Tag: BUHARI

  • Insecurity, corruption,  unemployment, others as  evils Buhari must overcome

    Insecurity, corruption, unemployment, others as evils Buhari must overcome

    As Muhammadu Buhari takes office as President today, unemployment, insecurity, epileptic power supply, corruption, among others, are challenges he must tackle with dispatch, writes Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN 

    Over the years, leadership has been identified as the bane of national development. Policies are unstable and short- term. Although it has often been said that a problem identified and diagnosed is half-solved, the Nigerian leadership challenge has defied this reasoning. The fundamental challenge has been narrowed down to ill-prepared leadership, wrong recruitment process and lack of vision.

    Funds appropriated for welfare and security of the people as well as provision of infrastructure are diverted to private accounts. Jobs done are shoddy as the contractors understand the language of the leaders. The education sector remains comatose; hospitals designated centres of excellence have become glorified  consulting clinics; power supply continues to haunt big and small businesses; the roads are in poor state and infrastructure for economic progress remains a source of national embarrassment, performing below regional standards. No sector stands out.

    To say that Nigeria is at the cross roads  is an understatement, especially against the backdrop of the  collective experience in almost all spheres of its national life. The task before Muhammadu Buhari, who takes over from Dr Goodluck Jonathan today, is enormous. Top among the tasks that must be done are turning the tides against insecurity, defeating corruption and banishing unemployment, among others.

    Insecurity

    The current state of insecurity is a manifestation of deep-rooted and structurally entrenched crisis of development that creates the environment for the emergence of poverty, unemployment, and inequality. These, in turn, lead to frustration, alienation, and ultimately, social discontent that spark violence and insecurity. Without the enabling environment, these conditions could not have metamorphosed into serious national security problems threatening to tear the country apart. The Boko Haram insurgency has not only claimed thousands of lives, it has also seen daring terrorists hang their flag in parts of the country, especially in the northeast.

    Buhari made security a driving issue in his presidential campaign. He promised to put an end to Boko Haram insurgency if elected. He said the primary responsibility of a responsible government is to protect the lives and properties of every Nigerian wherever they choose to live. There are also problems of kidnappings  and robbery attacks which have assumed dangerous dimension.

    Relevant to this appalling picture is the issue of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). A report of the Internal Displaced Monitoring Centre and the Norwegian Refugee Council indicate that of 33 million internal refugees across the world, about 3.3 million Nigerians are internally displaced because of the Boko Haram insurgency in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states. The number of dislodged victims of the six year old violent campaign by the terrorists in the affected areas is not only thought- provoking but also a cause for concern because it suggests that the scale of the problem may not have been fully captured and may indeed be beyond the range of the available figures.

    The challenges faced by displaced persons call for serious commitment. The Buhari presidency should help the internally displaced by perfecting relief structures.

    A security expert said the president should acknowledge the failure of the security agencies hence there should be a complete overhaul of the security agencies to pre-empt security breaches –– particularly, the failure of the intelligence services to contain the recurring security breaches.

    According to him, “Mr President, on assumption of office, has to act decisively to execute his office, and this can be achieved by implementing the anti-terrorism law and punish culprits of such heinous crimes capable of causing instability in the nation. The trends leading to this situation are reversible, if seriously proactive and sustained measures could be adopted by the government and the international community. The implication of this is that policy makers have the duty to arrest the drift through social justice and development. To address security problem in Nigeria is in effect, to address its crisis of development”.

    Unemployment

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has described the menace of chronic youth unemployment in Nigeria as a time bomb. The interpretation is that when the problem assumes an uncontrollable dimension, it will explode, with deleterious effects on the society. It stands to reason that there is a correlation between the youth unemployment in the land and the reserve army of idle and ignorant hands that a sect like Boko Haram is able to recruit for its heinous crimes. Similarly, the ever increasing wave of armed robberies, kidnappings, mindless assassinations and other crimes perpetrated mostly by youths across the country can be linked to the spectre of mass unemployment.

    The magnitude of the unemployment in the country will be better appreciated by making reference to the statement of the former Chairman of the Subsidy Re-investment Programme (SURE-P) Dr Christopher Kolade when he noted that 40 million Nigerians, that is 23.9 per cent of the population are unemployed as a result of the inability of the system to absorb the approximately 300,000 graduates churned out of tertiary institutions annually. This figure may not necessarily include the chronically underemployed such as casual workers, or those who are employed seasonally.

    The problem of unemployment is mounting daily. The manufacturing sector which used to be the major employer of labour is in a coma. Many manufacturing companies have closed shop in Nigeria and relocated to neighbouring West African countries or South Africa that provide enabling environment for business to thrive. The banks are downsizing at a ridiculous rate while access to loan has become an official publicity stunt. More devastating is the fact that the government has failed to provide stable power supply and security that are central to industrialisation and by extension employment generation and general development of the country.

