Tag: BUHARI

  • Beyond ‘bailout’ for states (2)

    Beyond ‘bailout’ for states (2)

    Given the level of critical thinking in a country with less than 75% literacy rate, leaving citizens at the mercy of the central government to guarantee prompt payment of salaries and pension benefits is capable of encouraging citizens to lose confidence in subnational governments and thus see the central government as the only level that is efficient and compassionate

    By the time the first part of this piece appeared in this column last week, the Nigeria Governors Forum had not given citizens their interpretation of the funds they got from the federal government about three weeks ago. At the end of a recent meeting of the country’s 36 governors, their chairman, Governor AbdulazziYari of Zamfara State, had the following to say: “What had been shared last time was monies from NLNG and FAAC. And as we have been saying, we have not been looking for bailout, instead, we have been looking for all monies that are in the coffers of the federation, most especially we are talking about some monies that are hung around the coffers of government to be brought together for the purpose of sharing… We are not taking any bailout from the federal government and the federal government did not give us any bailout yet…But we are talking on how best the intervention will happen within these days so we will be able to settle the issue of salaries and other operations in government in the country….”

    This column believes that the governors have not been reported accurately in a story titled “Nigerian governors backtrack, say they never asked Buhari for bailout.”  All that Governor Yari had said on behalf of his colleagues is that they have not received any bailout yet and are already on the way to doing so by “talking on how best the intervention will happen within these days so we will be able to settle the issue of salaries and other operations in government in the country.” But today’s column is not about the Governors Forum’s differentiation between bailout and intervention with respect to how to end the problem of insolvency of states. Our interest is about the dangers inherent in a federal system in which states have to be “looking for monies hanging around the coffers of the federation” to pay salaries of workers. It is salutary that the NGF has pledged “to work with Mr. President to ensure coherent policy actions that will create a clear policy direction for the country and stimulate domestic production.” Cultivating new policy directions is an appropriate step to take at this critical moment in the country’s economy.

    Should the current precarious situation in state finances continue, states are likely to be compelled to ask for bailout or its more euphemistic synonym, intervention, from the federal government. Should states become vulnerable again to the point of having to beg the central government for special assistance, by doing so, it may unintentionally be creating more distortions in the country’s quasi-federal system. In other words, there is a great danger of encouraging President Buhari to push the country further away from proper sharing of power and sovereignty that federalism represents.

    Without doubt, President Buhari is now a democrat and a ruler with clear mandate from citizens, but he was a major player decades back in the policies of military dictators who in the days of oil boom believed that the best way to keep Nigeria united was to create mini-states that were designed to depend largely on transfers from the Federation Account to states, most of which had no viability to sustain themselves without funds from the centre. There is a possibility that inability of states to pay workers or meet their statutory functions can tempt any president in a hurry to create a national economy that works to push for fewer functions for states in the name of making governance more rational and more cost-effective. In other words, governors themselves stand the risk of subverting the little autonomy they currently enjoy, should they run into another problem of paying their workers. The real problem may not be about what many pundits consider as the reason for failure of states to pay workers’ salaries: mismanagement or inordinate ambition. It seems to be about creating an enabling environment for each level of government in a federal system to raise most of the revenues it needs.

    It is equally risky for governors to do anything to give their constituents the impression that states are more likely to generate agony for them than being a source of citizen empowerment. Given the level of critical thinking in a country with less than 75% literacy rate, leaving citizens at the mercy of the central government to guarantee prompt payment of salaries and pension benefits is capable of encouraging citizens to lose confidence in subnational governments and thus see the central government as the only level that is efficient and compassionate. Once citizens are pushed to feel this way, the temptation for them to prefer a full-blown unitary model of government may increase.

    Now that the Governors Forum has committed to working with President Buhari in creating policy directions that can respond to the country’s precarious financial situation, each state governor also needs to involve his constituents in the process of creating new policy directions. This initiative should not be restricted to governors alone; citizens should be engaged to contribute via town-hall meetings to determine what should be the right relationship between central and subnational governments. It will even be proper for state governments to subject their own thinking on how to prevent states from being vassals of the central government to a referendum in each state. Involving citizens in providing ideas about federal-state relations in an ethos of sole dependence on exploitation of non-renewable  natural resources may serve the interest of all better than leaving such matters solely in the hands of the political and economic elite.

