Tag: BUHARI

  • APC chairmen urge Buhari to intervene over ‘impunity’ in Ekiti, others

    APC chairmen urge Buhari to intervene over ‘impunity’ in Ekiti, others

    ALL Progressives Congress (APC) chairmen in the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) have asked President Muhammadu Buhari to stop impunity and harassment of their members in Ekiti, Rivers, Ondo, Taraba and Bayelsa states.

    They alleged that the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP)-controlled administrations in the affected states have been attacking APC members.

    The party chairmen added that some commissioners of Police have been conniving with the affected state governments to terrorise APC members.

    But they asked the president to support efforts to resolve the crisis in the National Assembly.

    They alleged that many APC leaders and members have been forced to flee from Ekiti State.

    The chairmen, The Nation learnt, raised the issues with Buhari at a closed door  session when they visited the Presidential Villa.

    Buhari’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, had quoted him on Saturday as saying that it would not be business as usual on matters of political harassment and intimidation of any Nigerian henceforth.

    Adesina said the president spoke when the state chairmen of APC visited him and promised to probe political assassinations

    But a top source, who told The Nation what transpired at the meeting, said: “Immediately after the opening courtesies, the chairmen went into a private session, where the president asked them to lay their complaints.

    “The chairmen complained about harassment, intimidation, attack and killing of some APC leaders in Ekiti, Rivers, Ondo, Taraba and Bayelsa states.

    “They said in Ekiti, virtually all APC leaders and key stakeholders have relocated to other states because of the intimidation by the state government. They expressed concerns that some APC witnesses were attacked in the state at an election tribunal.

    “They also kicked against arbitrary detention of APC members in Ondo State at the behest of the state government. The same harassment is the order of the day in Taraba State, where APC is challenging the outcome of the governorship election.

    “The chairmen demanded the probe of killing of APC members during the general election in Rivers State. They alleged that the PDP administration had been witch-hunting and sacking APC members in Rivers State.

    “The APC leaders expressed regrets that some Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) workers have been compromised in Rivers State as they have prevented APC from inspecting electoral materials.

    “As regards Bayelsa State, the APC chairmen accused PDP of bankrolling the formation of a parallel APC in the state to create crisis ahead of the state’s forthcoming governorship election.

    “They said they were disturbed that security agencies have continued to recognise the parallel APC in spite of the fact that APC National Secretariat was explicit that the party in Bayelsa State was not factionalised.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “President Buhari simply promised to look into all the allegations and open discussion with the affected state governments.”

    The Chairman of the APC Chairmen’s Forum, Mallam Umar Haruna Mohammed, said the group wanted Buhari to support efforts to resolve the crisis in the National Assembly.

    He added that as the rallying point for APC, the President has the responsibility of ensuring that all stakeholders accept, respect and uphold party’s supremacy

    Mohammed said: “We are here as state chairmen of our great party to congratulate our member, our rallying point.

    “Secondly, we are here to pledge our unflinching support, loyalty to you and your government and our total cooperation on the enormous task of meeting the yearnings and the expectations of Nigerians and the world.

    “These expectations could only be realised, if every state is carried along and also if APC as a party works as a family.

    “Let me at this juncture appreciate you Mr. President for observing and upholding party supremacy. Thank you sir.

    “As mentioned earlier, as a leader and the rallying point of APC, you have the responsibility of ensuring that all stakeholders accept, respect and uphold party supremacy as enshrined in the party’s constitution.

    “It is a known fact to all of us that many people made a lot of sacrifice, some even made the supreme sacrifice, to ensure that APC and you in particular emerged victorious in the last election.”

    He added: “For this, it is necessary for all of us to appeal to you again to support the ongoing efforts being made to resolve the National Assembly crisis so that the anxiety currently being entertained by Nigerians will be effectively diffused for our party to focus on the more relevant and enormous challenges of rebuilding from the misrule of the past 16 years.”

  • Presidency disowns Twitter  comments ascribed to Zahra Buhari

    Presidency disowns Twitter comments ascribed to Zahra Buhari

    The Presidency yesterday disowned the Twitter comments allegedly posted by Zahra Buhari, one of the daughters of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, said the tweets were from an account falsely linked to Zahra Buhari.

    According to him, the Twitter account was abandoned a long time ago by Zahra when it was compromised by hackers

    The statement reads: “The attention of the Presidency has been drawn to unauthorised and unexpected tweets by an account falsely linked to Zahra Buhari, one of the daughters of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “Following enquiries by a few foreign missions on the raging online controversy about unsavoury comments against some foreign leaders purportedly made by her, we wish to state categorically that Zahra is indeed on Twitter but the offending handle @Zahra_Buhari has stopped being her own for a long time since it was compromised by hackers.

