Tag: defence

  • Boko Haram leader Shekau’s associate found dead, says Defence Hqtrs

    Boko Haram leader Shekau’s associate found dead, says Defence Hqtrs

    The Defence Headquarters yesterday said an unnamed associate of Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, has been found dead.

    Director of Defence Information, Brig.-Gen. Chris Olukolade said the alleged terror agent was found dead by the Special Forces in the vicinity of Lake Chad.

    There is however no independent confirmation of the claim as reporters have no access to the battle front.

    Brig.-Gen. Olukolade added that two other suspected terrorists who were found at the scene were arrested. They are currently in the custody of the Multinational Joint Task Force.

    He said the three suspects were confirmed to have operated in Baga, one of the Boko Haram operational bases in Borno State.

    According to the military, the terrorists were in the process of crossing the border to Niger Republic when they met their ill fate.

    Brig.-Gen. Olukolade stated that more troops of the Nigeria Police Mobile Force have joined the operations by the Special Forces, as more towns are being secured in the operations to rid the nation of terrorist activities.

    “A terrorist believed to be a close associate of insurgents’ leader, Abubakar Shekau has been found dead as he ran errand for the leadership. The other two fellow terrorists, one of which is confirmed to be a Nigerien, are now in the custody of the Multinational Joint Task Force.

    “The three were in the process of crossing the border to the neighbouring Niger Republic through the Lake Chad. The three have been confirmed to have operated in Baga and participated in perpetrating arson and other atrocities around the vicinity of the town.

    “They have been relocating from place to place since they left Baga last month”, the statement added.

     

  • Insecurity: we’re on top of the situation, says Defence Chief

    The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Admiral Ola Saa’d Ibrahim, yesterday said the Armed Forces are on top of the security situation across the country.

    Ibrahim spoke in his office in Abuja when he received a delegation of the Course 52 of the National Defence College of India.

    The CDS was speaking as President Goodluck Jonathan was meeting with security chiefs over insecurity in the land.

    Admitting that the country is presently facing more security challenges than before, the Defence Chief explained that the situation has not degenerated beyond redemption.

    According to him, the Defence Headquarters has been effectively managing the problem.

    Ibrahim said: “The Defence Headquarters today manages practically all the crises in-house because we drag all the forces to solve the problems in Nigeria.

    “As I am talking to you, I would be talking to the Senate Committee on Defence, Security and Intelligence on matters affecting us in the North. In the Middle Belt, there is another military operation going on there. Three different sets of operation are also going on in the South-South with its peculiarities.

    “They (security challenges) don’t look alike. Different challenges have different colourations. Thankfully, we inherited robust Armed Forces from our heroes past.

    “We celebrate that, and through a combination of resilience and the can-do spirit, we will solve all the problems our own way by deploying whatever capability at our disposal.”

    The Defence Chief identified inadequate budgetary allocations to the Armed Forces as one of the major challenges of tackling insecurity.

    He noted that the problem of scarce resources is not peculiar to Nigeria.

    He said: “There is no country that does not have problem with the budget over the years. We are also a victim here. Every country has its own budgetary challenges.

    “As far as budgetary appropriation for Defence is concerned, in the whole world, there is a concerted reduction in Defence budget across board. Nigeria is not an exception to that. We have to manage these crises within the confines of so many limitations. But let me tell you: we are doing very well.

    “There is no country that does not manage one problem or the other when you are confronted with the reality. In the classroom, you are trained to solve those peculiar challenges that confront you. It is the same thing we do here.”

    Ibrahim explained that the Boko Haram insurgency infiltrated the country through the back door, but expressed optimism that the problem will soon be solved.

     

  • 2013 African Youth Championship (AYC) Flying Eagles begin title defence today in Oran

    2013 African Youth Championship (AYC) Flying Eagles begin title defence today in Oran

     Battle Mali at 5.25pm 

     

    Nigeria’s Flying Eagles will start the defence of their Under-20 African Championship title at the Stade Ahmed Zabana in Oran today.

