Tag: failure

  • The failure of luck

    Saddled and burdened by an electoral consequence of a fatal collective blunder, the political space grizzles the inaction of a motley collection of duffers in the vineyard of a supposed meister. In activating our civic devoirs and democratic covenant, we created a plethora of value deficits in our electoral judgments that led us to this stalemate and suspended-animation. The complex signals of confusion to the voters, some days before the polls, coming from revered political hierarchy, compelling massive support for this man of luck, made victory attainable for impostors in power and slow-witted personages.

    It was a political error by the command masters who misread the nuance of the fortunate chap by falling for his theatrics and melodramatics. A man that was unsure of even a razor-thin victory ended up being congratulated for his massive ‘good luck’ at the polls. In a rare show of incongruous jubilation, two parties of incompatible identities, roared into ecstasy of perfidy, celebrating the fall of a serial contender of the khaki memory and a noisy cleric of latter fame that was his deputy. And paradoxically, the party that issued the proclamation on vote-transfer engaged in this kerfuffle without even obliging its own representative, that was the collateral damage of this strange overnight cooperation, a deserving sentiment. Not too long, the web of fraternity between the incompatibles became tangled with cracks when sharing the spoils of their pyrrhic victory. Withdrawal. Lamentations. Disappointments. And then, a requiem.

    Divorced, the beautiful bride during the election, the one that added value to the one that lacked value, went back to the “khaki groom”, a member of the septuagenarian club, to consummate a new romance to dislodge the lucky dude from his rock of refuge. Politics, like computer, can also reboot. The masters of the game, who made the initial blunder, are restarting again hoping that this time around, the citizens can have ‘a piece’ of the action from these collapsed conglomerates and experimental amalgam. This is another narrative for a prophetic morrow.

    Settled within his rock of luck with the patience of his choice, the lucky man is unruffled about the breach of covenant. He is unrepentant in his default in the creation of dividends both in kind and in cash for the people that entrusted their collective destinies into his hands. He has breached covenant. He has breached trust. And latching on the citizens’ generous spirit of forgiveness, he is reclining in the indulgence of a return, dismissing the immorality of the content of his intention with putative immortality.

    Four years in the saddle, the two years inherited from a deceased master and two years of electoral charity, the citizens are inured to the spectacle of power intrigues and power base consolidation. The people with the power of vote have been subdued by the same men they invested into power with their votes. Projections and calculations of 2015 are unsettling the polity with cacophonous distractions. They have not finished the one they are eating they are contemplating how to eat the one they are projecting. Excluded from the equation of recompense, and piqued by their abandonment by this assembly of middling leaders, the people are concluding that their misfortune was caused by the suspect appropriation of their collective fortunes by the same man parading his medal of luck in every balcony of might. Shocked and stunned that this government is a milchcow for parasitic midges sucking the content of the national vault, the citizens, joined by international sympathisers, are worried by the scope and scale of corruption in government. Elaborate and systematic larceny is becoming a metastasis and we-the people-are agitating for a chemotherapeutic surgery to halt this dangerous slide of emptying the nation’s fiscal larder.

    We have a government that we are not feeling. There is a government but there is no governance. There are no dividends but there are divisions. Our government is too distant from us. There is a disconnect. No blood is flowing between the people and their government. The only blood that is flowing is the blood of innocent citizens that are victims of the monstrous creations of the state: Boko Haram, ritualists, kidnappers, armed robbers, hired killers and other collective machinery of terminations.

    Tortured by the guilt of reneging on its promise of providing plentitude for the people, this mingy government, notorious for its putz around mentality, punctuated its inaction, in a fright of rage during the fuel price increase, with a puzzled contemplation of what it called palliatives as if the citizens are not worthy of permanent healing or a prophylactic attention by the government.

    The popular refrain, chorused by all invading military ragamuffins when substituting one for another during the inglorious years of military charade, was that our hospitals had become mere consulting clinics. Though when departing into eternal confinement, the military never upgraded the “consulting clinics”, it is tragic that even now, 14 years into democracy, our hospitals are still glorified clinics and government health policies and reforms are revolting and risible. They are patronising of the citizens but fall short of addressing their health challenges comprehensively. Assuaging the plight of the citizens in the area of transportation during the roll-out of the “palliative regime” under SURE-P, the government gave out new buses but it never addressed the condition of the roads the buses would ply. Most of the federal highways are in terrible condition. The craters, gullies, pot-holes and canals that dot our highways are a reflection of the insensitivity of the government to the hardship the people go through. To now imagine that citizens will have to travel six to ten hours on these roads of ‘yahooze’ shape shows how much indeed the government loves its citizens!

