Tag: BUHARI

  • Why nobody can Islamise Nigeria, by Buhari

    Why nobody can Islamise Nigeria, by Buhari

    THE presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), General Muhammadu Buhari, has assured that nobody can Islamise the country under his government, if elected in March 28 presidential election.

    Nigerians, General Buhari advised, must reject those who propagate hatred, ethnicity, divisiveness, sectionalism or seek to manipulate religious differences for political gains.

    Addressing Christian leaders under the auspices of Northern Christian Leaders Eagle Eye Forum in Abuja, he said dividing Nigerians along religious lines was distasteful to him, having lived through a system that recognises excellence, rather than the religion or tribe one belongs to.

    He declared that despite what his detractors said, he was not a religious fanatic of any sort and will never been.

    “In all my life, I have never supported extremism of any kind, and nowhere in my record of service to this nation can this false toga, political opponents have tried so hard to put on me, be substantiated.

    “Indeed, it is very unfortunate and I feel extremely sad that I have to give this type of assurance,” he said.

    The new phenomenon of dividing Nigerians “along religious lines”, he said, “is really very irritating to me because I live through all these examples.”

    In his address entitled: “One Nation bound in freedom, peace and unity,” he told his audience: “Please take note of the historical events that happened in this country. General Yakubu Gowon presided over this country for nine solid years, including 30 months of serious civil war. All his service chiefs and Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters, were Christians. I never heard of any Muslim, any reasonable Muslim that raised observation.

    “When politics started, Abiola, a Muslim, went to the Northeast and picked Babagana Kingible, also a Muslim, and they won the election, including in Kano, where an indigenes who was also a Muslim was standing election.

    “When I was in government, I, as Head of State and late Tunde Idiagbon, again a Muslim, were from the North. Both of Muslims and from the North presided over the country and nobody ever raised a finger. So, this new phenomenon of dividing us along religious lines which has gained a lot of currency is really very irritating to me because I live through all these examples.

    “In the military, it really did not matter as long as up you are qualified. It was your competence that matters. If you are good, you earn good reports on course, you earn good confidential reports and you get promotion. If you are bad, no matter how religious you are, you are pushed aside. It was as simple as that”.

    The former Nigeria leader, who was flanked by his running mate, Prof. Yomi Osinbajo, added: “Recently, I had the honour and privilege of meeting with the Conference of Catholic Bishops, here in Abuja.

    “At that meeting, I had the opportunity to make some remarks about our country, these imminent elections, my personal views, as well as record. I cherish and appreciate this opportunity to again reiterate some of the remarks I made at that meeting.

    “As our nation approaches perhaps the most crucial election in our history, all true patriots are called to deeper reflection of the basic ingredients that bind the nation together- our common freedom, peace and unity.

    “This reflection is even more relevant in the face of the illegal postponement of the general elections – a feat achieved through various sinister ploys and with the sole aim of avoiding the will of the people.

    “In all of these, I feel the urge to communicate some of my personal vision and thoughts to the people of our great country, especially on the question of religion, a sensitive matter for many citizens that has become the most frequently used tool by the ruling party. This affords me an opportunity to give my response to the ruling party’s false propaganda and lies against my person.

    “Needless to say, we must at all times hold the unity, peace and progress of our dear nation paramount and above all other considerations, especially politics. Those who deliberately disseminate divisive disinformation and attempt to stoke primordial sentiments using religion or ethnicity and create fear in the minds of our people fail the standard of patriotism this nation demands of them and deserves from them.”

    He noted: “The ruling government and PDP have adopted this sad divisive and false narrative as their strategy to prevent the inevitable change that our country and people desire and require. And they have succeeded in making some of us victims of the tales which they invent, propagate and sell as gospel truth to gullible listeners, while it is all nothing, but a tissue of lies.”

    While saying that he has never been and will never be a religious bigot, Buhari said: “For me, the issue of religion was, and should always, be a matter of personal conviction. This personal conviction approach to religion has defined my work and interactions all my life, including my tenure in office as military Head of State.

    “The religion of all those I worked with was never a factor in their progress or in what happened to them. All that mattered then, and should still matter today, are competence, integrity and readiness to be fair to all.

    “I was recently informed that we had a balanced cabinet with key positions such as Finance, Energy and Defence occupied by Christians. In addition, 11 of the 19 governors I appointed were Christians.

    “My most memorable recollections of subordinate service were under Christian bosses, the finest our country had then, and among the most respected today. Indeed, one of the best appraisals I received in the course of my military career was from General T.Y Danjuma.

    “Government has no business preferring one religion to the other. The role of government is to protect lives and properties of citizens and to respect and protect their constitutional rights.”

