Tag: Donald Trump

  • Iran: Trump should stop interfering in Middle East

    U.S. President Donald Trump should stop interfering in the Middle East if he wants the price of oil to stop rising, Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh said on Wednesday.

    “Mr Trump is trying to seriously reduce exports of Iran’s oil and also ensure the price of oil does not go up, but these two cannot happen together.

    “If he wants the price of oil not to go up and the market not to get destabilised, he should stop unwarranted and disruptive interference in the Middle East.

    “He should not be an obstacle to the production and export of Iran’s oil.

    “Trump, not the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, is behind the recent rise in prices,’’ Zanganeh said.

    Read Also: Trump rejects meeting with Iran’s Rouhani at UN gathering

    According to him, Trump blames OPEC for what he has created and caused the rise of the price of oil and disturbance in the market.

    “OPEC members do not have the capacity to increase production,’’ Zanganeh said.

    In a speech at the UN on Tuesday, Trump reiterated calls on OPEC to pump more oil and stop raising prices.

    He also accused Iran of sowing chaos and promised further sanctions on the country.

    The U.S. will apply sanctions to halt oil exports from Iran, the third-largest producer in OPEC, starting on Nov. 4.

    The pending loss of Iranian supply has been a major factor in the recent surge in crude prices.

  • Trump rejects globalism in speech at UN

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday told scores of Heads of State and Government that his country rejects the ideology of globalism, both generally and in relation to international justice and the migration crisis.

    Trump, on the opening day of the Assembly’s annual General Debate, rejected globalism in his speech to the 73rd Session of the annual debate at the UN General Assembly.

    Trump said: “America is governed by Americans. We reject the ideology of globalism, and we embrace the doctrine of patriotism.

    “Around the world, responsible nations must defend against threats to sovereignty not just from global governance, but also from other new forms of coercion and domination.”

    He reiterated the U.S. commitment to making the UN more effective and accountable declaring: “I have said many times that the United Nations has unlimited potential”.

    Trump also re-echoed his past criticism of the world body, hitting out at the UN-backed International Criminal Court and the recently-proposed Global Compact on Migration.

    He stressed that the U.S. will not pay more than 25 percent of the UN peacekeeping budget, so as to encourage other countries to step up and share in the burden.

    “And we are working to shift more of our funding from assessed contributions to voluntary so that we can target American resources to the programs with the best record of success.

    “Only when each of us does our part and contributes our share can we realise the UN’s highest aspirations.”

    He added that in spite of his warning to the Assembly in 2017 that “the UN Human Rights Council had become a grave embarrassment to this institution, shielding egregious human rights abusers while bashing America and its many friends”, “no action at all was taken”.

    “So the United States took the only responsible course: We withdrew from the Human Rights Council, and we will not return until real reform is enacted.

    “As far as America is concerned, the ICC has no jurisdiction, no legitimacy, and no authority.

    “The ICC claims near-universal jurisdiction over the citizens of every country, violating all principles of justice, fairness, and due process.

    “We will never surrender America’s sovereignty to an unelected, unaccountable global bureaucracy,” he declared.

    Trump added that the U.S. would not participate in the new Global Compact on Migration, scheduled to be adopted in Morocco in December 2018, stressing that “migration should not be governed by an international body unaccountable to our own citizens.” (NAN)

  • Donald Trump is not our problem

    President Donald Trump is indeed an enigma. He is arguably the most talked about personality in the world today. He is a split personality given to loony ideas. He is coarse in language and lacking the refinement of a statesman. He is considered a racist with a loud disdain for blacks and Muslims. His being the president of the richest and most powerful country in the world was most unexpected.  But the reality is that he is the president of the United States of America.  His campaign for the office of the president of the United States was so unconventional that many wondered why he would deliberately set himself on the path of electoral failure.

    Three key issues; security, economy and jobs are crucial to Americans. Trump predicated his campaign on them. In the course of his journey to the White House, he not only contended with the Democratic Party, he contended with many members of his Republican Party, African Americans and the American press. The CNN, Washing Post and The New York Times were against his aspirations. He had no option than to court the social media especially the twitter. He used the twitter effectively to dish out his programmes, rough talk and abuse of perceived enemies. He told Americans the bitter truth which many hate to hear.  His mission was to make America great again.