    The many surgeries done to the power sector that had consumed trillions of naira still leave the nation in the dark and to the generosity of the moon. The fluctuating megawatts have become a bottomless pit to the nation’s treasury with heaps of naira filling this pit of eternal darkness with no trace of light at the bottom of the pit. Every prognosis of improvement and every prophesy about increase in megawatts has somersaulted like a marble on the precipice. What can a nation do without power? And lack of it is responsible for a new phenomenon called GEJ paralysis-a situation of national lull caused by government’s inaction over its energy-related problems, where citizens’ activities are diminished, or more poignantly, demobilised by a dysfunctional hydroelectric technology.

    A greater puzzlement of our national catastrophe is the castration of its future; a condition that leaves a substantial percentage of its youths roaming the streets without any prospect of being compensated for their acquired skills, expertise, education, artistry and talents. Disturbed by this legacy of moping morass exhibited by the present crop of leadership, my fear is that national leadership is on a steady decline if the witnesses of today’s leaders are the natural successors of the present non-performers.

    Obasanjo’s statement in Jigawa that “you can help somebody to get a job, but you cannot help him to do the job” had a tinge of sarcasm and ego-triping. But a deeper reading locates the statement in a philosophical context more serious than Obasanjo’s egoism. When providence places you in a position you never expect to find yourself because of some obvious limitations, or in a position higher than your mental resource, it is you, not providence, that will have to show that you deserve the benevolence of providence by doing the work you got through “good luck”. Constructed on electoral happenstance, and not on any past historic exploits, need we ask again the reason(s) for the failure of luck.

     

  • Can Senate avert budget failure?

    Can Senate avert budget failure?

    Members of the National Assembly, ministers and other professionals recently converged on Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), for a two-day brainstorming on the review of the national planning and budgeting process. Assistant Editor ONYEDI OJIABOR reports.

     

    IT is less than six months to the end of the year. Yet, the National Assembly and the Presidency are still locked in a war of wits over this year’s budget.

    Though President Goodluck Jonathan reluctantly signed the 2013 Appropriation bill, the fiscal document was returned wholesale to the parliament over allegations by the Presidency that the lawmakers usurped the executive powers.

    One area of dispute is the directive that the Accountant General of the Federation should furnish the National Assembly with the quarterly releases. The Presidency said this directive was against the spirit of separation of powers. The lawmakers, however, think thought.

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on National Planning, Economic Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Senator Barnabas Gemade, gave the synopsis of what led the Senate to begin the search for a new budgeting process that would be all- inclusive.

    The need for national planning and budgeting process was described by the Senate President, David Mark, as “all important,” apparently in view of the slow pace of the country’s economy to respond to economic therapies.

    The importance of national planning, Gemade said, cannot be overemphasized. According to him, it enables a nation to make conscious choice regarding the rate and direction of its growth.

    He faulted the current budgeting process, which he said, makes the legislature less involved and to rely solely on the input provided by the executive arm of government, giving no room for the legislature to effectively exert its control over the fiscal priorities of the government.

    He told the participants that the public hearing was not meant to witch hunt anybody, or to reduce anybody’s sphere of influence.

    The discourse stemmed from a motion by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) lawmaker, Senator Olubunmi Adetunmbi, whose scholarly touch to national issues, has often shaped deliberations in the Senate.

    Adetunmbi in the motion, blamed the sharp disconnect between the multi-year development plans and the annual national budget under which the Federal Ministry of Finance prepares the budget with little or no regards to ministries, departments and agencies for the stunted growth of the country’s economy.

    During the debate of the motion, the Senate agreed that a disconnect between the national plans and the annual budget is largely responsible for the slow shift from recurrent to annual capital budget in the country.

    But opinions soon differed at the public hearing, with the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, leading those who think that the existing status quo should not be altered.