    “Tweets by this handle are therefore not her own and should be disregarded and considered as the work of hackers seeking to cause mischief between this country and other friendly states.

     “Zahra’s authentic handle is @ZmBuhari and any handle other than this on Twitter should be considered as fake and therefore fraudulent.

     “It is also pertinent to state at this point that neither the wife of the President, Mrs. Aisha Buhari nor the other children are presently on Twitter, Facebook or the various other platforms.

     “As they explore the possibilities on this new territory, we request the public to ignore the many accounts on various platforms in their names that currently exist. Such accounts, beside the authentic one cited above in the name of Zahra are unauthorised and therefore fake.”

  • ‘Our expectations from Buhari’

    The Lagos Chamber of  Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari on the need to get the economy running.

    Its President, Mr Remi Bello, said the new political dispensation offers a great opportunity to bring about the desired change in all facets of our national life, including the economy, social sector, quality of life, value orientation and governance quality.

    He asked the president to take advantage of its goodwill to immediately commence the charting of a new course for the nation and the economy.

    Bello said the private sector was awaiting President Buhari’s economic blueprint that would define the policy directions of his administration.

    “This is important for policy clarity, strategic planning, investment decisions and investors’ confidence. Major business decisions have been put on hold over the past six months because of the political risk associated with a transition regime. The first half of the year was characterised by profound uncertainty which slowed down the momentum of economic activities in the country,” he said.

    On what the private sector is expecting, he said they would like to see an unveiling of economic blueprint of the administration. This according to him will include planned reform  in oil and gas, intervention in the power sector, regime of investment incentives, monetary policy thrust focussing on exchange rate management, inflation and interest rate.

    Others are the tightening of monetary policy, automotive policy and its sustainability, trade policy covering tariffs, import prohibitions, waivers and others.

    The LCCI boss also stressed the need to have a clear and sustainable tax policy, debt management including the direction of this year’s Federal Government budget and the privatisation of development finance institutions.

    “Common External Tariff (CET) recently adopted by ECOWAS; sectoral  policies to drive growth and economic diversification. Key initiatives to reduce the cost of doing business; the status of legacy debts and contractual obligations, contractor arrears, outstanding subsidy payments, salary arrears, legacy projects, port reforms,” he said.

    He advised that the momentum of economic activities needs to be rebuilt in earnest with better expenditure quality, constructive spending priorities and transparency in the governance process. Others are enhanced security of life and property, investment friendly policies, promotion of democratic ideals and the primacy of rule of law.

  • BBOG group to meet Buhari July 8

    BBOG group to meet Buhari July 8

    Members of the #BringBackOurGirls advocacy group have concluded plans to meet with President ‎Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday July 8.

    The group wrote a letter to the President weeks earlier, demanding to meet with him to discuss the rescue of the Chibok girls who were abducted from their school in Borno State over a year ago and the continuous onslaught of the Boko Haram sect in the Northeastern part of the country.

    A member of the group, Aisha Yesufu said that the group among other things will be discussing on what the government is doing towards ending terrorism in the country, rescuing the abducted Chibok girls and returning the peace and normalcy to the lives of people who have been disrupted by Boko Haram.

    Yesufu who spoke on Sunday in Abuja after the usual sit out of the group added that the group was disappointed in the President for not giving a state of the nation address ‎to the country with the huge casualty caused by Boko Haram in the last 30 days.

    Her words, “We have certainly concluded plans to meet with the President by 12pm on Wednesday and when we get their we will discuss the rescue of the Chibok girls and also ask the President to tell us what is being done to end terrorism in the Northeast.”

    ” Over 400 people have been killed in by Boko Haram in the Northeast, that is a huge number. Every life matters and it is high time that the government begins to make Nigerians realise that all lives matters.

    “‎We certainly believe that the President is doing all in his power to end terrorism but we need him to give a state of the union address, not just keep silent when people are killed in this country. We are tired of those twitter messages that comes out to tell us that he condemns the atrocities, we need to see him address the nation, to make Nigerians see that he empatises with the victims and their families.”

  • Buhari condemns attacks on places of worship

    Buhari condemns attacks on places of worship

    President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed sadness over the reported dastardly bomb attack at a church on the outskirts of Potiskum, Yobe, on Sunday.

    This is contained in a statement issued in Abuja on Sunday by the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina.

    According to the statement, Buhari deeply regrets the unfortunate loss of lives in the attack and commiserates with all those who lost loved ones in the incident which also caused needless injury to others and damage to the church building.

    “The President wholly condemns the resumption of attacks by terrorists on places of worship– which are highly revered places of prayer and communion with God for most Nigerians.

    “Nigerians are a very religious people and President Buhari believes that the terrorists who wantonly attack our places of worship have willfully declared war on all that we value, and must, therefore, be confronted with all our might and collective resolve,’’ the statement said.

