Tag: future

  • Saving the future of Nigeria

    It is a popular saying that “if you educate a woman you have educated the entire generation unborn”. This is because the nurturing and caring of the future generation is absolutely in their hands, from pregnancy to when a child separates from the family to build his own, which also passes what he learned from his mother to his own family. This continues as long as life continues.

     If the above is correct, which no doubt it is, then the case is the same if a woman is given otherwise.  In this case, women (mothers) becoming drug abusers/addict, which is the situation we have found ourselves. This is a serious challenge posed to the future generation. Unless we find a solution to drug abuse, we will surely find ourselves in the future where every child will be a potential drug abuser/addict.

     The solution to this problem lies with everybody in the community; from government and its regulatory bodies, health professionals down to the grass roots.

    The situation now is alarming, therefore government and its regulatory bodies are the first line of call. The Nigerian government needs to see open drug market as a potential threat to the future of the nation. It makes drug distribution channel chaotic and not easy to be regulated. In a proper drug distribution channel, abused drugs can easily be tracked down and any diversion can be detected and culprit brought to justice. The federal government and all the relevant stakeholders should help the Nigerian citizens through ensuring the implementation of the national drug distribution guideline.

    The Pharmacist Council of Nigeria needs to do more by standing up to its constitutional responsibility to safeguard the life of Nigerians. The council cannot do it alone.  It needs to be supported by the government and other agencies to ensure hospitals (private and public), pharmacy premises and drug stores of any kind are properly registered and regulated. This will go a long way in reducing access to the abused drugs.

    Pharmacy premises and hospital premises have what is called poison book which is given by the Pharmacist Council of Nigeria as one of its effort to make sure all controlled drugs (abused drugs inclusive) are properly dispensed and documented. If only drug distribution channel can be perfected and the poison book well utilised, the drug addicts cannot lay their hands on drugs, not to talk of abusing them, therefore saving generation of Nigerian youths.

    The health care professionals have a lot to contribute in taking care of this menace. If they can abide by the oath they swore to, greater percentage of drug abuse will stop. The doctors prescribe controlled drugs even if there is no need or there is an alternative. The pharmacist dispensed controlled drugs without proper prescription and without proper documentation. This should be discouraged.

    The professionals should use their knowledge in sensitising their local community and their patients on the effect of drug abuse.

     

    • By Mustapha Mustapha Umar, Rigasa, Kaduna.
  • Youths and the future

    SIR: The Nigerian youth is socially amputated at many levels by the devious objectives of a clandestine government who has no plan for the growing population. At another end, he creates some of his problems as he directs his energies to unproductive ventures like restiveness, hooliganism, cultism and stealing.

    One of the burdens of the youths of this generation is the passive attention they pay to the workings of governance, economic theories, national income and budget system. The Nigerian youth is buried in sports and entertainment. He knows everything about the football clubs in the world and what they are worth financially but doesn’t understand the importance of the nation’s GDP. He is usually at a loss when he listens to the Minister of Finance reeling out tools for economic analysis. It is difficult for the average Nigerian youth to question their leaders because their knowledge of the working of government is shallow.

    It is this failing that makes the youth easy tools for the political class to use. They use them for political thuggery and the females are constantly dragged in for sexual expeditions. It is truly a society that works against itself. The leaders whose responsibility is to protect the citizens have turned against the very ones they should care for. It is so because the youths have failed to question their leaders; they don’t have the courage to demand for justice. The youths will remain subservient to their leaders as long as they remain dormant in the face of extreme social injustice.

    This generation of youths wants instant wealth and it really doesn’t matter how they get it. They had gone to school with the belief that life will show them the side of fortune. Now they are out of school only to discover that there are 18 generations of unemployed graduates in Nigeria struggling for job placement.

    The Nigerian political leaders have long hijacked the political terrain and locked it against the youths but the youths are still told they are the leaders of tomorrow. It is this deceit and delusional practice that has made the youths to lose hope in the system. The desperate ones take to crime; like taking a sword against a sea of trouble. The very contented ones find themselves deluded, gasping for breath under the weight of poverty.

    The state and federal government must collaborate to curb this social malady before it gets out of hand. Employment is the critical issue that must be tackled first. The youths must be gainfully employed to enable them get busy doing things that will enhance the image of the country.

    Proper attention should be paid to the educational sector to bring about innovation in the system. No country can make any headway while its educational sector suffers setbacks of all sorts ranging from lack of funding to lack of qualified manpower.

    Lastly, the youths must read to expand their intellectual horizon, develop strategies and ideas. The energy channeled towards football information should be spread across bigger economic and national concerns for the purposes of getting a grasp of the workings and distribution of economic resources. If their knowledge is sharpened on the proper functioning of government and the dynamics of policy making, they can raise requisitions and criticize government intelligently when government policies contravene the laws of the land. We must develop the strategies to achieve economic justice and expand the aspiration of nationhood.

     

    • Evans Ufeli,

    evanylaw@yahoo.com

  • Ambode, Jakande to students: future in your hands

    Ambode, Jakande to students: future in your hands

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and the state’s first Executive Governor Alhaji Lateef Jakande have challenged secondary school leavers to aim for the best in their academic pursuit.

    The duo enjoined them to stay focused and not be distracted.

    They spoke during the presentation of 250 Free GCE forms to indigent students of Odi-Olowo/Ojuwoye Local Council Development Area at the council secretariat, Ilupeju, Lagos.

    Jakande expressed happiness that the free education introduced during his regime is gaining more acceptability.

    “We never believe that the policy (free education) could go far but we that God that what we started then is being embrace by the populace,” he said.

    He hailed the council’s Executive Secretary Rasaq Ajala for investing in the youths.

    Ambode who was represented by Ministry of Education Permanent Secretary Mrs Olabisi Ariyo said the exercise was borne out of the realisation of the importance of education in the development of the people.

    “Since education has been identified as the greatest weapon against poverty, we must do everything within our means to ensure that no child is denied access to education on the basis of his or her socio-economic background,” he said.

    The governor assured Lagosians of his administration’s commitment to providing qualitative education at all levels.

    “It is therefore necessary to appeal to parents to secure the future of their children and themselves by not engaging them in street trading during school hours. This is against the provisions of the Child Rights Law of Lagos State.