    Observers said Okonjo-Iweala might have been influenced in her position by her Bretton Wood orientation.

    Some observers said the minister might be apprehensive that the removal of budgeting from her ministry would amount to taking away the soul of the ministry.

    But former the Chief Economic Adviser to President Olusegun Obasanjo, Ode Ojowu, disagreed.

    In his presentation at the public hearing, Ojowu said that globally, planning is recognised as critical to growth and development.

    Though accepted as the engine of growth, Ojowu admitted that in practical terms, the role of planning has continued to wane with the exception of a few countries where it has retained its primacy in driving the overall economic and social progress.

    For him, Nigeria ’s experience with planning has been mixed: the earliest plans, in particular, the First to the Third national development plans, were quite successfully implemented with their targets mostly achieved, including some progress with structural transformation of the economy.

    The Fourth and Fifth National Development Plans were, however, not as successful owing to the failure of revenue, Ojowu said.

    The economist traced the beginning of crisis in planning to the failure of Fourth and Fifth national development plans.

    He pointed out that General Ibrahim Babangida’s Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) was actually a response to this failure.

    SAP, Ojowu argued, meant the abandonment of the structural transformation, which the plans aimed to achieve in favour of adjustment of the structures that really never existed.

    He posited that SAP generated even greater crisis leading to a return to planning in the twilight of the military era through the return of democratic rule in 1999.

    Ojowu said that, the severance of Planning from the Ministry of Fnance and Economic Planning by the National Planning Commission decree of 1992, was intended to boost planning and enhance its impact on growth development.

    He noted that though the measure was well intended and in line with best practices, the move nonetheless, witnessed some resistance and led to an amendment of the decree in 1993, which returned the capital budget function to ministry of finance.

    “What followed was a simmering conflict that endured. As a fallout of this conflict, in 2004, the department of planned budgets and programmes with its entire staff was transferred to the ministry of fiancé. This, largely personality driven conflict between the national planning commission and ministry of finance, has deepened at the expense of institutional and national development,” Ojowu said.

    functions and perhaps relevance.

    Ojowu said over time, though the laws setting up the national planning commission have not changed, they have been counteracted by other laws like the Fiscal Responsibility Act and the creation of such institutions like the Budget Office in the ministry of finance.

    “Either way, the economy bears the ultimate burden of the absence of clarity of role around budget coordination, the absence of linkage with national planning and the shrunken role of the legislature in the process,” he said.

    Ojowu was of the view that the absence of a strong national planning function denies the budgetary process of a robust analytical contributions and effective partnership with the international community and development organisations.

    The way forward, he said, would be to address subsumed role of the national planning function in the budgetary process and prepare national plans that allow the government to develop a holistic perspective among other concerns raised in the Adetunmbi motion will require a honest and open discussion of the ideological undertone for or against formal planning in the country since the mid 1980s.

    Ojowu was not alone in this postulation. Mike Kwanashie, a professor of Economics and Vice Chancellor, Veritas University , also said that planning was abandoned in the country following the adoption of SAP as a national economic policy.

    Kwanashie said to make matters worse, that with the introduction of SAP planning infrastructure was relegated to the back seat while the manpower was scattered throughout the civil service.

    He was of the opinion that the absence of long term planning to drive growth and development reflects in the current underdevelopment of many aspects of economic life of the country.

    For him, the country had developed from independence until the mid 1980s a core of planning officers that were trained in the act of planning, project evaluation and analysis involving project circles and costing.

    He believed that the absence of these skills in public management of the budget, after the introduction of SAP, greatly undermined the integrity of the capital budget.

    The Vice Chancellor also believed that Vision 20-2-20 was articulated to restore the country back to the path of long-term planning.

    He said that one major lesson learnt is the need to better interface the annual budget with the medium term plan.

    Kwanashie identified a major disconnect between the national integrated projects and the Medium Term Expenditure Framework that drives the annual budget.

    He expressed worry that the country is yet to achieve the harmony between plans and budget, which he sees as critical for the attainment of the objectives of the national vision.

    Kanashie isolated two major components of the budget critical in the growth trajectory of an economy.

    One is that the relationship between the current and capital budget is critical to the ability of the budget to create growth potential in an economy.

    Planning, he said, imposes a strict discipline on the selection of projects and increases the chances of project success.