    Hillary Clinton based her campaign on spurious inclusiveness and human rights which hide deadly realities. She was talking of gay marriage, building bridges between racial divides and the right to terminate unwanted pregnancies.  She was blind to the fact that Americans are out of jobs every day. For political expediency, she downplayed the devastating effect of rising terrorism.

    America is the most accommodating country in the world. Many immigrants have gone there and excelled. The sweet juice in the US has made us turn the country into a toll free amusement park. It is noteworthy that in the past 20 years, Nigeria had not granted citizenship to more than 150 immigrants. We now want to dictate to the US on border control. It is our desire that her doors remain open at all times for free entry of all manner of people. It is now fashionable for elite pregnant women in Nigeria to run to the US or Britain to deliver their babies. They want to give birth to CITIZENS. What a big shame. Trump’s temporary ban of citizens from some countries from entry to the US had been severely criticized. Nigeria closed its borders to citizens of Liberia at the heat of the Ebola virus scare. This was informed by our sad experience from a victim from Liberia who entered Nigeria. It was the safest measure to take at that time. The question is why the blanket ban on all Liberians when only very few of them carry the virus? It is because it is deadly not to do so. I am not advocating a complete ban from these countries but immigrants from the countries should be diligently screened before entry.

    Trump is not having issues with naturalized Latinos or blacks from African countries.  His war is against Mexicans who traffic in drugs and foster criminality in the US. Many Latinos who attacked Trump’s campaign waved the Mexican flag on American soil. Nothing can be unpatriotic and stupid as that. Is it these people that should be allowed free entry into the US?

    Without strict border control, in few years, Americans will be a minority in their own country. Border control should therefore start in earnest. I am still to be aware of any Middle East country with open borders. Is there freedom of choice of religion in Middle East countries? Terrorism is a plague worse than cancer.

    Those who want the US to open its doors to all manner of immigrants have not swallowed the bitter pills of terrorism. Those who have lost their loved ones to terrorist attacks would sing a different tune. Why should the US allow without proper scrutiny Iranians who shout death to America? We should moderate our racism accusation. More than half of the whites who brought Trump into the White House voted Obama, a black man as president. Would Nigerians ever vote a naturalized white man as president? Also, is living in America a do or die affair? Don’t we have our own country?

    I am yet to see an American or Briton with head over heels on the way to live in Nigeria.

    No one has been able to fault Trump on the economy. The economy has witnessed growth the highest in recent time. He is fighting against American jobs going out of the country.  He has imposed tariff on imported goods to protect American industries. He felt should not import steel and aluminum from China when it is home to these products? I agree with Trump that it is an insult to Americans to be importing microwave ovens from China. In the area of bringing the economy back to life, he has achieved a remarkable progress. The level of employment has been upped and with deep tax cut. It is wrong to attribute his success on the economy solely on the good foundation laid by Barrack Obama. The American economy is very volatile. Any poor governance for a single day will affect the price of stocks. If Trump had done nothing other than drink tea and play golf in his first week in office, the value of stocks would drop significantly. This is unlike Nigeria where appointment of ministers and signing of the budget could be delayed for six months with little consequence.

    Trump has done well on security. ISIS is completely defanged in Iraq and to a reasonable extent in Syria. The initiative towards the denuclearization of North and South Korea is yielding good results. Terrorists all over the world now know that they have a formidable enemy in Trump.

    Our problem is not the brash and loose mouthed Trump but ourselves. We should build a good country for ourselves instead of having headache on Trump in a country very far away.

     

    Jacobs writes from Celestial Church of Christ, Calabar.

  • Loans, security and theTrojan Horse

    A statement  from a media aide in the Nigerian  presidency spelt out details of loans request  by the Nigerian president  to  the  Chinese president  for finance to develop  a power plant in Mambilla Plateau  in the North East  and for the resuscitation of the Chad Basin for  economic usage  and exploitation  that could limit the high level  of poverty  and social upheavals  that have characterized that environment  for sometime.  This development  and the tweet  of the US President Donald Trump  that  the Op Ed  article  in the New  York Times this week  purportedly written  by  a Trump Administration official  undermining the White  House  is  a  security  breach, form  the cornerstone of  today’s  discussion. Both  reflect  real and potential  changes  for good or bad in any democracy especially with regard  to future  control  of the  socio  -economic, security  and political    architecture  as  well  as the cultural  values  of  both the US  and indeed Western civilization.