    To him, “One critical freedom that every government must strive to protect is the liberty for citizens to exercise their respective faiths, Christians and Muslims or others, in a lawful manner without fear or hindrance and to prosecute those who use religion as an excuse to destroy homes, schools and places of worship.

    “When governments fail in that duty, they must then assist in the rebuilding of structures, including destroyed places of worship and giving full restitution for lost property.

    “We, Nigerians, are a religious people, and the burning of places of worship constitutes one of the vilest forms of abomination to all those who believe in God. It is the duty of governments to protect this important sensitivity.

    “Let me state this categorically, that I, Muhammadu Buhari, as an individual, and as president of this great country by the grace of God, given the opportunity to serve, have no personal religious agenda. And I will not entertain, consider or promote the religious agenda of anyone.

    “I will not condone any initiative that seeks to promote one religion over the other. Neither I, nor my party, or any member of my team has any desire or plan to Islamise or Christianise Nigeria or support anyone with such intention.

    “Although I am a practicing Muslim, and I have been so all my life, I have never belonged to, nor shared the views of, any extremist group. I am not even a cleric. I believe that religion is personal and private.

    “Most of my bodyguards are Christians. If I have not Islamised these people who serve under me, how will I Islamise the likes of Chief John Odigie- Oyegun, Ogbonnaya Onu, Governors Rochas Okorocha, Kayode Fayemi, Rotimi Amaechi or Professor Yemi Osinbajo, who is a senior advocate of Nigeria and a pastor? Or how will I Islamise Nigeria?”

    He added: “Our constitution, which in many respects, is similar to the American constitution, does not permit a state religion. The Sharia identified in the constitution is almost synonymous with customary law. It is only applicable in matters of personal status such as marriage, divorce and inheritance.

    “This has been the case since the 1979 Constitution. Just as no one can make any customary or any other religious law the law of Nigeria, so Sharia cannot therefore be the law of Nigeria.

    “My record is evidence of this strongly held belief. Before my tenure, the deadly and violent extremist radical sect, Maitasine, carried out terrorist activities in the North, especially Kano. When it erupted again in Bulunkutu and Yola during my tenure, it was effectively eliminated. Similarly, when some Chadian insurgents attempted to occupy Nigerian territory, I led the military confrontation that eliminated the threat.

    “For all purposes, we must all learn to live together as brothers and sisters, because the problems that bedevil our nation do not discriminate based on religion or ethnicity. Poverty and hunger do not know or respect religion or creed. When a bomb explodes in a market, it kills and maims without regard for religion or ethnicity. The millions of the unemployed youth of our country cut across all tribes and religions.

    “Wicked propagandists continue to spread vicious lies about me for political gain, including claiming that I once asked Muslims not to vote for Christians. This must be the height of absurdity. How could I ever say that, when whoever voted for me would be voting for the Christian running with me on the same ticket?

    “And how could I ever say that of Christians when my own holy book, the Qur’an, tells me that in the entire world those that are nearest in love to me are those who believe in Jesus Christ ? I ask, who, intending to win any election, ever does that? How can I choose southern Christian running mates (Chuba Okadigbo of blessed memory, Pastor Tunde Bakare and Pastor Yemi Osinbajo) and with them by my side, make such silly utterances?

    “Because they have no record, they must seek to destroy our own; and because they have no integrity, they feel they must impugn our own. We must reject those who propagate hatred, ethnicity, divisiveness, sectionalism or seek to manipulate our religious differences in such cynical fashion.”

    Others who accompanied Buhari to the meeting are: Gen. Paul Tarfa; Gen. Abdulrahaman Danbazau; Col. Hamid Ibrahim Ali; Prof. Ango Abdullahi; Boss Mustapha and B.D. Lawal, an engineer.

  • Leadership lesson from Buhari

    SIR: Students of management and leadership across the world must be surprised at the criticism against the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate in the 2015 general election, Muhammadu Buhari, by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that the leading opposition candidate shared leadership when he was Nigeria’s military head of state from 1983 to 1985 and chairman of the Petroleum (Special)  Trust Fund (PTF) from 1994 to 1999. Admittedly, Buhari’s deputy, Tunde Idiagbon, was in those days perceived to be so powerful that the military regime  was known in the popular media as the Buhari-Idiagbon regime. Almost all major government policies and decisions were announced by Idiagbon, who was chief of staff at the supreme headquarters.

    The world must be intrigued by the criticism against Buhari because contemporary leadership scholars, researchers and practitioners  are agreed that the notion that leadership is about one man bestriding the stage like a colossus is old fashioned and discredited. The notion is known as the messiah syndrome, according to Peter Guy Northouse, author of the famous book, Leadership: Theory and Practice. In place of the one-man hero idea of leadership which is referred to as personality and trait leadership, scholars now canvass what is called distributed or shared leadership. It seeks to bring on board as many people as possible. You can call it democracy in action.