    He posited that with the passage of the Fiscal Responsibility Act in 2007, it has become necessary for Medium-Term Expenditure Framework to be presented to the National Assembly prior to consideration of each year’s budget.

    jjHe insisted that the restoration of planning in the country is a major step forward for driving the growth and development process and should be solidly entrenched in the management of the country’s economy.

    He did not forget to stress the fact that the major role of the budget within the planning/budgeting context is to implement the plan.

    “You have the plan first then the budget. The budget takes its cue from the plan. There is need to ‘de mystify’ budgets and to increase particip ation in the budget-making process.

    “A major medium for ensuring effective participation is first full engagement of the legislature as the elected representatives of the people,” he said.

    Okonjo-Iweala opposed any fiscal policy aimed at removing budgeting as part of the functions of the Ministry of Finance.

    The minister said that the stunted growth of the country’s economy should not be blamed on fact that budgeting and planning are not done under one roof.

    According to her, through the initiative of the envelope system of budgeting, MDAs are made to set priorities. She noted that the envelope system, prior to the time she came to office, MDAs did not have ownership of the budget.

    She advised that the partnership between the Finance Ministry and National Planning Commission should be sustained and strengthened.

    “We strongly believe that a country needs a strong budgeting process and a strong planning process. We believe that strong planning process gives a country vision, direction and focus. Planning shows the direction a country is going,” she said.

    On the independence of the budget office as it is practiced in the United States , she said that the location of the budget office is based on the structure of the economy. She added that where the economy is heavily driven by the private sector, to move the budget office out of the Ministry of Finance may be desirable.

    On the need to restructure the budget circle to reflect the country’s weather condition, she said that she has an open mind on the issue.

    The minister said that structuring the budget circle from January to December is a matter of convenience.

     

     

     

  • NGF election, ministers’ failure

    NGF election, ministers’ failure

    The Nigerian Governors’ Forum, NGF, took off as a mere association of governors of the 36 states of the federation. At that time, many people thought they were just like any other association bonded by the desire to create a forum to discuss mutual issues concerning them personally and the states they govern. Yet there were many who thought the governors were only creating a forum for themselves for a different kind of jamboree different from the usual rollicking and frolicking that have been the characteristics of men of means and power. I belong to the last school of thought.

    However, events of the last five years or so, beginning with the election of the crown prince of Kwara politics, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, former two-term governor of Kwara State, as chairman of NGF, have proved cynics wrong. It was Saraki, the scion of the Saraki Dynasty of Ilorin, now a senator, who introduced glamour and candour into the group when he was chairman between 2007 and 2011.

    Saraki’s exit in 2011 paved the way for the emergence of Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi as chairman of the forum. The constitution of the NGF provides for a vice-chairman though both Saraki and Amaechi have, through their deft political moves, overshadowed that office and made the occupants more or less lame duck vice-chairmen whose voices are hardly heard anywhere beyond the day they are elected or handpicked. Amaechi upped the ante but has so far failed to display the political diplomacy and maturity of Saraki. Several times, the forum under the leadership of Amaechi has come into headlong collision with the Presidency on various national issues, including the issue of the creation of Sovereign Wealth Fund, which has seen the forum and the Presidency in various legal tussles in the courts, among other litigations. It is also under Amaechi as chairman of the NGF that Rivers State, the state he presides over as governor, took Bayelsa State, a sister state, on over the ownership of some disputed oil wells. The neighbouring Bayelsa State was carved out of Rivers State in 1995.

    Perhaps, the greatest issue that is causing Amaechi headache at the moment is the forthcoming 2015 elections. Amaechi is speculated to be having a vice presidential ambition after his second and last term as governor of Rivers State in 2015. Ahead of the NGF’s election that took place last Friday, Rivers State has been engulfed in multiple political crises which many people believe are man-made problems designed to distract Amaechi and possibly stop him from pursing his agenda to return as second-term chairman of the NGF. Another issue is the grounding of Amaechi’s Bombardier aircraft by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA, which has dominated the airwaves and engendered national discourse for some time now. Another matter that has attracted national attention is the sweeping-off of the PDP state executive in Rivers State and its replacement with the Felix Obuah-led group. Obuah was allegedly shot in the groins a few years ago by suspected assassins. Amaechi loyalists said it took the grace of God and Amaechi, who flew him out of the country for treatment in South Africa, before his health stabilized. Now the same Obuah has turned round to stab his benefactor in the back through his imposition as Rivers PDP party’s chairman by a surprise court ruling.