    And in Nigeria’s  case  the development portends  genuine fears  about  a looming Chinese colonization  of not only Nigeria but the entire  continent  of Africa. Let  me assure  you  that  I am  not an alarmist  and I am not exaggerating  either, and, indeed,    to prove  that is my task on this page today.

    Let  me start  with  the Nigerian leader President  Muhammadu Buhari’s request  for  the loan  in the most  respectful  if not cap in hand manner. Which  shows  a desperation  which  confirms his identification  of the importance of this Chinese loan. Let me state that I do  not doubt  his judgement  as well  as his integrity  or its  pedigree  in asking  for  this Chinese loan.

    After all this was a former Nigerian military  ruler  who    before  he was overthrown,  wisely  rejected the IMF loan which  his successors accepted    and that  led  to  the  repayment  cost  of that  loan ruining our economy disastrously  with  the  adoption of  the infamous  IMF  conditionalities  that  has crippled  not only our economy  but  that of  all  nations in the developing world  that took  the loan. For  now according  to Chinese officials Nigeria is the biggest construction market  for China in Africa, its third biggest trading partner  and a vast  market  for Chinese investment in market.

    The  Chinese  are  noted  for being shrewd  business men but  no matter  how you praise  the quality of the Chinese rice they  do not give free  lunch. That  is their attitude  on  business  especially loans. They  know  repayment will  be a burden  now  and more so  in the future and they  are  bidding  their time. They  may  not ask for security  as conventional  bankers do  but  they  will  negotiate repayment  terms  and as with  sovereign nations on debts,  there could be loss of  independence and sovereignty  once repayment arrangements are not as envisaged or agreed  at  point  of disbursement  of the loans. There is the story of an Asian nation’s president who  got the Chinese to build  an  airport in  his hometown as election promise.  When  repayment  got awry  the Chinese  took over the airport  as a strategic transport location for    promotion of  Chinese  security interests in that environment.

    It    was part  of the Chinese  Belt  and  Silk  Road  Project  to link  China with  Europe  and Asia  but that  nation lost  part of its territory and sovereignty as well. If  that  is not another  form  of colonialism  I    wonder  what  it is.  Once  again  Nigeria should be cautious  with  Chinese  loans as the Chinese don’t give free lunch.

    In  addition  the Chinese are  atheists  and have no  respect  for religious freedom  and indeed  have literally incarcerated the minority  Muslim Urghurs in China  and have built  incarceration camps that  are  to disorient  this Muslim  minority  from  their religious  beliefs  and instill  communist  and state loyalty  and patriotism  in them.

    That  is the ideology  of Communist  China which  is a command democracy  that  is also  militaristic  and brooks no disputes  with  the Chinese government  controlled  in a one party state by the Chinese Communist  Party. Which  itself is a powerful minority  in China. The  saying that evil  communications corrupt good manners  is very apt  here  and we should be careful  with  the use  of Chinese loans to build  our strategic  infrastructure  for economic  development. The  cost  of repayment  may be colossal  or prohibitive in future.

    In  the case of the letter ripping  the US Administration of Donald Trump  apart  my  sympathy  is with the beleaguered  US  president. The  writer  of the article claimed  to be  working within the Cabinet or White  House to undermine  Trump  so he does not mislead America. The  writer is  said  to be anonymous  but  the US  president  has tweeted  that it is the duty of the New York Times to fish  him out and name him in  the security interest  of  the US.  That  to  me is a valid  point.  Or  is free  expression  above security  interest  of a state? I  doubt.  But  that  seems to be the norm  in the US.

    Indeed given  the names given the US president in media hostile to him, it is as if he was elected  to be disgraced and described  in the vilest  terms and that  cannot  be right even  in freedom drunk US  where anyway  it is  almost  a crime to  be black.