    “To the beneficiaries of these Free GCE forms, I enjoin you all to show appreciation by performing well in your examinations through hard work. This is the only way you can make the council and your parents proud,” he said.

    Ajala said the gesture was an evidence that the council is progressing.

    He said: “We are very much conversant with the maxim that education is the best legacy you can bequeath to a soul but the factors militating against it left much to be desired. One major hindrance why many of our youths have unfulfilled dream is because of their inability to meet up with the financial demands of their academic. In this wise, we decided to assist these youths to realise their potentials. We believed so much in the power of knowledge. Education liberates the mind, inspires confidence and gives the opportunity to contribute meaningfully to the society.”

    He said the council went through a painstaking process before embarking on the gesture, appealing to the beneficiaries to see it as a golden opportunity to pursue their life time dream.

    “My esteemed students, you must take your academics serious so that you can use it as a tool to free yourself from the shackles of poverty, ignorance, disease and all sorts of vicious vices. You must also inculcate excellent moral such that your immediate community can vouch for you. Do not be swayed by unproductive activities that neither add value nor bring progress to you. The future is yours; therefore I implore you to make maximum use of any worthy opportunity that comes your way. You must see yourself as good ambassadors of this council. We want that stereotyped mindset to change. We want Odi-Olowo/Ojuwoye to be projected positively in the committee of Local Councils through your academic achievement and impeccable character,” he said.

  • APGA repositioning for the future

    APGA repositioning for the future

    Last week, All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) held a national retreat where representatives engaged in a rare self assessment of the party in the past 13 years, setting out new strategies to move the party forward. Yinusa Ibrahim in Lafia reports

    For three days running, about 100 executive members of the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA), drawn from the 36 states of the country and Federal Capital Territory FCT, converged in Abuja at the weekend, for the first retreat of the party since the change of guards in the APGA hierarchy, barely a month ago after its inauguration.

    The excitement knew no bounds as the purpose of the retreat, as profusely encapsulated by the National Chairman, Dr Victor Ikechukwu Oye, is to afford members opportunity for frank appraisal of the journey so far, the new heights they would envisage APGA to attain; what are the merits of such assemblage in terms of their individual contribution at the retreat for the propagation of the ideals of the party and also what roles have been played individually or corporately in the growth and development of the party?

    Oye urged the representatives at the retreat, which included members of the National Working Committee, six zonal and 36 state branch chairmen, to be frank as ever and provide sincere answers to these burning questions. Applauding APGA for taking the lead, the National Chairman commended the party saying: ‘This is the first time any registered political party in Nigeria is staging a retreat for this category of party executive members.”

    His opening and welcome address highlighted the essence of the retreat which would among other things build the desired harmony and synergies for the advancement of the cause of the party.

    The brainstorming, sharing of conviviality and breaking into working groups in addition to incisive lectures by academics and top party officials, were all meant to change the face of APGA from a regional party to a more acceptable national party as the top brass of the party left the retreat hall agreeing to work assiduously and without rancour on how to reposition the party to enable it play its deserved role in Nigeria’s democratic firmament.

    As they went into close sessions, the words of the National Chairman became the binding voice as his in-depth presentation became adopted and was the lever of the retreat. Nothing could best express the mood at the retreat than the assurances that ‘the era of division and in-fighting in our party is gone forever. We are in a new era, where love will prevail and hatred banished, resourcefulness and had work will be richly rewarded, party discipline entrenched as a creed, and constant interaction and capacity building sustained as ethos.

    ‘We are, therefore, challenged at this retreat to eschew bickering, malignant and tendentious outbursts, bad blood, festering and nagging. We must see one another as brother and sister’s keepers, ever ready to put the past behind us and look forward to a more promising future. We must come up with strategies on how to sustain and surpass the successes we achieved in the past 13 years and see how we can deploy our talents and even, resources to the development of the party.’

    Perhaps more than ever are the three-prong approaches of the new executive of the party, which according to Mr. Labaran Maku, former Minister of Information and Defence and the APGA Gubernatorial Candidate in Nasarawa State and now the APGA National Secretary, includes the issue of a revalidation of new membership cards and new part registers. As a matter of fact, the National Chairman displayed to the excitement of the delegates copies of the cards and the new registers.  He admonished every card carrying member of the party to re-register with just a N100. Members are also to renew their membership dues monthly as that was the surest methodology to keep their party afloat so that the party could meet its numerous responsibilities. The party has printed about a million cards and hopes to generate funds from the issuance of the cards to party members across the country. The party now also has in its kitty a million Membership Registers which would be coordinated by party state chairmen. A note of warning of severe punishment and disciplinary measures awaited anyone that would defraud the party in the exercise which is commencing almost immediately.

    Once a party is solvent, it would build its structures and be answerable to the people and not the whims and caprices of individuals. There is a major leap in relocating the party headquarters to a more befitting edifice that will epitomise the real APGA, not in the obscure decrepit office that now houses the party’s National Secretariat.

    Oye was upbeat and disclosed that a gigantic six-storey structure is on the card, capable of providing adequate offices, including guest houses for members of APGA visiting Abuja instead of going to hotels to pay exorbitant hotel bills for accommodation. In between applause, he said a member of the party, an architect, has volunteered to do the architectural designs free of charge including producing a master piece of sculptural engraved work of the real symbol of APGA -the Cock.

    APGA is also working on an effective and comprehensive data base that would be installed at the headquarters. The IT organisation handling this major IT networking is executing this lofty project with the Guarantee Trust Bank. When completed, all information on APGA would, at the touch of a botton, become easily accessible by all, including party members worldwide.

    Said Oye: ‘ We are building a very strong portal about APGA and the online platform with Nigerians in Diaspora- the USA, UK and South Africa, to name a few. We are in touch with our members in the 51 states in the US and our desire is for APGA to become a global brand.’

    The National Chairman is optimistic that the party’s governorship candidate, Mr. Labaran Maku, now pursuing his case at the Governorship Election Tribunal in Nasarawa, would eventually be declared winner of the last elections in that state. He was also hopeful that APGA governorship candidate for Abia State, Dr Alex Otti, would also be declared winner at the tribunal in Umuahia.