    I have in a recent essay shown that Buhari has a reputation of empowering subordinates, stating that this is a good leadership practice. I cited the instance of Tam David-West, his minister of petroleum resources, who has on occasion stated that Buhari never for once interfered with his work by asking him to employ a particular individual or promote another or assign any a person to certain responsibilities or even to consider a firm for a contract award. He trusted his ministers and other aides, and so gave them a free hand to discharge their responsibilities. Interestingly researchers in management science, especially those involved in human resource development, now make a strong case for what is called employee empowerment. This is a concept which supports  granting employees a free hand to do their work but also assigning higher responsibilities to them, which will see them develop and grow in their career paths.

    Nigeria is essentially a traditional society, so a number of even professionals and intellectuals are still very conservative, if not out of touch with modern ideas and practice. This is why some of them are in this day and age still critical of Buhari’s shared leadership style, instead of praising it for being superior to some other leadership styles. These are elements still enamoured of the big man concept, the very leadership disease which has paralysed Africa for several decades. Rather than make our leaders feel that they are truly the servants of the people, these elements make  them feel like lords and conquerors of their own people.

    By seeking to paint him as an ineffective leader because he empowered competent subordinates and practised shared leadership as military head of state at a time distributed leadership had not become a popular concept, especially on a continent notorious for absolute dictatorship,  the PDP and its operatives have unwittingly  portrayed Buhari as a man ahead of his generation. Students, researchers and authors  will find Buhari a rewarding study in leadership even in a military regime. He does provide useful management and leadership lessons.

    • C. Don Adinuba

    Lagos

  • Buhari meets Northern Christian leaders

    Buhari meets Northern Christian leaders

     Presidential Candidate All Progressives Congress (APC), Muhammadu Buhari  (second left) , Vice Presidential Candidate, Yemi Osibajo (left) , Chairman Northern Christian Leaders Eagle-Eyes Forum , Aminchi Abu (second right) Bishop ,Daniel Oboni during an Interactive Session between the Presidential Candidates  of All Progressives Congress and Northern Christian Leaders in Abuj a yesterday Photo Abayomi Fayese
    Presidential Candidate All Progressives Congress (APC), Muhammadu Buhari (second left) , Vice Presidential Candidate, Yemi Osibajo (left) , Chairman Northern Christian Leaders Eagle-Eyes Forum , Aminchi Abu (second right) Bishop ,Daniel Oboni during an Interactive Session between the Presidential Candidates of All Progressives Congress and Northern Christian Leaders in Abuj a yesterday Photo Abayomi Fayese
  • What Obasanjo’s endorsement means to me, by Buhari

    What Obasanjo’s endorsement means to me, by Buhari

    All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate Gen. Muhammadu Buhari last night said the endorsement of his candidacy by former President Olusegun Obasanjo will boost his chances in the March 28 elections.

    Interviewed on Cable News Network (CNN) by Christane Amanpour, Gen Buhari, who expressed disappointment about the shift of the elections, also criticised the Federal Government’s handling of the Boko Haram insurgency.

    He said Obasanjo’s support “would certainly bring more supporters to us and more confidence again to us for those who were sitting on the fence, because General Obasanjo is highly respected and as far as the Nigerian nation is concerned, there is no serious issue that can be discussed without people seeking his opinion and listening to it”.

     The APC candidate said the presentation made by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at the Council of State meeting was that “they were ready to conduct election on the date they fixed a year ago and for them forced virtually by the military that they cannot guarantee the safety of their workers; they had to concede to the demand of the military for additional six weeks.

    “Now since those six weeks are constitutionally-allowed, we had to tell our supporters to remain calm and resolute and obey the laws.”

    On Boko Haram and the fight against insurgency by the Jonathan administration, Gen Buhari said that had been “made much more clear, when the National Assembly attempted to conduct a hearing after our soldiers were giving interviews to the foreign media about being sent to the front without proper weapons.

    “The National Assembly attempted to conduct a hearing by getting the budget approved by the National Assembly over the last three years and inviting the service chiefs to come and tell them why the weapons were not procured and sent to the soldiers under competent leadership. That hearing was scuttled.

    “So, it showed the misapplication or misappropriation of the resources provided by the government and (it) says why the Nigerian military was unable to defeat Boko Haram.”

    Gen. Buhari also said as an elected president, he will not rule with iron fist, unlike when he was a military Head of State.

    He promised to combat Boko Haram if elected, using the “Nigerian military that built a reputation internationally for effectiveness; it’s a great embarrassment to them and to the country that they have not been able to secure Nigerian territory, an area of 14 local governments out of 774 local governments. I believe this problem will not be too difficult for the APC government because we know the Nigerian military is competent. It is a question of making sure that the money voted for equipment and training is properly utilised.”