    Citizens who are generally at the receiving end of policies made by political leaders may be in a better position to take a long-term view of the country’s economic problems than governors and other holders of political appointments who are preoccupied with frantic efforts to prevent their states from going into bankruptcy. With proper political education of citizens, they are likely to avoid a quick-fix approach to the issue of resource and power sharing. One of such quick-fix solutions to this issue is the 2014 Jonathan national dialogue which a group of Yoruba opinion leaders are pushing as the best option for states to obtain the kind of autonomy they need if they are to be able to provide sustainable development.

    Governors, especially those in the Southwest, where the noise about the last national dialogue is loudest, need not buy into the design to turn the recommendations of the conference into an albatross around their necks and the necks of their constituents. That conference worked on a wrong premise when the inflow of funds from non-renewable fossil was considered by delegates to be adequate to sustain 55 states. Nothing can be more eye-opening than the steady fall in the price of petroleum since the end of the 2014 conference.

    Now that the belief that Nigeria with 37 bureaucracies can be sustained by revenue from non-renewable resource is being shattered, governors planning to provide policy directions for the Buhari government need to engage their citizens directly, rather than allowing themselves to be hobbled by the push by non-elected delegates to adopt recommendations of the Jonathan national dialogue. Presenting recommendations of the Jonathan conference as synonymous with demands of Nigerians’ from the Southwest on the imperative of re-federalising the Nigerian polity may be tantamount to giving the country an Abiku federalism that may not move the country substantially away from the current model of states as parasites on revenues that accrue largely from petroleum and other non-renewable resource.

    Selected delegates to the 2014 national dialogue have the right to push the outcome of three-months of deliberations by delegates for adoption and implementation by President Buhari. But individual delegates and association of delegates do not have the right to present recommendations of the conference as the wishes of citizens in the six Yoruba states. Delegates did not consult with citizens before and during the conference. However, governors in the region with vocal advocates for implementation of recommendations from the dialogue should be open to consider some of the recommendations for inclusion in the questions to be presented to citizens in Southwestern states in a referendum. Limiting efforts at re-federalisation of the country to outcomes of the 2014 conference has the potential to prevent federating units from proper sharing of power and sovereignty with the central government in a sustainable manner. No federal system has thrived under a system in which subnational units are made to depend on allocations from the centre, regardless of the generosity of such allocations.

  • Still on a successful Buhari anti-corruption war

    Still on a successful Buhari anti-corruption war

    If the National Assembly, expected to be the bulwark of the government, could be so easily compromised, God help us with a judiciary crawling with corrupt judges and where some very senior lawyers serve as conduit for bribes to sway court decisions

    The first part of this article indicated a few inescapable actions President Buhari must take if he wants to succeed in reining in corruption in the land.  Corruption has become so hydra-headed, even systemic in Nigeria that were it not going to fight back any war aimed at it, any attempt to stamp it out would still be a helluva duel. Those eating our country raw are so entrenched, and loaded,  that they have wasted no time in showing  what they are capable of  in the National Assembly the way they made minced meat of the  time honoured practice of  having members  of the majority party in parliament holding the principal  posts in both chambers, whether  at  home here in Nigeria,  or in  the U.S from where we borrowed the presidential system. If the National Assembly, expected to be the bulwark of the government, could be so easily compromised, God help us with a judiciary crawling with corrupt judges and where some very senior lawyers serve as conduit for bribes to sway court decisions.  Except President Buhari demonstrates unmistakable seriousness, early enough, by ensuring that every member of his party not only  respects party supremacy, but  acts in support of his government’s  policies,  which one is sure will be people friendly, there is enough stolen money out there to make nonsense of his  change mantra, the anti-corruption war, inclusive.

    Fortunately, as I was busy making suggestions on the subject here last Sunday, Itse Sagay, a distinguished legal scholar and Professor of Law, in concluding his article: ‘Politics, Public Service, Morality and Integrity in Nigeria’, (The Nation of the same date), was leveraging on his huge knowledge of the underlying weaknesses in our extant legal system to prescribe the following ways of strengthening current laws if the president is to successfully fight corruption. Wrote Professor Sagay:  “I wonder whether Nigeria has not gone too far down the depths of the abyss to be saved.  Recently, Professor Ben Nwabueze suggested that only a bloody revolution could save Nigeria.  I hope not.  What we absolutely and urgently need is a leader who can impose discipline and eliminate corruption.  There will be need to amend our laws to strengthen the state at the expense of individual liberty at least for a short while, if we are to get to redemption point.  All legal provisions permitting preliminary objections to prosecutions for corruption must be repealed from our laws.  The power of any court to issue an order of injunction against a trial for any crime, particularly corruption, should be repealed.  Interlocutory applications in cases concerning corruption should be banned.”

