Tag: change

  • Progressive governors, Ribadu: change has come to Nigeria

    Progressive governors, Ribadu: change has come to Nigeria

    The Progressive Governors Forum (PGF) and the former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, yesterday described the registration of the All Progressive Congress (APC) as a watershed in the quest for a better Nigeria and a signal for the beginning of a new era.

    The PGF, which is made up of eleven governors which formed the newly registered party, said the registration of the APC is a victory for democrats across the nation. The group said with the registration of the party, change has finally come to Nigeria.

    The group also praised INEC’s sense of responsibility and courage for “upholding the constitution and the provisions of the Electoral Act 2010 as amended.”

    “The Progressive Governors Forum (PGF) hereby joins members of the Interim Management Committee led by His Excellency, Chief Bisi Akande, and the good people of Nigeria in celebrating this day. It is a day that will go down in history as a day of unity for all progressives and patriotic Nigerians. It is a day when the flame of patriotic optimism was kindled in the hearts of all Nigerians who desire a brighter future for our nation,” the statement said.

    The group said the task ahead was to accelerate the process of the consummation of party building and organisation from the grassroots, embark on mass membership mobilisation and registration and begin the process of securing the input of Nigerians at the grassroots in the party’s plans.

    “We, therefore, urge all Nigerians to take advantage of this opportunity to be part of this movement for change which has come to stay by becoming members of our great party, the All Progressive Congress, (APC),” the group said.

    Ribadu urged the APC to strive harder for the ultimate goal of dislodging the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Ribadu, in a statement in Abuja, congratulated key players in the merged parties “for shoving their personal interests in order to allow for mutation of a pan-Nigerian party that can provide credible alternative to the ruling party”.

    The statement, issued by Ribadu’s media aide, Abdulaziz Abdulaziz, quoted the 2011 presidential candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), expressing hope that the APC would sweep the polls in the next general elections.

    “Like millions of Nigerians from all over the country, I am immensely delighted over the successful registration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) by the Independent n National Electoral Commission (INEC),” Ribadu said.

    According to him, the registration of the party by the electoral body “is not the end. It is the beginning of the end of misrule and cluelessness” as he called for renewed zeal and commitment by members of the party to achieve the desired objective.

    He called on Nigerians to resist manipulations of the electoral process either through whipping up religious or sectional sentiments or by the use of money, maintaining that 2015 elections would be a major litmus test for the opposition and all progressive Nigerians.

  • The politics of security, change and culture

    In China recently the authorities organized earthquake drills to educate citizens on how to react to real earth quakes and escape or save lives in what is a dangerous natural disaster that has claimed many lives and property and is more common in that part of the world than others. In the UK a great debate ensued in Parliament recently on the gay rights Marriage bill that polarized the Conservative party, the senior partner in the ruling coalition just as two men shouting religious slogan killed a British soldier in Woolwich in a terrorist act that saw the PM cutting short an official trip to denounce the terrorist act while stressing that Britain will never succumb to terror or terrorism. In Kenya the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission -TJRC – which investigated various political crimes and assassinations in Kenya from independence till the 2007 post election violence, found the newly elected President and Vice President in the March 2013 elections culpable, but did not recommend sanctions as the two leaders have similar charges pending against them on the matter at the International Criminal Court at the Hague. In Nigeria the newspapers were replete with pictures of the Chief Priest of a cult whose members killed over 20 men recently with the Chief Priest asserting that his god protected him against the policemen who he said had been given orders to bring him to the state capital dead or alive, but got killed instead as they were drunk on their way to destroy him.

    From preparing against a natural disaster, to making laws that change the face and nature of marriage, to having financiers and executors of thuggery and violence in positions of power in a democratic dispensation or allowing a security risk to market the prowess of his clan god or deity on a national and global scene, the contention I am making today is that a cultural and religious sea change is abroad in the world as we know it today and this has great and far reaching import for the peace and security of the world as we know for now.