    The President reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to doing everything possible to eradicate Boko Haram, terrorism and mindless extremism from Nigeria in the shortest possible time.

    He further assured all Nigerians that terrorism would ultimately be defeated and full security restored in all parts of the country for people to safely practice their respective faiths with liberty wherever they may reside in the nation.

    According to the President, the constitution gives all Nigerians that right and the present administration will deploy all required force and resources to protect citizens’ right to freedom of worship.

  • Buhari vows to probe political assassinations

    Buhari vows to probe political assassinations

    • Declares that government won’t negotiate with Boko Haram from position of weakness

    It won’t be business as usual on matters of political assassination, political harassment and intimidation of any Nigerian henceforth, President Muhammadu Buhari  vowed yesterday.

    He said he will personally ensure that all such cases are thoroughly investigated and the perpetrators speedily brought to justice, irrespective of their political affiliations.

    President Buhari spoke in Abuja when State Chairmen of the All Progressives Congress (APC) visited him at the seat of power.

    His Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, quoted him as saying that “at every point, the law must be supreme and everyone must respect the law, if our democratic system is to survive.”

    The security agencies have failed to unravel several cases of political assassinations in the country.

    These include the December 23, 2001 murder of the then Attorney General of the Federation/Justice Minister, Chief Bola Ige, in his Ibadan residence, the March 5, 2003 killing of the Deputy National Chairman of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), Chief Harry Marshall in Abuja, and the July 27, 2006 killing of a leader of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State, Chief Funso Williams at his Ikoyi residence.

    Also not resolved yet are the killings in Ekiti State of Mr. Tunde Omojola (2005), Dr. Ayo Daramola (2006) and Kehinde Fasuba (2009).

    Speaking further yesterday Buhari said: “Injustice cannot survive for long.  Justice will ultimately prevail. We will make sure that those saddled with the responsibility of ensuring justice and equity do not rest on their oars.

    “The only way we can sustain our democracy is to ensure that the law remains supreme at all times. If the law is upheld, people will have confidence that they can vote for who they want to vote for, without intimidation or threats. People must have protection to exercise their rights freely or we could be headed for anarchy.”

    He said that he remained fully committed to providing a level playing field for all Nigerians to get on with their daily lives or participate in electing their leaders, without fear of intimidation.

    The President said that his administration will continuously strengthen the nation’s criminal justice system to curb the reign of injustice and impunity in the country.

    The police and the judiciary, he stressed, “must ensure that justice is done in the country.  We won’t allow impunity to continue in certain states, where the rights of the people are being violated.

    “I have a personal commitment to fair play and respect of personal rights. This government will do all that is possible to enforce that.

    “My address to National Executive Council of the APC was very clear. We are now in the frontline.  We are the party in government. We must lead by good example and consolidate on the gains of our democratic system,’’ he said.

    Buhari urged the APC State Chairmen and other political leaders in the country to keep to prescribed legal processes for the resolution of political disputes and never resort to violence, criminality and other forms of unacceptable behaviour in seeking redress for any perceived injustice.

    He also called on the state chairmen to work with the party’s elected officials to ensure that the APC delivers on its promise of better living conditions for all Nigerians.

    The leader of the delegation and Chairman of the APC in Kano State, Umar Dogowa, said that the APC State Chairmen were on a visit to the Presidential Villa to reaffirm their support for President Buhari and his administration.

    Also yesterday, Buhari   said that the Federal Government will not negotiate with the terror sect, Boko Haram, from a position of weakness.

    But he also emphasized that government will not shy away from any negotiation initiated by Boko Haram.

    Adesina, in a statement entitled ‘Amplification of comments on negotiations with Boko Haram’, pointed out that the Americans also negotiated with the Talibans in Afghanistan at some point in time.

    He said: “Most wars, however furious or vicious, often end around the negotiation table. So, if Boko Haram opts for negotiation, the government will not be averse to it.

    “Government will, however, not be negotiating from a position of weakness, but that of strength. The machinery put in place, and which will be set in motion soon, can only devastate and decapitate insurgency.

    “It is multinational in nature, and relief is on the way for Nigeria and her neighbours. President Muhammadu Buhari is resolute. He has battled and won insurgency before he is poised to win again. It is a promise he made to Nigerians, and he is a promise keeper.

    “But I say again, if the insurgents want to negotiate, no decent government will be averse to such. Didn’t the Taliban and Americans also negotiate in Afghanistan?”

  • Buhari fires CSO

    Buhari fires CSO

    President Muhammadu Buhari has dropped  his Chief Security Officer (CSO), Abdulrahman Mani following  what sources described as a power tussle between  Mani and the President’s Aide-de-Camp (ADC), Lt. Col. Mohammed Abubakar. A replacement has already been appointed. He is Abubakar Usman.