    He also promised to firmly fight corruption, saying “because, there are serious citizens that (have) said unless Nigerian kills corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria.”

  • Northeast APC: only Buhari has capacity to defeat Boko Haram

    Northeast APC: only Buhari has capacity to defeat Boko Haram

    THE National Vice Chairman (Northeast) of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Babachir David Lawal, said yesterday that the party’s presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari, remained the only one in the general elections with the capacity to defeat Boko Haram and restore the image of the country’s military.

    Addressing a news conference in his office in Abuja, Lawal, an engineer, said the Military High Command should have known that General Buhari was the only one with the capacity and inclination to restore the low morale and self-esteem of the military.

    He dismissed claims that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was bias in the distribution of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) in the Northeast states because they collected more PVCs than others.

    The APC chieftain stressed that people in the region had every reason to want to vote out the government, which, he said, failed to protect them in six years.

    To him, with it many towns and villages under Boko Haram, the people are ready to vote the government out.

    Lawal noted that since the only way to do that was the PVCs, the Northeast people had every reason to defile the security challenges to collect their cards.

    Lawal criticised the military for what he described as the intimidation of the opposition, aided by the military.

    His evidence: the “siege on APC leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s home and the Imo State Government House”.

    He spoke also on the postponment of the February 14 and 28 elections.

    Lawal said: “Nigerians woke up on the morning of Saturday, February 7, 2015, to the very sad announcement by INEC that at the instance of the Nigerian Military High Command, it had decided to shift the national elections by six weeks.

    “What makes this sad is the recourse to subterfuge and blackmail using the hapless people of the Northeast as an excuse to carry out a pre-planned and brutally executed course of action designed to abort the pending resounding electoral defeat of the PDP at the hands of the APC.

    “As if the merciless killings of its people and the wanton destruction of its property is not enough, the people of the Northeast region now have to bear the additional burden of being used as a decoy to perpetrate evil by its erstwhile traducers and persecutors.”

    “Nigerians know that the true reason for this extension is so that the PDP can perfect its rigging plans, failing which it will create a constitutional crisis to altogether abort the democratic process of government change,” Lawal alleged, adding:

    “This could be so because some of their henchmen have publicly sworn that they will never hand-over power to Gen. Buhari.

    “Mark my words. INEC was fully prepared to conduct the elections. It had demonstrated its ability and readiness to conduct elections in the Northeast region through the creation of voting centres in safe areas for the internally displaced persons (IDPs).”

  • Group rallies support for Buhari in Ekiti

    Group rallies support for Buhari in Ekiti

    A group, the Buhari Support Organization (BSO), has intensified the house-to-house campaign and grassroots mobilization to woo voters for the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.

    The group has also been going round markets, motor parks, bus stops, newsstands, palaces, public squares, shops and other public places selling the candidacy of Buhari to the people of the Land of Honour.

    Reviewing the activities of the group in a chat with reporters, State Coordinator of BSO, Hon. Femi Adeleye, said the group is encouraged by the support so far given to Buhari’s candidacy by electorate in the state.

    He explained that the sudden postponement of the general elections won’t save President Goodluck Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from defeat at the polls.

    Adeleye, a former member of the state House of Assembly disclosed that more volunteers have offered to join the group to help project Buhari’s message of change and the need to rescue Nigeria from the brink of collapse.

    The former state legislator disclosed that many PDP members have expressed their readiness to vote for Buhari on March 28 “in line with the current mood of Ekiti people.”

    He welcomed the decision of the Council of State to ignore calls for the postponement of the general election, stressing that Nigerians are ready to cast their ballots at the polls and would resist any attempt to “change the goalpost in the middle of the game.”

    Adeleye said the people of Ekiti State have resolved to vote for Buhari, having identified him as the right candidate that has the experience, pedigree, character and integrity to turn the fortunes of Nigeria around for good.

    He said: “Buhari is the right man for the top job and that is why we are working hard to sell his candidacy to the people both in the rural and urban areas. We are encouraged and overwhelmed by the way people are accepting him.

    “He is a former Head of State who has integrity and honesty; he is not corrupt and he did not use all the positions he had occupied in life to amass wealth and his desire is how Nigeria can move forward from the present sorry state.

    “Buhari is the face of the emerging new Nigeria The unprecedented reception he had received from all over the country is an indication that he is the man Nigerians want as their next President.”

    Adeleye urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to be above board and conduct a credible, free and fair election that will meet with international standards.

    He also appealed to security agencies to be non-partisan, adding that they are maintained by taxpayers money.