    Let me start on a happy note even though the issue is a natural tragedy like an earthquake but it is its planned management and the foresight involved, that creates a good lesson on crisis management. The new Chinese leadership in China has identified corruptionas a target for zero tolerance and elimination in China under its new mandate. But natural disasters have no calling cards and do not give notice of appearance. China’s earthquake drill is therefore a pragmatic and innovative effort to protect lives and give people courage when such disasters happen so that people, as far as is possible under the circumstances, know what to do to keep alive or even to save lives in the process. Coincidentally a recent survey on the global perception or sovereign reputation of key nations of the world put Germany as No 1 dethroning Japan which obviously lost its enviable position because of the way it handled it nuclear plant radiation explosion in recent times . It is instructive that Germany closed its own nuclear plants after the Japanese nuclear disaster at great economic costs but in deference to German public opinion. Iran was rated the worst nation in terms of global perception not unlikely because of its quest for nuclear power on the pretence of getting electricity for which it is facing UN sanctions. In addition Iran has been reluctant to ask for expert aid during outbreak of natural disasters in which it has had more than its fair share in recent times.

    My fascination with the Chinese Earthquake drill stems from the socio economic and cultural problems of armed robbery and now terrorism facing some nations especially Nigeria. People flee here at the sight of armed robbers whereas if drills can be organized the robbers would know that people in the environment have some knowledge and information on how to react to them rather than just fear and that they can thwart their criminal activity successfully. This itself can be a formidable deterrence against the current high incidence of armed robbery or rampant terrorism or even kidnapping. In the Woolwich terror killing in the UK, a lady reportedly boldly told the terrorist who was saying that terrorists would wage war on London that they will fail and the lady even asked him to turn in the bloodied knife he was wielding after killing the British soldier. Really I think drills and mass orientation campaigns to resist armed robbers and terrorists will go a long way in reducing their menace and in making our environment safer than hitherto.

    On the gay marriage bill debate in London, my view is that the world is turning upside down in that part of the world and a culture shock is afloat. But the government seems hell bent on getting the bill through with the active support of the leadership of even the opposition labor party. Which really is to be expected as leftist parties have such inclinations towards gay rights and marriage just as the Democratic party of President Obama is trying to bulldoze its way through in Congress and the US Supreme Court. This is in spite of the fact that the public is getting annoyed at the redefinition of marriage by a go British government that got to power in a hung parliament and does not have a mandate for the policy it is rushing through in the UK. Indeed those opposed to the great gay marriage drive have complained that no party in Britain put this in its manifesto in the last elections and it is unfair to create such a cultural and religious change without the requisite democratic mandate. This is also unlike the situation in France where the socialists made it clear in their campaign manifesto and are fulfilling their promise although most French citizens have now woken up from their slumber and are now frowning at the development.

    The situation in Kenya however is a clear case of locking the stables doors after the horses have bolted. The two leaders indicted in the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Committee Report are now the newly elected and sworn in President and Vice President of Kenya even though they were on different sides when they commited the post election violence five years ago. Now, who in Kenya will bell the cat for their prosecution? Also given their new alliance and their running successfully on the presidential ticket in Kenya, who can say that violence and thuggery do not pay, at least in the politics of Kenya? Even though the 2013 Kenyan Presidential elections were said to be free and fair there is something suspect in a legitimacy or authority gained in an atmosphere of violence as choice is a prerequisite for true democratic power and legitimacy. This surely is sorely lacking in Kenya’s two leading politicians for now given the TJRC Report just published in Kenya.

    Lastly the picture of the aged Chief Priest of the Ombatse Cult Alla Agu was on the front pages of some newspapers this week as he reportedly spoke through an interpreter when a senator from the area visited him with some pressmen in Lakyo, Nasarawa state this week. Obviously the man whose cult members reportedly killed 20 policemen had no regrets on the incident. Instead he seized the opportunity to glorify the god of his sect. Reportedly he said ‘It is the governor that asked the police officers to come here and arrest me, cut my head and take my head to him. When they came because they were themselves drunk, my god did not allow them to come to me and they died on the way.’ As reported, the Ombatse Chief Priest spoke in the presence of Senator Solomon Ewuga of the Federal Republic of Nigeria during a visit to him in his Lakyo community. Really, I wonder what the Inspector General of Police will make of this, given the high death toll of the Police in the hands of the Ombatse cult members as reported by the governor of the state. To me it is unbelievable that a man like the Ombatse chief priest is not yet in police custody at least for his own protection not to talk of the image of the police in providing security for all Nigerians including policemen. In addition, the interview has helped in marketing unwittingly the ‘protective capabilities’ of the Ombatse Cult god and this is bound to open lucrative opportunities for the cult with people looking for protection from all sorts of attacks and assaults on both sides of the law in our society. I find it thoroughly amazing that the police have not been able to find their way to Lakyo to see the Chief Priest at least to take a statement on what happened. Surely that speaks volumes on the security of all of us who greatly sympathise with the police on the loss of so many men in the incredible case involving the Ombatse Cult of Lakyo in Nasarawa state in Nigeria.