    Both Mani and Usman are officials of the Department of Security Service (DSS).

    Mani had, in a June 26 memo, overruled the ADC on security arrangement at the Presidential Villa whereby DSS operatives attached to the seat of power were barred from “Admin Reception, Service Chiefs Gate, Residence Reception, Rear Resident, Resident Gate, Office Reception, C-In-C Control Office, ACADE Gate, C-IN-C Control Gate and Panama.”

    They were thus restricted to duty beats/locations within the immediate outer perimeter of the Presidential Villa alongside other security forces.

    In effect only soldiers and policemen, trained as Presidential Body Guards (PBGs), are to “provide close/immediate protection for Mr. President henceforth.”

    The action of the ADC did not go down well with Mani who directed the DSS operatives to disregard Abubakar’s memo.

    He claimed that Abubakar’s circular was a misrepresentation of President Buhari’s directive.

    He said: “For the avoidance of doubt, Section 2 (1) (ii) of Instrument No. SSS 1 of 23rd May, 1999, made pursuant to Section 6 of the National Security Agencies (NSA) decree of 1986 which has been re-enacted as Section 6 of NSA Act CAP N74 LFN 2004, empowers personnel of the DSS to provide protective security for designated principal government functionaries including, but not limited to the President and Vice President as well as members of their immediate families.

    “It also mandates the DSS to provide protective security for sensitive installations such as the Presidential Villa and visiting foreign dignitaries. For this reason, personnel of the DSS who are on this schedule are carefully selected and properly trained both locally and abroad. Furthermore, continued background checks are maintained on them to confirm suitability and loyalty.

    “In fact, the issues raised in the aforementioned circular tend to suggest that the author may have ventured into a not-too-familiar terrain. The extant practice, the world over, is that VIP protection, which is a specialised field, is usually handled by the Secret Service, under whatever nomenclature. They usually constitute the inner core security ring around every principal. The police and the military by training and mandate, are often required to provide secondary and tertiary cordons around venues and routes.

    “However, all over other security agencies including the army, the police and others have their roles to play. It is on this note that heads of all security agencies currently in the Presidential Villa and their subordinates are enjoined to key into the existing command and control structure. They are to work in harmony with each other in full and strict compliance with the demands of their statutory prescribed responsibilities.”

    The President’s  Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina declined to comment on the issues last night because as he said, “it is a security matter. “

    He said only the DSS could comment on it.

    Mani was deployed by the DSS as a security detail to Buhari in 2011 shortly before he launched his campaign that year.

  • Will Boko Haram demystify Buhari?

    Will Boko Haram demystify Buhari?

    If anyone has a good chance of breaking the Boko Haram insurgency, it is President Muhammadu Buhari. He has the experience – having chased killer Maitatsine Muslim fundamentalists all the way into Chad in the 80s.

    He has the knowledge of the terrain, having worked in several senior capacities in the North East. Although he would not be functioning as an officer on the battlefield, his background as a one-time army general should help him relate better with those charged with doing the fighting today.

    His job has been made easier by the fruits of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s last throw of the dice. It wasn’t too long ago when at least 14 local government areas in three states in the North East were under Boko Haram control.

    Today, on account of the multinational military operations of February and March, the insurgents have been driven out of the major towns they held. They have been reduced to attacking soft targets in villages in no-man’s land along our borders with Chad, Niger and Cameroun.

    More importantly, Buhari is not bogged down by politics that made clearheaded analysis of the problem impossible at the highest levels of government in recent times. In the last two years of his tenure Jonathan and security agencies like the Department of State Security (DSS) spent valuable time trying to sell the fiction that Boko Haram was being sponsored by leading lights of the then opposition All Progressives Congress (APC).

    It’s over five weeks since the opposition became the governing party. You would have expected the ‘sponsors’ to call off their goons and claim credit for peace returning to the ravaged areas. On the contrary, we’ve witnessed a spike in attacks that have claimed hundreds of lives in this short period.

    Of that huge toll, the massacre of the last few days in Kukawa and surrounding villages in Borno State account for as many as 150 or more of those casualties.

    Judging by the unrelenting bloodbath not much has changed since the handover. If anything the insurgents seem to be sending out a message that the election-induced military offensive of February had not destroyed them as a fighting force. Their defiance can be better understood against the backdrop of widespread expectation that Buhari’s tough guy reputation would work the magic where Jonathan’s vacillation didn’t.

    I think the president understands that the extremists are not just going to disarm because of his history. He also appreciates that they are a different proposition from the bow and arrow and dane gun-wielding maniacs he crushed in the Second Republic.