    The National Chairman expressed the party’s sincere appreciation to the National Leader and Chairman, Board of Trustees (BOT), Anambra State Governor, Willie Obiano (Akpokuodike), for his practical love and support for APGA.

    He said the party was also doing tremendously well in Kogi and Bayelsa states and members were warming up to the governorship elections coming up on October 21 and December this year. Ditto, Edo State, with assurances given that Edo North had witnessed massive defection of politicians from the ruling party, APC, to APGA, a positive development that APGA’s Cock was going to crow in Edo State soonest in subsequent elections especially the Local Government Elections slated for early next year in Edo State.

    With the new face of APGA, which has like minds from all over the country and also with astute politician, Barrister Ifeatu Obi-Okoye as the party’s Chief Spokesperson (National Publicity Secretary) and the helmsmen of the duo of frontline journalists, Dr Victor Oye as National Chairman and Mr. Labaran Maku as National Secretary, it seems a new dawn may have broken for APGA. They have an uphill task to show a difference and present an alternative to Nigerian electorate and international community, that APGA has become the emergent Nigeria party waiting on the wings to contest power in 2019.

  • What future for Tompolo,  ex-militants?

    What future for Tompolo, ex-militants?

    Towards the end of last week, a terse statement by ex-militant leader Tompolo, calling for a meeting of former militants sent waves across the country leading to fear that they are regrouping, Shola O’Neil, S’South Regional Editor, in Port Harcourt, examines the behind the headline issues.

    The ‘General Officer Commanding’ (GOC) of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), Chief Government Ekpemupolo, is famous for his reticent nature. The man popularly called Tompolo hardly speaks, at least not in public, and when he does his words are usually measured and weighty. His actions have stood him out among his peers in the Niger Delta agitation for a better deal from the Nigerian nation.

    So, when he sent out an invitation on Thursday, July 23, rallying all “Commanders and leaders of the various wings of MEND …to a crucial and urgent meeting” in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, it reverberated across the region and beyond.

    The tension generated by the invitation was heightened by recent developments by at the national and regional levels.

    Although the distribution list of the invitation was not included, that it was intended for various wing leaders, meant that it was a serious affair. Dokubo Asari, founder of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteer Force; Ebikabowe Victor Ben (aka Boyloaf), Ateke Tom, Ezekiel Akposibowei (aka Egbema I) and Shoot-at-Sight, Ogunboss among other colleagues from Ondo, Edo, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Akwa Ibom states, were therefore expected.

    Had the meeting held, it would be first time that such high calibre of former militants would be congregating since President Goodluck Jonathan lost the March 28 presidential election.

    It would be recalled that Tompolo and those associates shook the nation the last time they met in Yenagoa in the heat of the rescheduled Presidential election. Three former warlords met at Creek Haven, the official seat of power of the Bayelsa State Government, with Governor Seriake Dickson reportedly in attendance. The message from the meeting was ominous – President Jonathan must be re-elected for the continued peace and security of the Niger Delta region as well as for the continuous existence of the country.

    The threat elicited condemnation from all sections of the country, as well as a famous riposte by Gen Theophilus Danjuma, who called for the arrest of Tompolo and other attendees at the meeting. But rather than be sated, Tompolo reaffirmed his stance in Warri, Delta State.

    “Gen. Danjuma and his cohorts”, he said, “should know that I remain resolute on my position in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, that President Jonathan must win this election for Nigeria to continue to stay together.”

    At about the same time the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State, Mr Jimi Agbaje, was also quoted as alluding to the capacity of Niger Delta militants to cripple the nation’s economy by attacking oil facilities in the region if their ‘son’ and ‘brother’ fails the re-election bid.

    The defeat of Jonathan in the March 28 election and the inauguration of the incumbent president were watched with trepidation by people of the region.

    Tompolo had been rarely seen or heard since then until on Thursday.  Before the election though, it was gathered that he and other former MEND leaders were watched closely by security agencies.

    It was against the above scenario that the planned revival of MEND in Yenogoa generated much interest and attention both within and outside the region. Tompolo is the most respected (and feared) agitator in the region. His influence and sphere spread from Cross River to Ondo.

    He formed MEND in the wake of the 2005 Joint Task Force’s aerial and water bombardments of Okerenkoko, and other parts of Gbaramatu Kingdom after the end of the fratricidal Warri crisis, which was a precursor of the Niger Delta crisis.

    The crisis became a full blown war in May 2009 when nine officers of the Nigerian Army were killed around the Chanomi Creeks of Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State in May 2009.

     Why so much ado about a meeting?

    Beyond the initial war threat by former militants though, recent developments in the Niger Delta region and apparent change in the Federal Government’s policy thrust on handling of former militants when compared to the patronages they enjoyed during the immediate past administration, were some of the reasons why the meeting generated tension.

    Since President Muhammadu Buhari took over in May 29, the monthly stipend paid to beneficiaries of the amnesty programme has stopped. The stipend was part of the package approved by the late President Umar Yar’Adua as part of the deal to get Tompolo and others to drop their arms and exchange lives in the creeks for the city.

    Since Buhari’s inauguration, the emolument and other patronages have stopped, leading to building tension in the area. Only recently, women protested in Yenagoa over the non payment of fees for 13 students undergoing pilot training with the German national carrier, Lufthansa in Frankfurt, Germany. There have also been protests by their counterparts in Nigeria, who have severally blockaded the East-West highway to express their grievances.

    Although the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, explained that the default was due to ongoing investigation of the running of the programme, there had been rumour that the new administration planned to stop the amnesty programme when its initial five-year period ends in December.

    While the delay in the payment of monthly stipends mostly affected the wellbeing of foot-soldiers and other backdoor beneficiaries of the amnesty programme, President Buhari’s cancellation of the controversial multibillion pipeline surveillance contracts, was seen as directly hitting on Tompolo and other former ‘Generals’ of MEND.

    It was widely reported that during the first phase of the contract awarded shortly after Jonathan’s inauguration in 2011, Tompolo’s share of the contract was a whopping N5.1bn, while his counterparts Asari Dokubo, Ebikabowe Victor Ben (aka Boyloaf) and Ateke Tom got N1.44bn, N608million and N608m respectively. Although the deal was meant to ensure security of the oil facilities, incidents of pipeline vandalism and illegal bunkering escalated. The exception was in some parts of parts Delta State under the control of Tompolo.