  • ‘Social clubs agents of change’

    Social clubs have been described as agents of change in the society. They are not formed for dining and wining or to encourage any anti-social behaviour.

    These were the views of the chairman of Fibre Optics Concept and Baylag Communication, Aare Mojibayo Olagunju who has just been elected as the Governor-General of High Society Club of Nigeria.

    According to him, members of social clubs are men of integrity and credible characters who are in various professional, academic and business callings who use the opportunity of their clubs to meet and rub minds with others on socio-economic and political issues.

    On what his group stands for, he said High Society Club is a social group that performs charitable functions. “It is non-political and non-profit making. Members meet regularly to unwind and discuss important issues as they relate to individuals and the society,”he said. The club was founded in 1962 and its membership cuts across ethnic and religious frontiers. The headquarters is located in Somolu, Lagos.

    On his dream for the group, Olagunju said he would bring back the glory of good old days. Speaking further he said, “My major priority is to rehabilitate the physical structures and make them attractive and comfortable for prospective and existing members. My regime will also focus on membership drive, we want to bring back the glory of the club which made prominent musicians like the legendary Tunde Nightgale of blessed memory, King Sunny Ade and Chief Ebenezer Obey Fabiyi visited the place regularly. The club is for all Nigerians irrespective of religious leanings, it is open to academics, professionals and others, young or old who are in lawful business.

    He mentioned limited fund as a major challenge, saying members would be urged to pay up their dues to carry out structural rehabilitation. For instance, we need a standard room for indoor games and other recreational activities,the new chairman added.

    Olagunju appealed for support, saying members watchword should be cooperation, commitment and focus. He added: “We have to tap all available resources to keep our boat floating, steady and faster. All of is should be committed to revenue drive because we need fund for accelerated development”.

  • Senate to Jonathan: change your tactics on  Boko Haram

    Senate to Jonathan: change your tactics on Boko Haram

    Senators yesterday gave the Executive a wake-up call on the Boko Haram insurgency.

    The Senate urged the Executive to consider other options and strategies that would be effective in fighting the crisis.

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, at plenary in Abuja, described the multiple explosions that left dozens dead in Kano on Monday as regrettable.

    He said it was high time the Federal Government tackled the security challenge headlong.

    He also urged relevant Senate committees to critically appraise the entire appalling scenario with a view to making a positive input.

    Ekweremadu said: “What happened in Kano is regrettable and we must do everything possible as a country to ensure we end this kind of carnage.

    “The Federal Government should consider other options towards resolving the crises.

    “I also would want to urge relevant committees to look at the whole scenario and possibly advise the Senate on the way forward towards addressing the situation.”

    Members of the Igbo community in Kano State have rejected the usual mass burial given to victims of bomb explosions.

    They insisted on retrieving the bodies for proper burial.

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Education, Senator Uche Chukwumerije (Abia North), who spoke on behalf of the group, requested that security be tightened in the state to protect all citizens.

    Chukwumerije urged the Federal Government to directly manage whatever monetary compensation is to be allocated relatives of the dead.

    Chukwumerije and Senator Kabiru Gaya (Kano South), coming under Order 43, expressed concern over the government’s inability to combat the ugly trend of insecurity in the country.

    Chukwumerije specifically alleged that the insurgency has assumed ethnic and regional dimensions.

    He called for immediate action to forestall likely exploitation of the circumstance by enemies of the state, whose primary objective is to pitch the various ethnic groups in the country against one another.