    Another chieftain of BSO, Mr. Kehinde Ajayi, described the situation in the country as terrible. He added that Nigeria needs a personality like Buhari to remedy the situation.

    He said major opinion polls favour Buhari as the likely winner of the presidential election and that Nigerians are earnestly yearning for change.

    Ajayi, a former Secretary General of Ekiti Focus Group in the United States, said the world is watching Nigeria. He warned against any attempt to sabotage the election.

    He revealed that other pan-Ekiti unions in the United States are solidly behind the candidature of Buhari and that Nigerians at home should rally round the APC flag bearer to become the next President.

    Ajayi said: “We are expecting this poll to be free and fair; it will be a make-or-mar election. With solid preparations from INEC and security agencies, we hope that nobody will allow himself to be used to truncate the people’s wish.

    “Opinion polls show that Buhari is on ground, people are yearning for change, people are looking for change because the present system is not working.”

  • 2015: Jonathan, Buhari, the Rich and the poor (7)

    Under intense pressure from many fronts last Saturday, Prof. Atahiru Jega’s Independent National Election Commission (INEC) postponed the Presidential election from February 14 to March 26. That is a whopping 40 days ample leg room for President Jonathan and the PDP which can make or unmake the success chances of many politicians. President Ebere Jonathan, rated far behind challenger Gen. Mohammadu Buhari (rtd), should heave a sigh of relief and clink champing glasses with his backers in the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP). In the All Progressives Congress (APC) there may have been a momentary grave yard silence. Gen. Mohammadu Buhari (rtd), tipped he win the polls, may have lapsed into a swoon. To start with, the PDP has enough money to foot another round of campaigns over 40 days which the APC cannot afford. For the first campaigns, PDP raised about N25 billion from only about four of its members. Gen. Buhari depended largely on the N100 personal donations through cell phone recharge cards. The winning joter of the President was the statement credited to the Army that, because it was fighting insurgents in 10 local governments areas in the north, it couldn’t provide adequate security cover for the polls. The police, too, followed in tow. It was a warming to INEC and the country that going ahead with the polls on Saturday could be calamitous, and Prof. Jega, defiant and independent as he may have wished to be, should know a bait had been set for him. And, simultaneously, the PDP began to assail his person as they did Gen. Buharis. The assaults were led by Chief Edwin Clark, a respected South-South region of Nigeria leader who sees nothing wrong with the Jonathan Administration and has become its number one spokesman and apologist. If Prof Jega stuck to his guns, the PDP would, very likely, boycott the elections, plunging Nigeria 51 years back to the 1964 general elections which was boycotted by UPGA, (United Progressive Grand Alliance), a political coalition of the Eastern and Western regions of Nigeria. That boycott discredited the election under which Alhaji Tafawa Balewa became Prime Minister of Nigeria, fermented killings and arson in the Western region and led to Nigeria’s first military coup and the Biafran civil war.

    Even with Prof. Jega refraining from taking a plunge from the cliff to wherever the leap would lead, the government saw the postponement of the polls as dangerous enough to cause trouble that it deployed troops around Lagos and some important cities ahead of the announcement. That was intriguing. For this was the same Army credited with saying it had no potential to provide cover for peaceful elections deploying troops to combat protests. The Army left at least three questions unanswered in a security report of its preparedness for its professional duties to Nigeria it was said to have given the government.

    •If the Army should, but cannot provide cover for a purely civil event, what would happen if the Cameroun or Cod’voire or Niger or Chad were to invade Nigeria in search of territory? Many people know the Nigerian Army would not tolerate that, that it is robust, that it is one of the worlds best Armies, that Boko haram get as e bi, as we say when, the more we look, the more we look at something, the less of it we see. If the Army statement is a political statement, as many people suspect, it would be an unfortunate event that could politicise the Army. We cannot blame President Jonathan for starting this in a civil society in which the army would appeared to be giving instruction to a civil government instead of taking orders from it, or supporting and defending the public will. President Olusegun Obasanjo, whose creation is the Jonathan Administration, deployed troops to win elections he couldn’t win. Now helpless, he must be sad watching whirlwinds and morsoon winds growing out of the winds he unleashed while in office.

    2)               Much as I am a novice in military matters, I believe it is reasonable to assume that soldiers are trained to kill and destroy, when necessary, and that, in civil matters in civilised society, it is to the police that the primary duty of maintaining law and order is assigned. Why do we think there would be such crisis on Election Day that requires the Army’s attention to quelle if we do not believe the elections would be rigged and the voters would protest it. Such indicators are prouded by the President himself in a statement during the last Osun State governorship election when he said the election was a do or die affair”.