    Boko Haram is a more sophisticated fighting outfit whose funding sources remain a mystery. They have been implicated in bank robberies in the past, but that cannot be enough to sustain an operation that has spread into four countries and withstood everything their collective armies have thrown at it. It is certainly getting substantial funding from somewhere. It is also recruiting enough people to refresh its ranks in spite of the heavy losses it suffers regularly in combat.

    This should trouble us. Aside from conscription, it is evident that many people are joining up with the sect of their own free will. How is it that a group which takes as much delight in killing Muslims as it does in slaughtering Christians, still manages to attract followers in territories where Islam is the predominant religion?

    It is the same puzzle that surrounds the appeal of the Islamic State (IS) such that it is attracting young people who grew up in America and the United Kingdom to suddenly abandon their families and comfortable lifestyles to join up with Jihadi fighters in the Middle East.

    The pat explanations about economic marginalisation are no longer enough to explain the phenomenon. It is possible that some were initially lured to join the sect in the hope that they would be better off. But we’ve also heard enough stories from defectors and escapees who speak of crushing poverty within the ranks of the insurgents.

    Something more powerful than bread and butter is at work here. Wars cease when sides in a conflict decide they are fed up with death. This isn’t the case in a conflict where one side is only too glad to die in the hope of arriving speedily in Paradise into the warm embrace of 72 virgins! When death becomes the fast track to a better reality conflict can no longer be conventional.

    That should also affect our expectations as to how this war would be resolved. When militants took up arms in the Niger Delta their grouse was economic and environmental. They had demands that could be negotiated and the compromise was the Amnesty Programme that silenced the booming guns. The arrangement may not be pretty but at least it brought closure – after a fashion.

    But how do you deal with enemies who are not willing to negotiate? Their only condition for peace is that you bow to their way of thinking and worship. In a multi-religious and multi-ethnic setting like Nigeria that is a non-starter: leaving only an option – a fight to the finish until only one side is left standing.

    Such face-offs are usually wars of attrition that are long-drawn. A striking parallel on the African continent is the conflict between the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and the Ugandan government. The rebels formed their organisation in 1987, took up arms in the 90s and have been killing and maiming for over two decades.

    Just like Boko Haram the LRA’s activities spilled out of Uganda and over the years affected South Sudan, the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. While claiming to be committed to the establishment of multi-party democracy, this ‘Christian’ cult aims to rule Uganda according to the Biblical Ten Commandments. Its religious roots mirror that of the North East insurgents who are pushing a brand of Islam that views Western education as sinful.

    A Wikipedia entry about the LRA says it “is not motivated by any identifiable political agenda, and its military strategy and tactics reflect this and it appears to largely function as a personality cult of its leader Joseph Kony.”

    The same entry quoting a report funded by United States Embassy in Kampala in 1997 said: “the LRA has no political program or ideology, at least none that the local population has heard or can understand.” (Who in Nigeria has been able to explain what Boko Haram is fighting for, or why it enters a town and mows down 150 unarmed men, women and children?)

    This ragtag army at the height of its infamy had thousands enlisted in its ranks. But over the years offensives by the Ugandan army as well as joint operations with neighbouring countries depleted its cadres to the extent that by some estimates it now has only a few hundred fighting men it can call upon to commit havoc.

    Even with the intervention of the United States which in 2011 provided 100 military advisers and $4.5 million per month to defeat the rebels, they stubbornly carry on.

    In March 2012 a four-nation African Union military force was created with Uganda providing leadership. The brigade of 5,000 drew soldiers from the DR Congo, Central African Republic and South Sudan with the mandate to track down Kony and the remnants of the LRA. (That force is much like the one Nigeria heads – involving three of our neighbours.) But as of today the rebel leader remains at large and his diehard followers keep moving between four countries.

    Without doubt Buhari and his team are determined to approach the problem differently. It is certainly too early to begin to see the effects of that new strategy when even the process of relocating command and control to Maiduguri is yet to be completed. Still, I don’t see him reinventing the wheel. Judging by the moves he has made in the last few weeks, were seeing a replay of what has been tried in East Africa against the LRA with a limited measure of success.

    That isn’t to say that it might not work better here because unlike the Boko Haram situation, the Ugandan rebellion despite its religious colouration had deep ethnic roots. This afforded the rebels a measure of acceptance by the dominant tribes in the northern part of the country. Our Islamists have never aspired to be part of the mainstream political arrangements and don’t care about winning the affection of local people in territories they conquer.

    Irrespective of the tack the government wants to adopt it now has to manage a crisis of expectations. Jonathan did so poorly in his handling of the  insurgency that people naively expect Buhari like some ‘Rambo’ character to waltz into Sambisa and gun down every one of them. And they expect it to happen fast! In reality this Boko Haram business will not have a Hollywood ending.