    I am not quite sure whether being a legal scholar, Professor Sagay could not bear to suggest, as I did in the first part of this article, that anybody facing corruption charges should be presumed guilty with the responsibility devolving on him to prove his innocence. Nigerians just have to appreciate the fact that corruption in our country has assumed the stature of a virulent cancer which demands nothing short of a drastic surgical intervention. Like President Buhari has been quoted as saying, if we do not kill corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria and “the house would have truly fallen”, to quote the German, Karl Maier. Over and above Professor  Sagay’s  prescriptions,  it is my view  that  a Special Court should be established to try corruption cases so as to avoid the shenanigans we see daily in our courts; shenanigans which  lawyers exploit to thwart justice, thereby ensuring that corruption remains alive and kicking, even emboldened.

    The Nation editor, Gbenga Omotoso, took us through some of these in his recent article: “An Anti-Graft War Advisory” –The Nation, Thursday, July 23, 2015 – from which we shall quote at some length.

    He wrote: “Here we go: Merely taking you before the court – if you fail to get a perpetual injunction against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), its agents, privies, officers, operatives or whatsoever called – does not make you a prisoner. Be ready to shell out a fortune – obviously a small fraction of the cash they claim you have stolen – to get a damn good lawyer, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN). There are many of them in town nowadays. Your adversary, the tempestuous EFCC, cannot afford them. When you are remanded, don’t panic and give your traducers a chance to say: “Oh; he’s finished.” Remember, the offence, no matter how huge the cash involved, is bailable. In fact, the charges may be as long as the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. Never mind; as the case progresses, they may be withdrawn, amended or consolidated into one or two.

    Bail will come in very liberal terms

    When the case proper begins, your lawyer will tell the judge he has no jurisdiction to entertain the matter. The judge could be stubborn. He may fix a date to determine his jurisdiction and, in actual fact, rule that he is fit to hear the matter. Don’t fret. Your lawyer will simply head for the ever-busy Court of Appeal. This, no doubt, will take months to resolve. The appeal may be decided, most likely against you.

    Another judge will naturally take over the case. A plea is taken – “Are you guilty or not?” Be firm in replying: “Not guilty at all, my Lord.” Your SAN will then raise a preliminary objection, saying again that His Lordship has no jurisdiction to hear the matter. “The offence was not committed in Abuja,” he will tell the court, “and the money involved is, after all, not the federal government’s.” Besides, no prima facie case has been established against you, the lawyer will say confidently.”

    At this point, after many years in court, the accused most probably becomes a governor and for the next eight years, our man is untouchable – no thanks to immunity. And if he decided to become a senator, I ask Nigerians to guess what chances EFCC, which could not afford a SAN in the first place, would have against an individual legislator- for whose gluttony, immodesty and outright immorality, if not thievery –  Nigeria spends an estimated N290 Million annually to maintain in a country with more than 70 percent of its populace living below poverty line, who  could thereby easily afford to buy the entire system to escape justice.

    It is therefore crystal clear that President Buhari has his job cut out in his promised war against corruption. He has to present to the National Assembly a steely executive bill , with none of those debilitating clauses as in the present EFCC Law, which passed into law, will then  form the regulatory underpinning of a serious anti corruption war. Presidency officials must ensure that the National Assembly is not allowed to embed in the new law, any of those their usual shifty clauses which lawyers turn round to mindlessly exploit for money.

    Reactions

    I  present below, for lack of space, a few of my readers’ reactions to the first part.

    A brand new anti-graft agency will be great especially with a head like Gen. Ishola Williams (RTD) which is the only way we can be sure the fight will be certain and thorough  –  080338392. (The general’s name appeared in more reactions).

    May you continue to live long with the ink ever-flowing from the source of truth. An organisation like the current EFCC cannot be the institution President Buhari envisaged would salvage Nigeria from the present wreck -080536571..

    Thanks for your article on anti-corruption. One obstacle in the way of implementing your revolutionary idea is the role of lawyers. The legal profession is based on lying and immorality as lawyers are always concerned with making money even if it means defending Lucifer and ensuring he is declared a saint. So the role of lawyers and the legal profession must be examined and debated nationally with a view to finding how to neutralise their satanic role in the war against corruption -080338562..