    •If the Army cannot overrun Boko Haram in 40 days, what, again, happens to the elections. Will they be shifted again, If they are, with Prof Jega’s appointment be renewed? If the President brings someone else, will the election not be flawed before it has taken place? If the Army is not ready before the President’s tenure lapses, will Nigeria head for an Interim National Government? Is the ING idea the plan of the Establishment to save itself from a probing Buhari Administration? In other words, is it a way of defusing a political bomb inimical to Establishment interests? Will it fit into the theory of the Establishment employing such tactics to save itself politically and economically?

     

    f we fear the Army is being politicized, the church has long fallen prey to mammon. The churches now appear to be competing for the President’s attention and should get plenty of it in the coming 40 days. In which major Pentecostal church has the President not gone to campaign for re-election in a manner which may pitch Christians against Moslems and disturb our Nigeria’s fragile religious peace? Redeemed Christian Church of God? Winners Chapel? Chosen? Each visit has been followed by poisonous propaganda by the President’s men. After the Redeemed visit, it was that he couldn’t anoint two men for the same office. This was a veiled reference to his support for President Jonathan in 2011 and inability, therefore, to swing for Prof. Osinbajo, a Vice Presidential candidate of APC and a senior Pastor of Redeemed. In other words, say the propagandists, President Jonathan has the nod for 2015.

    A worse propaganda broke out after the Winners’ visit the General Overseer, Oyedepo, was said to have threatened to open the gates of hell for any member who voted against President Jonathan. Oyedepo was wise. He taped the proceedings. And according to people who claimed to have watched it, no such thing was said. To have said so would have been calamitous for this gentleman. For hell is not in paradise, and only a resident of hell can open the gates of hell for the inmates. I do not subscribe to the speculations that, like the tail of Halley’s Comet or other comets, made up of gas and dust, hard currency constitutes the tails of these Presidential visits. Over which the churches, excepts perhaps the Catholic Church, are falling over themselves. But I believe the visits, if successful, may set Christians up against Moslems in the South-West region which would appear to be vehemently opposed to a second term for the President. To counter this offensive, the APC would have to keep up the tempo of any damage to the economy by the Jonathan Administration. The APC would appear not to have roasted this meat well enough. Former Central Bank Governor Charles Soludo may not be its card – carrying member, but he has shown the way economic issues can be focused in a campaign focusing on the economy.

    In only two well – researched articles he has shown about #30 trillion from crude oil sales could be in privates pockets! In whose pockets is the money nestling, we are yet to know. APC Vice Presidential candidate Osinbajo is a professor of law. In the next 40 days, can he give us a professional dissertation on the damage to the rule of law which the President swore on the Bible to uphold but damaged? I remember the case of Mr. Justice Salami of the Federal Court of Appeal Vs the Supreme Court Justices. I remember, also the Judge in Ekiti State who was beaten up in the Court room and who had to flee through the window. A President who swore on the sacred Bible to uphold the Rule of Law would have fished out the Judges attackers and brought them to book. But what happened?

    Alfred Rewani

    n a time such as this, Nigerians who genuinely what their country to run well and beautifully cannot forget Pa Alfred Rewani, a state murder victim during the regime of Gen. Sanni Abacha. He characteristically, this prolific writer would have linked us to the past at this time, to enable us know where we are coming from, so we can take only sure steps into the future. When Prof Jega stood his ground against the President and the National Cainal of state did likewise, I wrote the following test, based on my memory of the past about which Pa Rewane would have connected us. The unfolding political event which led to this commentary has been overtaken. But I have decided to live it as intact as I wrote it. I cannot do it as well as he would have…

    CONGRATULATIONS, NIGERIA. By averting a postponement of Saturday’s Presidential election, Nigeria may have averted a dangerous political crisis. An election crisis brought the military to power in 1966, led to the 1967-70 Biafran civil war, led to the overthrow of Gen. Yakubu Gowon’s military government, Saw Gen. Ibrahim Babangida out of power, paved the way for gen. Sanni Abacha to take power and later destroyed him, brought Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo (rtd) back to power, and, under President Ebere Jonathan, may have led to a crisis of yet unknown dimensions. When it comes to protecting personal or party interests, politicians never appear to have a sense of history. Already, the country appears politically divided along the physical shape of the Biafran war years… the eastern region of Nigeria on one side, and the rest of Nigeria on the other. And all it would take to cause commotion could be a careless and unjustifiable political manoeuvre or statements.

    If political campaigns have no other value, that is if election results had been predetermined and polls are mere formalities, they are at least handwritings on the wall. We all interprete political campaign handwritings differently, depending on our education about political behaviour and our emotions. But when you notice panic in a political camp, that’s another handwriting on the wall super-inposed  on those of the political campaigns.  There is no doubt that President Jonathan had a bad product to sell to the electorate. That bad product was what his government has made of the economy of Nigeria in the last four years. On the eve of the campaigns, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the President’s party, sought to present the economic mess as Nigerian feature of a global economic crisis triggered by the collapse of crude oil price in the world market. But the government could not explain why Nigerian pump price fell by only 10 percent against 60 percent in even some non-oil producing countries, and why Value Added Tax (VAT) simultaneously leapt from five to 10 percent.