    Chukwumerije said: “From the feedback one gets from Kano and from the consequences of the bombings, this now seems to take the focus of ethnicity and eligion and we believe that this must be addressed at the earliest possible opportunity because we know that the special fabric of this country suffers from two fault lines – ethnicity and religion – and this is the fault lines any enemy of state can exploit in order to cause tension within the country.

    “The true perception of the Igbo all over Kano was that this was primarily targeted at them. They lost so much property and human beings.

    “We are therefore saying that the Nigerian state, for which belong the basic responsibility of providing security to all members as a part of its social contract, should rise to its responsibility.

    “There are two strategic options now facing Nigeria in order to deal with the situation.

    “One is ensuring that the environment of insecurity is a challenge that must be visibly and effectively tackled.

    “The Nigerian government and security operatives would always be ready with statistics, saying they are doing their best but this kind of game is like a football match.

    “It is not about dribbling but how many goals you scored.”

    The lawmaker representing Abia South further noted that there was already a disconnect between the government of Kano State and the people and stressed the need for effective security system to safeguard lives and property.

    He said: “The government must triple its effort to bring the issue to an end.

    “Another point is that the issue of effective security system to safeguard the people is long overdue.

    “Another is the issue of averting the danger of disconnect between the state and the citizens.

    “When this crisis happened, the Governor was nowhere to be seen. The main anger of the victims was that they are human beings and not woods.

    “The government has lost an opportunity of isolating the terrorist as a marginal group outside the mainstream of the society.

    “The victims will have the impression that everyone is against them.

    “This would have given the government the opportunity to prove that these are agents of government who wanted to knock the heads of social groups together in order to achieve their goals.”

    Senator Gaya recalled that Kano was a hub for the Igbo for many years and insisted that some forces were deployed to create disunity between the North and the South.

    He said: “Let me clearly say that from history, Kano and the people of Sabon-Gari have been business partners and have lived together for long even though we have had issues here and there.

    Gaya said it is time for lawmakers to be strict on the executive over their resolutions.

    “We must take a decision now, it is our responsibility to take a decision in this chamber and make it binding on the government”, Gaya said.

    The Senate in its usual manner observed a minute silence in honour of those who lost their lives in the blast.

  • CHANGE OF NAME  Baribote frowns at NPFL

    CHANGE OF NAME Baribote frowns at NPFL

    • Vows to continue court action 

    Deposed chairman of the Nigeria Premier League (NPL), Victor Baribote Rumson, has challenged the change of name for the nation’s top flight.

    The League Management Committee (LMC) changed the name of the elite division from the NPL to the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL).

    But Baribote has described the change of name as illegal.

    “Did the congress sanction the change of name from the Nigeria Premier League (NPL)?” queried the owner of Nembe City FC.

    “Only the congress consisting of the 20 Premier League clubs can approve such a change because the league is owned by the clubs and not appointed officers.”

    Baribote also challenged the legality of the LMC while talking to supersport.com.

    He said that the setting up of the LMC to run the league contradicts FIFA and CAF statutes which the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) operates within.

    “There are laws guiding football. These same laws or statutes are same that the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) operates within as we have in FIFA and CAFstatutes. I don’t know where an interim committee is provided for in those statutes to run the league. But because some people don’t like the face of Chief Baribote so I was eased out. I know the statutes provide for a league body headed by the first vice president of the football federation but some people have brought ethnic sentiments into our football.

    “And in the NPL statutes there are only provisions for the 20 clubs and seven elected members from the different geo-political zones including a chairman to represent the clubs on the board. But now we have 13 appointed persons, making it 33 members instead of 27. So that makes it unlawful, according to the NPL statutes. May be they should just appoint 20 committee members so we will have one member for each of the 20 clubs,” said Baribote.

    He also described as unfortunate that the LMC is now waiting for government grant to commence the 2012/13 season.

    “It’s laughable that they are now seeking government grant to start the league. We were almost 90 percent close to resolving the issue of title sponsorship until they turned the clubs against my board. During the hearing of House of Representatives sports committee on Thursday members of the LMC assured that they will contribute money from their pockets to run the league.