    Femi, I am sure you must have forgotten that the legislature that makes the law is having Saraki as the president despite the issue of Trade Bank and that of his family. I have written you earlier on this. Why do you think he wants to be Senate President at all costs? Why are former governors all heading to the senate? This legislature will block all anti corruption moves by the executive. That is why Saraki and Dogara are there. I pray that the president reads your piece of yesterday. It is more than marvellous -080556794..

  • Why Buhari saved debtor states, by Osinbajo

    Why Buhari saved debtor states, by Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has explained that President Muhammadu Buhari decided to offer bailouts to states unable to pay salaries because of his love and compassion for workers.

    He spoke yesterday in Ibadan, the capital of Oyo State.

    Osinbajo said going by the financial circumstances of the affected states and the plight of workers, it was imperative for any listening and sensitive government to intervene in the way President Buhari did.

    According to him: “As you know, the Federal Government under President Buhari directed that three things should be done regarding the situation of the states in Nigeria.

    “We know that the states were unable to pay salaries of their workers for many months. The first stage was the sum of money that was shared from the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas dividends and taxes amounting to $2.1b.

    “The second package is a loan, which the states are allowed to access. The loans are concessionary in nature and any state that deserves it should have it.

    The Vice President went on: “The third stage is the conversion of loans owed to commercial banks by the states to bonds.  It is fairly complicated but simply put the state and FG will work out how the loan will be repaid over an extended period of time.

    “We are looking at 15 to 20 year period. Some have described this as bailout but what Buhari has done is an extremely creative and compassionate way of giving relief to states as much as possible, given the financial circumstances they found themselves.”

    He called on the affected states to utilise the fund for its purpose judiciously, saying the 40 per cent drop in federal allocation to states as a result of fall in crude oil prices was capable of paralysing state finances.”

  • Buhari: From Washington with dignity

    Buhari: From Washington with dignity

    It was an official visit that attracted not only national, but also international attention. President Muhammadu Buhari was going to visit the United States of America for four days, on the invitation of President Barack Obama. Was this going to be just another jamboree, or truly an event that would reset the buttons in the relationship between the two countries?

    Sure, there had been some cooling of passion between the two erstwhile allies during the dying days of the Goodluck Jonathan administration, and American experts sent here to train our military had even been asked to leave. She had also refused to sell us Cobra helicopters and other armaments, which could have made a lot of difference in our fight against insurgents in the North-east of the country. America had cited some reasons, including alleged human rights violations. The then President  Jonathan was thus forced to look towards South Africa for arms. He loaded millions of dollars in a private jet as if going to Oyingbo market, and got his fingers burnt in the process. South Africa seized the cash, and also impounded the aircraft for some time. The Nigerian government could only huff and puff for a while, and then licked its wounds quietly.

    No doubt, the kiln of passion needed to be kindled anew between Nigeria and America, and the invitation extended to President Buhari during the G7 Summit in Germany in June, was a much needed elixir. The Nigerian leader accepted the offer, and so was in Washington between Sunday, July 19 and Wednesday, July 22.

    But another whiff of controversy had presaged the meeting. America, through its Supreme Court, had recently legitimized same sex relationship. A man could marry a man if he wanted, while a woman could also marry a woman. It was against the laws of God, but heck, what did America care? God was either dead due to old age, or now belongs to the old school.  What matters now are rights, and people with homosexual or lesbian cravings must have their rights protected under the law.

    It was into the eye of this storm that some Nigerians felt President Buhari would be flying, on his trip. True, he had been asked to bring a ‘wish list’ by his host, but is there ever free lunch in America? Yes, your wish would be granted. America would help you decapitate Boko Haram, would help you trace and repatriate billions of dollars salted away in foreign banks by past rulers, would help boost your economy and generate employment, but at what price? At a price of endorsing same sex marriage, which would be contrary to our laws as a country, and to the laws of the God that majority of Nigerians believe in, and serve? Would President Buhari capitulate simply because America would help him fulfill promises he made during election campaigns?

    To America we flew last Sunday, arriving after a voyage of 12 hours. Our President was accommodated along with some members of the entourage at the historic Blair House, just a peeping distance from the White House. A good number of meetings were to hold at that Blair House in the next four days.

    You would be permitted if you had jet lag after 12 hours in the air, punctuated only by a one hour technical stopover at a Portuguese island called Santa Maria, to refuel your plane. But President Buhari was still spry enough to settle down to business immediately. We have heard of the work rate of former Army General and later civilian president, Olusegun Obasanjo. Now we see another retired Army General now civilian president, exhibiting the same horsepower work ethics. Could it be true that they give them some injections in the military, which makes them go on and on? Well, I did not say so. I only heard of it.

