are comfortable remaining in Abuja, Lagos and other major cities where they serve the banks and other big companies,” Banjo said.

    With Internet Penetration: The way forward as its theme, NIG chief said internet is one of the very innovations meant for the youth, adding that cybercrimes are most associated with the youths. He therefore urged policy makers to factor the youths into making any policy that has to do with this age bracket.

    He wondered if the laws allow a brilliant hacker, who is only 15 years old to be employed by an agency of the government, such as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), to help burst cyber crimes. He also stressed the need for a re-orientation  and reform of the education sector, arguing that with the state of the sector, it is doubtful if it would be able to produce the required skilled manpower that would drive the economic development of the country.

    Banjo said the time has come for the government to exert a form of control over what people put on the internet. He took exception to the current practice where people go to the internet to insult people and cast aspersions on their reputation.

    He said to address this, “Swift Courts” should be set up across the country to deal with character assassination and defamation using the internet, adding that the need to restrict what happens on the internet is informed by the fact that young persons are becoming indoctrinated through the internet.

    He took a swipe at excuses, such as spectrum unavailability holding back internet penetration, saying a country, noting that as South Korea has 2.3 gigahertz (GH) spectrum is adjudged to have full penetration.

     

  •  How far can Buhari go?

    Nigeria’s major shortcoming as an independent nation is her clashing contradictions. Another challenge is that the memory of her people is short; indeed, too short that since we tend to forgive and forget the past so easily, it has become practically difficult for the sinners of, especially, our immediate past to either repent or be treated to the real wages of sin. For instance, despite Yakubu Gowon’s geo-political absurdities and socio-economic silliness, he is now Nigeria’s chief prayer warrior. Sani Abacha, the Maximum Dictator, is now seen as a saint compared to Olusegun Obasanjo, the Maximum Democrat; while the Maximum Democrat is already comparing his place and space in history to Abraham Lincoln. Emeka Odimegwu-Ojukwu, who rated personal ambitions above national pursuits, eventually became “the voice of the injury of the Easterners” while Alfred Papapreye Diete-Spiff, that military governor who once humiliated professionalism, is now seen as the ‘beacon of hope’ for the oppressed and the depressed people of the Niger Delta.

    Besides, while Michael Ani, Victor Ovie-Whiskey, Eme Awa, Ephraim Akpata and Abel Goubadia died without treating Nigerians to what derailed their plans for the country, Humphrey Nwosu, on his own part, was literally too dull to comprehend what his job as umpire entailed. And Maurice Iwu only ended up wooing Nigerians into another round of electoral mess. Tragically, we now seem to have lost interest in our ability to put things right that, even, in the face of mind-boggling revelations of how our commonweal was recklessly abused and selfishly converted, we think ’go and sin no more’ remains the best approach to issues of governance.

    This is Nigeria in 2015! Nigeria, now the world’s 7th largest country has also been rated as the world’s 2nd most deadly country. No thanks to the terrorist activities of Boko Haram and its affiliates! Again, Nigeria is not only the largest economy in Africa with over-$500m dollars in Gross Domestic Product (GDP), she also ranks as the 21st largest economy by nominal GDP. But more than 60% of her population is below poverty level, courtesy of poor government and administrative laxity. Though Nigeria now ranks 6th in agricultural output globally; and first in Africa, her food exports continue to decline even as imports are on the increase. As if these are not enough, Nigeria is ranked 10th largest country with illicit financial flow even as her debt profile under former President Goodluck Jonathan alone was about 34.2% of Nigeria’s total debt. The country’s services sector is 63rd in the world but her economic situation remains precarious, thus making life ”an absurd desire” and lack “a sign that we were born wrongly”.

    In 1985, Nigeria had 19 states, with a population of 83.9million. Now, it has 36 states, and Abuja, her capital city; and with a population of about 177,155,754. By that year, Nigeria’s per capita incomes had dropped to about one-quarter of their 1970s’ high; and oil had become the major source of income for the government. Then, our oil export stood at 1.82 million barrels per day; and the cost of a barrel was US$18. Now, Nigeria produces about 2.52 million barrels per day with a barrel selling for less than US$45. Naira as at 1985 exchanged at NGN0.894 to the dollar. Now, it hovers between NGN200.00 and NGN250.00 to US$1. In any case, we need not forget that it was the introduction of the infamous Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) by the Ibrahim Babangida-led junta in 1986 that eventually changed the face and the fate of the naira-dollar relationship.

    Thirty years ago, a prospective secondary school leaver would gladly aim at lofty and profitable ambitions that would make his family proud. Babangida came and unwittingly mortgaged the spirit of courage and creativity of Nigeria’s youth. Before Judas Iscariot was Judas Maccabaeus. But Judas lost his place and popularity among Christian and Jews alike after the Betrayer came to fulfill ”all things … which were written in the law of Moses.” Now, our youth would rather prefer graduating as ‘yahoo boys’ to appreciating the true meaning of meritocracy and social justice.

    Having said that, where do we go from here and how far can the president go in clearing the Augean stables? What can this land, which currently sacrifices transparency on the altar of efficiency, do to feel the beauty, tenderness, and freedom of healing that the Buhari administration is bringing on board? Indeed, this is why I am deeply worried!

    In its July 17, 1966 reaction to Nigeria’s first coup, The Sun (a prominent British newspaper), described democracy as a ”sophisticated form of government needing time and economic security to develop.” Students of history will readily admit that Nigeria’s political space is full of all kinds of deceit and trickery. Of course, that’s why I don’t envy the president. Amid this chaos however, it is gratifying to note that Buhari has within a short period of time in office done a lot to close up the gulf that has hitherto weakened our collective resolve to forge a common front. Needless to repeat that its results, so far, have been awesomely impressive; at least, we know how Nigeria was before former President Jonathan took over as president in 2011 and we also know how bad things had gone by the time Buhari was taking over on May 29, 2015.