    It  is apparent  that  American  society in Trump Era is  a combative and hostile  divide between  those who  lost  the last Presidential  election narrowly  and those who  won. The  Democrats  who lost see nothing good in the new president  and the media on their  side  too see nothing good in the new American  president. They have questioned his election and legitimacy and are now on the highway  to see him  impeached. He  too has dug in and is using tweeter  to fight in an  unprecedented, one man  riot squad  manner. But  in  lodging an anonymous letter in his cabinet  in this manner, the New York Times in my view  violated the ethics of responsible journalism which  it can only  redeem by fishing out the Trojan Horse  in the

    Trump  cabinet  and those  who put  it  there. Trump  can  very well  be the worst  or most stupid president the US ever  had.

    That is no justification for publishing an anonymous letter that is aimed at destroying the government  of the US, which  the Trump  presidency is,  as the executive arm of government  in the US presidential system  based on separation  of powers. What  the New York  Times published on the Trump  Administration is a clear  lesson on sedition. Once  again  long live the Federal  Republic  of Nigeria.

     

     

  • Hubris and national pride

    My established reputation that he has done deliberately little to repudiate, President Donald Trump is renown for carrying himself with the ultimate supercilious swagger. In his own eyes, he is the centre of God’s universe around which all other existences must gravitate or otherwise fall off into ignoble oblivion. Actually, as it seems, they pass or fail the test of qualification for survival on his terms.

    When he comes in contact with those other existences as is inevitable under heaven, he readily throws up pejorative labels for persons or groups against whom he runs in, or whose chemistry simply don’t jell with his own. Not that he has much challenge using those labels openly and with defiant sensationalism. But even where such labels occur Freudianly in private conversations, and later on get leaked to pose awkward public relations or diplomatic moments, he typically spares no time for trite niceties of retraction or other forms of remediation. He is The Donald phenomenon, of which there is no other creation faintly peer-matching, isn’t he?

    The American leader has been openly accused of being racist and particularly hubristic towards non-Caucasians, and he hasn’t seemed scantly bothered by that impression. In his own country, for instance, he has been remarkably insular towards the deprivations of people on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico, which by some alchemy of geo-politics happens to be a territory of the United States. Hurricane Maria struck on that island late last year and has left nearly 3,000 residents dead in its wake, going by the latest update on the ensuing toll. The mayor of Puerto Rican capital San Juan, Ms. Carmen Cruz, only last week accused Washington of responsibility for the huge toll, saying: “The Trump administration killed Puerto Ricans with neglect.” And to boot, he has kept his xenophobic bluster unflaggingly at historic levels.

    The latest of the American leader’s hubristic slips was the report early last week that he allegedly confided in some aides that he never again wanted to meet “someone so lifeless” as President Muhammadu Buhari, apparently following from his hosting the Nigerian counterpart in Washington at the close of April, this year. The Financial Times (FT) published the report, citing “three people familiar with the matter” who were not named. The mention of President Buhari in the report was only incidental, though, as FT was basically using the piece to tout a scheduled visit by Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta to the White House last Monday as a fresh opportunity for Africa to wring some concessions out of Trump who has since coming to the American presidency in 2017 been without an agenda for the continent.

    We must momentarily sidestep competing partisan capital that Buhari supporters on one hand, and opposition actors on the other have tried to milk from the FT report (we will shortly return to that issue) and try to unravel possible implications of the alleged utterance for Nigeria’s ties with the Trump presidency. But for a start, it would not do to live in denial that Mr. Trump was misreported. Chances are almost fool-proof that he was not. Even if we discountenance the reputed authority of the reporting medium, namely FT, the alleged statement is vintagely Trumpist, both in essence and by established pattern.

    Apparently owing to the mutual diplomatese that tailed the April outing by visiting Mr. Buhari and host Mr. Trump in Washington, the Nigerian presidency addled last week on what to make of the new report. “I doubt the authenticity of the claim that the President of the USA said that. But if truly he said so, then it is of no significance to us. This is because the same Trump publicly endorsed and applauded the President for a job well done,” Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed was reported saying. Other officials of government who spoke on the matter tagged on that same narrative.

    But let’s just face up to the uncomfortable truth: Trump most likely spoke as was reported. Of course, the hateful slur attributed to him was not the stuff of state policy pronouncements, and that should explain why he couldn’t have taken a press podium to air his gut’s dark workings betrayed by the alleged remark. To that end, it is instructive that neither he nor any American official has risen in swift denial of the FT report. Besides, that the newspaper didn’t identify its sources should not detract from its credibility, because the utterance in issue isn’t exactly the type intended for full-faced spokespersons to put in public domain.