    After a briefing of what was to come in the next four days by Professor Ade Adefuye, Nigerian Ambassador to the United States of America, the President played host to former American Ambassador in Nigeria, Thomas Pickering and Professor Jean Herskovits. The man who has been quite outspoken about Nigeria, and who had doubted if the country would survive the 2015 general elections, Ambassador John Campbell, also came, among other people.

    The day was not done until Madeline Albright (remember her? A large number of people across the world were mad about Madeline years back when she was American Secretary of State. She did the work admirably).  Well, Madeline came to dinner with our President. She has aged, but rather gracefully.

    Day 2 was the day the world had been waiting for. Day of meeting with the world’s most influential president, Barak Obama. But not so fast! First, breakfast with the Vice President, Joe Biden. Venue was the Naval Observatory, which is the official residence of the American number 2 man. What did he tell our President?

    Biden gave an overview of the objectives of the entire visit,assuring Nigeria of the goodwill  and support of America. He shared perspectives on the terror war, drawing from America’s experiences after the September 2001 assault, in which thousands were killed by Al-Qaeda inspired terrorists. He said Boko Haram, which has now pledged loyalty to ISIS, should not be battled with just military option. There was also the need to combine the war with strong socio-economic programs. He said the U.S would be ready to work with Nigeria in that direction.

    On the Nigerian economy, Biden bade the leadership to tackle the issue of corruption, strengthen the institutions, and appoint tested hands to man critical sectors. If all these were done, he assured that investors would flood Nigeria in droves.

    President Buhari thanked his host, and added that the role played by America prior to general elections, sending Secretary of State John Kerry to convey that America would not tolerate the subversion of the people’s will, went a long way to guarantee fairness and justice.

    Having served as Minister for Petroleum Resources for over three years in the 1970s, President Buhari did not forget to mention the oil sector. He said between 10 to 20 billion dollars may have been lost to oil theft in the past one year, and pledged to sanitize the sector. He welcomed American assistance.

    The much awaited meeting with President Obama came up a while later at the White House. American leaders have been known to be fairly parsimonious with praises, particularly when talking about leaders of other countries. But Obama was effusive. He described President Buhari as a man of integrity, needed for such a time as this in Nigeria. He congratulated him for winning the March 2015 presidential election, adding that Nigeria was very important to Africa. The destiny of the continent was tied to Nigeria’s, he said, pledging that America would continue to support, as long as Nigeria does the right things.

    Every patriotic Nigerian must have stood several feet taller, as Obama eulogized our President. It served to rekindle confidence in our country. With the right leadership, Nigeria can, and will get there. Sure.

    The American president charted the same course as his deputy on the issue of Boko Haram. According to him, economic and social programs must run concurrently with military option, to conclusively defeat insurgency.

    Obama said the diversity of Nigeria, rather than be a centrifugal force, must be a centripetal one. The disparate parts of the country should be harnessed to become source of strength, adding that no part of the country should be left behind, or alienated.

    Buhari, the American president observed, was hugely popular, judging by the enormous goodwill that surrounded his election. He urged him to use the goodwill to serve Nigeria, alongside the governors that accompanied him. The governors are Rochas Okorocha, Imo, Adams Oshiomhole, Edo, Tanko Al-Makura, Nasarawa, Kashim Shettima, Borno, and Abiola Ajimobi, Oyo.

    Speaking on behalf of the governors, Okorocha assured Obama that the states’ helmsmen would back up Buhari to bring enduring change to Nigeria.

    President Obama made pledges. America would help Nigeria in diverse ways: checkmate insurgency, train and equip her military, recover monies siphoned out of federal coffers, and many others. And with no strings attached.

    The bilateral meetings/ audiences with the Nigerian president at Blair House, and other venues, were worth their weight in gold. The American Secretary of Commerce met with the Nigerian team, so did Loretta Lynch, U.S Attorney General, Jack Lew, Secretary of the Treasury, the Barker Group, potential investors in the Agriculture and Power sectors. There was an interactive dinner hosted by U.S Chamber of Commerce and Corporate Council for Africa, and captains of industry from Nigeria and America were there, among others.