    Apart from the stoppage of amnesty stipend and pipeline surveillance contracts, the recent sacking of the Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr Patrick Akpobolokeimi, a protégé of Tompolo, was viewed as part of a general plot to remove the remaining vestige of his overbearing  influence during the immediate past administration.

    The former university lecturer’s appointment as NIMASA’s DG after the controversial sacking of Mr Temisan Omatseye in 2010, was due mostly to the influence of Tompolo, who also reportedly facilitated the renewal of his mandate by the former administration.

    Tompolo’s influence over NIMASA was buttressed by Global West Vessel Services, a company linked to Tompolo, getting the lucrative N15 billion ($103m) contract for the supply of vessels and security platforms, from Dr Akpobolokaemi-led NIMASA. A Maritime University was also located by Akpobolokaemi at Okerenkoko along with other platforms of the agencies.

    Furthermore, local and international media have been awash with reports of alleged fraud in the oil and gas sector under the last administration. Mrs Deziani Alison-Madueke, an Ijaw from Bayelsa State, was the Minister of Petroleum Resources during Jonathan’s entire full tenure. She is at the centre of investigation into subsidy scam as well as several alleged illicit deals involving the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and allocation of oil mining licences.

    The Presidency has also disclosed of an ongoing probe of the Amnesty Programme, headed by Mr. Kingsley Kuku, an Ijaw from Arogbo in Ondo State. Kuku is a very close associate of Tompolo, who is also instrumental to his appointment and longevity in the position. The former amnesty boss singled out Tompolo for praises during a thanksgiving service held at the end of his assignment in Arogbo.

    Before Tompolo’s convention of the MEND meeting, there was a general siege mentality among some Ijaw people, who expressed concern over probes targeting the former president and his Ijaw appointees, including Mrs Madueke.

    The feeling, although not as strong, is similar to the one displayed when disgraced former Bayelsa State governor, Chief Diepriye Alamieyeseigha, was arrested in London for alleged money laundering in 2005. After his impeachment and subsequent arrest in December of that year, MEND in its inchoate stage made his release one of their conditions to cease hostility.

    Although Tompolo did not state the agenda of the meeting in the terse invitation, a copy of which was forwarded to The Nation, the development listed above gave credence to concerns that the motive could be a return to insurgency in the Niger Delta. He has since denied nursing any sinister motives in a subsequent statement.

    Tompolo’s long time media aide and confidant, Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, who was contacted by our reporter on Thursday, apart from confirming the meeting, divulged very little else. Pressed by our reporter, he merely said it was to deliberate on the state of the nation and Niger Delta in the light of prevailing situations.

    However, a MEND faction loyal to Henry Okah believed that the meeting was a ploy to stop the present administration’s ongoing probe of the oil industry and Jonathan’s stewardship. In fact, a statement by MEND’s spokesperson, Jomo Gbomo, accused Tompolo of convening the meeting to “defend oil thieves and corruption officials of the Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.”

    The faction affirmed its support for President Muhammadu Buhari and “his government’s courage to probe the administration of ex-President Jonathan,” insisting that the examination should also include the office of the former President, the ex-First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, and the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme.

    Pressure on Tompolo to shelve meeting

    Nevertheless, there were sections of Ijaw and other tribal leaders in the state who felt that the timing of the meeting was ill-conceived. It was gathered that shortly after the story on planned reconvention of MEND went viral online, Tompolo started receiving series of calls from his kinsmen and other leaders.

    The host governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, in the heat of the debate, advised the ex-militants to shelve their meeting. The governor’s call was contained in a statement by his media aide, Mr Daniel Iworiso-Markson.

    “He was inundated with telephone calls; people were calling from all over the world to confirm if he was truly the convener of the meeting,” a Gbaramatu source, who asked not to be named told our reporter on telephone Saturday.

    But beyond concerns that the proposed meeting could plunge the region into fresh crisis, pressure on the former militant leader also revealed deep-seated grievances of, not just some sections of the region, but some of Tompolo’s colleagues in the struggle.

    For instance, Okah’s faction, the arm of MEND led by ‘General’ Bibi Oduku opposed the meeting even before indications emerged that it would be cancelled. Speaking with our reporter, the leader of the Niger Delta Amnesty Progressive Change for Buhari, faulted the timing and agenda of the meeting.

    The group wondered why Tompolo thought it wise to convene a meeting of MEND in the first two months of Buhari’s administration when he failed to take similar step in Jonathan’s four-year tenure.

    “What were the developments that came during Jonathan’s government that Buhari has now stopped that we have to meet about? We view this as a gimmick by some persons to gain relevance in the present administration.”

    Feelers from the camps of Boyloaf, Ateke and others indicated that they were not favourably disposed to the Yenagoa meeting.

    Our Yenagoa reporter said shortly after the planned meeting was made public, Boyloaf kicked against it. Quoting a source, he said, “Boyloaf will not attend the meeting. He has also called on security agencies to be at alert to avert any breakdown of law and order. Apart from him, many other notable ex-militant leaders will not be there.

    “It is expected that Africa, Pastor Reuben, Shoot-at-Sight, Ogunboss, Ateke Tom, Farrah and many other former ‘generals’, and ‘commanders’ will boycott the event.”

    It was gathered that some leaders of the group were not comfortable that Tompolo took the initiative without contacting and sounding them out, while others were still said to be aggrieved about how Tompolo ‘cornered’ Jonathan and contracts in the past half-decade.

    Beyond the fraction within MEND, our check revealed that a cross section of tribal leaders in the region were uncomfortable with ‘threat’ of another crisis, particularly as some parts of the region were yet to recover from the 2007 – 2010 oil war declared by MEND.

    “While some few individuals, their family members and clans may have benefited, the larger part of the people have nothing to show for their suffering during the crisis because the benefit was cornered by a few individuals,” an Isoko leader from Delta State said.

