Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • House may shun budget debate

    House may shun budget debate

    •Okonjo-Iweala to answer 50 question

    THE House of Representatives Committee on Finance will not work on the 2014 budget revenue frame work until Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala responds to the 50 questions on the state of the economy, it emerged yesterday.

    The minister laid the budget document before the House on behalf of President Goodluck Jonathan on December 19, last year.The committee gave the minitser 50 questions on the state of economy the same day and expected her response within two weeks.

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala had not responded to the questions as at yesterday.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, told The Nation that the minister’s response to the questions was a prerequisite to working on the budget document.

    “The (minister’s) response to some of the questions are critical to determining certain parametres in the budget document. I say this because as a professional, her response is meant to trigger certain reactions in a direction that requires clear understanding.

    “As I am talking to you, the Finance Minister has not responded to our questions, and we are not joking about it. We must be given these answers before we can do any work on the budget’s revenue framework.

    “It is the sole responsibility of the Finance Committee to work on the revenue framework, which will form the basis for the passage of the budget together with the expenditure framework. This will be worked on by the Appropriation Committee.

    “Therefore, we have decided that we will not open up the budget revenue framework until she responds to the 50 questions.”

    The face-off between the minister and the committee over the questions occurred at an interactive session on the day the budget document was laid on the floor of the House.

    This was after she informed the committee members of her health challenge.

    It was learnt that the committee was not opposed to giving the minister more time to respond to the questions, following her failure to meet the two-week deadline.

    “We are ready to give her till we resume next week and we will take it from there. We don’t want to be hasty in our judgment. We will wait. It is about the country and not individuals,” the source added.

  • ‘Jonathan’s  critics lack  ethical maturity’

    ‘Jonathan’s critics lack ethical maturity’

    THE Special Adviser to the President on Ethics and Values, Mrs. Sarah Jibril, has said those criticising President Goodluck Jonathan lack good manners and ethical maturity.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Abuja during the Round Table on Cultural Diplomacy in Africa and Nigeria, Mrs Jibril noted that it was a wrong style of politics to insult an elected President of a country instead of exploring the right channels for raising observations.

    Though she did not mention the names of such critics, the 18-page open letter by former President Olusegun Obasanjo to Dr Jonathan on December 2, last year, contained some weighty allegations against the President.

    Mrs Jibril said: “Insulting the President is a bad definition of politics. There is a way you can raise observations. But I think they would have much more human civilisation input that you are talking to a person you voted for and he has avenues of being advised. But to take it personally to insult the President of the Federal Republic of your country, it means that person is showing the lack of home training, good manners and ethical maturity.

    “They are better advised to now show that, indeed, they …must also show that they have decorum of self-respect, mutual and national respect.

    “It boils down to philosophical bankruptcy or ignorance. It is a matter of personal ego for people to criticise rather than make contributions. It is the responsibility of the government to re-educate them.

    “I appreciate that Mr President is not responding to every insult that is coming up. Our business in leadership is tolerantly, patiently and lovingly to continue to educate people and explain what we are trying to do.”

    The presidential aide backed the National Assembly for voting against the bill on same-sex marriage.

    Mrs Jibril said the practice is alien to Nigerian culture.

    She said: “Our National Assembly has raised the issue of same-sex marriage. In Africa, we live in natural environments: we live with our animals at home and even in the forest and we have never seen where a male horse was mating another male horse; neither have we seen a female chicken hanging around with another female chicken. So, it is alien to us.”

    The Foreign Affairs Minister, Prof. Viola Onwuliri, who was represented at the round table by the Director of Training and Staff Welfare in the ministry, Uche Okeke, noted that Nigerians were high on the talk and low on actions concerning traditional practices.

    To ensure compliance with ethics and values in the country, she urged the office of the Special Adviser on Ethics and Values to set up a committee for the enforcement.

    The minister said the police did not have adequate manpower to ensure behavioural change.

    “Enforcement is weak in Nigeria. So, we should attach conditions or withhold some services until compliance is ensured. It is after this that you will start seeing behavioural change.” Prof Onwuliri said.

  • President urged to disregard RTEAN’s faction leader

    President urged to disregard RTEAN’s faction leader

    •‘We have unresolved differences’

    THE President of a faction of the Road Transport Employment Association of Nigeria (RTEAN), Alhaji Abubakar Sadiq, yesterday urged President Goodluck Jonathan not to recognise another faction, led by Musa Isewele.

    The Isewele-led faction last Friday visited President Jonathan in Abuja, apparently to seek recognition.