    What of the meeting with Dr Pate of the World Health Organization (WHO), representatives of the World Bank, and  of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation? Refreshing. WHO unfolded plans to spend 300 million dollars to fight malaria in Nigeria, while the World Bank, subject to ratification by its board of directors, will make available the princely sum of  2.1 billion dollars for the rebuilding of infrastructure in the North-east, a region beleaguered by insurgency in the past six years. The fund, under the auspices of International Development Agency (IDA) will be made available as loans for Nigeria, at very low interest rates. The first 10 years would be interest free, while an additional 30 years would be granted at rates lower than that of the capital market.

    A delighted President Buhari said priority would be given to the resettlement of more than one million internally displaced persons (IDPs), and directed that a team be set up on the side of the Federal Government, which would meet and harmonize plans with the World Bank team as soon as possible.

    The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation also disclosed plans to work with the Dangote Foundation to ensure that Nigeria gets a clean bill of health on polio. Already, no case of polio has been recorded in the country for a full year, and if the position subsists for another full year, Nigeria would be declared polio free.

    Cheery news also from the session between the Nigerian team and the American Attorney General. The host country would track illicit money from Nigeria in all their jurisdictions, including the U.S, while training would also be provided for our judicial officers, prosecutors, police, and other security agencies, to track and recover stolen funds.

    There were other bilateral meetings with John O. Brennan, Director of the CIA and Deputy Secretary of Defence, Robert Work, and Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen Martin Dempsey.

    Oh, the courtesy call by the Class of 1980 of the United States War College, in which the then Col Muhammadu Buhari participated, and got glowing recommendations. It was a time to go down memory lane.

    Same sex issue enters the scene. On Tuesday afternoon, President Buhari was in his right elements, as he attended a joint session by the Senate and House Committees on Foreign Affairs at the Capitol Hill. Many issues came up for discussion, ranging from foreign relations, to growing democracy, human rights, and many others. Then a senator brought in the clincher. What does Nigeria think of the rights of homosexuals and lesbians.

    Sodomy or anything of such kind is against the laws of Nigeria, and, indeed, the Nigerian society abhors such practices, the President declared. Pastor Tunde Bakare of The Latter Rain Assembly was in the audience, and from the delight on his face, he could have carried the President shoulder high, if protocol had permitted such.

    To cap that delightful day, the president headed to the Chancery, Nigeria Embassy. He had two assignments there. A Meet and Greet session had been packaged by Mo Abudu of Ebony Life TV, in which Nigerian youths, who are professionals, had been invited from across America to greet President Buhari, and share their dreams of a greater country with him. The young people were really happy to have their president and father figure in their midst.

    Next was the meeting with Nigerians in Diaspora, who also came from across America. Biodun Ogunjobi had driven 12 hours to attend the event. He alo had waited for four hours outside the Embassy gates, till the program commenced. Such is the fervor Nigerians in America have for their country, and for a president they see as symbol of change. For about two hours, the President interacted with them, answering all the questions.

    The night did not end without the president meeting with the All Progressives Congress (APC) members in USA and Canada. The previous day, the party members had massed at the gate of Blair House, bearing different placards hailing President Buhari. When he saw them, he got down from his vehicle to greet them. The gesture drew sustained applause.

    On the final day of the visit, it was an interactive event at the United States Institute of Peace (USIP).  It was jointly organized by the National Democratic Institute, International Republican Institute, Centre for Strategic Studies and Atlantic Council. Ambassador Johnny Carson, who coordinated the session, described the guest as a man of honour and integrity. The event included a question and answer session, a round table discussion, and a presentation by the Nigerian president. And did the man sparkle? In fact, so remarkable was that outing that Pastor Bakare told this writer: “He obviously left the best for the last. That was simply brilliant.”

    President Buhari went to America, he saw, and he conquered. As I watched him signing the Visitors’ Register as he attempted to leave that historic monument called Blair House, I wondered how many people in the world would ever have such privilege. Not many. An American official had given him a pen, and the president wrote for about three minutes. He also must have been effusive in his appreciation. When he finished, he read over what he had written, put the pen back in its casing, rose, and handed it to the American official. That one collected it, and solemnly handed it back to the Nigerian president as a gift. Very solemn. And moving.

    As President Buhari strode out of Blair House for the last time, with his entourage in tow, one could see that an invisible Nigerian flag had been hoisted in the Amrican sky, and it was fluttering proudly. The Nigerian president had come with dignity, attended all the sessions lined up for him, not missing a single one,  and was returning home with an enhanced reputation, not just for himself but also for about 170 million of his country men and women. Who says change will not come to Nigeria?