    Speaking in the same vein, Chief Ayirimi Emami, an Itsekiri community leader, who has a turbulent history with Tompolo, described the botched meeting as uncalled for, noting that the Ijaw leader had no moral justification to convene any meeting on Niger Delta. He noted that after having unfettered access to the seat of power and enjoying “juicy contracts from the Federal Government through NIMASA, pipeline surveillance, maritime security and other forms of undue favours,” he should be grateful for the amnesty programme and be quiet.

    “Members of the fractured MEND have been granted amnesty long ago by the Federal Government and whatever the agenda of that meeting should be disregarded by the Buhari administration, which has shown absolute focus. We are determined to give the Buhari administration total support,” Ayiri added.

    Also, a cross section of leaders from the region felt that it was too early to assess the Buhari government, since he was yet to appoint ministers and other key officials to drive his agenda.

    “Under this kind of situation, what are we going to judge about him? So far, he has started well by trying to clean the Augean stable and although he has made some appointments, it is yet too early. If they need to meet at all, it should be in six months or thereabouts when things are fully in place.”

    Nevertheless, feelers from the states indicated that crime rates and other nefarious activities could spiral in the weeks ahead unless the amnesty funds are released to beneficiaries.

    “There are thousands of youths who rely on the stipend to cater for their families; if they don’t get payment in the days ahead, they may result to illicit means to make ends meet and this could pose greater challenges for security and peace in the Niger Delta,” a very top member of the Joint Task Force told our reporter on condition of anonymity.

    Blame the media

    Smarting from the avalanche of negative reaction on the failed meeting, Tompolo issued a clarification shortly after midday on Friday. While lamenting the misconception about his intention, he flayed a “mischievous section” of the media.

    In the statement titled “Why I called Saturday meeting”, he said he was “compelled to clarify issues as they relate to the meeting of the leadership of ex-agitators under the platform of MEND and other organisations” because of tension it had generated.

    Speaking further, he said, “I consider it unfortunate that a section of the Nigerian nation and the media have chosen to mischievously tread the path of misinforming the public and right thinking person by linking the meeting to whatever decision the current government at the centre may have taken in relation to the stoppage of the pipeline surveillance contract, even though payment have not been made for the services rendered in the renewed contract, or termination of appointments.

    “This is highly provocative and despicable,” he added.

    Tompolo explained that contrary to the negative reactions his proposed meeting generated, his intention was to help douse the tension building up over the continued delay in payment of amnesty stipends to beneficiaries.

    While asserting his leadership of former agitators in the region, particularly due to his role in providing leadership when the idea was first muted, he conceded that there was misconception about the delay. He therefore maintained that it behoves of him to douse the tension and explain the delay to his colleagues before the situation got out of hand.

    According to him, “The nation would recall that in the build up to the amnesty offer of the late President, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, there was hesitation on the part of most of Niger Delta agitators until God in His infinite mercy, granted me wisdom to provide leadership.

    “While some of us understand to an extent, the apparent delay in the continued payment of the monthly stipend to the ex-agitators in view of the seeming scrutiny of government agencies, including the Amnesty Office by the current administration, same cannot be said of the majority of beneficiaries of the Amnesty programme.

    “To this extent, some of us, particularly myself and other leaders have been under intense pressure from ex-agitators, commanders, individuals, parents and guardians as well as communities who are beneficiaries of the Amnesty programme. While a few see the delay in the payment of their monthly stipends in the light of the need for the current government to settle in properly, others see the delay as a template to stop the programme. The expulsion of some students (home and overseas) by their schools and training institutions particularly has heightened these fears.

    “Hence, I thought it wise that a meeting of the collegiate leadership of the platform under which we operated as agitators could be convened to appraise the situation and possibly, explore means to douse the tension that is growing among the disarmed youths whose stipends (training allowances and tuition fees) have been delayed for months.

    “This becomes more compelling in view of the fact that as leaders of the platform that served as midwife to the Amnesty offer, we owe the nation a duty to play our roles in order to stem a relapse of the relative peace in the Niger Delta Region.”

    Tompolo flayed the tension generated by the meeting, describing it as “uncalled for, diversionary and mischievous”, adding that there was no evil intended in whatever form.

    “We appreciate the pressures being mounted by leaders from the region especially as some have expressed concern that the meeting could be misinterpreted to mean the resurgence of hostilities; we say it is not.”

    He assured that having embraced peace, “I remain supportive of various governments at all levels, including the President Mohammud Burhari’s government, but wondered why a meeting of the ex-agitators could prop anxiety.”

    As at the time of this report yesterday, policemen had taken over the venue of the botched meeting in Yenagoa, while people of the state and beyond went about their normal business.

    So far only time will tell if the matter has been laid to rest.

     

     

     

  • What future for Kwara PDP? 

    What future for Kwara PDP? 

    What does the future hold for the Kwara State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)?

    This is the question on the lips of many people in the state.

    Since the party suffered a crushing defeat at the recent general elections, there has been a lull in the activities of the party. Indeed, many PDP chieftains have left the state. The party in now a ghost of its self.

    Pundits argue that the emergence of Senator Simeon Ajibola as the governorship candidate in a racourous primary and the subsequent defection of Senator Gbemisola Saraki and her supporters to the All Progressives Congress (APC), on the eve of the presidential elections, served as the PDP’s death knell.

    Senator Gbemisola Saraki, a scion of the Saraki dynasty and a grassroots politician, commands a large followership.

    During their defection, former Speaker of the House of Assembly Pastor Benjamin Yisa and a close associate of the senator said with the defection of Saraki and his associates to the APC, it was impossible for the PDP to win the poll.

    He said: “No matter how the Kwara PDP tries to shake it off, Gbemi’s defection is a big blow to the party. The PDP’s loss is now the APC’s gain. Going by the results of the last election, the impact of her defection is being felt all over the state.

    “Her defection will serve as a lesson to the political class not to maltreat its best eleven. The idea that monkey dey chop, baboon dey work is over in politics. Unfortunately, the Kwara PDP didn’t listen to this timely advice of its national chairman, Alhaji Adamu Muazu but went on a frolic of their own. The three State Executives of the PDP that announced their defection yesterday were the engine room of PDP in the Kwara State. And now that the engine rooms have left, what is remaining is a mere carcass.”