    We must begin to prepare for the long haul. This sect, just like the LRA, isn’t going to totally disappear because we don’t have enough soldiers to police huge expanses of territory in the country side far from regular military outposts.

    They may become a pale shadow of the fearsome terror machine whose maniacal leader, Abubakar Shekau, taunted us with boastful videos from time to time at the height of their notoriety. But they would not totally disappear. Such is the bloodlust that they have become accustomed to that there would be nothing else left for them to do other than kill and be killed.

    The governmentmust complement the goal of military victory with winning the war for the minds of those who have been enslaved by the evil Boko Haram ideology. That is the only way of killing the insurgency because what is driving it is the power of an idea.

    Unless that approach is taken Buhari would be reduced to celebrating military success one day and issuing unending commiserations the next – just like his predecessor. After a while many would not remember that he was the feared general who once put rampaging extremists to flight in the 80s. They would only remember his record with Boko Haram.

  • Speed or efficiency of the political machine of change?

    Speed or efficiency of the political machine of change?

    If there is any urgency now, it is not announcement of ministers but providing appropriate response to the herculean task in front of the new president: finding solutions to the looming crisis of unpaid government workers at the federal, state, and local level

    It is clear by now that 1968 will go down as the year the new politics of the next decade or more began….And therefore this is the year when the old politics must be a thing of the past. But if this is true—and I profoundly believe that it is—then there is no more important question than what the new politics is. What are its components, and what does it mean to the future of the country? The most obvious element of the new politics is the politics of citizen participation, of personal involvement.—Senator Robert Kennedy, Speech at a San Francisco press gathering, May 21, 1968

    The result of the presidential election of March 28, 2015 promised the emergence of a new politics in the country. It marked the end of years of a governance system that was driven by impunity, a governance model that was older than Goodluck Jonathan but that came to its nadir under his presidency. The enragement of citizens fostered by the last four years of PDP governance in the country led to momentous civic engagement that encouraged hundreds of Nigerians to do more campaigning in the social media for Buhari’s presidential bid than was done in the traditional media. Many people are now insinuating in the social media that was one of the bulwarks of support for Presidential candidate Buhari that the new president is slow. Even some traditional media houses are insinuating that President Buhari’s failure to appoint ministers three weeks into his tenure had grounded governance, despite the President’s directives that permanent secretaries in the ministries should continue to provide leadership for the ministries.

    Given the enthusiasm with which voters went to the polls to elect Buhari in March, it is not out of place for citizens to get impatient with the president’s seeming slowness in appointing ministers. Such complaints are not out of order in an ethos in which citizens, not necessarily belonging to professional civil society organisations, have volunteered since the beginning of the year to promote more civic engagement than before. But appointing ministers is not as urgent as getting the machine to effect change properly oiled for the job. The National Assembly, to use the phrase of enthusiasts of speed in governance, ‘has hit the ground running’ without functioning in compliance with the manifesto of change. But the NASS is not the focus of today’s column. The focus is on why President Buhari needs to do his homework thoroughly before naming ministers, if the impact of such appointments is to serve the need of change.

    In his covenant with Nigerians, President Buhari had stated clearly what his objectives and activities would be in his first 100 days in office. President Buhari on behalf of his party promised an administration that will change the culture of public service in major sectors of the polity and society: Insecurity from Boko Haram in particular; providing a national strategy for fighting corruption; addressing through policy initiatives the collapse of health and education sectors; and restoring economic stability. Certainly, he would need ministers to do most of these  things but not before doing due diligence on potential candidates for jobs that call for a new mindset that is distinct from the business-as-usual mode, a code word for government as a facility for self-enrichment.

     When President Buhari made these promises, among others, the culture of secrecy and governance by bill boards in vogue until May 29 did not allow him to discover the geography or ecology of the Augean stables the new president finally inherited at the end of May. Even though the new opposition party has quickly characterised the revelation that the PDP government failed to provide handover notes until the eve of the inauguration, the facts that were unearthed after the swearing-in ceremony show that Buhari had inherited a federal government that was in the last few months borrowing money to pay federal workers while leaving many states in the lurch, all on account of sudden decline in petroleum prices. If inheriting a virtually empty treasury is not an excuse for caution in rushing to appoint ministers, citizens should wonder what other excuse for caution on the part of the new president is acceptable to those who left the seat of power broken and soiled.

    The jury may still be out on how empty the treasury inherited on May 29 is, what is clear from the recent visit of governors to President Buhari on the need for an immediate bail-out of states to enable them pay salary arrears is an indication that governance at every level was very poor by the time President Buhari took over. If there is any urgency now, it is not announcement of ministers but providing appropriate response to the herculean task in front of the new president: finding solutions to the looming crisis of unpaid government workers at the federal, state, and local level.