    To worsen matters on an Election Eve, Nigeria’s currency, the Naira, was devalued from about N165 to the United States Dollar to about N205 today. That means inflation. Many state governments and the Federal Government owed workers salaries for about five months. Meanwhile, the President and some of his ministers lived in opulence. The President had 12 jets in his Presidential fleet against only two jets left behind a few years ago by President Olusegun Obasanjo who left behind a tidy foreign reserve and even sovereign reserve. Both reserves were squandered, and President Jonathan was in the process of adding a 13th jet to the fleet before the campaigns. Even the Minister of Petroleum had an official private jet. It would appear this jet was not in the budget approved for the President by the National Assembly. And this bears testimony to claims by the opposition that the government spends more money out of the Budget than in the Budget. Public finance watchers believe the free petro dollar comes from oil sales not accounted for. In the recent public exchanges between Professor Charles Solido, Former Governor of the Central Bank, and incumbent Finance Minister Mrs. Okonjo Iweala, Professor Solido has used her own data of oil revenue outside the books, which are conservative figures, to show that this free cash circulating in the corridors of power has amounted to N30 trillion!

    I believe the mistake of President Jonathan is his assumption that the presidency is a tea party. He probably didn’t realise early enough that the President is the driver of the craft, the chief servant of the public. He took a back seat, far away from the rigour of work, and handed the work to other people. These other people were no fools. They stormed the treasury, and helped themselves to free cash. The government became loose and he did not have firm control over anything. And, so, when the report card hard to be written four years after in an election, there was nothing substantial to write home about the economy. Corruption had so eaten deep into the government and society that even Gen. Ibrahim Babangida whose regime was before now widely acclaim to aggravate corruption in Nigeria, would now publicly say that, compared with President Jonathan’s, he was a saint! And, to worsen matters, President Jonathan went about making light jokes about corruption. One of his famous comments on corruption was that “stealing is not corruption”. At campaign rallies, he said he couldn’t send corrupt people to jail because the prisons would not take them all. At another forum, he said he couldn’t jail his friends simply because they were corrupt.

    And, so, quite naturally, the entry of Gen. Mohamadu Buhari (rtd) as a major challenger for the presidency would cause a stir, if not a scare in the PDP. He immediately lay his person bare: he has only two houses in the whole wide world, and less than one million in his bank account. This was a challenge to President Jonathan to publicly declare his assets. The President would not. Even in 2007 when he was Vice-president to President Yar A’dua, who publicly declared his asset of about N960 million, Vice-president Jonathan made no such declaration.  In contrast, Gen. Buhari says his ministers would publicly declare assets and he would empower the now moribund Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to do its job independent of the government.

    The PDP tried to move the campaign away from corruption and the economy. Thus, the person of Buhari became its punch bag. He was hit left and right and all over about his age, health, education, family life and his life span. But it always turned out information about Buhari’s person was false and the lies against his person won him pity and support. There ploys having failed to subsume the challenger, two king jokers were wheeled out of the armoury. One was to trick him into a public debate with President Jonathan who himself avoided a public debate in 2011. Gen. Buhari is not a man of many words. And he may easily get angry. Besides, he could easily make the mistake of a Chief Obafemi Awolowo or a Chief Moshood Abiola. In Aba, heart of igboland, Chief Awolowo said he would ban the importation of stockfish and second hand clothes. Stockfish was, and still is, a culinary delicacy in Eastern Nigeria. Chief Awolowo said life had been drained away from it with the extraction of Cod Liver oil and that it was the sun-dried chaff Norway was selling to Nigeria. For second-hand clothes why should any-one dehumanise himself or herself by wearing clothes, shoes, brassairs and undies someone else had won life out off and discarded? Why should we make ourselves “second-hand” human beings? Unfortunately, these are what a majority of Nigerians have become, unable to break free of the spiritual yoke, which makes them substandard to other human beings, given the huge business in second-hand “everything imaginable” in Nigeria today.

  • Fayose blasts Obasanjo for endorsing Buhari

    Fayose blasts Obasanjo for endorsing Buhari

    Former president Olusegun Obasanjo on Wednesday came under attacks from Ekiti State Governor, Ayo Fayose, for endorsing  the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.

    Obasanjo had on Tuesday while launching his latest book, “My Watch” in Nairobi, Kenya, endorsed Buhari as the right man to lead Nigeria as from May 29 this year.