    John Obuh’s men were champions in South Africa in 2011 and have now been drawn in Group B alongside Mali, DR Congo and Gabon.

    The Nigerians, six-time winners of the African Youth Championship (AYC), kick off their campaign against West African opponents, Mali.

    The last time both teams met in the AYC in Johannesburg, South Africa at the semi-final stage two years ago, the Nigerians triumphed 2-0.

    Five players from Nigeria’s championship-winning team of two years ago are in the present team to defend the title this time.

    The players are Mohammed Goyi Aliyu, Chidi Osuchukwu, Kayode Olarenwaju, Edafe Egbedi and Abduljeleel Ajagun, who is now captain of the team.

    Obuh has also included the talented trio of Christian Pyagbara (Sharks), Alhaji Gero (Enugu Rangers) and Ikechukwu Okorie (Enyimba) to the squad.

    But Nigeria will start the AYC with one injury concern. Enugu Rangers’ goalkeeper, Emmanuel Daniel is out for a few days and it is likely ABS shot-stopper, Jonah Usman could start between the sticks.

    The Malian Under-20 national team go into the AYC with a talented young squad mixed with local and overseas players.

    Mali head coach, Moussa Keita, will look to talented youngsters like Boubakary Diarra (FC Nantes), Aboubacar Ibrahima Toungara (Centre Salif Keita), Abdoulaye Keita (Bastia), Boubacar Diarra (TP Mazembe), Samba Diallo (Djoliba AC) and Tiekoro Keita (Guingamp) to upset the apple cart when they face Nigeria this Sunday.

    Nigeria will play all of their group matches in the Algerian city of Oran.

    The match between Nigeria and Mali will be live on SuperSport 9 and SuperSport Select from 6.25pm CAT (5.25pm Nigerian time) this Sunday.

  • El-Rufai: In defence of public discourse

    El-Rufai: In defence of public discourse

    At the beginning, a caveat: this is not a defence of Malam Nasir El-Rufai. I believe he is not intellectually deformed to defend himself. I am no supporter of his many elitist policies while in the helms at the Federal Capital Territory. This, rather, is a defence of commonsense and a defence of the culture of public discourse which, unfortunately, has dived below the mark of decent coition of ideas and cocktail of facts. I find myself agreeing with the Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka who wrote in a 2007 essay; “We have gone below the Ground Zero of public debate”.

    Just as 2012 was folding off, Nigerians got engrossed in a heated debate following the release of There Was a Country, Chinua Achebe’s Civil War memoirs. The hell, to use the cliché, was literally let loose as Nigerians took each other by the throat. You could say this was a healthy engagement in ironing out some key national questions and revisiting our haunting history. It was not. This was because most of the loudest voices, especially in the early days of the quasi-debate, were of the people that had not actually read the book. Opinions were developed based on second-hand information that in most cases were subjugated to subjective interpretations or selective revisionism. The only knowledge to the book held by most commentators then was in form of some early reviews published in foreign titles and, in some cases, snippets of the book published as excerpts by the media. I had wanted to do a meta-review of There Was a Country especially after reading the reviews of the book penned by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Chika Uniagwe and Noo Saro-Wiwa. In particular, I was angered by some careless lines of fiction in Adichie’s review that I had intended to take up. However, I restrained myself to wait and read the primary text first; which I had ordered by then. Alas, I never got around to writing the piece.

    Recently, former Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili delivered a pre-convocation lecture at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, where she alleged that our foreign reserve has been deflated by $67 billion since the 2007 election. A cheer group of semi-intellectuals, who, thanks to Dr Reuben Abati, we now come to know as “today’s men” viciously launched a character-assassination attack on her, and anything she was thought to be representing. That also served as launch pad to take all her co-travellers, the “yesterday’s men”, to the cleaners.