    “Now I’m asking these questions – why was my board forcefully removed from office? For the same reasons for which they removed my board, have they achieved success in those areas? Has the LMC settled the issue of title sponsorship for which they used as an excuse to force out my board?” asked the former Bayelsa United chairman.

    “Today in the Premier League, only myself and Senator Bukola Saraki are real club owners and deserve to make valid contributions to the league as we spend our money to run our clubs. So you see some actions do not make people more Nigerian than the other.”

    Despite blaming the NFF and the National Sports Commission (NSC) for the crisis in the top flight, Baribote reckons that recalling the (NPL) board he chaired will bring about solutions.

    He also declared that without such solution, he would continue with his court case challenging his removal as NPL chairman.

    Hearing on the case at the Federal High Court in Abuja comes up on Monday.

    The NPL board chaired by Baribote was voted out of office in Abuja in December 2012.

  • Fayemi the challenge of change

    Fayemi the challenge of change

    Recently, while on an official visit to the United Kingdom, the Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi delivered a lecture at the Royal Institute of International Affairs popularly known as ‘Chatham House’ London.

    Governor Fayemi, a globally recognised leading resource on matters relating to governance, democratisation, security and economic development had in recent times honoured a number of speaking engagements focusing on socio- political developments in Nigeria and internationally.

    At the Chatham House, he spoke on the topic ‘The Challenge of Change: Democracy and Development in Ekiti State, Nigeria’. He started his lecture by relating a striking personal experience. He narrated that the elders of his “small but scenic hometown, Isan-Ekiti,” had come to see him to express certain displeasure with him shortly after he was sworn-in as the Governor of Ekiti State in late 2010.

    “At this point,” he recounted further, “while the Government House in the state capital was being renovated, I was driving to the Governor’s office from my hometown daily. The elders told me that they found it disappointing and sorely disconcerting that the people in the town were hardly aware of when I drove out of, and back into town every day.”

    Why was this a problem, Fayemi said he was forced to ask them?

    Reporting their response, the governor said: “Well, they understood my credentials as a scholar, they were also aware that I had been an activist for many years. But now I was the Governor of the Ekiti State, and this would be the first and, perhaps, the only time in a long while, that the Governor would come from their hometown.

    “Why then was I denying them the opportunity of enjoying the pomp and circumstance of power by driving in and out of town without using the siren – if only to remind the people of the adjoining towns that their own son is the Governor of the state?”

    Fayemi said he gave the narration to illustrate both the challenges and the opportunities for change in the ethos and practices of power and governance in Nigeria.

    He then proceeded to lay out the key issues, including the fundaments, the ethos and the practices which he believed were significant in examining the challenges facing state, governance, democratisation and development in Nigeria.

    He avowed that “change is central in all these, because social transformation is an indispensable factor in any society – even in the most developed ones. Because society is a permanent work-in- progress, continuity and change must be in a constant struggle so as to find the best direction and methods of social progress. However, no lasting social change starts outside the minds of human beings.”

    To buttress his argument, he cited Albert Einstein’s statement that “The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.”

    Based on his narrated personal experience, Fayemi observed: “If a political culture encourages people to think that a state governor is not “governor enough” if he does not announce his going and coming with blaring sirens, even when there is no obstructing traffic, then we have to realise that the challenges of change is multi-dimensional.

    Expatiating more on ‘The Fundaments of the African State’, he looked back at the last two decades of democratisation in Africa, which he declared, has brought to bear significant social, economic and political changes on the African continent. He said with several years he had spent in the civil society, working with social forces in Africa and development agencies across the world to encourage change in the continent, he could confirm that Africa is changing for the better.

    He, however, made an allusion to “a lot” of that had been “written by Western scholars on the African predicament which oscillates between hope and despair and described in various dark grammars – failed states, collapsed states, incapable states, proforma democracies to mention but a few of such epithets.”

    He added that some African scholars have equally responded to many of the dark prognoses on the African State by describing them as “collapse thesis.” Some Western scholars, he said, have even gone further, adept at what they consider to be the most sinister manifestations of the State in Africa since it fits a convenient and popular narrative, to announce that, despite all its “illogicality,” “Africa [actually] Works” – because as they conclude, “Disorder [acts] as Political Instrument” in the continent.