    Recently, an industrialist entered into agreement with a Romanian firm to come and set up an agro-allied industry which will in its first year employ 1,000 workers. The investors came to Nigeria to formalise the agreement and process other requirements for the take-off of the project. The hotel where they lodged was on generator 24 hours daily which raised their suspicion over the state of power supply in the country. The second day of their visit, they were robbed on their way back to the hotel. The following morning they left for the airport and left the country without parting words to their Nigerian business partner. That was the end of the business transaction. The fact is, no genuine foreign investor would come and invest in a country where security of lives and property is lacking and where power supply is not stable.

    Agriculture stands out as a major solution to Nigerian unemployment if properly developed. The reason why many Nigerians run away from agriculture is because of the use of hoes and other primitive equipment which they consider stressful to them. With introduction of machines into agriculture, Nigerians will embrace it. Improved system of farming and poultry will propel many to pick farming as means of employment. The Buhari administration should organise seminars where citizens will be taught on new improved system of making living from agriculture.

    Government should support Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) to boost employment in the country. Private establishments contribute largely to the growth of manufacturing companies in the country. According to Nigerian Bureau of Statistics, SMEs manufacture more than 90 per cent of the products used in Nigeria. Government should provide more funds to SMEs so that they can expand their operations and create more jobs for Nigerians.

    Economy

    To say that the economy is dire strait is to state the obvious. The impression is that Nigeria is broke. Both federal and state governments are cash strapped that they cannot pay workers’ salaries. In fact, the Jonathan Federal Government had to take loan to pay April salaries. This suggests that the nation is broke. It is a manifestation of economic mismanagement.

    To revive the economy, a renowned economist Mr Henry Boyo said there is urgent need for a fundamental restructuring of the country’s monetary framework so that the economy can be rapidly transformed to induce vast expansion in industrial activity with single digit lending rates, increase employment opportunities, lower single digit of inflation and a market determined exchange rate mechanism. He noted that the government’s efforts to achieve these parameters, reduce poverty and enhance the social welfare of the people in the last 30 years have evidently failed woefully.

    “Indeed our economy appears trapped in a paradox of deepening poverty with increasing export revenue. It is inexplicable, for example that Nigeria became listed amongst the poorest nation in the world. A careful analysis of the process of infusion of our export earnings into the economy will show that this anomaly was made inevitable by the Central Bank’s practice of capturing export dollar revenue and substituting naira at its unilaterally determined rate of exchange before payment of consolidated naira allocations to the three tiers of government”.

    Another economist, Dr Joseph Edebiri, blamed  Jonathan for failing to put in place a robust fiscal policy that could align with the monetary policy. He said this would have brought down inflation rate from the present 15 per cent, reduce lending rate to single digit to stimulate the productive sector, open up the mining sector to international investors, promote private local petroleum refining and railways with extra-ordinary incentives, halt the massive borrowing that and has taken the external debt to $60 billion.

    He said: “Jonathan failed to prosecute oil subsidy thieves and their official collaborators, to clean up the corrupt Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), to reduce his large army of unproductive advisers and assistants and also to reshuffle and reduce his incompetent cabinet. He dismissed the claims of Jonathan economic advisers especially, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala that the economy was  growing at seven per cent. The statistics being bandied by government officials contrasted with the reality on ground. The economy she claimed was growing has not impacted on the standard of living. The inflation in the country is one of the highest in the world. The manufacturing sector is almost dead as industrialists close shop daily because of high cost of production, he said.

    “We don’t know how much we are earning from oil export. The government seemed to have legitimised oil thievery. It also appears that Jonathan has accepted that oil theft is a part of the Nigerian reality because his government has done nothing to bring the culprits to book,” he added.

    Corruption

    To observers, the anti-corruption war of the Jonathan administration was not just dead; its remains have been interred. It failed to tackle corruption. The high profile corruption cases, including Malabo oil deal, Halliburton contract scam, the $20 billion fraud in the NNPC, the N1 trillion debt owed the NITEL for the use of its facilities by GSM operators at the inception, the purchase of over- priced bullet –proof by former Aviation Minister, Stella Oduah. The dust raised by the Pension Fund scam, Otedola-Farouk saga and other related cases are still fresh in the minds of the people.

    Jonathan’s posture against the monster called ‘corruption’, which appears to be the root cause of many of the country’s woes, was not impressive. The government did too little in arresting or punishing corrupt officials and individuals. One of the perceived weaknesses that cast the Jonathan administration in bad light is the less than forceful presidential presence and ineffective deployment and application of presidential power in calling people around him to order. His actions suggested that he accommodated mediocre elements within his inner circle and that he lacked the will to show them the door.

    The Jonathan administration carried on as though it was unaware that corruption is an impediment that stunts the growth of nations. No nation has ever developed or made any meaningful progress without tackling corruption head-long. Indeed, Jonathan had a poor public image due to his failure to wage a spirited war against corruption, leakages in the oil industry, including pipeline vandalism.

    Buhari is not new in fighting corruption. In 1983, when he came to power as military Head of State, he succeeded in halting Nigeria from drifting and restored her glory within a short period. The corrupt politicians that looted the treasury were brought to book and vomited what they illegally swallowed. Nigerians are keeping faith with his promise to stamp out corruption that has given the country a bad name in the comity of nations.