    Should anyone be blindsided by this pattern that is now so familiar anyway? Last January, Mr. Trump was reported to have called out African nations and the southern American states of Haiti and El Salvador as ‘shitholes’ at a meeting in the White House. When the story broke and even his own countrymen deplored the apparent racial bigotry, Trump’s camp only offered tepid prevarications that amounted essentially to no denial. Some four months later when Buhari visited Washington and journalists squared up with Trump at their joint press conference in the Rose Garden, he neither denied nor apologise for the disparaging remark. Actually, he dug in, saying: “The (Nigerian) president knows me and he knows where I’m coming from. And you do have some countries that are in very bad shape and very tough places to live in.”

    But there’s the catch: President Buhari curiously indulged his host. Asked at that press conference about his reaction to Trump’s ‘shithole’ remark, the Nigerian leader parried the question, saying: “I’m not sure about, you know, the validity of whether that allegation against the president is true or not. So the best thing for me is to keep quiet.” Many people felt he missed a golden opportunity to – diplomatically, of course – chide President Trump for his bigotry, being the first African leader to have met the American counterpart in one-on-one encounter since the commencement of his (Trump’s) presidency and following soon after the controversial remark.

    On the heels of that ‘shithole’ report, Nigeria had been stridently mute over the affront whereas some other African countries voiced their outrage. Besides the umbrella African Union (AU) that said Trump’s statement “flies in the face of all accepted behavior and practice,” for instance, Botswana slammed the American leader as “reprehensible and racist,” saying it had summoned the U.S. ambassador to clarify whether Botswana was one of those countries being regarded as ‘shitholes.’ It could well well be that Mr. Trump anticipated some fire along that line, among other things, at the April meeting; in which case his alleged ‘lifeless’ comment says little about reality check and more about his own cynical fancies that were short-fed by the encounter.

    Now, back to politicians. It is a shame that we readily submit our national sovereignty and identity to validation by spurious external standard bearers simply for partisan motives. That is what cheerleaders of the Nigerian president and opposition critics on the sheer basis of Trump’s alleged latest comment have done. A bigger tragedy is that the whole build-up to Buhari’s Washington visit and official narratives thereafter as well signposted this mindset of seeking offshore validation. But if Mr. Trump’s say-so were ever to be the ultimate benchmark, how do we explain his labelling legendary Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein, only last Wednesday, as a “sloppy” and “degenerate fool” who invented stories? That was Trump’s tweeted verdict on the ace journalist over a Bernstein story about his ex-lawyer Michael Cohen that he did not fancy. Bernstein fired back that he has spent his life bringing the truth to light and no “taunt” could diminish that commitment.

    The point here is that we are what we are based on what we really are, for good or for bad, and not what an offshore validator says we are. If political actors seek validation or repudiation, that would come from the true impact of governance on the generality of Nigerians and the verdict of voters at the coming elections.

     

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.

     

  • Trump’s comment won’t keep other world leaders away from Buhari – Presidency

    The Presidency on Saturday said that the recent comment credited to the United States President, Donald Trump won’t keep other world leaders away from President Muhammadu Buhari.

    While the British Prime Minister, Theresa May visited Buhari in Abuja on Wednesday, the German Chancellor, Ms Angela Merkel did the same on Friday.

    Speaking with journalists on arrival in Beijing, China, the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, said that there is a special attraction to Buhari and Nigeria.

    He said “You know that as a policy, we said that we are not going to answer the American President, however, the fact that the entire world and world leaders are cueing up to meet President Muhammadu Buhari, is an indication that there is something about President Buhari, there is something about the Nigeria he now leads, that the world likes.

    “I think that Nigerians themselves should better look at this from this positive point of view, is a major development.

    Read Also: 2019: Saraki declares for Presidency

    “We had situations in the country in the past where key world leaders didn’t want to meet our own leaders, all of that has changed in the last three years.” he stated

    On the expectation of Nigeria from President Buhari’s visit to China, he said “You know that from the last summit in South Africa, the Chinese financing of projects in Nigeria has more than doubled under President Muhammadu Buhari and so therefore, we expect that if the same momentum is maintained, we hope that going forward, all of the projects that are outstanding like the Kaduna-Kano rail project, the coastal rail scheme, Mambilla power project, the second phase of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport expansion project, Lagos, Port Harcourt, Abuja/ Kano.