    Amaechi has also been under the threat of impeachment for some time now. This impeachment moves are thought to be the handiwork of his foes, mainly some politicians in Abuja. The arrowhead of the sinister plots is said to be Nyesom Wike, the sitting minister of state for education, who is an indigene of Rivers State in the federal cabinet. Before that Godsday Orubebe, the minister of Niger Delta Affairs had traded volatile words extensively with Amaechi on the East-West Road project. Both Amaechi and Wike have since been embroiled in a titanic struggle for political power in Rivers State.

    The road to last Friday’s NGF election was long and tortuous. The entire nation was gripped with tension as the two camps in the contest – Amaechi and some PDP governors – made last-minute desperate attempts to ensure victory for their candidates. But Amaechi knew that it was one fight for his political life. The NGF election was postponed last March when it was earlier scheduled to take place. When the forum later met in April, the issue of election or no election never came up for discussion. Amaechi would have completed his term as NGF chairman last Monday, May 27.

    Apparently, it was in the desperate bid by the PDP to stop Amaechi’s candidacy that the ‘Abuja politicians’, led by Wike, have continued to mount political pressure on him by instigating the crisis that is currently rocking Rivers State politics. The aim is to pressure him out of contention for the NGF’s chief helmsman’s job. After two major futile attempts by Bamanga Tukur, the PDP chairman, to stop Amaechi, Tukur and his clique flew a kite: it floated the PDP Governors’ Forum and made Godswill Akpabio chairman of the forum. The PDP has 26 out of the existing 36 governors in the country. The main reason for taking this road is that Tukur believes he is facing stiff opposition to his position as chairman of the party from the NGF. He has, therefore, been surreptitiously doing everything to be a cog in NGF’s wheel of progress. Tukur believes that doing just that will whittle down the powers and influence of the NGF, take the shine of it and thereby cut whoever emerges as chairman to size. All these machinations didn’t work either. When this failed, PDP drafted Ibrahim Shema, the governor of Katsina State, instead of the charismatic and much-favoured Isa Yuguda, governor of Bauchi State, into the race.

    At the last minute on Friday, all other contenders were persuaded to step aside and David Jonah Jang, the second-term governor of Plateau State, was put forward as the PDP candidate. Jang then approached Olusegun Mimiko, the governor of Ondo State, to be his deputy. Before the contest, Mimiko was reportedly caught in-between the two groups, which had both nominated him vice-chairman. That election ended in near deadlock with the two camps laying claim to victory. That was not the end of the matter. The seeming failure of the PDP to wield its influence at the election and swing victory to his side is largely believed to have been caused by the lacklustre performance of some ministers as PDP representatives in the states. It is true that 10 of the states are controlled by the opposition, but if the 26 states under PDP, except perhaps Rivers State, where Amaechi calls the shots, had defaulted, what happened in the other 25 states? By the last count, only 17 PDP governors have lined up behind Jang to divide NGF into two equal haves.

    Many of the ministers, especially those who could not deliver their states to PDP last Friday, are believed to be out of tune with the political reality on the ground in their respective states as they regard the party as the only body they owe allegiance to and, therefore, their constituencies, which are their states back home, do not matter to them. Some are also in perpetual loggerheads with their governors because their obedience starts and ends with the PDP chairman, around whom they run rings and cringe. To those in this category, their people back home, especially their governors, do not matter. So instead of going to their respective states to consolidate and mend broken fences, at least for the NGF chairmanship election, they sat back in Abuja.

    Therefore, the outcome of last Friday’s NGF election portends a dangerous signal for 2015, and may sound the death knell of NGF except tact and caution are applied. Not the courts can be of any help!