    While many countries have become attached to the ritual of the first 100 days of a new president or prime minister, Nigeria has a peculiar situation that calls for extreme caution before major appointments are made. The old mindset is that political office is an opportunity to enrich the individual and that politicaloffices are to be shared among political party stalwarts, with little regard to the principle of governing as a means of actually improving public service beyond the usual rhetorical assurance. Undoubtedly, Nigeria is endowed with talented people and richly credentialed individuals, but if the emphasis on change demands a search for men and women of character, the searcher may give the nation a better service by not rushing to name ministers until proper diligence has been done.

    The emphasis that may be needed after decades of poor governance should not be on speed of the new president to appoint ministers. The need to chart a new course in the way the country is governed may require the kind of caution that President Buhari has shown in the last three weeks. He has been busy enough with consultation with other West African countries that collaborate with Nigeria in fighting the menace of Boko Haram. He has also been spending time on consulting with foreign countries that can assist Nigeria in efforts to recover proceeds from looting of the country in the last few years for the purpose of bringing life back to the economy. He had ensured that a process of due diligence was adopted in selection of the Accountant-General, a post that is crucial to the work of ministers. This is the first time there is a real democratic change of regime in country and selecting ministers requires proper planning.

    Citizens who had witnessed failure in governance in the past may have reasons to expect earth-shaking policy statements from new ministers, but such statements may be meaningless without knowing exactly how strong the economy is. In a system where the buck stops at the president’s table, it is in order for a president who is as concerned about the culture of governance especially quality of public service as he is about the character of ministers to assist him to err on the side of slowness than to err on the side of rushed poor judgment.

    Given the theatrics regarding election of principal legislative officers in both houses, it is proper to expect the president to use appointment of ministers to seize some of the attention of the media, if only to show existence of order in the other branch of government. But the times are now different. There is a dire need for deep reflection on appointing ministers capable of staying the course of fundamental change in the polity and society. Just as President John Kennedy said about the relevance of the first 100 days: “All this will not be finished in the first hundred days. Nor will it be finished in the first thousand days, nor in the life of this administration, nor even perhaps in our lifetime on this planet. But let us begin.” In more recent times, President Barack Obama’s observation on the significance of the first 100 days is worth citizens’ attention: “The first hundred days is going to be important, but it’s probably going to be the first thousand days that makes the difference.”

    It will not be out of place if President Buhari needs the first hundred days to plan how to save Nigeria from its ugly past, in view of the state of the nation he inherited three weeks ago.

  • The unnecessary hoopla about Buhari’s non appointment of ministers

    The unnecessary hoopla about Buhari’s non appointment of ministers

    Now, are Nigerians, by our hoopla, eager to have President Buhari bring into positions of responsibility all manner and shape of characters to do same or worse or,  rather allow him to get a grip of the Augean stable he inherited and appoint Nigerians he believes will share his vision of a corruption-free government?

    “Woe unto you, O land, when your king is a child, and your princes feast in the morning!” –Ecclesiastes 10:16

    Forgetting that when an old man falls he looks backwards to reflect on  the cause of his fall, much has been the hue and cry over President Muhammadu Buhari’s non appointment of ministers, even in a mere one month. The noise has become so loud you begin to wonder if this is not a carryover of the military’s era of ‘with immediate effect and alacrity’; when appointees first heard about their appointments, as well as dismissals, on the airwaves. Little, I guess, are Nigerians aware that a man of the president’s age, experience and overall exposure, cannot be expected to be driven by undue enthusiasm to jump into those same excitements that have so poorly served Nigeria.  I recall that at his second coming,  one of President Olusegun Obasanjo’s most harrowing regrets about governance in Nigeria was the fact that literally every modicum of infrastructure and institutions he left behind to drive a  developing economy, among them, the Nigerian Airways and the National Shipping Line, had been vaporised  by his successors beginning from Alhaji Shehu Shagari, through IBB and the murderous General Abacha, terminating with Abubakar,  none of who failed to appoint ministers  with alacrity. Nor did the soporific, pitiable Jonathan government delay in appointing ministers. But what did we see of those ministers of a directionless government whose overarching concern was to maintain a policy of appeasement towards every Tom, Dick and Harry President Goodluck Jonathan believed would be useful in his re-election scheme which had commenced as soon as he was sworn in on 29, May 2011.

    These ministers were active in condoning oil thefts running into 400, 000 barrels per day even where they had gifted their cousins multi-billion dollar oil pipeline protection contracts just as they were complicit in the heist of the tiny cabal that smoked us all up through the oil subsidy scam. When finally the president and minister thought of doing anything to ameliorate the economically crippling situation, Nigerians woke up on the very first day of January, 2012, to hear that every kobo of ‘subsidy’ had been removed, in a case of blaming, and punishing the victim.