    “All of these projects, they will move more steadily and thankfully, we have virtually everyone who matters on our own side.

    “So, we hope that what ever is left, the dotted lines will be signed, and we are hoping that we will take back with us, quite a number of schemes that will take Nigeria forward.” he said

  • Trump, lifelessness and Buhari phenomenon

    On August 27, The Financial Times of London (FT) published a story on the impending meeting between United States president Donald Trump and Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta. It was a fairly upbeat story describing the optimism of those the paper spoke with regarding a meeting they hoped would define Mr Trump’s perception of relationship with Kenya in particular and Africa in general. But the story contained what seemed like a cursory sentence, albeit unquoted, that summarised the US president’s view of the Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari who visited earlier on April 30. According to the writers of the story, Katrina Manson and David Pilling, Mr Trump was so dismayed by the Nigerian president’s political and bodily posture that he swore beneath his breath never again to meet someone so lifeless. The story then hoped Mr Kenyatta, when he visited, would represent Africa well and help change the impression Mr Trump had of African leaders, if not the continent entirely.

    The story resonated well with opponents of President Buhari, a politician they hope they could either persuade not to run for a second term — a forlorn hope if ever there was any — or dethrone should he choose to throw his hat into the ring. For the first time in many years, the president’s spokesmen were unsure how to respond or if there was any need to respond at all. Femi Adesina, one of the two spokesmen, said he had no comment; and Garba Shehu, the second spokesman, said the presidency would not react to such a comment. It was left to the presidency’s social media warriors to excoriate Mr Trump, describing him as an execrable character unfit to make any honest or valuable character assessment about anybody, let alone about the more morally upright and honourable Mr Buhari.

    Surprisingly, most of those who read the story or wrote commentaries on it assumed that Mr Trump was largely talking about the president’s fitness and health status. This is a terrible misinterpretation. President Buhari may not be as sprightly or gregarious as the feisty Mr Trump, but both of them are over 70 years of age, and the US president appears to be acutely aware that age imposes certain limitations on individuals, especially those in high office. Those who watched the live broadcast of the joint Buhari-Trump press conference on Al Jazeera could not but be struck by the realisation that the Nigerian president hugely underperformed. Mr Trump was therefore probably referring to the impression he formed of President Buhari from the private and public (press conference) meetings they held. The US president himself relies on bluster to wade through his press conferences both within and outside the US, in part to cover his failings and low intellectual endowments. He would be shocked to notice that his visitor had neither of the accoutrements that had enabled him to present a manageable and sometimes exultant facade before the American people.

    A day or two before the Buhari-Trump engagement, expectations were high — some of these expressed in Nigerian and foreign periodicals — that President Buhari would respond appropriately and adequately to Mr Trumps derogatory remarks about black people and Africa; and that he would make the continent proud. He disappointed everybody, including Americans themselves, many of whom, especially their reporters, find their president repulsive and intolerable. Indeed, a reporter pointedly asked how the Nigerian president would react to Mr Trump’s description of Nigeria and some other African countries as shitholes. President Buhari prevaricated and then incomprehensibly suggested that the American president might have been misunderstood. It was obvious throughout the press conference that the interviewees and the interviewers struggled through what turned out to be an excessively boring press conference.

    It is fair to say that President Buhari played safe throughout the press conference, saying nothing to upset his host, and refusing to stand up either for himself, his country, or his beliefs. He was safe, but he was not inspiring, nor bold, nor courageous, especially in view of the plenitude of issues he ought to have addressed publicly. Yes, he was not articulate, and will never be, but had he made up for such shortcomings with a display of untrammelled logic and ferocious patriotic and pan-Africanist ideals, he would have given the public a glimpse of his depth, not to say perhaps the recondite issues he raised with the US president in their private meeting. On several occasions, Mr Trump, who is himself not a man of profundity or logic, and who is often contemptuous of weak rivals, helped President Buhari to complete his thoughts and save him from embarrassment in the eyes of the world. The Nigerian president’s weaknesses were too glaring, and Mr Trump groaned beside him in pain and discomfort. When President Buhari’s aides returned to Nigeria and wrote glowing tributes to the performance of their boss, it was clear they hypocritically drew the wrong lessons from the visit and the press conference.