    For him to succeed in his anti-corruption war, the Buhari administration must consider strengthening the criminal justice system in the country and appoint people of integrity to head the anti-graft agencies. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) and Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) and its tribunal should be independent of the Presidency in terms of appointments and financing. The focus of the Buhari Presidency should be on prevention, detection and prosecution of corrupt persons which are fundamental to ending corruption.

    Power Supply

    The quantum of power consumed in a country by the citizens is considered a good indicator of the country’s socio-economic performance. Epileptic power supply is the greatest paradox of life in Nigeria, a country blessed with various sources of energy, including crude oil, natural gas, hydro power, coal and solar energy. The blackout is unprecedented. Business enterprises rely on generator 24 hours daily to power their machines. Those that cannot afford extra budget for diesel have closed shop and lay off their workers.

    Energy crisis in Nigeria has become a norm for several decades and is the bane of her economic development. There is an extreme electricity deficiency in Nigeria. The causes of this deficiency are related to financial, socio-political, and structural issues which lead the power sector in Nigeria to be recording high energy losses from power generation and billing which lead to insufficient cash generation as a result of these inefficiencies. Only about 40 per cent of households in Nigeria are connected to the national grid. There is highly-energy loss due to the physical deterioration of the transmission and distribution facilities, an inadequate metering system and an increase in the incidence of power theft through illegal connections.

    The crux of the matter includes inadequate generation, inefficient transmission and distribution of power. Nigeria’s installed power generation capacity of 6,000 mega watts is grossly inadequate to cater for the needs of over 140 million people. The country generates less than 3,000 mw.

    Government officials have always blamed the problem of power outages to inadequate gas supply to thermal power plants and low level of water in the dams. A lecturer in the Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Lagos (UNILAG), Professor Frank Okafor said “the fact is a number of power stations are old. Look at Kainji dam built in 1968, if you just change a rotor and say it will give you 2’000 mw it’s a lie. An old machine remains old no matter the amount of rehabilitation or renovation. The old machines can never meet our target.

    “If a developing country like Brazil can generate 100,000 mw, why not Nigeria priding itself as giant of Africa? Already South Africa is in Congo to build plant which they intend to transmit through High Voltage Distributive Transmission. Nigeria lacks the capacity for implementing long-term development plans.

    “No nation survives without long-term development plans. We are almost at 2020, there is nothing on ground to say there is plan pointing at 2020. They keep telling us that the power generation will hit over 20,000 mw by 2020. As regards Brazil, they have a very high potential for hydro power and they took their time to train their people. They built power plants and export power to neighbouring countries”.

    On the way out, Okafor said, it is high time Nigeria considers renewable energy as panacea to incessant power outages. “These renewable energy sources like solar, wind, coal, biomass and small hydro are good even though not cost effective but they should be encouraged. Nevertheless, we still need big generating plants to run our steel plants and manufacturing industries.

    Fuel Scarcity

    Experience over the years has shown that Nigeria has not been able to find solution to frequent scarcity of petroleum products. The ultimate solution is to build new refineries. It doesn’t make sense for a country that produces crude oil to be importing refined product. Refining crude oil locally will not only make enough products for local consumption available, but will provide employment for the teeming unemployed youths. Refine locally to meet local needs will solve the problem of oil subsidy that runs into billions of naira every year.

    A petro-chemical engineer, Funso Adebowale, suggests that Nigeria should build new refineries with local technology instead of spending huge sums of money importing experts to come and maintain the existing refineries that has never met local demand.

    Adebowale reasoned that the funds used in paying the experts to come and service our old refineries would have been better channelled into research in our universities or assist to develop what is referred to as  illegal refineries that abound in the Niger Delta.

    “Evidence abound that crude oil has been locally refined in the Niger Delta by the people we derogatorily referred to as oil thieves. What that means is that local refineries exist in Nigeria. We should improve on them.

    “Nigeria has the capacity to refine crude oil but the problem has been lack of political will and vision on the part of our political leaders. The in-coming administration should hearken to the voice of reasoning by encouraging the universities to embark on research to produce home grown refineries within a time frame”.

    Unifying the country

    The task before Buhari is enormous. His first task will be to heal the wounds of a charged electoral campaign. He is inheriting a country divided along ethnic and religious lines more than any time in the nation’s history. This fact was not lost on him when he declared in his first speech after he was declared winner of the election that: “This was a hard- fought contest. Emotions are high. We must not allow them to get the better of us. This is not the time for confrontation”.

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar aptly captured what most Nigerians expect from their new leader in his letter of congratulation. Atiku said: “When you assume our highest office, you must become the president of not just the APC, but all of Nigeria, including the people who did not vote for you. We look up to you to heal the fractures of our country and truly unite this country like never before.”

     

  • Buhari formally receives handover notes

    Buhari formally receives handover notes

    President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday received the handover notes from the outgoing President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The exercise took place inside the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Jonathan had earlier conducted the President-elect round the seat of power.