    Gbemi Saraki said: “I commend members of the GRS Movement for standing up in solidarity at this critical time. I assure them that the storm is over. With the APC, we are assured of justice, equity and fair play. I also commend and thank the leadership of the APC in Kwara State led by Senator Bukola Saraki and Governor Ahmed who have made our move seamless. On behalf of the teeming members of the GRS Movement, I assure them of our dedication and commitment to all party causes.”

    A former chieftain of the PDP, Rev Bunmi Olusona said the PDP is dead in the state, adding that“the future of PDP in Kwara is very bleak. The party selfishly mismanaged it primaries and ended up with an array of bad and unsellable candidates.

    “The party is now peopled by wilted politicians without fellowship. I left the party with a cream of grassroot politicians and my exit finally nailed the coffin of the party in the state. The platform now is nothing but a mere debating society.”

    But, the PDP Chairman, Akogun Iyiola Oyedepo, said the party can bounce back to reckoning. He admitted that the party, before the elections, was peopled with ambitious, arrogant and self-conceited politicians

    Oyedepo added: “Reality has dawned on them. It is now many of us can reason very well. They now know that PDP can lose. Many of those that can give us problems don’t have resources to do that again. They have exhausted their money; they prefer to eat with whatever they have now. The collective loss now makes us to sit down and strategise for the future. I have no doubt that we are going to get there.

    Throughout the country, activities are down now because government is about to be formed. In the next one or two months, President Muhammadu Buhari would have formed his cabinet; even state governors would have picked their commissioners and formed their cabinet. Then we will know what to do. As a party, we just held a meeting, we want to re-strategize and move forward. There must be a period you just keep low for some time. This is the period and I am sure after the Ramadan our activities will pick up in earnest.

    On the defection of Gbemisola Saraki, the PDP chairman said: “When she was in our party, she aspired to become the governorship candidate and lost. If she is the most important person, she would have lost. When she decided to go for governorship in 2011, she lost. After all, that party was owned by her father. If they were that powerful, they would have won. It is not true that her defection has nailed PDP.

    “People only see noise making and appearance in Gbemisola Saraki. Her hold on Kwara politics is too fickle. I don’t dispute that fact that she commands some followers in Kwara central but even absolute. In the whole of Kwara South Gbemisola has no hold at all. How can we be dead when she has no hold in anywhere in the seven local government areas of Kwara South?

    “When you go to North how many people are following her? But when she comes to town and command some thugs and they follow, you say that is politics. In other words, PDP is alive and kicking in the state.

    “We lost the 2015 elections for some key reasons. We lost because we were not united among ourselves; we lost of the over ambition of many of the key contestants. Their belief was that ‘let me have the ticket and I am already in government house,’ because they had not seen our party losing any election.

    “To them, once you had the ticket you were almost 90 percent to government. So, it made for over ambition. We also lost that because our national secretariat did not take us serious. The secretariat believed we could never win in the state where the Sarakis have taken everything; as a result of that, we were not properly financed. We lost because, when we evolved a candidate, other people refused to work with him”.

    And lost because we had moles in our midst; they were here to report to some other people what we were doing and when it was time for them to go home they left us.”

    “Reality has dawned on them. It is now many of us can reason very well. They now know that PDP can lose. Many of those that can give us problems don’t have resources to do that again”

  • Political Science in Nigeria: Looking to the future

    Political Science in Nigeria: Looking to the future

    Since I got myself involved in the discourse over the whole issue of disciplinary relevance of the humanities and specifically philosophy, which caused me to advance a case for the rebranding of humanities in terms of pedagogy, curricula and praxis, the response I have been receiving had set me thinking on the fate of political science and the social sciences in the context of the concerns of that debate. This contribution and the next one therefore attempt to share a bit of my thought on this all important subject matter. Political science remains the discipline that gave me the theoretical weapon that had enabled me come to term with thinking about Nigeria from the perspective of the public service and its urgent reform. If the major actors that founded the discipline in Nigeria-Dudley, Essien-Udom, Ezera, Ake, Ekeh, Akinyemi, Gambari, Ogunsanwo, Oyediran, Awa, Nnoli, Ayoade, Adebisi, Ekpebu, Adekanye, Adeniran, Oyovbaire, Jinadu, Olagunju, Elaigwu, Nwosu, Aaron Gana, Gboyega, Otubanjo, Jega, Takaya, Kyari, Bande, Onwudiwe, Onyeoziri, Occuli, Okunade, Amuwo, Agbaje, Ihonvbere, Said Adejumobi, Osagae, Adisa, Dunmoye, Nwolise, Akinterinwa, Joy Ogwu, Egwu, Olukotun, Suberu, etc.-are either dead, semi or fully retired or in the diaspora, where is that discipline headed? How are the current generation of political scientists in Nigeria holding up against the onslaught of discipline-bashing that has afflicted the social sciences and the humanities, especially with the coming of STEM-science, technology, engineering and mathematics?

    If, according to Thomas Carlyle, economics is a dismal science, has political science become more dismal? Haven’t political scientists also succumbed to the ‘publish or perish’ principle that ensures promotion on the basis of facile articles that have not illuminated our collective experience as a nation? How do or should political scientists answer to Nigeria? How do functionalism, constructivism, democratic theory, game theory, prebendalism, elite theory, dependency theory, prisoner’s dilemma, iron law of oligarchy, institutionalism, behaviouralism, Marxist-Leninism, Dutch and double Dutch theory, Westphalia concept of world order, and all the others affect the way we perceive our predicament? If Nigeria’s GDP averages 7% annual growth rates, how does that translates relative to mystery index/poverty rate and consequent political behaviour, for instance? What is the state of political science scholarship in Nigeria?

    Let us answer that question by starting from the basics: What do political scientists do? They study politics, political processes, political institutions and political behaviour. Or, to put it another way, political scientists are concerned with power and power relations. They are interested in answering the question of who gets what, when and how, from as small a component as the family, down to a somewhat larger component as the Afijio local government council then on to the national level of Nigeria’s political economy and even to a global power relation between the developed and the developing countries of the world. And they are interested in achieving a scientifically objective analysis that eschews bias and sentiment in an attempt to come to methodologically sound conclusions that can aid governance policies and paradigms. Thus, for instance, a political scientist would want to interrogate the political economy dimensions to how income distribution within the Nigerian society, within the last fifteen years, has generated a huge poverty level. Or, s/he may be interested in the question of how the electoral processes constitute a veritable factor in the measurement of democratisation in Nigeria.