    Enter Nasir El-Rufai’s The Accidental Public Servant. Since the commencement of some media reviews of this book, some people began hauling stones, even if aimless. Typical of the age-old orientation, the media went for the more explosive parts; some areas in which some leading dramatis personae of our politics space are ‘negatively’portrayed. And there come the most banal, even grotesque campaign to rubbish the author and, ultimately, throw the bath water with the baby. The book has now become a spring post from which the personality of the author is attacked. Of course his adversaries have been waiting for it thus the spontaneous firing of verbal missiles and the hysteria. However, as with the case with Ezekwesili’s UNN lecture, those who disagreed with El-Rufai’s assertions have not shown readiness to present us with superior arguments. What we have been dished all these days is a confetti of hate-words with an unruly tincture of half-truths. This is the level to which public debate has been reduced. Sad.

    I am writing this not with the mind that El-Rufai wrote the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. In any case, as a student of deconstruction, I know truth itself is contestable and often subjective. However, we must give it to the former minister for not only writing the book but also putting names to faces even when he knows that these people are largely alive and can go any length to defend themselves or fight back. The Atiku Media Office has gone public with invectives while sponsoring adverts in print and broadcast media to point “inconsistencies” between what El-Rufai claimed in the book and what he told the Senate during his clearance for ministerial post. Their undoing is that none of them, it seems, cared to verify what is actually in the book vis-à-vis what was said by El-Rufai at the Senate.

    Some of the more civil critics of the book thought that El-Rufai, in writing the memoir, had thrown ethics of “statecraft” (whatever that means!) and confidentiality to the dogs, thereby baring it all. This is another sad story of our country’s descent into paucity of public discourse. Memoirs should be explosive, political memoirs especially. The advance democracies that we are wont to copy use memoirs to deepen democratic culture and foster transparency. Government business is not a cultic venture. People have the right to know and memoirs are written to reveal what was not in the public knowledge. If all that is written in a memoir is a mishmash of jejune facts that are already known, what is the essence?

    We will do this country and indeed future generation a whole lot of good if we begin to water the culture of a more fertile public debate. This unhealthy reductionism of bringing down serious issues that require intense intellectual reflection and honest introspection is a great disservice for the country. Many a problem bedeviling the very existence of Nigeria as a country is attributed to our lack of sincerity to look at the problems objectively and call a spade by its name, no matter whose ox is gored. Let there be more memoirs, let there be more sincere engagement of the memoirs.

     

    •Abdulaziz is a journalist in Abuja.

  • In defence of presidential umbrage

    In defence of presidential umbrage

    If there is any positive point to be taken away from President Goodluck Jonathan’s on-the-spot assessment of the state of infrastructural decay at the Police College, Lagos, it is the fact that it indicates that after all, our President is far from being clueless as most of his critics would want us to believe. As should be expected, most Nigerians wasted no time in joining the bandwagon of Facebook and Twitter ‘abusers’, labelling Jonathan “clueless” all because he fingered his enemies as the brains behind the Ikeja Police College rot. And there lies my problem with the Nigerian electorate. They are simply difficult to govern. They complain over every step taken in the name of governance. They complain incessantly over the hilariously unique brand of good governance that our President exemplifies. Oh, come off it! You can accuse the President of anything but definitely not a charge of inability to handle all the problems confronting this country…in his own way. Surely, a clueless person would not have answers to all questions like he has been doing lately. Please, you may wish to have another view of the interview conducted by Christiane Amanpour where the President scored himself high on power supply, saying: “Power is one area that Nigerians are pleased with this administration. I prefer you ask ordinary Nigerians on the street of Lagos or Abuja this question.” Ha! Holy Moses!

    Question is: must we heckle for heckling sake? Or are we saying that the President should keep quiet while critics run him out of Aso Rock? By the way, I am of the opinion that Jonathan’s indignation against the media and the yamheads that allowed the filming of that great institution is justified! In fact, no one worthy of being described as a patriot would have allowed such sacrilege. What exactly was the television station trying to prove by showing footages of police trainees queuing to answer the call of nature in open and dirty spaces; scrambling to be part of a sharing ratio of 50 trainees per fish head; bathing in the open; adopting the ‘shot put’ method in the disposal of human wastes; and sweating for sleeping space in overcrowded, poorly ventilated and stuffy dormitories that could pass for an utterly unkempt prison in saner climes? Didn’t it occur to these dumb heads that these processes are deliberately designed for the trainees with the aim of getting them psychologically prepared for the arduous task of policing in the country and sadistically taming citizens in the open prison called Nigeria?