    He presented an executive summary of his handover notes and a copy of the National Conference report to Buhari in the presence of All Progressives Congress chiefs who witnessed the event.

    The outgoing President, who spoke after the presentation, said his administration had done its best for the country.

    On his part, the President-elect said he would not make an official statement until after studying the handover notes.

    He commended Jonathan for conceding defeat in the March 28 presidential election.

  • Buhari arrives for Aso Rock tour

    Buhari arrives for Aso Rock tour

    The President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, has arrived Aso Rock for a tour of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He was accompaigned by aides and some members of the All Progressive Congress.

    Buhari will be conducted round the seat of power by the outgoing President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The change of leadership baton takes place at the Eagle Square on Friday.

  • I’ll not interfere in National Assembly’s  leadership, says Buhari

    I’ll not interfere in National Assembly’s leadership, says Buhari

    President-elect Muhammadu Buhari has insisted that he will not interfere in the process of selecting leadership of the National Assembly.

    Buhari said he was prepared to work with whoever emerged irrespective of where he comes from.

    In a statement from his media team, the President-elect said it has become necessary for him to clear the air in view of the continued name-dropping in some circles linking his name to some candidates.

     He said: “I am prepared to work with any leaders that the House or Senate selects. It doesn’t matter who the person is or where he or she is from. There is due process for the selection of leaders of the National Assembly. I will not interfere in that process.”

    Buhari added that the media and the public should begin to get used to no more “business as usual. Nigeria has indeed entered a new dispensation. My administration does not intend to repeat the same mistakes made by previous governments.”

  • Buhari condoles with Obasanjo

    Buhari condoles with Obasanjo

    President-elect Muhammadu Buhari has condoled with former President Olusegun Obasanjo on the death of his younger sister, Madam Adunni Oluwasola Eweje-Obasanjo.

    A statement in Abuja by Buhari’s Head of Media Team, Malam Garba Shehu,  expressed sadness that Madam Eweje-Obasanjo died at a period when her wisdom will be needed.

    He urged the former President to take heart and bear the loss with equanimity and faith that God who knows all things will strengthen him and other relations.

  • Anti-aging tips for Buhari in Change era (8)

    TOMORROW IS D-DAY, when President Ebele Azikwe Jonathan should pass power to president– elect Gen Mohammadu Buhari (rtd). The hearts of many people, including Gen, Buhari’s must be pounding harder and faster as this column speculated last Thursday. At under 110/70, mine isn’t. As a matter of fact, I will not witness Gen. Buhari’s inauguration on radio and television, and I will miss the Trafalgar square–type assembly which my acquaintance, Alhaji Jide Tairu director at Lagos State Ministry of Transportation, has arranged for that day at our housing estate to commemorate the inauguration. I will be in Lagos alright, but out of circulation, cut off from radio and television and merry-making of all sorts. For tomorrow is May 29 one of the important dates in my calendar since 1977 which presages a three–day observance of PENTECOST.

    Christians know of Pentecost as the season of the ascension of the crucified but risen Christ. It is celebrated worldwide in Christiandom 40 days after Easter Monday, which reminds them of the teaching of early Christian fathers that the Lord Jesus physically arose from the dead on that day. There are many Christians who do not share this belief down the line. While they believe the Lord survived physical death, they see this more in terms of his soul or ethereal body and have explanations for the whereabouts of his physical earthly remains. Even Apostle Paul would note the body of the Lord he encountered was not the mortal earthly cloak of his essence.

    Well, this is not the issue now. Since 1977, I have been priviledged to partake of the recognition and observance of Pentecost over three days beginning from tomorrow. I crave your indulgence to mention, briefly this event because the date coincides, somewhat, with the date chosen, for whatever reason(s), to inaugurate a new Nigerian Federal Government, and because Gen. Buhari’s election, unique at this time of Nigeria’s history, positions his inauguration as president for tomorrow.

    Many Christians remember that Temple in paradise where 24 Elders unceasingly sing Holy, Holy, Holy, God Almighty. From eternity to Eternity.