    Why is political science important? This question seems superfluous given our definition of what political scientists do. Yet its significance derives from the fact that political science has also been boxed into a siege mentality in a modern world given the pre-eminence of science and technology and the other STEM disciplines. Political scientists have been forced everywhere to defend the relevance of their disciplines. And that is in spite of its appellation of being scientific! But this is only one side of the story, especially in Nigeria. The other side is that most political scientists in Nigeria have been forced into exile by the very political processes they are supposed to analyse and understand. One can, as a telling illustration, ask the question: Why would the Centre for Democratic Studies (CDS); National Council for Inter-Governmental Relations (NCIR) – dedicated to research into our peculiar brand of federalism etc, – not have resurrected sixteen years into democratic governance, if indeed they died through suffocation in the heat of militarism? Where is the Nigerian Political Science Association (NPSA) beyond just routine annual conferences? This last question isn’t a request for spatial location but a serious interrogation of the state of political science in Nigeria at both the pedagogical and research levels. In other words, does the discipline of political science in Nigeria lacks an active professional gate-keeping to channel research and pedagogical energies?

    Mario Vargas Llosa, the Peruvian writer, captures the cynicism that pervades the study of politics. For him, ‘Real politics…has little to do with ideas, values, and imagination…and everything to do with manoeuvres, intrigues, plots, paranoia, betrayals, a great deal of calculation, no little cynicism, and every kind of con game.’ Have Nigerian political scientists succumbed to the latter and forgotten the former? Or have we retreated to the sanitised and air-conditioned atmosphere of the conference halls where we release communiqués without bites? If not, where are the profusion of ideas, values and imagination? Where is the distinct political science voice on matters of policy intelligence and articulation in Nigeria?

    When I made the hard but final decision, in 1980, to pursue political science as a career path, I had a distinctive understanding of what it would enable me to do. I was coming from a particularly strong reading of Plato’s Republic and the connection of philosophy to the political reorientation of society. My parents couldn’t understand my obsession with philosophy. So, I switched my focus: Since it was the manipulation of power that led to the killing of Socrates, the study of power and power relations-the main staple of political science-offers a significant avenue to come to term with the dynamics of the Nigerian society and its own unique predicament. I was not disappointed. And then I eventually met and read political scholars who wrote and taught with passion. They all understood what Noam Chomsky considered the responsibility of the intellectuals everywhere: Speaking the truth and exposing lies. They facilitated the tight connection between political research and policy analysis. This is one of the reasons why the death of Professor Kunle Amuwo was too hard for me to take. He represented a tradition I met in the Department of Political Science, University of Ibadan.

    That tradition was a vigorous injection of the Nigerian political scientist into the tragic divide between the state and the society configuration. This, for me, is where the action of political theorising in Nigeria is. It is within the state-society space that power is used and abused. It is that space that spawns corruption, poverty, crime, terrorism, and bad leadership. That space also generates reforms and revolutions. And depending on what we do, it can also either generate abject resignation to autocratic manipulations or invigorate democratic governance and consolidation.

    Nigeria and her plural complexities constitute a real theatre for political analysis. It should, by that fact alone, generate serious pedagogical programmes that bring government policies and personalities live into the classrooms for methodological interrogations and interactions. The Boko Haram insurgency is a terrible challenge to the Nigerian Political Science Association and the multiplicities of our methodologies. We have become too academic in the face of serious politics! And the greatest problems of Nigeria will not be solved in sterile conferences and dusty journals; we will begin to solve them when political science pedagogy articulates a new direction for research that interacts with policies and those who make them. We must not only bring Nigeria actively into the average political science classroom, but we also actively apply our methodologies and ideas to Nigeria by a vigorous invasion of her public spheres where we confront policies and policy makers in sincere battles for the soul of our Fatherland. And political science possesses a larger responsibility: It can chart a path for political responsibility that can become a template for other social science disciplines. Isn’t that what the NPSA welcome note intends on its website?

    If we can manage all these, then maybe the early avatars of the discipline that had fought a good fight would no longer resent their retirement. And then just maybe, we can all settle down to more enlightening answers to the ancient question of who gets what, when and how.

     

    – Dr. Olaopa is

    Permanent Secretary Federal Ministry of Communication Technology Abuja. Nigeria

    tunji.olaopa@commtech.gov.ng

     tolaopa2003@gmail.com    

     

  • Our youths have future, says Vector

    Our youths have future, says Vector

    OLANREWAJU Ogunmefun, popularly known as Vector tha Viper, has said that the Nigerian youths hold so much promise, if given the right platform.

    He said, “I’m excited for the future of Nigerian youths. I know it can only get better if the youths actually voted by the ratio that counts, because their votes matter a lot.”

    The hip-hop artiste, in recent times, has kept a low profile. He has released two studio albums, namely State of Surprise (SOS) and a follow-up. He is the voice behind the Sprite commercial that airs on most radio stations across Nigeria since 2009. In anticipation of his second studio album, he released a mix tape titled Bar Racks. He released his second studio album titled The Second Coming in 2012.

  • Brand activation is the future

    Brand activation is the future

    As innovation continues to drive marketing, from the old to modern creative leaning, in the face of competitive marketing budget, the Chief Executive Officer of Oracle Experience, Mr. Felix King Eiremiokhae, has said investment in brand activation is the future of marketing.

    Brand activation, a significant part of below-the-line marketing, is an ideal way to build up, change or enhance a brand’s image. It’s a way of communicating with the crowd, and intensifying their relationship with a product or brand. Brand activation can be used in many ways, from Point-of-Sales-techniques to on the field activation.

    Over the years, clients have not been making any meaningful marketing budget provision for brand activation, but the recent success recorded by brand activation agencies has begun to attract interest from brand owners, despite that some still consider it a risky investment. While innovation has continue to be the driver for the growth of the emerging marketing mix in the marketing communication, Eiremiokhae said experiential marketing agencies have moved from  dancing on the streets to seeing themselves as story-tellers in such a way that appeals to the emotion of consumers.