    They said the environment under which the police are trained is dehumanising and lowers the integrity of trainees. And I ask: how? Has any policeman complained to the public or has that affected the “your boys dey here” mentality? Besides, if the environment under which officers are trained were to be squeaky clean, would it have been easier for trainees to, with lightning speed, adjust to the real condition of the police stations and barracks? Or have we not given a thought to what it would cost the authorities to maintain a Shock Therapy Unit whereby freshly recruited officers would be lectured on how to cope with the ghetto lifestyle of police barracks should the government succumb to the call for an upgrade of the police colleges of which the Lagos centre is described by one of the interviewed senior police officers as “the best in the country?’ How long, really, can the pig last outside its stinking sty?

    On a serious note, I am shocked that Nigerians have refused to see the business sense in this whole matter. They dissipate needless energy on the social media, faulting the Otuoke-born leader for his “un-presidential remarks” by quipping: “This is a calculated attempt to damage the image of the government, as the college is not the only training institution in the country.”  They said he missed an opportunity to show leadership and seize the moment to explain what his administration would do to the correct the rot of countless years. Haba, what else do we want him to do? Has he not reminded us that he should not be blamed if he was annoyingly slow in correcting the decay he inherited from our long inglorious past? Has he not explained that these things take time and that 2013 promises better prospects of regular electricity supply, infrastructural development, employment generation and a robust security network? So, why can’t impatient citizens exercise some patience with our leader’s ‘Papa Go-Slow’ principles of leadership so that we can all benefit from the good luck that 2013 holds?

    Still on the fish head matter, a bird whispered to Knucklehead that some smart foreign investors are already asking questions on the magical formula being used in sharing the poor thing. Even Arsene Wenger, the coach of my favourite EPL club, Arsenal, would sacrifice an eye to learn one or two economic lessons on the Almighty Theory of feeding 50 men with one fish head. Yet, here in Nigeria, we are shouting blue murder. In the first place, must trainees eat fish or even its fins? In fact, we ought to thank the police hierarchy for their magnanimity in sparing the fish head to ordinary trainees while they manage the softer parts! For this great sacrifice, all they get as rewards are visible pot bellies. Oh, what a great sacrifice!

    Predictably, the Action Congress of Nigeria joined the fray for all the wrong reasons. It lampooned Jonathan for demanding to know how a private television station’s camera “penetrated’ the walls of a 70-year-old institution, with a collateral damage of exposing its stinking innards to the world. Playing the role of an unsolicited advisor, the party went to say that:  “Mr. President, those comments were totally unnecessary, and they put a damper on what would have been a great moment for you. Terrible as the state of the Police College in Ikeja is, it represents a tip of the iceberg when compared with the pervasive rot in police barracks and police stations as well as the generally poor welfare of the police.” What gall! Why should any unremunerated citizen or political party dare to render quality advice that seems to put them above dimwit fat cats in high places? Rot ko, eyesore ni.

    I wonder why Dr. Doyin Okupe has not taken exception to this outright fallacy by the ACN. Yes, our policing system may not be the best in West Africa but it is definitely not the worst. All it takes for the government to prove this is to commission a high-powered committee to understudy policing in the sub-region; submit a report to be examined by another white-paper drafting committee; and leave the razzmatazz of the great findings to Minister Labaran Maku to handle! For a man who conveniently maintained a permanent smirk on his face while announcing a magical 80 per cent daily electricity supply in all the nooks and crannies of Nigeria in 2012, dabbing the police rot with sweet-smelling fragrance should be a piece of cake for Nigeria’s innovative Information Minister! Even if the result turns out to be negative, I doubt if that should be a veritable ground for making a “calculated attempt to damage the image of an administration’s” transformation agenda?