    his temple is at the boundary of the Divine World or the World of Angels with paradise, the world of human spirits.    we humans are spirits from the spiritual world or World of spirit, which lies below the world of Angels in the divine world. At the summit of the spiritual world there is a semblance, though in spiritual content, of the temple of the elders in the Divine world. It is this Temple which bore a part of the light of God when God issued the creation fiat or order…” LET THERE BE LIGHT” PRIOR TO THIS ORDER EXISTENCE BEGAN WITH Him the creator and ended with the Elders. Below the realms of the Elders, a dark, cold void existed. The order brought a part of the light of God from out of Him to the boundary of the world of the Elders and of the void. That part of the light of God immediately brought light, heat and warmth to the void to give it life, and we are informed that “the spirit of God hovered over the land.” This was the creation of paradise, after which was to evolve subsequent creation which developed, through the Big bang  scenarios described by science, after the prototype or archetype of the original creation. It is the beings in this original creation that were made after the “Image of God”, not the imperfect human beings on earth who are still struggling consciously or unconsciously, to achieve immortality. In the Temple at the summit of paradise, the world of perfected and evolved human spirits like you and me striving to become images of the images of God, there is a king. He is that part of the light of God, that is, He is a part of God, who brought creation into being and anchored God’s law within it. In this Temple, His Essence or being is cloaked in the finest spirit material, hence this Name of Holy spirit. For God and God alone is Holy. The Lord Jesus referred to Him when He said… “And when he, the spirit of Truth is come…” It is of Him that the Lord Jesus also referred when He said any sin against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven. For, as the Creative will of God the father, the Holy Spirit brought Creation into being under the Laws of God, anchored these laws in creation, has the responsibility for the smooth–running of creation, including the redress of any imbalance or injustice throw what we call the Law of Karma or of sowing and Reaping and, Finally, responsibility for the final Judgement. The Lord Jesus advises us that … when He the Spirit of Truth comes, He will reprieve the world of sin and proclaim the judgment” The book of Revelation in the Bible announces Him as … “ that which was, which is and which is to come…” (For the Judgement, the next verse announces greetings also from the risen and departed Lord Jesus and describe him as the “faithful witness”). This, two personalities are spoken of… that which is to come”, and “the faithful witness”. It’s goes on to describe Jesus as “the first begotten of the Death” which I understand to mean to mean the first son of God to live on earth with a spirituality dead humanity. Thus the Holy spirit as the will and power of God who is to come is the second son of God.

    As part of His responsibility for the maintenance of Creation, which He brought into existence, there is an outpouring of power from the Holy Spirit into Creation once, in what we observe on earth every year at a definite time those human Spirits whose inner or Spirit eyes are sufficiently sensitive to see the paleness or dullness of the earth when it is running out of this power, like an anemic person in need of blood transfusion, the peak of the receipt of this power has been determined to be between May 29 and May 31. This outpouring is like the surge of blood from the heart to all parts of the body to maintain them. The heart beats about 72 times a minute, but the outpouring takes place once a year. The scenario should flood us with humility; it should teach us that, as there is only one God, there is only One Law and one power. This law operates throughout creation in the same way: creation is maintained or the human body is maintained.

    Revelation 1:4-6 describe the Holy Spirit as “that which was, which is and which is to come” and the Lord Jesus as “the faithful witness.” Being from the same origin as the Holy Spirit, Jesus would know of the timing of the outpouring of power from the Holy Spirit, He would delay His ascent homewards to the father and instruct His Disciples to gather in the upper chamber to witness this event. Hitherto, He alone would have it, it was possible that was what happened at the Transfiguration been observing it. Please recall that He once said He had many things He would have loved to teach them, but they were not yet mature for the information. Their grief over, His crucification which purged their souls of anything else most probably opened them up that “special“ Pentecost to receive power as It descended from high and perform the wonders ascribed to them at that Pentecost.

    hristians would need to purge themselves of some errors connected with Pentecost. One: Pentecost or the outpouring of power was not a one–off event limited to the disciples alone. Two: They do not have the holy spirit in them but probably have in them power from the Holy Spirit, for the Holy Spirit is personal like Jesus and is not merely the rush of wind.

    Three, it is given to not only Christians to partake of Pentecost. God did not create religions. Man fashioned religions from out of the Messages He sent to different parts of the earth, on the basis of what spiritual knowledge they needed to have in order that they may ascend the next rung of the ladder of life on their homeward journey to paradise. Had these messages been left as pure as they were brought and joined in ascending order, they would have form a single ladder to the pedestal of Truth, to God. The power of Pentecost is impersonal. It works for every soul opened to it in the degree of the absorbent capacity of that soul.

    It transforms from slumber of “winter” to spring what we call Nature, the hills and the mountains, the meadows, fields and the forests, the oceans and the seas. These things are not Nature but the effects or work of Nature. Nature comprise all the Nature beings who stand unswerving in the Will of God to fulfill His Command for the Creation of a home in different parts of developed or Subsequent Creation for the maturing of the human spirit who could not mature in the Original Paradise because that was too close to the proximity of the Power of God.

    Four we used the Power of Pentecost according to our nature, to ennoble ourselves or our environment, or to burden ourselves with more guilt spiritually and, thereby, entangle ourselves and our societies for spiritual perdition. If society is stagnant, such as ours, whenever Creation is on the move, it is evidence that we are entangled. My prayer is that, as President, irrespective of his religion, Gen. Mohammadu Buhari (rtd) would be sufficiently connected to the strengthening, guiding and helpful rays of the Power of Pentecost pouring forth from On high at his time, to fulfill the transformation of Nigeria to the honour and glory of the Almighty Creator AMEN. Thus, off I go, out of circulation at the time of the inauguration of the Buhari Administration tomorrow. Alhaji Jide Tairu and my other friends should now understand my absence at the inauguration of the Trafalgar Square–type Assembly. So should Mr George Ubeng, an avid reader of this column who, unsuccessfully, has been inviting me to a palatial pleasure garden turned to a health farm run by his wife. He believes I have no time for pleasure, that I am all work, work, work and more work. How wrong he can be. He shoudn’t soon be surprised about my plans to bring Jide Tairu‘’Trafalgar Square’’ to the ‘’gardens’’ in nearby Iju – Ishaga neighborhood of Lagos, and bring the ‘’gardens’’ to the Square.