    While avoiding, as he said, to indulge in philosophical and/or theoretical postulations about the continent, Fayemi turned to a Marxian dictum to react to what he termed “the (prevailing) restrictive and (popular) constraining attitude both in the academy and the international development community toward the African State.”

    Karl Mark, in The German Ideology, had said: “The philosophers have only interpreted the world, the point, however, is to change it.” Governor Fayemi argued that the same view can be extended to the African situation.

    Not many, I believe, will contend with Fayemi’s argument, as he put it, that: “The philosophers have only interpreted Africa, the point, however, is to change it.”

    As Fayemi has constantly postulated in many of his talks, we all need a typology of Africa’s democratization that further interrogates the broad categories away from the Manichean divide – of success and failure, pessimism and optimism, sub-optimal performance and unprecedented progress – which is possible and indeed, necessary because of its practical implications for policy choices by African citizens, their governments and development partners.

    As accurate as this typology is, it remains incomplete in its inadequate analyses of the process and dynamics of change and in its focus on outcomes. As Fayemi would always argue: “Both optimists and pessimists of the African condition focus on outcomes, linking these outcomes in a linear relationship with particular reforms and assuming static environments.”

    I agree with him that what is needed – is an understanding of the relationship between evolving economic and political contexts of reform – of how and why reforms proceed. I equally believe with him, as he argued further, that we must move away from a focus on judgments pegged on macro- reforms, that is country level analyses and big ticket issues – democratisation, privatisation, anti-corruption, insecurity – that are often measured by large, dramatic shifts – technically appropriate but often lacking in political fit.

    Opportunities to accelerate change and strengthen governance structures, as he said, are often missed in the context of this exclusive focus, or worse they may accelerate the challenges, inherent in the process of change, by withdrawing, for example, in the wake of partial reform. Rather than focus on short term gains, it is important to understand social change in Africa in a longer term perspective rather than through the typical binaries of success and failure.

    It is in this way, along the line of Fayemi’s postulation, that it would become clear that societal transformation in Africa in the past two decades of democratisation has led to the emergence of new social forces, changed the importance of others and consequently altered the relationships among various social and political actors whilst fostering new coalitions between the state and society.

    • Omobude wrote from Ibadan, Oyo State.

     

  • Mexico’s President seeks to change country’s name

    Mexico’s President seeks to change country’s name

    Mexican President Felipe Calderon has sent a bill to congress to change the official name of the country.

    The BBC reports that the current name, the United States of Mexico, was adopted in 1824 and was intended to emulate its northern neighbour.

    President Calderon wants to change it to just Mexico, as the country is known the world over.

    Mr. Calderon, who leaves office on December 1, said Mexico no longer needed to copy any foreign power.

    “The name of our country no longer needs to emulate that of other nations,” Mr. Calderon told a news conference.

    “Forgive me for the expression, but Mexico’s name is Mexico.”

    The name United States of Mexico (Estados Unidos Mexicanos) was brought in after independence from Spain.

    It is used mostly on official documents, money and other government material.

    Mr. Calderon first suggested the name change as a congressman in 2003, but the bill did not make it to a vote.

    The BBC says if the reaction on Twitter is anything to go by few Mexicans see this as a serious issue.

    Suggestions flooded in for a new name for Mexico, many of them mocking Mr. Calderon, such as “Fraud-land” in reference to widespread corruption.

    The constitutional reform Mr. Calderon proposes needs to be approved by both houses of Congress and a majority of Mexico’s 31 state legislatures.

    Coming with just a week to go before Mr. Calderon leaves office, the president’s critics see this as a symbolic gesture.

    Mr. Calderon will hand over to president-elect Enrique Pena Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party.

     

  • Nigerian leaders must change from their ways

    Nigerian leaders must change from their ways

    SIR: The state of the Nigerian nation is worrisome and we must appreciate the fact that Nigeria and Nigerians need prayers. Nobody understands the present situation. And the leaders we have around should be sincere for the sake of corporate existence of Nigeria . But they are hiding a lot of things from the public.