    The FT did not set out to humiliate the Nigerian president by paraphrasing President Trump’s disapproval of his performance during the US visit. The paper merely tried to juxtapose the Nigerian president’s visit with the hopes about President Kenyatta’s visit. They anticipated that the Kenyan leader would learn from the failings of the Nigerian leader, and more importantly recognise that he needed to stand up for Africa and represent the continent well, especially before the impatient and scurrilous American president. And by publishing the impression Mr Trump had of President Buhari, both the reporters and the American president’s aides indicated that everyone knew that the Nigerian president did not quite hold his own during his US visit. Nigerians also know their president very well. If the misinterpretation of the statement by Mr Trump is removed from the equation, it would be clear that the US president was referring not to President Buhari’s poor health status, but his lack of ideas, incomparable disinterestedness in things, and intellectual sparseness.

    It did not take all of the more than three years President Buhari has spent in office for Nigerians themselves to conclude that nothing profound on any topic, not even on the anti-corruption fight or on the battle against insecurity, would come from their president. They didn’t need Mr Trump to remind them that nothing deep and transcendental would come from Aso Villa under President Buhari. They have realised that he has frighteningly stunted ideas about democracy, rule of law, and indeed poor vision of where Nigeria should be in the next few decades and more. They dispute the accusation that they bought a pig in poke in 2015, insisting that they had hoped that on the four or so cardinal issues the president promised during the campaigns, he had a passable understanding of their wider ramifications and consequences upon the polity. Now they are not so sure anymore.

    It has perhaps taken Mr Trump to succinctly describe President Buhari’s failings — for whether Nigerians like it or not, leaders have the capacity to do adequate and fairly accurate peer review when they want to. Sadly, no one will confirm whether Mr Trump actually made that statement or not. In fact, asked whether the statement was true or not, American ambassadorial staff in Nigeria had urged reporters to redirect their questions to the FT reporters. Of course the FT reporters will stand by their story, and it is not clear anyway whether any Nigerian honestly disbelieved the Trumpian conclusion about President Buhari. And, to add to the misery, no one can ask Mr Trump whether he said what was attributed to him. He would ignore the question, for he is an unorthodox man, unfettered by diplomatese, logic, truth and empathy. President Buhari had one golden chance last April to win the confidence of the American president in order to gain certain advantages for Nigeria and make the continent proud. He flunked the test.

    It is pointless debating the veracity of the statement attributed to the US president. It also does not seem appropriate to ask President Buhari’s aides to imbue their principal with the lofty ideals and ideas the country had hoped to see in him when they elected him. At his age and given his background, that exercise will end up barren. What is most appropriate is to find ways of managing him before next year’s election, and to determine subsequently whether vis-a-vis other candidates in the coming presidential poll he should be managed for four more years or asked to take a deserved rest.

  • Trump blames China for hacking Clinton emails

    U.S. President Donald Trump said on Twitter early on Wednesday China hacked the emails of 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton but did not offer any evidence or further information.

    “Hillary Clinton’s Emails, many of which are Classified Information, got hacked by China. Next move better be by the FBI & DOJ or, after all of their other missteps (Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, Ohr, FISA, Dirty Dossier etc.), their credibility will be forever gone!” he tweeted a little after midnight on Wednesday.

    Trump said in an earlier tweet on Tuesday night: “China hacked Hillary Clinton’s private Email Server. Are they sure it wasn’t Russia (just kidding!)? What are the odds that the FBI and DOJ are right on top of this? Actually, a very big story. Much classified information!”

    Speaking in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said such accusations were nothing new.

    “This isn’t the first time we’ve heard similar kinds of allegations,” Hua told a daily news briefing.

    “China is a staunch defender of cybersecurity. We firmly oppose and crack down on any forms of internet attacks and the stealing of secrets,” she added, without specifically mentioning Trump or Clinton in her answer.

    U.S. intelligence officials have said Russia orchestrated the hacking of Democratic officials to meddle with the 2016 presidential election.