     

    DEEP VEIN THROMBOSIS

    Let’s hurry back to familiar grounds. As president, Gen Buhari (rtd) cannot escape frequent air and road travel in and out of Nigeria. This week, he returned from a visit to Mr Tony Blair, British prime minister.

    The western world is interested in Nigeria’s future. Under President Jonathan, foreign and home debts have climbed to a new Olympian height at about US60 billion dollars. There is nothing wrong with a debt if the money is judiciously spent on projects which regenerate repayments and post profits on top of it. Nigeria’s debts behave abnormally because they hardly bring anything back in return.

    Traveling long hours by road, rail or air (I have no sea travel experience), the tendency is for some people to cross their tired legs, placing one foot on top of the other or, unknowingly, resting the fold of the knee against the seat. Resting the knee fold against the seat may compress a deep vein which runs under, disturb free flow of blood or even cause the blood to clot. Clots of blood detaching from this thrombos may lodge someday. Sometime, the carotid (heart) arteries, deprive the heart of sufficient blood supply for its work or even cause a heart attack. If the lodgement is in the brain, a stroke may occur. Clots in the blood vessels may cause swellings in the foot which may give rise to interonitent claudication,  a condition in leg when the sufferer experiences pain on walking even short distances.

    Besides, clots may, give rise to phlebitis (inflammation of the walls of the veins). If you observe the hands and arms of many people, or even the legs, you may find the veins and other blood vessels so inflamed that they appear to want to leap out.

    o dissolve clots, orthodox medicine relies on such pharmaceuticals as aspirin and waffarin. These could be dangerous for some people as they may cause lacerations in the stomach and intestine, thereby provoking stomach and intestinal bleeding. In alternative medicine, safer and effective remedies include serrapeptase, cayenne pepper, fish oil and Vitamin E to mention a few. Of Vitamin E, Judy Limberg Mcfarland, one of our tour guides in this series, says:  “Vitamin E also decreases the need for oxygen in the tissues and organs of the body. Mega Vitamin levels of Vitamin C and trace levels of Selenum also share this function. Additionally, Vitamin E improves the transportation of oxygen by the red blood cells… dissolves clots and prevents their formation in arteries and veins. It is useful in treating and preventing phlebitis ( inflammation of the walls of the vein). As a preventive measure against strokes, Vitamin E helps prevent arterial and venous thrombosis or clots in the circulatory system of the brain.”

    Judy Mcfarland says Vitamin E also “restores capillary permeability, it helps dilate the capillaries and this helps  circulation of blood throughout the body”.

    Judy Mcfarland adds: “A number of years ago, at a National Nutritional food Association convention, mother and I had the priviledge of hearing Dr. Nufrid Shute discuss his work with 38,000 candiac patients. During his lecture, he showed fantastic colour slides that I will never forget. Among them were pictures of patients with ulcerated amputated stubs, diabetic gangerine, terrible ulceration and severe burns, all of which refused to heal. But after natural Vitamin E, usually 600 ius daily, had been given to the patients, and Vitamin E ointment had been used, all the patients were restored. Ulcerated and naked wounds healed more rapidly with Vitamin E therapy, and the scar tissue did not contact and was not tender. Vitamin E was even shown to prevent disfiguring scars and to help heal old scar. Remember this, if you need a scar to heal after an operation.

     

    YOUR HEART AND VITAMIN E  is the classic book: by Dr. Evein Shute.

    Of cayenne, she says: “Cayenne is more than a hot spice. Like many herbs, cayenne pepper ( capsicum frudescuns) also known as capsicum, is used for medicinal as well as for culinary purposes. In recent years, more than 650 studies of capsaicin (the “hot “ property in cayenne pepper, have been published, including more than 100 clinical studies in human beings). Capsicum is excellent for equalising blood circulation, which helps to prevent strokes and heart attacks. It increases the heart action, effectively increasing circulation without increasing blood pressure.’’

    On the information about Vitamin E shared by Judy McFarland, I would like to add that, in choosing a Vitamin E brand, the pack should be well inspected to ensure the product is the natural form of Vitamin E. The natural form is d-alpha tocopherol.  The inorganic form, sometimes made from petroleum sources, is dl tocopherol. The difference is between d and dl. There are mixed tocopherols, which contains all six or so variants of Vitamin E, and other  brands, with only one or a few variants. If you choose to try fish oil for clots, be mindful that there are varying grades of it and that the safer and more effective ones do not come cheap. Fish oil from fish in the Atlantic is less preferred, for example, to krill oil from krill fishin the Antarctic , which is unpolluted by heavy metals, while some producers take extra pains to purify their fish oil brand, some others do not and sell cheap. The secret of what goes on in the industry is shared in the classic book of Dr. Udo Erasmus, Fats that heal and fats that kill.