    And so, Mr. Jonathan was right on point for lashing out at those whose calculators only work to perfection whenever the subject was an assessment of his performance in government. His riotous outrage is not without validation. Why were those cameras not focused on the millions of jobs that have been created since Jonathan became President? Why can’t the affected television station zoom its camera on the smiling faces of in-patients at our hospitals as they receive qualitative treatment from doctors who no longer go on strike? Why, for crying out loud, can’t they run a documentary on the historically unique state of our public schools and juice it up with the stories relating to the world standard graduates that we now bake here at home? Didn’t they know that parents no longer send their children to Ghana and Togo for secondary and tertiary education? Have they not seen the high reduction in the money being wasted on medical tourism? Were they not there when the First Lady visited Iginla Hospital for medical check-up only to make a brief shuttle to Wiesbaden, Germany to collect the result? How about the transformation of Nigeria into an investors’ paradise in the face of explosive insecurity? Why are these ungrateful Nigerians courting the rage of Jonathan by directing their camera lens on the activities of a ‘local terror group’ called Boko Haram, an insignificant institution like the police college or the corruptive tendencies of some bad apples in high places?

    Why are they drawing the President’s ire needlessly? Why are these persons confusing our rulers since it is mutually agreed that they are yet to be blessed with true leaders. They make all the right noise about voters’ power but hardly make wise use of it on Election Day. They sell their votes for a pot of porridge and still have the balls to demand for accountability from the one who bought their conscience. They want to eat their cake and still have it as takeaway.  Why can’t they understand the unwritten code of the deadly game and join the bandwagon of those who applaud blind larceny. Why can’t they settle for the usual crumbs and watch as the nation slides further into egregious rot? Why?

  • Oliha raps Eagles’ defence

    Oliha raps Eagles’ defence

    • Says Yobo should be drafted to right full back 

    Former Super Eagles midfielder Thompson Oliha has singled out the senior national team’s defence for the sole reason the nation failed to pick maximum points against the Stallions of Burkina Faso in the Group C encounter of the 2013 African Cup of Nations played on Monday night.

    Oliha, a member of the 1994 Eagles that dazzled the continent to Nigeria’s second conquest in the Nations Cup at the 19th edition in Tunisia, opined that the defence marshalled by captain Joseph Yobo was the country’s Achilles heel against the Burkinabes.

    He added that the country’s representatives also suffered from loss of concentration which, he enthused, was unheard of in games of such magnitude and at such a time in the match.

    Oliha warns that for Nigeria to survive the onslaught of the defending champions, Zambia’s Copper Bullets, the Eagles captain should be replaced in his preferred central defence with another better player while Yobo be moved to the right full-back position because of his experience.

    Currently one of the coaches in the Kwara Football Academy of Excellence, Oliha said the Stephen Keshi-led Eagles’ technical crew should tutor and lift the spirits of the players ahead of their must-win match against Zambia.

    A furious Oliha disclosed: “Nigeria had no defence against Burkina Faso. For me, Yobo had a bad day and should be replaced in our next game from the central defence position if we want to get anything out of that match.

    “We also suffered from loss of concentration and we paid dearly for it so late in the match when we were already celebrating a win. It was that bad.

    “Keshi and his other aides in the technical crew should be able to fashion out a winning formula and strive to lift the spirits of the players. This will make them come all out against Zambia and get the needed victory. At this stage of our game we should not be having problems with countries like Burkina Faso, and the fact that we struggled against them showed the level to which our game has gone down against so called minnows on the continent,” the one-time Eagles star concluded.

  • Oshiomhole closes defence

    Four witnesses yesterday testified at the Edo State Election Petition Tribunal on the on-going hearing of the petition filed by Maj-Gen Charles Airhiavbere against the election of Governor Adams Oshiomhole.

    The witnesses were Bernard Isioma, Joseph Aguebor, Osasere Austin Uzamere and Kenneth Edebiri.