     

    • Adesina is Special Adviser, Media and Publicity, to President Buhari
  • Buhari vows to keep polio out of Nigeria

    Buhari vows to keep polio out of Nigeria

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday declared that his administration will do all within its powers to ensure that no child is ever infected with polio again.

    He spoke at a brief event in the Presidential Villa, Abuja to mark Nigeria’s successful completion of one year without any reported case of the wild polio virus.

    Buhari, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, pledged that the federal government will mobilise and deploy all necessary resources to efficiently complete the task of eradicating polio from the country.

    He said: “Today, 25th of July, 2015, Nigeria has successfully completed one year without any case reported of the wild polio virus.

    “Achieving this feat has placed us firmly on the path to eradicating this paralyzing disease from our land.

    “I seize this opportunity to call on Governors, our traditional and religious leaders, the private sector and our mothers and fathers to redouble their efforts to ensure that every child and every new born baby is vaccinated with the polio vaccine and other life saving routine vaccines.”

    The President personally vaccinated one of his grandchildren against polio at the occasion to demonstrate his commitment to eradicating the virus from Nigeria as well as the safety and efficacy of the polio vaccine.

    He thanked all Nigerians and foreign partners who have support the country’s polio eradication programme in several ways.

    The President said that he looked forward to the formal declaration of Nigeria as a polio-free country in 2017.

  • We will deploy all resources to keep polio out of Nigeria, Says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday declared that his government will do all within its powers to ensure that no Nigerian child is ever infected with polio again.

    He spoke at a brief event in the Presidential Villa, Abuja to mark Nigeria’s successful completion of one year without any reported case of the wild polio virus.

    Buhari, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, pledged that the Federal Government will mobilize and deploy all necessary resources to efficiently complete the task of eradicating polio from the country.

    He said: “Today, 25th of July, 2015, Nigeria has successfully completed one year without any case reported of the wild polio virus.

    “Achieving this feat has placed us firmly on the path to eradicating this paralyzing disease from our land.

    “I seize this opportunity to call on Governors, our traditional and religious leaders, the private sector and our mothers and fathers to redouble their efforts to ensure that every child and every new born baby is vaccinated with the polio vaccine and other life saving routine vaccines,” President Buhari said.

    The President personally vaccinated one of his grandchildren against polio at the occasion to demonstrate his commitment to eradicating the virus from Nigeria as well as the safety and efficacy of the polio vaccine.

    He thanked all Nigerians and foreign partners who have support the country’s polio eradication programme in several ways.

    The President said that he looked forward to the formal declaration of Nigeria as a polio-free country in 2017.

  • Psychiatric Hospital: Bishop petitions Buhari

    Psychiatric Hospital: Bishop petitions Buhari

    A former member of the House of Representatives and ordained clergyman, Bishop Ezekiel Oise Orhevba has appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari to save the Federal Psychiatric Hospital, Uselu – Benin from what he termed: “its present irretrievably Monumental rot.”

    Bishop Orhevba in the petition to President Buhari made available to Nation on Saturday, unless the President intervenes in the affairs of the more than 50 years old Hospital, chances are that “it will experience a total ruin and abandonment.”

    The Bishop whose petition was further supported by a 22- paragraph affidavit to drive home his points, noted that there has been no peace in the hospital for over three years now.

    “There has been steady retrogression of the hospital. The hospital is in total darkness,” he stated.

    He further stated: “You can see the gardeners/landscape attendants using cutlasses to mow the grass instead of the former practice of using mechanical lawn mowers.”

    ” Food for patients is now cooked with firewood instead of gas, thereby leading to massive environment pollution in a Psychiatric Medical facility, where convalescing patients are not supposed to inhale noxious gas.

    “The hospital that has about 250 beds for patients hardly see up to 50 patients now due to the unpleasant and unfriendly condition of the hospital.”

    While alleging that there is a “terrorist gang” involved in transcendental sleaze in the hospital, Bishop Orhevba claimed that since October 2014, the Medical Director, Dr. S. O. Olotu had sacked about eight senior members of staff of the hospital who had never had any query over framed up charges.

    He alleged that the purported sack of the officers concerned was not approved by either the minister or the permanent secretary.

    Bishop Orhevba called on the President to help end the alleged reign of corruption and impunity going on at the Federal Psychiatric Hospital Benin so that the avowed manifesto of change for which President Buhari is globally acclaimed will not be aborted.

    Efforts to reach the Public Relations Officer of the Hospital, Mr. Efe Stawart and the Medical Director, Dr. S.O. Olotu, to comment on the issues raised in the petition were unsuccessful.