  • As Buhari steps in

    As Buhari steps in

    Today, Thursday May 28, is the eve of the swearing in of Muhammadu Buhari as President of Nigeria, and of Yemi Osinbajo as Vice-President. Something tells me that our country, Nigeria, is about to step into its most formative era ever. I have therefore chosen today as my day to start to speak face to face with Nigeria – after many past months of speaking as Gbogun Gboro.

    First of all then, I warmly congratulate the incoming president and vice-president of Nigeria. I rejoice with Nigeria that, against countless predictions, the presidential election of last month did not degenerate into conflicts, blood-letting and disaster. And I applaud outgoing President Jonathan for bowing out dutifully to the voice of Nigerians after their verdict had become clear and unambiguous through their votes.

    But above all else, I look forward today into the immediate future of Nigeria. All I say here today about our country’s past is really to provide a guide to our future. I know that our Nigeria can make it, and that it can thrive and prosper – if we sincerely determine so.  The knowledge, the confidence, that Nigeria has all it takes to prosper and become a great power in the world was the determinant of all my involvement in Nigerian politics in my youth (and in my University College Ibadan student days) from the late 1950s on, and after. In the years when we prepared for independence, our three regions were advancing quite strongly, and indeed proudly, in various directions of development. Each region took strides forward in its own way and at its own pace, and made its own kind of contribution to the overall progress of our country.

    The only serious weakness in this promising picture of the late 1950s was that the ‘minority’ ethnic nationalities in each region wanted to be constituted into a small multi-ethnic region of their own (a Calabar Ogoja Rivers Region out of the Eastern Region, a Midwest Region out of the Western Region, and a Middle Belt and North-eastern regions out of the vast Northern Region), but that our British rulers rejected their demands. However, there was good reason to hope that, after independence, our country’s leaders would attend properly to those demands – and that our country would then have even better chances to progress and prosper.

    Unfortunately, our leaders who controlled our Federal Government at independence bluntly refused to deal with this matter in a spirit of statesmanship and love for all our country. They thus set the stage for conflict, confusion and disorder in our country. Coming mostly from the Northern Region (with Eastern Region’s leaders as junior partners), these controllers of our Federal Government chose to approach the affairs of our country in a manner that immediately pushed our country onto the path of disaster. Determined to humble the Western Region which was the pace-setter region in most fields of development, they employed the powers of the Federal Government in 1962 to destabilize the Western Region – to suspend its elected government and appoint over it a sole administrator. Subsequent attempts to employ federal power to rig elections in the Western Region soon plunged the Western Region into a revolt; and this led to the first military seizure of power in Nigeria. The military in power then went on and distorted Nigeria’s federal structure completely, and turned Nigeria into a country ruled by a Federal Government that controls virtually all power and all resources, and that presumes to be able to promote development in all corners of Nigeria. Made smaller and smaller (until their number reached 36), the states of the Nigerian federation became impotent entities incapable of doing much for development and security in their domains, dependent on federal allocations, and constantly subject to federal bullying.

    In the context of this chaos, prosperity deserted Nigeria and poverty took over. Under federal management, Nigeria’s enviable agriculturally based exports (cocoa in the Western Region, palm produce in the Eastern Region, and groundnuts in the Northern Region), more or less disappeared. Petroleum from the Niger Delta became almost our sole export, and it poured increasingly large revenues into our economy. But it only increased the urge in the Federal Government to take over all resources. The Federal Government became abominably inefficient and corrupt, and public corruption became Nigeria’s pervasive culture. Most influential Nigerians abandoned productive enterprise and found ways to join in the scrambling for shares in the corruption. At lower levels in the Nigerian society, the escalating poverty destroyed almost all of productive orientation, and most Nigerians who could do so found some way to benefit from the fruits of corrupt politics. Increasingly harassed by their ever-demanding constituents, Nigerian politicians became more and more blatant in turning public offices into sources of graft and of indefensible remunerations.

    I am happy that Buhari has strong anti-corruption credentials, and I trust his promise to suppress corruption. I am sure that Osinbajo will be his kindred spirit and strong partner in the fight. But corruption is only a symptom of the deep-seated disease in the management of our country’s affairs. A president may suppress corruption, but unless the real disease is healed, corruption will return. Nigeria’s real disease inheres in the fact that we are neglecting, or evading attention to, the obvious fact that ours is a country of many different nations – nations different in culture, in history, in territory, and in culturally determined modes of response to issues and to the demands of modern development. Being different in these ways does not mean we cannot become a stable and successful country; what it means is that we must truthfully and even humbly accept that our nations are different, and we must pay due respect to those differences.

    The acknowledgement and respect of our differences must be clearly written in our constitutional structure, our practice of politics, and our inter-group relationships. When any of our component nations, especially any of our larger nations, chooses to disrespect our nations’ differences, the outcome can only be some wrong-headed attempt to dominate others, or a disruptive crudity in relations with others – each of which can only make our country unstable or even a failure. A relentless attempt by some to dominate our country and all its peoples  has been a constant factor in our history since independence, and it is towards that end that resolute attempts have been made by some to accumulate power and resource-control at the federal centre – the outcome of which has been massive inefficiency and public corruption, widespread hostility among our nations, attempts by federal authority to rig elections across our country, and our country’s sad decline across board.