    “So, that is the direction. That is why you discover that most agencies that are not into ideation would struggle as we progress in the industry because every brand wants to tell a story. Story that people can walk away and remember over a long period time, but how many agencies can tell a story through activation? That is another story for another day,” he told The Nation.

    As one of the experiential agencies that drives the big budget and project in the brands and marketing industry, he said challenges in executing groundbreaking   activations have  been huge, adding that the most mountainous of all challenges in the industry comes from practitioners themselves.

    “Life itself is a huge challenge and what separates you from others and makes you outstanding is how you are able to manage these challenges when they come your way. I keep telling people that you need to take risk for you to be able to stand out. The biggest challenge we keep seeing in the industry is ourselves.  We keep doing things that had never been done in the industry and that is a huge challenge for us because you are required by clients to surpass your previous feats. So, it is already difficult for people to understand the direction we want to go. What we do here at Oracle is like a paint, who has all the ideas but those ideas are inside of him. Therefore, trying to reinterpret those ideas sometimes could be really challenging. But the good thing is that clients are always patient with us and give us the opportunity to express our inner thoughts and that make it easy for us,” he said.

    Besides Eiremiokhae said marketing budget, manpower and third party supplier challenges could undermine delivering innovative brand engagement activation.  “Looking at our environment you discover that sometimes budget can also be a very big issue. Besides that, manpower and  third party supplier are huge challenges an agency like ours could face in delivering on these innovative brand engagement activations, but somehow, here we are, the clients are happy with us despite the challenges and they are always ready to stay on a journey with us,” he said

    Despite that he said Oracle Experience was able to executive award-winning brand activations. Some of the activations, he said, included STAR Bottle Tree, Guilder re-launched, Guilder Yacht and Heineken Green Light Experience. “All of them represent different things. If you look at Heineken Green Light Experience, the concept and ideation are totally different from the Star Bottle Tree. The concept of Guilder Yacht was equally very different from that of Guilder re-launch despite the fact that it is the same brand. We create to fit every experience. From the Star Bottle Tree we broke the world record and built a Christmas tree from the Star Bottle to the level of 36 feet. For us, that was quite amazing and it got some international recognitions, one of which is creating a new record in the Guinness Book of Records as the tallest Christmas bottle tree in the continent. It was broadcast all over the world too,” he said.

    Clients don’t want to take risk in brand activation.

    Despite that, brand engagement activation is the way to go in the marketing communication industry. He said most clients are afraid of taking a risk except for few ones. “Most fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) businesses like to play safe when it comes to taking risk in brand engagement platforms. They are not ready to take such risks, but before a brand can become exceptional and outstanding it has to take risk with such remarkable activations.

    “Nigerian Breweries is a company, which likes to take risk. They have the belief that they have all it takes to embark on the journey with us. So as a global company, NB is not just playing around at the local market, they are also playing at the international stage because Heineken is a global brand therefore, whatever you are creating locally, of course, you need to also showcase it internationally,” he said.

  • ‘Our youths, our future’

    ‘Our youths, our future’

    Indigenes of Azumini Ancient Kingdom in Abia State have visited the community’s traditional ruler to seek his  blessings and discuss the challenges of youths.  LAURA OPUSUNJU and CHINONYE EMUCHAY report.

    Azumini Ancient Kingdom, a community in Ukwa East Local Government Area of Abia State is still basking in the glow of the coronation of its traditional ruler, Prof Edward Eule. The monarch was a university teacher in the United States before he was picked to ascend the throne.

    But, before he could settle down to business, students of Azumini origin in higher institutions under the aegis of Azumini Students’ Union (ASU) visited him. Led by the union’s national president, Emmanuel Shebbs, the students met the monarch in his palace to seek his blessings and tell him of the challenges facing the youth.

    Shebbs praised the monarch for granting the students audience, saying: “We are here today to seek your ofo oma (blessings) and to contribute our ideas and recommendations which can make your reign peaceful.”

    The ASU president said politicians had disappointed the community, noting that the youth do not trust them again.

    Shebbs told the king that the major challenges facing the community were unemployment and moral decadence. He said the  community is blessed with intellectuals, scholars and youths that could work for its development but many of them, he said, do not have the wherewithal to contribute their quota.

    He said: “The community has educated men and women and youths currently studying at various universities within and outside the country. But the challenge which bothers us so much is that, there are many youths who are not in school due to challenges that make it difficult to go to school.

    “We request that your royal highness to consider the establishment of Azumini Royal Scholarship scheme to encourage young men and women to go to school. We want jobs to be created for the community youths to reduce urban migration. If this is done, people will come back home and develop Azumini. We love our community that is why we are here to make our recommendations for the development of Aumini Kingdom.”

    Reacting, Eze Eule hailed the students’ courage to list their challenges. He said the students’ thoughts and ideas indicated that the community was blessed with good youths, raising hope that Azumini Kingdom would be a better place if the youth are allowed to participate in development.

    He urged the students to be virtuous and be good example to others, who did not have privilege to get education.

    Eule said he understood the need for immediate action to develop the community, reiterating his readiness to settle age-long disputes, which he said, have stifled the growth of the community for years.

    He said: “Development cannot happen when there is dispute in the society. We have to promote peaceful relationship between Azumini people and their neighbours. We are doing that now and thank God it is working out to our expectation.”

    On the issue of scholarship, the monarch said: “That is very interesting. We are going to commence immediate action on that.  I will communicate with our kinsmen in the United States. We have the Azumini Welfare Association in United States. We will see how we can make that happen. Even if it means to start with two or three students for now, we will. Education is very crucial to development and we have to start with that.”

    The monarch described unemployment as a general problem, but promised to use his contact to attract investors and companies to the community. “We have sufficient raw materials and we have the arable land. We thank God the power project is on. As soon as that is completed, we will invite investors to come into Azumini to create jobs, not just for Azumini people but also for our neighbours,” he said.

    The highpoint of the meeting was the formal nomination of Eze Eule as Royal Grand Patron to the union. The nomination letter was presented to the monarch by Shebbs, who said the position was expected to bring successes to the union and its members.

    “We promise to be good ambassadors of the Azumini Kingdom and set good examples for upcoming generations,” Shebbs said.