    The brazen unfaithfulness in the nation breeds corruption and fraudulent practices that are eating deep into the resources of the nation and affecting the economy very seriously, thus leading to inadequacy of infrastructure which the economy needs for grow.

    Our electricity is not functioning as expected and the authorities are collecting money. People are paying money for the water that is not supplied. Instead of the government to provide electricity, water and other basic amenities, they are short-changing the public by importing generators for the public; even in Benin Republic they are not using generator.

    Leaders are using the money for the convenience of the people, not for their own personal gain.

    Our roads are not motorable. They are death traps as the money that is supposed to be used to fix our roads are being shared to buy trailers and heavy trucks that are spoiling the roads and causing fatal accidents, claiming the lives of the citizenry without any care.

    On the petrol subsidy money, government is not subsidizing anything. They are using the money accruing from increase in petrol price to build refineries outside the nation and petrol stations for us in Nigeria , where fuel is being sold to us at exorbitant rates.

    They are increasing tuition fees in higher institutions, beyond poor man’s reach without creating jobs. Nigerians are already frustrated, hence the spate of kidnapping, blood shedding, armed-robbery and sundry forms of killings here and there. Our leaders should know that if the children of the poor are hungry, the children of the rich will not sleep.

    Let our leaders be warned that unfaithfulness and corruption will continue to frustrate people and the more frustrated the people are, the more problems should be expected in this nation.

    The word of God says “righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people,” Proverbs 14: 34 . Our leaders in every sphere of governance should read the handwriting on the wall and repent, or they should be expecting more problems for the nation because in Proverbs 15: 27, it is written: “He who is greedy for gain troubles his own house, but, he who hates bribe will live.”

    Also, 2 Chronicles 7: 14-15 records: “If my people who are called by my name could humble themselves, pray and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then, I will hear from heaven and forgive their sins and heal their land… Now my eyes will be opened and my ear attentive to prayers…”

    Therefore, let our leaders repent from their wickedness, selfish ways, so that God can hear our prayers. When a country is well governed, there will be peace, prosperity and progress throughout the nation. A word is enough for the wise.

     

    • Pastor Raphael Olalekan-Adesina,

    General Overseer, His ComingEvangelical Church

    Int’l Inc, Nigeria.

     

  • Can Romney change the game?

    Can Romney change the game?

    His closing remarks to voters in speeches and TV ads are combative. He sees the remarks as the last opportunities to swing the votes. From Friday till this morning, former Governor Mitt Romney has had a tight schedule.

    His top aides have not been less busy, especially in the swing states of Ohio, Wisconsin, New Hampshire, Colorado and Pennsylvania. They are trying their best to seal the deal at the end of a long, bitter and close campaign.

    And in doing this, they are going for the jugular of his main opponent, President Barack Obama of the Democratic Party.

    Romney, on Friday, warned that re-electing President Obama would result in another government shutdown and national default.

    The former Massachusetts governor said of Obama and the Congress: “He’s ignored them. He’s attacked them. He’s blamed them. The debt ceiling will come up again, and shutdown and default will be threatened, chilling the economy.”

    Romney said the choice voters face tomorrow boils down to one simple question: “Do you want more of the same or do you want real change?” he told hundreds of supporters packed into a cement-floored Wisconsin warehouse.

    In the Wisconsin speech, Romney asked people to vote for “real change” if they are “tired of being tired.” “From Day One, I will go to work to help Americans get back to work. This will probably be a turnout election. We’re going to do something that surprises a few people in the White House that are there right now. And that is, we’re going to win Wisconsin.”

    Before Romney appeared in Wisconsin, Labor Department’s final jobs report was released. It showed that U.S. employers added 171,000 jobs in October and that hiring was stronger in September and August. The unemployment rate inched up to 7.9 percent, from 7.8 percent in September. The report painted a picture of a job market gaining momentum. Romney would not allow Obama gain any advantage with this report. In a statement, he said the latest unemployment report was a “sad reminder that the economy is at a virtual standstill”.