    It is therefore imperative, if we sincerely desire the best for our country, that we must consciously try to evolve a Nigerian culture based on respect for our nations’ very real differences. Constitutionally, that calls for properly restructuring our federation; it also calls for giving back to the component units of our federation the task, resources, and strength for development. In all respects, it calls for respectful contacts and relations among our nations. Without these, it will be impossible to make Nigeria successful, or even to keep Nigeria as one country.  Focusing mostly on suppressing corruption while leaving our federation in its present chaotic structure may appear to succeed for a while, but it will fail in the end. I wish President Buhari – and I wish Nigeria – not a superficial and transient success, but a true and lasting success.

  • ‘Buhari should foster unity in APC’

    ‘Buhari should foster unity in APC’

    A group, the Sanity Group (SG) has urged President-elect Muhammadu Buhari to remain neutral as the senators-elect prepare for the election of a new Senate President. According to the association, the President-elect must foster unity and harmony in the party.

    The group also advised APC leaders to support a popular candidate for the slot to prevent the re-enactment of the ‘Tambuwal scenario’.

    In a statement, SG coordinator, Olusola Sanni, said it will be very dangerous for the APC, if any of the aspirants become the Senate President without the bloc support of the party.

    He said the contest should be effectively managed to prevent internal rebellion.

    Urging the party to moderate its interference in the in-house contest, he said APC should learn from the Obasanjo era when the Senate experienced instability because of undue executive interference.

    He added: “Buhari must avoid this pitfall and, stay neutral and if he needs to support, he should support the most popular candidate.

    “Intra party crisis led to the fall of PDP when 16 became greater than 19. The problem of PDP started when President Goodluck Jonathan pitched his tent with 16 governors as against the 19 governors. APC leadership should learn from GEJ/PDP mistake and avoid a costly mistake that can lead to the fall of APC.

  • NASS: I will not interfere in selection process – Buhari

    NASS: I will not interfere in selection process – Buhari

    President -elect, Muhammadu Buhari, has insisted that he will not interfere in the process of selecting leadership of the National Assembly, saying he is prepared to work with whoever emerge from the  process.

    In a statement issued by his media team, Buhari said it has become necessary for him to clear the air in view of the continued name-dropping in some circles, linking his name to some candidates.

    He said: “I am prepared to work with any leaders that the House or Senate select. It doesn’t matter who the person is or where he or she is from. There is due process for the selection of leaders of the National Assembly. I will not interfere in that process.”

    Buhari said the media and the public should begin to get used to no more “business as usual,” adding that Nigeria has indeed entered a new dispensation.

    “My administration does not intend to repeat the same mistakes made by previous governments,” the President-elect added.

  • Buhari is misunderstood by Nigerians – Momoh

    Buhari is misunderstood by Nigerians – Momoh

    Former Minister of Information, Prince Tony Momoh, has said the President- elect, Muhammadu Buhari, is generally misunderstood by many Nigerians, saying the retired army officer is the simplest man to meet.

    Momoh said Buhari talks about the rules and expects everybody to obey the rules.

    “He is very predictable. You will know what he will do, if you compromise any of the issues, you are on your own,” the ex-minister said on the President-elect.

    Speaking at the presentation of a documentary film on the former head of state titled: “Buhari, My Hero,” in Abuja, Momoh who worked with Buhari as National Chairman of the Congress for Progressives Change (CPC), assured that the “President-elect will pursue security, develop infrastructure and all of us will look forward to prosperity.”

    He said the documentary film brought out so many things which Nigerians did not know about. Buhari.

    Momoh said: “It brought out how humorous he is. How strict people thought he was, but how very humane he has always been. There were lots of things people did not know about Buhari, which came out in the film today such as closeness to those who worked with him and those he worked with. There did not seem to be anybody who said anything evil about him or the so called bad side the hate campaigns said about him.

    “As a person, I have known Buhari since 2003 when I worked with him and I know he is the simplest man you can meet. He talks about the rules and expects everybody to obey the rules. He is very predictable, you will know what he will do, if you compromise any of the issues, you are on your own.

    “After inauguration, Nigerians expect him to hit the road running. Buhari said things have become so hard that it will take a lot of time to stabilize and he will pursue security, develop infrastructure and all of us will look forward to prosperity.”

    The former Commandant of the Nigeria a Defence Academy (NDA), Gen. Paul Tafa, commended the producer of the documentary for a job well done, saying “what she has done is commendable.”

    “Single handedly, she traversed Nigeria, with her team and at her expense to interview people, friends and relations of Buhari because of her belief in the man as somebody who will bring change to Nigeria.

    “The documentary says it all, but even before that, I want to say that Buhari is the man Nigeria needs now and the prayer is that all that he has stood for and said would be fulfilled in the next four years.

    “I have been with him before the election, but now if you go to where he lives, people have surrounded him, saying they did this and that in order to get something.”