    Oshiomhole’s counsel Adeniyi Akintola told the tribunal they were closing their defence after calling seven witnesses.

    He said: “We do not want to call any witnesses. We did because we have to show that we have something to say.”

    Bernard said he voted at Unit four, Ward 10 in Egor Local Government Area and all voters were accredited before voting.

    He said he recorded the counting of ballot papers with his Samsung cell phone and tendered the video recording as Exhibit 62.

    Bernard, however, said he did not know the number of accredited voters in the unit.

    Aguebor said the ACN won the election in his unit and that other party agents signed the result sheets.

    Uzamere said he was the ACN agent at Unit 11 Ward 1.

    He said Sunny Imafidon was not the PDP agent during the election.

    Kenneth Edebiri denied allegations that he bribed to induce voters during the election.

    He said he did not order soldiers to threaten anyone and that the elections were free and fair.

    The case was adjourned till Tuesday for the ACN to open its defence.

  • Oshiomhole to open defence today

    Oshiomhole to open defence today

    Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole will today open his defence at the Governorship Election Petition Tribunal.

    The candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the July 14 election, Maj. Gen. Charles Airhiavbere, is challenging Oshiomhole’s victory on grounds that the governor lacks the educational qualification to contest the election.

    Airhiavbere is also alleging that the election was marred by irregularities.

    The petitioner closed his case last Thursday after presenting 22 witnesses.

    His application to call two more witnesses is pending before the Court of Appeal.

    Oshiomhole and other respondents have 10 days to call their witnesses.

     

  • Reps committee walk minister out at budget defence

    Reps committee walk minister out at budget defence

    The House of Representatives has expressed concern over President Goodluck Jonathan’s failure to prioritise science and technology in next year’s budget.

    Besides, the lawmakers walked out the Minister of Science and Technology, Prof Ita Okon Bassey-Ewa, from the ministry’s 2013 budget defence session for failing to aggregate the ministry’s 2012 budget performance.

    Bassey-Ewa, who appeared before the Committee on Transport, yesterday also angered the lawmakers over the appointment of a substantive Director-General for the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI)

    Chairman of the Committee Abiodun Akinlade regretted that President Jonathan could not include science and technology in his six priority areas in the budget.

    The minister was walked out for“not taking the Committee seriously” and shouting back at the lawmakers.

    The drama began when Bassey-Ewa was requested to put the 2012 budget performance of the Ministry in percentage, which he failed to do.

    Akinlade said it was not the first time that the minister has failed as he could not convert to percentages his ministry’s performance for the year during their last oversight visit to the ministry.

    “The minister has never taken the committee seriously. I can recollect that he also failed to provide the percentage performance of his ministry when we went to his office for oversight functions sometime ago.”

    But Bassey-Ewa retorted angrily, shouting: “We are prepared; we are prepared. You can see that I have been trying to compute the percentage.”

    He was, however , asked to leave the session after being cautioned. The minister insisted that he was shouted at first by the lawmakers.

    Bassey-Ewa was also advised to get himself acquainted with his ministry’s activities before appearing again for another budget defense.

    In a related development, the lawmakers blasted the Ministry of Power for its inability to utilise half of funds released for its capital projects this year.

    The sum of N75.464billion was budgeted for the ministry’s capital projects while N34.765billion was released by the Ministry of Finance.

    Though the ministry could only utilise N19.763billion, the lawmakers, nonetheless, lamented that less that 40 per cent of the total allocation have been released by the Ministry of Finance.

    The lawmakers noted that it was the reason behind the ministry’s failure to address the perennial power challenges in the country.

    Committee Chairman Patrick Ikhariale said: “As at November, the ministry still has such a huge amount of money yet it has not utilised the money.

    “What this means is that the ministry does not need such amount of money because if it needs the money it would have done something with it.

    “With the way the ministry is going, it is hoped that it will not cause the collapse of the power sector.