    Nor was that all with these selfsame ministers. Edo State Governor, Comrade Oshiomhole, recently alleged that the Finance Minister granted multi-billion waivers, the total of which, I know Mrs Okonjo –Iweala never really told the nation. In Oshiomhole’s words: ‘The Federal Government (obviously on the advice of the coordinating minister) illegally granted waivers to various organisations, running into hundreds of billions of naira that ought to flow to the federation account’. The governor equally informed that this was further compounded by the fact that both the Ministry of Finance and Petroleum Resources, working together, simply refused to transfer to the federation account a lot of the money that ought to have accrued. According to him “over the past four to five years, the NLNG had every year made huge payment -between $1.5 to $2 billion – which ought to go to the federation account. This money was never transferred to the federation account but was unilaterally expended by the Federal Government.”

    Now, are Nigerians, by our hoopla, eager to have President Buhari bring into positions of responsibility all manner and shape of characters to do same or worse or,  rather allow him to get a grip of the Augean stable he inherited and appoint Nigerians he believes will share his vision of a corruption-free government? I think we should ponder these things before we get consumed with the jeremiads of some people whose business projections in a continuing PDP government have been dramatically altered.

    I will be the first to concede that some who argue for early appointments are truly concerned. For instance, I saw the purity of heart in Dele Momodu’s letter to the president which, for me, was advisory, unlike the adversarial types that have emanated from some partisans, especially to respected professional bodies who are surreptitiously being encouraged to up the ante of public discontent.  For instance, after denigrating some of those working quietly with the president as  gerontocrats, some of  those who are  keen on business as usual, have  also quarrelled with his not making earthshaking  economic policy pronouncements even when they were themselves key to helping the Jonathan government pulverise the country’s economy.

    Those who quarrel with the president for preferring to see the entire picture of the akudiaya –wobbling  – economy handed over to him on May 29, 2015, in the words  of one of the key exponents contend as follows:

    a)           The way the Federal Government works is that absolutely nothing happens in any ministry in the absence of a minister.

    b)    To even consummate commercial transactions  between one company and another in the oil sector, the minister has to approve it.

     c)    It’s the minister that signs certificates of occupancy for land deals in Abuja.

    d)   It’s the minister that approves payments to vendors, contractors, etc and concludes by         saying that the system grinds to a halt when the minister is not there.

     These have largely been dismissed by those who should know.  For instance, a retired federal Permanent Secretary posited as follows, in rebuttal:

     “Statement No. 1. is false. Statement 2 may be right for some matters like filling station licence etc, which may require the approval of minister but as regards procurement, the Permanent Secretary handles the implementation. The minister is not involved except for information only. This is in accordance with the provisions of Public Procurement Act of 2007. Involvement of ministers in procurement matters is a violation of the Act. Statement No. 4 is absolutely incorrect; again, all procurement matters stop at the table of the Permanent Secretary (PS) including approval of payments

     to vendors and contractors. The Act only provides that the minister should be informed by the Permanent Secretary for information only so that the minister is aware that the aspect of the annual budget is implemented. Therefore, to say that activities in the Federal Ministries, Departments and  Agencies will be at a standstill in the absence of the minister is not correct, though, some matters that will require the minister’s approval under the law or Civil Service Procedure like Citizenship matters in the Ministry of Interior may wait for the minister’s approval.  Once the annual budget is passed into law as Appropriation Act, the implementation is that of Permanent Secretary as the minister has no approving authority on procurements.”

    In further  canvassing patience, those who argue on the side of the president’s measured pace, given that the ‘ancien regime’ was very hesitant in giving him facts and figures, have further posited as follows: “If a minister is being assigned to a ministry, he/she should know what to go there for in order to have  the promised change. Detailed problems are currently being discreetly sorted out in the various ministries and MDAs by the Permanent Secretaries and Chief Executive Officers currently functioning as Acting Heads. Ministers, they contend, are politicians who would need to be put through on their assumption of office. If hurriedly appointed, there could be the tendency for some to go there to create wrong pictures or even cry wolves where there are none.”

    For me nothing demonstrates the wrongheadedness of un-reflected appointments – appointments with immediate effect and alacrity, especially at the topmost levels of our past governments, more than the present parlous state of the economy and, indeed, the wholesale paralysis currently engulfing every aspect of our national life. As you read this, fuel scarcity has again hit the filling stations, Power Holding Company, at its various discos, are eagerly dispensing darkness just as 23 out of 36 states of the federation are grappling with unpaid workers salaries resulting largely from very powerful ministers shortchanging the federation account from where the states largely fund their sustenance.