    “The fact that unemployment is higher today than the day President Obama took office will reinforce voters’ desire for change,” said senior Romney strategist Ed Gillespie.

    The Republican presidential torchbearer mocked Obama for suggesting in an NBC interview that a single official oversee overlapping business programmes. “I don’t think adding a new chair in his cabinet will help add millions of jobs on Main Street. We don’t need a ‘secretary of Business’ to understand business. We need a president who understands business, and I do.”

    In New Hampshire, he mocked Obama for telling supporters a day earlier that voting would be their “best revenge”.

    “Vote for ‘revenge?’” the Republican candidate asked. “Let me tell you what I’d like to tell you: Vote for love of country. It is time we lead America to a better place.”

    The last minute battle is being fought also on the air. A Romney TV ad ridiculed Obama’s comment. “His solution to everything is to add another bureaucrat,” the narrator said.

    The last minute campaign also involves the phone banks of each of the candidates personally calling registered voters encouraging them to go out and vote tomorrow or vote early. At one such centre in Madison, volunteers for Romney said they have made hundreds of calls in the last few days. They told The Nation they were optimistic their efforts would yield result.

    The first Vice-chairman of the Republican Party in Wisconsin, Brian Schmming, told reporters that for either Obama or Romney, winning Wisconsin was critical to taking the White House. He expressed optimism that Romney would carry the day.

    Romney will have a hard time winning the White House if he does not carry Ohio but a Reuters/Ipsos poll at the weekend showed him trailing by a margin of just 1 per cent. However, other polls in recent days have put him slightly further behind. Polls in the other key states also show there is little to separate the pair

    There are, however, fears that the election could be so close that Romney could win the popular votes but lose the Electoral College. If this happens, it will be a replay of the 2000 election in which Al Gore won the popular votes but George Bush jnr won the Electoral College votes, the ultimate decider of who takes the White House.

    Romney at a rally at Janesville yesterday, criticised Obama healthcare programme, unemployment and promised better life for Americans.

  • NGO seeks behavioural change

    A non-governmental organisation (NGO), the Beautiful Nigeria Project (BNP), has stressed the need for behavioural change for the country to move forward.

    The founder of the NGO, Pastor Buchi Thomas, made the call during the formal launch of the group in Abuja.

    Thomas noted that the he is out to restore values, virtues and ethics in the country.

    He said: “Nigeria is God’s gift to us and whatever we do to this great inheritance in our hands shall be accounted for.

    “It is just a question of time.

    “Because of our children who are watching, because of the children who are listening, let us put our differences aside and join hands together to support the transformation programmes of the government.

    “The children can see the future, they are eager to embrace it, they can feel it, they are watching if the legacy will be shown to them.

    “We all owe this nation the responsibility to change it; don’t join the band wagon of the corrupt.

    “Don’t put your name in the record of the spoilers of Nigeria.

    “Be patriotic, be a change agent, be agent of transformation.”

    The Associate Pastor of Graceland Christian Centre, Akowonjo,  Lagos added that the country is known for its peaceful,  loving, blessed, tolerant and happy people.

    He said: “We are beautiful and great people.

    “The Beautiful Nigeria Project has come to restore our values, virtues, and vigour as African pride and hope.

    “Friends, the process of refining pure gold is not the same as refining Bronze.

    “The when of when is when we all begin to change our mindset, behaviour and attitude about this great nation Nigeria.

    “Are you a plus or a minus in the process of making Nigeria beautiful?”

    He lamented that Nigeria has faced many discouraging challenges that could have made the nation to collapse.

    “If it had not been God on our side when corruption and the likes ravaged our fatherland, by now, Nigeria would have been a forgotten brand in the comity of nations.”

    He said the BNP has chosen entertainment as orientation strategy to reach the youths.

    “The youths have been left out of governance over the years, though we can see changes in this administration, but we are advocating for full involvement of our youths in governance,” he said.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Ethics and Values, Mrs Sarah Jibril called on youths to buy into the project for a better country.

    Sarah, who was the special guest of honour at the event, noted that transformation can only come if people change their orientation and imbibe better ways of doing things.

    She lauded the initiator and founder of the NGO, saying the gesture signposts hope for the country.