    “N15billion not utilised is highly embarrassing, the committee is of the opinion that the ministry should be given what it would be able to use.

    “This year budget is not going to be the normal ritual, we are going to do a thorough job.”

     

  • In defence of how China picks its leaders

    In defence of how China picks its leaders

    The coverage in the western media of leadership changes at the Chinese Communist party’s 18th congress has been almost uniformly negative. Critics say corruption pervades the upper echelons of the party, policy issues are not publicly discussed and the Chinese people are completely left out of the process.

    There is some truth to such criticisms but they miss the big picture. The Chinese political system has undergone a significant change over the past three decades and it comes close to the best formula for governing a large country: meritocracy at the top, democracy at the bottom, with room for experimentation in between.

    There is a good case for popular participation at local levels. People usually know what’s needed in their communities and they have a good sense of the competence and character of the leaders they choose. In fact, most Chinese participate in local-level elections.

    In a big country, however, one person, one vote is problematic. From a moral point of view, citizens should vote for the common good because their votes affect not just themselves but other people. Yet voters tend to vote with their pocketbooks. Many can’t even do that well, since they lack economic competence. One group of voters – the rich – has a better understanding of economics and finds it easy to skew the system in their favour.

    To remedy the problem the economist Bryan Caplan proposes tests of voter competence, but that’s a non-starter in democracies because nobody wants to give up the vote once they have it. Hence, it really is the end of history, but in the bad sense that no improvements are possible once the system of one person, one vote is in place.

    There is a deeper problem with democracy. It confers voting rights only to adults within national borders. But it’s not just voters who are affected by the policies of the government: non-voters such as future generations and people living outside the country are also affected. In Europe and the US, the public repeatedly votes for lower taxes and higher benefits, recklessly mortgaging the future of their countries. And let’s not mention global warming.

    So how leaders should be chosen at the central level? Ideally, the process should be meritocratic: the mechanism should be explicitly designed to choose leaders with superior competence and virtue. Over the past three decades or so, the CPC has gradually transformed itself from a revolutionary party to a meritocratic organisation.

    Today, universities are the main recruitment grounds for new members. Students need to score in the top percentile of national examinations to be admitted to an elite university that grooms future leaders. Then they compete fiercely to be admitted into the party. Only high-performing students who have undergone thorough character checks are admitted.

    Those who want to serve in government then usually need to pass government examinations, with thousands of applicants competing for a single spot. Once they are part of the political system, further evaluations are required to move up the chain of command. They must perform well at lower levels of government and pass character tests. Then there are more position-specific exams that test for specialised skills.

    The advantages of Chinese-style meritocracy are clear. Cadres are put through a gruelling process of talent selection and only those with an excellent performance record make it to the highest levels. Instead of wasting time and money campaigning for votes, leaders can seek to improve their knowledge and performance. China often sends its leaders to learn from best practices abroad.

    Yes, meritocracy can only work in the context of a one-party state. In a multi-party state, there is no assurance that performance at lower levels of government will be rewarded at higher levels, and there is no strong incentive to train cadres so that they have experience at higher levels because the key personnel can change with a government led by a different party. Hence, less talent goes to the bureaucracy, because the real power-holders are supposed to be chosen by the people.

    In practice, Chinese-style meritocracy is flawed. Most obviously, there is widespread corruption in the political system. Term and age limits help to “guard the guardians”, but more is needed to curb abuses of power, such as a more open and credible media, more transparency and an effective legal system, higher salaries for officials, and more independent anti-corruption agencies.

    When it comes to political systems, western opinion leaders are still stuck in a narrative of dichotomy: democracy versus authoritarianism. But the competition in the 21st century, as the scholar Zhang Weiwei writes, is between good and bad governance. The Chinese regime has developed the right formula for choosing political rulers that is consistent with China’s culture and history and suitable to modern circumstances. It should be improved on the basis of this formula, not western-style democracy.

    • The writers are a professor of political theory at TsinghuaUniversity and a Shanghai-based venture capitalist.

    – Financial Times