    But Buhari’s endorsement by Obasanjo did not go down well with Fayose who described the former president’s action as “political somersault.”

    In a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Idowu Adelusi, Fayose called on Nigerians not to take Obasanjo serious, saying the former Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has lost his value as a good leader.

    Fayose said the former president should not be taken serious “because of his antecedent as a man who has penchant for deceiving people for his own political gains.”

    The governor said leaving “President Goodluck Jonathan to vote for Buhari is akin to abandoning the road and entering the bush.”

    Fayose claimed that Obasanjo’s utterances of late including the latest endorsement of a candidate of an opposition party is not meant for the good of Nigerians but intended to plunge the country into another political crisis.

    He alleged that Obasanjo opted for this political abracadbra because of his failure to secure life presidency through his third term agenda.

    “Anything that comes out of the mouth and mind of Obasanjo is laced with senility which is dangerous for anybody to follow,” Fayose stated.

     

  • Buhari rejects use of soldiers for election duty

    Buhari rejects use of soldiers for election duty

    Says, ‘Nigeria will remain multi-religious state’

    The presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, said on Wednesday in Abuja that he was opposed to the deployment of soldiers for election duty, saying it is the responsibility of the police to ensure security during elections.

    The former head of state also said he was committed to ensuring that Nigeria remains a multi religious society where every Nigerian will be free to practice his or her religion, adding that he will never support any move to either Christianize or Islamize the country.

    He spoke at different meetings with Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria, a delegation of the United Nations, the African Union and the European Union Election mission in Nigeria.

    He spoke just as the UN and AU said it is expedient for stakeholders in Nigeria electoral process to know the constitutional limit for elections and ensure that they are respected.

    Asked whether he support the deployment of military during elections, he said, “no, I do not support it. It is police duty and I think there is no local government area in this country without the police.”

    At a meeting with the Catholic Bishop Conference of Nigeria, Buhari said that although he has been severally and consistently vilified and maligned, he had no personal religious agenda and neither would he support any move by anybody or group of persons to either Christianize or Islamize the country.

    Buhari , who was accompanied by his running mate, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, the Director General of the APC Presidential Campaign Council, Rotimi Amaechi and a host of other members of the party’s PCC, said he “will not condone any initiative that seeks to promote one religion over the other.”

    The APC candidate traced the remote cause of many of the challenges confronting the nation to unemployment, saying “in a country where a large percentage of the younger generation is unemployed and where no immediate respite is in sight, these challenges are prone to abound. Give them self improvement opportunities, offer them a view of a greater tomorrow and all these will be in the past.”

    He told the religious leaders that his government will pursue a well planned agricultural programme in conjunction with development of the rural areas in order to exploit the multiplier benefits of agriculture, empower citizens and curtail rural-urban drift.

    He also stated that the solid mineral exploration and exploitation would be given a boost to generate employment.

     

  • Only Buhari has capacity to defeat Boko Haram – APC

    Only Buhari has capacity to defeat Boko Haram – APC

    The National Vice Chairman (North East) of the All Progressives Congress, Engr. Babachir David Lawal, said Wednesday in Abuja that the party’s presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari , remains the only candidate in the forthcoming elections that has the capacity to defeat Boko Haram and restore the battered image of the Nigerian military.

    Addressing a news conference in his office in Abuja, Lawal said the military high command should have known that the Buhari was the only one with the capacity and inclination to restore the dismally low morale and self-esteem of the present day armed forces.

    He also dismissed claims that the Independent National Electoral Commission was bias in the distribution of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), with troubled states in the northeast having collected more PVCs than others.

    Lawal stressed that people in the region have every reason to vote out the current government which has failed to protect them in the last six years.

    He said: “If the military high command comprised of patriots and/or men of honor of if they are men that have pride in their profession, they would have realized that the only one of the presidential candidates that has the capacity and inclination to restore the battered pride, and dismally low morale and self-esteem of the present day Nigerian military is Gen. Mohammadu Buhari.

    “The only one that has the capacity and inclination to defeat Boko Haram in the shortest possible time is GMB. But no, they are none of these. They are more comfortable hiring out their men to work under corrupt civilians, taking orders from them to rig elections.

    “They find it easier to deploy armored personnel carriers and battalions of troops to Imo State Government House and the residence of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu to harass and intimidate them, their wives and children for standing up for democracy. This is their comfort zone, not on the battle field tackling insurgents. To them, it is easier to intimidate Prof. Attahiru Jega of INEC than Ibrahim Shekau of Boko Haram.

    “But all these are futile efforts to delay the doomsday for the corrupt, the clueless, and the religious bigots in this government and their sit-don-look presidential candidate who gets stoned by his own party men at several campaign rallies. Nigerians are wiser now.”