     

  • Mass failure again

    Mass failure again

    • Poor performance in last NECO exams underscores neglect by federal and state governments

    The results of last year’s November/December Senior Secondary Certificate Examinations recently released by the National Examinations Council (NECO), has once again exposed the precarious state of education in Nigeria. The registrar of the 13-year-old examination body, Professor Promise Okpala, who announced the performance of the candidates said only 33 per cent of the 83, 755 candidates who sat for the English Language paper passed at the required credit level. By the result, given the condition that only candidates who obtain credit passes in five subjects including English Language and Mathematics could gain admission to universities in Nigeria, only 25, 628 of the candidates could achieve their dream this year.

    Many young men and women who sat the NECO December examinations have been repeatedly disappointed owing to failure in one or two of the core subjects. This is more so for science students who may not be particularly good at the English language. While the performance in Mathematics, another general core subject, was above the 50 per cent mark, it was not so in the sciences. In Physics, less than one per cent of the 35,000 who sat the examination passed at credit level. Mathematics did not give us a cause for cheer. Only 15 per cent passed while in Chemistry it was 35 per cent.

    If the results had been inconsistent with the pattern in recent years, it would not call for consternation, but results from NECO and the sister examination body, the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), over the past five years show that there has been a steady decline in the quality of education offered at all levels.

    The nation was first jolted to this reality when, in 2009, 98 per cent of the 234,682 candidates failed to make five credits, including English and Mathematics. Mind-boggling was the level of malpractices as 236,613 cases were recorded that year. It was expected that all stakeholders would be pushed to action and achieve a reversal of the trend within years. The latest results have confirmed that not much has been achieved.

    The failure of our teeming youths is the failure of government. Things have been kept at the same level, little has been done to upgrade facilities in public secondary schools and make teaching attractive for prospective students and applicants. The profession has become a fall-back for those who failed to gain the attention of other employers.

    Private schools of other shapes and descriptions have since sprung up to fill the vacuum. Even in this wise, there is an obvious failure of supervision and monitoring that has also led to poor performance in external examinations.

    Desperate students have thus resorted to abusing and subverting the process. Sometimes aided by parents and teachers, especially in private schools, the candidates do everything to have advance copies of examination papers or pay others to either sit for or assist them in the examination centres. No nation hoping to bridge the development gap between the first and third world could afford such neglect of the education sector.

    We call on governments at federal, state and local levels to take urgent, coordinated and concerted steps in adequately funding education. We must go beyond holding workshops and jamborees ostensibly to review laws and rules regulating education in the country. As a first step, funding must improve. While the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has recommended that all governments allocate a minimum of 26 per cent of their budgets to education, the Federal Government has consistently voted below 10 per cent in the past 13 years.

    Policy inconsistency resulting from change of ministers has not helped matters. Eight ministers have taken charge in the ministry since 1999. Professors Tunde Adeniran, Babalola Borishade, Fabian Osuji, Dr. Chinwe Obaji, Oby Ezekwesili, Igwe Aja Nwachukwu, Sam Egwu and Ruqayattu Rufai came up sometimes with contrasting policy thrusts.

    It must be realised that development in all sectors is hinged on the quality of education and no country can advance without paying special attention to the needs of the youth.

  • AHEAD BRAZIL 2014 WORLD CUP QUALIFIERS: Oliseh warns NFF: Failure, heartache await Eagles, if…

    AHEAD BRAZIL 2014 WORLD CUP QUALIFIERS: Oliseh warns NFF: Failure, heartache await Eagles, if…

    Former Super Eagles captain, Sunday Oliseh has told the Glasshouse on the need to build on the achievements recorded at the just-concluded African Cup of Nations ( AFCON) 2013 in South Africa.

    The ex-international recalled it was joy unlimited to see the Eagles claim her first major silverware after 19 years in the wilderness, even as he was quick to charge those in the corridors of power to ensure “we do not revert to those days when in our bid to pacify ourselves of failure, those in the administration coined out a new name for AFCON bronze medal as the Golden bronze.”

    “The joy that exploded in Nigeria as the referee blew the final whistle, when Nigeria took on Burkina Faso at the just concluded, memorable, AFCON is not describable and watching images at the Supersport studios in Johannesburg as we analyzed the event filled me with so much joy not just because we won, but personally because my people were finally made to feel pride and Joy like they deserve!

    “However, our joy should not blind us and push us to start taking wrong steps once again. What is next for Nigeria? And what does Nigeria need to do to avoid us waiting another decade before we share such joy again?!