  • ‘Buhari’s plan to limit probe to Jonathan’s administration in order’

    ‘Buhari’s plan to limit probe to Jonathan’s administration in order’

    A group, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has commended President Muhammadu Buhari for affirming his resolve to limit his probe of past corrupt public officers to former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

     The group in a statement signed by its chairman, Comrade Debo Adeniran said: “We lend our support to the president’s position. Those calling for the extension of the probe to other past administrations are self-defeatist, self-condemning and an obvious product of a guilty conscience. These people seemed to be haunted by their past and it’s like the case of a drowning man looking for others to drag along.

     “The decision is not an after thought as he has been consistent in his declaration to limit his probe of activities of past government to that of his immediate predecessor. Even before being sworn into power, President Buhari had maintained that, he would not waste his administration’s precious time on probing every past administration before his as doing so would only amount to sheer distraction which, at the end of the day, would have left the very core of governance unattended to.

     “President Buhari should  disregard such distractions and concentrate on pursuing his anti-corruption crusade with all his vigor and ensuring that the thieves of our common wealth are exposed and punished. Nigerians expect no less from him. The president should be reminded that the generality of Nigerians, having identified the monster called corruption as the arch-enemy that has overtime been warring against the progress of this nation, are impatiently waiting for him to wrestle it to submission as promised by him.”

  • ‘Nigerians must be patient with Buhari’

    ‘Nigerians must be patient with Buhari’

    Publisher of defunct Third Eye newspapers , Chief Akanni Aluko, yesterday,  commended President Muhammadu Buhari, over his zero tolerance for corruption adding that the recent action of the President has confirmed that Nigeria can fight and win the war against the vice.

    The publisher disagreed with those saying the President Buhari was slow, saying that the expected change would not take place overnight.

    According to him:  ” President Buhari_ came into office on specific mandate and  started with the slogan of change during the defunct CPC era. The ACN joined him and Nigerians embraced it and voted for them. And when you say change , you must wait patiently  for it and not complain. Nobody should be complaining now. Everything must go quietly and steady. So, I think the President knows what he is doing.

    “If he had for instance appointed the ministers , he would have been unsettled by now especially with  newspapers reporting  that out of the 36 states , 33 failed the corruption test . We have seen that almost everybody in Nigeria is a suspect . So, we must have to support the President.

    “He is here to properly clean Nigeria of corruption and bring the needed change . And the song we are listening to now is the change mantra .We can now see that almost all Nigerian governors are corrupt and there is absolutely no one that can come out clean _if they are subjected to corruption test.

  • Buhari will probe amnesty programme – Presidency

    Buhari will probe amnesty programme – Presidency

    President Muhammadu Buhari will look into the amnesty programme for Niger Delta ex –militants, the Presidency has said.

    The Presidency explained that it will be wrong for Buhari to continue the programme without taking a look at the whole amnesty package.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, who said this on Kaakaki, a breakfast programme on Africa Independent Television (AIT) in Abuja, Friday, added that there are issues concerning the amnesty programme which the President is taking time to study.

    Adesina said: “Don’t also forget that if a situation or process was riddled with corruption and you come saying you are going to clean up the system, and then you continue to just run on the same steam of what you met on ground then you have not changed anything.

    “There are a lot of issues about it and the President is studying those issues. After he has finished studying them, the package will be unfolded on amnesty.

    The presidential spokesman said the nonpayment of tuition fees for 13 pilots undergoing training at the Lufthansa airline school in Frankfurt, Germany, was unfortunate, adding that the situation will be sorted out soon.

    He dismissed insinuations that the Niger Delta region has been neglected by the present administration, adding that Buhari will ensure that all sections of the country is represented as stipulated by the principle of federal character.

    “If you follow that conversation trend through, you will also recall that the President also said that the constitution has protected all parts of the country, every part, and no part can be marginalized. So it is only somebody who takes part in what he said that will want to make mischief out of that. But if you take it as a whole, it is clear.

    He said the constitution has already protected every part of the country and no part can be marginalized.

    “And he believes in fairness and justice and so will ensure that no part is marginalized.

    “Talking of amnesty and all that, the President has said he still believes in the programme and will keep it going. But that he is studying the report. He is studying the one he met on ground. When he studies it fully something will be done.”

    Adesina, during the programme, also said there was no truth in reports by local media that Buhari accused the United States government of helping the Boko Haram sect.

    He described the reports as unfortunate and misinterpretation of what the President meant, adding that they were widely off the mark.