    ‘Where do we go from here and how far can the president go in clearing the Augean stables?  …we know how Nigeria was before former President Jonathan took over as president in 2011 and we also know how bad things had gone by the time Buhari was taking over on May 29, 2015’

    Let me by way of conclusion state that the hallmark of a leader is his ability to realise that change begins with selflessness and sacrifice; that discipline is very germane to effective leadership even as war on corruption ensures better service delivery; and that political process gets corrupted when unfettered pursuit of money becomes a way of life. Therefore, irrespective of constraints like age, party patronage, artificial sentiments and class solidarity, Nigerians see in Buhari a man who understands better the complexity of the issue at stake as well as how to confront all those stubborn situations that have hitherto resisted remedy. So, as he defines concrete objectives with a view to realising the vision and showing to the world that a sustainable pathway to development is possible, one can only pray for him and wish him well! After all, who knows but that Buhari has come to this presidential position for such a time as this?

     

    • Komolafe wrote in from Ijebu-Jesa, Osun State, Nigeria
  • Buhari’s kitchen cabinet

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s (PMB’s) appointment of his close aides has stirred some controversy. Particularly livid are +++some political actors from the Southeast, followed by a fringe from the Southwest; considered to be the order of neglect, as figuratively demonstrated by a national newspaper. With 30 appointments made so far, covering the military, the para-military, and the close aides of the presidency, the paper graphically represented the zero patronage for the Southeast. Many political actors have angrily described the appointments as sectional, parochial and an abuse of the constitutional provision on federal character.

    PMB, reportedly, has taken the protests in his chin, and has promised to look farther afield in future appointments. Expectedly, many sympathisers of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who lost their voice after the shellacking by PMB and his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), have been gloating, claiming that they had forewarned that the man hates unabashedly, the Southeasterners. For them, the recent appointments have vindicated them. Agreed, the recent appointments clearly favoured the North, but if I may ask, what gain did those appointed from the Southeast in the immediate past regime bring to their states?

    I am afraid that if there were any exceptional benefits, then it was substantially personal. So, except the style of governance changes, which is the hope of Nigerians under the government of PMB, the fact that this cadre of appointments have favoured the North may amount to nothing of significance in the lives of the people.  Even the Southwest, which had the privilege of producing former President Olusegun Obasanjo for eight years, continues to strenuously argue that the regime did not bring them any special succour.

    While I have no enthusiasm to defend PMB from those now gloating that they told the APC’s sympathisers that they have entered what in Nigerian parlance, is referred to as “a one chance bus”; (i.e., a bus controlled by rough necks, who will rob a passenger of his/her belongings, and then push him/her out of the bus); I had wished that one of the die-hard APC stalwarts, such as Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, Dr. Chris Ngige, or even any of the less prominent ones, had been honoured with a top position in the kitchen cabinet. My thinking is that such an appointment would have brought serious enthusiasm to the ongoing effort to build a stronger APC in the Southeast.

    But the president still has opportunities to demonstrate his pan-Nigerian broadmindedness, as there are still many more appointments to be made. One such opportunity would be the key ministerial appointments, particularly the economic team, which is yet to be fully constituted. As we witnessed under Presidents Obasanjo and Jonathan, the more influential associates of the presidents were not members of the famed kitchen cabinets. After all, while the cook works in the kitchen, he reserves the choicest meals for those that end up in the dining area.

     

    Gov. Ugwuanyi and Wawa House

     

    Since May 29, 2015, I have not commented on the style of governance of the new helmsman at the Lion building, the seat of government, of Enugu State. As predicted on this page, before the elections, Governor IfeanyiUgwuanyi, popularly referred to as Gburugburu, rode into power, with minimal stress. As a scion of the famed Ebeano family, his forbearers, Governors Chimaroke Nnamani and Sullivan Chime, had already paved the road to the building, with blood, tears and subterfuge;whileforbidding any match, by an opposition party.

    Indeed, the succession plans of the Ebeano, has not failed them, yet. What usually fails them, is managing ‘the successes’. In my village, when the infant is presented to the village sage, during the naming ceremony, the sage would intone: phuoezeenu, igaephukaani, (grow the upper tooth, before you grow, the lower tooth); among other admonitions, forbidding any abnormality. The challenge of the Ebeano family, is usually how to avoid abnormalities, like a child, spewing shit, into his father’s face, for a minor or no reason at all.

    So, you see a successor governor, growing all the lower teeth, before any of the upper ones. And to make matters worse, they use it to clobber their forbearers. That was the faith of Chief Jim Nwobodo, the progenitor of Ebeano family; same for Dr. Nnamani, the founder of Ebeano family. Of note, Chime, the immediate past governor, has after the debacle of a failed Senate seat, opted to stay away from the flurry of power and influence peddling. Who knows, that may save him. Gburugburu, so far acting his name, appears to be treading a different part.

    Last Thursday, I had tried to locate the Enugu State Liaison Office, to obtain the state of origin certificate, a requirement for admission, into government colleges. Believing that the Wawa house was my destination, I made my way to the Victoria Island location.With the rains pummelling my windshield, I was hoping to drive into the premises; after all, I had reasoned, that the compound is big enough to take in a bonafide visitor. But nay, no deal, as the place was locked.

    Surprisingly, I was told at the adjourning Imo Liaison Office, that the office had been relocated, to another part of town. When I raised the issue with some indigenes later, they were angst that the WaWa House was leased out, and another house, hired, as liaison office. Gburugburu, I hope that transaction was done in the best interest of our state?