    “Barely had we really reached the pinnacle of our celebration and the team landed in Nigeria that Keshi threw in the towel and resigned as the coach only to go back on his decision after a talk with the sports minister. The fact alone that he dared to do this tells us that we are far from being out of troubled waters and the man suffered psychologically!

    “It is no secret that managing Nigeria’s national senior team is a burden and nightmare very few. Top coaches in the world want to bother doing, not because the talent or prospects are not there but more or less because working with these administrators in the Nigerian Football Federation is a nightmare!

    “Our Government and people must act, we can no longer go on like this otherwise it might just be another decade before we party again like we gloriously did just days ago!

    “Enough is enough and all this lip service that is granted to Youth development has to be transformed into real and well channeled youth development. This false dream that some agents dream of that they can create new talents with the sole goal of selling is a thing of the past,” he cautioned while noting that he will continue to savour the memories of this year’s win in Africa’s biggest football fiesta .

    “I feel this joy of the success we felt at the AFCON 2013 is too sweet for it to be a once in a decade or more experience and hence if we erroneously think that we have arrived and things will now just fall into place from now on then we are delusional!

    “Success means you now have to do more to stay at the top, these propositions and more are needed to keep us smiling, otherwise we might just end up waiting another decade to smile again,” the former Ajax and Borussia Dortmund ace told sundayoliseh.tv.

  • Nigeria/Burkina Faso fallout  Fear of failure haunts Eagles

    Nigeria/Burkina Faso fallout Fear of failure haunts Eagles

    There is always wide-spread consternation when things go against Nigeria, so passionate and loyal is their extensive fan base.

    Their 1-1 draw with Burkina Faso in their 2013 Africa Cup of Nations opener on Monday was therefore treated like a defeat, with much finger-pointing from all and sundry.

    The Burkinabe got their equaliser with the final kick of the game after Nigeria had earlier been reduced to 10 men following a sending-off of Efe Ambrose. The Super Eagles had also earlier spurned a number of goalscoring chances to kill the game.

    The draw instantly turned the mood from one of barely-contained celebration to fear of failure in a group from which Nigeria had been expected to advance. Veteran defender Joseph Yobo admits they are now feeling the heat.

    “We failed to convert our chances to score the second goal, which would have sealed victory for us. We are now in a must-win situation in the second game against Zambia,” Yobo said.

    “We know what to expect in the game because they are the defending champions and we respect them for that, they know what we can do as well and know what we will come for in the match. It will be a difficult game because both teams need the three points.”

  • You are part of PDP failure, Akeredolu tells Mimiko

    You are part of PDP failure, Akeredolu tells Mimiko

    The Akeredolu Campaign Organisation (ACO) has challenged Ondo State governor, Dr Olusegun Mimiko, to explain why he should not share in the blame of the Dr. Segun Agagu- led Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government.

    The organisation said Mimiko is also responsible for the failure of the PDP government, which he strongly berated and described as the years of the holocaust at the gubernatorial debate in Akure at the weekend.

    A statement by the Director of Media, Publicity and Strategy Akeredolu Campaign Organisation, Mr. Idowu Ajanaku said: “Is Mimiko not the Secretary to the State Government and member of the State Executive Council in the Agagu government?

    “If he was that pained why did he not denounce the policies of that administration or resign?”

    It also noted: “The same Mimiko was rewarded with a ministerial appointment by the same PDP and under former President Obasanjo whose administration paupersied the entire South West, leaving the Ota road, his home town in a dilapidated state.”

    ACO added it is irresponsible of Mimiko to promise to continue working for the state after his admission of failure during the debate.

    The organisation queried: “In saying he was going to continue what he is doing now, is it that he would continue to build market stalls, boreholes his token gifts to the people of Ondo in the 21st century?

    “Would he continue to build fountains where there is no pipe borne water? Will he continue to conceive abandoned projects like the Doom-Dome, Ondo township road dualisation, Owo township road dualisation?

    “Will he continue to aggravate youths of the State with gross unemployment? Will he continue to punish the Staff of Adekunle Ajasin University and Rufus Giwa Polytechnic Owo who have not been paid 28 months areas of salaries and allowances against the holy writ that a labourer is worthy of his wage?”