    A U.S. federal grand jury indicted 12 Russian intelligence officers in July on charges of hacking the computer networks of Clinton and the Democratic Party.

    Special Counsel Robert Mueller is investigating Russia’s role in the 2016 election and whether the campaign of Republican candidate Trump colluded with Moscow.

    Russia denies meddling in the elections, while Trump has denied any collusion.

    Trump said in April 2017 China may have hacked the emails of Democratic officials to meddle with the 2016 presidential election.

    He also did not provide any evidence backing his allegation at that time.

    China has repeatedly denied any accusations of involvement in overseas hacking attacks.

    China and the U.S., whose ties are often fraught, are also currently in the midst of an increasingly bitter trade war.

  • Trump accuses Google of hiding ‘fair media’ coverage of him

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday accused Google’s search engine of hiding “fair media” coverage of him and said he would address the situation, without giving any details.

    In a pair of tweets, Trump said Google search results for “Trump News” showed only the reporting of what he terms fake news media.

    “They have it RIGGED, for me & others,” he said, blaming Google, part of Alphabet Inc, for what he said was dangerous action that promoted mainstream media outlets such as CNN and suppressed conservative political voices.

    “This is a very serious situation-will be addressed!” Trump added, without offering any details.

    Representatives for the White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Google also could not be immediately reached.

    Trump has long criticized news media coverage of him, frequently using the term fake news to describe critical reports.

    He has made social media, particularly Twitter, an integral part of his presidency.

    He has previously accused social media companies, which include Twitter and Facebook, of censorship.

    Trump’s accusation of bias on the part of Google comes as social media companies have suspended accounts, banned certain users and removed content as they face pressure from the U.S. Congress to police foreign propaganda and fake accounts aimed at disrupting American politics, including operations tied to Iran and Russia.

    Read Also: Trump under attack for Buhari ‘lifeless comment’

    Companies such as Facebook and Twitter have also been pressed to remove conspiracy driven content and hate speech.

    Tech companies have said they do not remove content for political reasons.

    Some Republican U.S. lawmakers have also raised concerns about social media companies removing content from some conservatives, and have called Twitter’s chief executive to testify before a U.S. House of Representatives committee on Sept. 5.

    Earlier in the month, Alphabet’s YouTube joined Apple Inc and Facebook in removing some content from Infowars, a website run by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.

    Jones was also temporarily suspended on Twitter.

     

    NAN

  • Asian shares gain on U.S.-Mexico trade optimism

    Asian shares advanced again on Tuesday while major currencies held on to gains as the U.S. and Mexico made a deal to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement.

    Oil prices were buoyant, with Brent up 25 cents to 76.46 dollars a barrel and U.S. crude rising 19 cents to 69.07 dollars.

    Investors expect Canada too would agree to the new terms to preserve a three-nation pact, ultimately dispelling the economic uncertainty caused by U.S. President Donald Trump’s repeated threats to ditch the 1994 NAFTA accord.

    MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan climbed 0.3 per cent for a second straight day of gains. Australian shares added 0.5 per cent while Japan’s Nikkei jumped 0.8 per cent.

    New York’s S&P 500 and Nasdaq indexes hit record highs and bond yields rose, while prices for copper, considered a barometer of global growth, climbed.

    Read Also: Asian LNG prices hit highest in over two months on tight supply

    Investors will keep an eye on U.S. economic data with consumer confidence figures due later in the day and the latest estimate for second-quarter gross domestic product expected on Wednesday.

    “The NAFTA agreement is clearly a positive to the extent that it reduces the risk of a generalized global trade war,” JPMorgan analysts said in a note.

    The dollar index paused near one-month lows against major currencies to be last at 94.762.

    Against the yen, the greenback held at 111.20.

    The euro held near a one-month top at 1.1680 dollars.

    The Australian dollar, which is often used as a liquid hedge for global growth, hovered around 0.7345 dollars to stay well above a trough of $0.7248.

    The Chinese yuan held near a four-week high to the dollar, a day after the country’s central bank took steps to support the currency.

    Commodity markets showed signs of optimism in global economic growth prospects. Copper, a favoured indicator of industrial momentum, held near a two-week high of 6,112.00 dollars a tonne.

    Gold too was firm too with spot prices at 1211.36 dollars an ounce.