    Sadiq said the visit had provoked members and deepened the crisis in the association.

    He noted that the action of the Isewele-led faction was capable of causing unrest at motor parks across the country.

    The union leader alleged that the Isewele faction had shunned several reconciliatory moves.

    According to him, Dr Jonathan needs to stop the implementation of the promises he made to the Isewele-led faction to avoid further crisis.

    Addressing reporters in Abuja, Sadiq said the union’s crisis remained unresolved because of the absence of the breakaway group at reconciliatory meetings organised by relevant authorities.

    The union’s spokesman explained that the faction could not be forced to attend the peace meetings, adding that this forced the “authentic” leadership of the union to take the legal option.

    Sadiq said: “The intra-union dispute rocking the association is unresolved. It is subject to litigation in the court, initiated by me against the breakaway faction, to the knowledge of government officials and ministries since 2007.

    “President Jonathan received a rebel leader, Musa Isewele. His visit has further provoked members and deepened the intra-union crisis in the association; this is well known to relevant ministries and agencies.”

    “The antics of… Isewele, who is standing trial in a court of competent jurisdiction with his recent sneak appearance with Mr. President at the Villa, are prejudicial, misleading, misrepresentative and uncalled for. His action is capable of confusing and aggravating tension among members of the association; it is capable of causing a breakdown of peace and security at motor parks across the federation.

     

    Sadiq claimed that Isewele is trying to co-opt the Presidency into the intra-union crisis by flying a regional agenda which is inimical to the national interest as the president belongs to all Nigerians.

    The President of the Association however urged government to either resolve the lingering crisis of the association or do not favour any group pending when the case will be resolved in court.

    The association further advised that the promise made by President Jonathan to RTEAN during the purported visit be withheld or kept in view in the interest of social justice pending the termination and resolution of intra-union crisis in court.

    The association expressed optimism that the crisis will be resolved by March.

    He urged members of the association to go about their businesses peacefully and they not resolve to violence.

  • Presidency  intervenes in Ugborodo crisis

    Presidency intervenes in Ugborodo crisis

    President Goodluck Jonathan has waded into the crisis in the oil-rich Ugborodo community in Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State.

    The peace effort came against the backdrop of a visit by a team from the Department of Military Intelligence (DMI) to Warri yesterday.

    President Jonathan invited key players in the crisis to Abuja for a meeting aimed at finding a solution to the crisis, which has claimed three lives in the last four days.

    A source told The Nation: “The invitation was conveyed by a top aide to President Jonathan on Sunday night.

    “The President directed both groups to attend the meeting with five delegates.

    “The two factional chairmen – Chief Thomas Ereyitomi and David Tonwe – are expected to attend the meeting, which will take place at 10am tomorrow at the Villa.”

    The Nation gathered that DMI officials stormed Warri from Lagos yesterday and quizzed some of the key players and stakeholders in the crisis.

    It was learnt that the security operatives would query top naval officials over their alleged complicity.

    A section in the conflict alleged that naval personnel aided their opponents in the Saturday clash.

    A source said a top official at the Forward Operation Base in Escravos was summoned to the DMI over the matter.

    The Navy has denied reports that its personnel were involved in the shooting, during which three locals at Arunto, Ugborodo allegedly died on Saturday.

    An indigene, Mr. Femi Uwawa, accused the Navy of complicity in the death of three persons on Saturday.

    But the Flag Officer Commanding, Central Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy, Rear Admiral Sidi-Ali Hassan Usman, who briefed reporters at the Nigerian Naval Ship (NNS), Warri, yesterday said: “No naval gunboat was involved in any operation, which led to the shootout or the alleged loss of lives, as reported.

    “It is equally important to say that the fracas was between Arotun and Madagho communities. The task force remained neutral in the crisis.”

  • Bayelsa defends proposed Fed  Govt’s power station upgrade

    Bayelsa defends proposed Fed Govt’s power station upgrade

    •’Jonathan not funding N1.8b phony project’

    Bayelsa State government has denied an allegation that President Goodluck Jonathan is diverting N1.8 billion to fund a phony power station.

    The government described the allegation as misplaced, mischievous and embarrassing.

    Special Adviser to the Bayelsa State Governor on Power Mr. Olice Kemenanabo and Commissioner for Energy Mr. Francis Ikio spoke to reporters yesterday in Yenagoa.

    Kemenanabo admitted that the state was connected to the national grid through a 2X30/40 MVA transmission station at Gbarain in Yenagoa Local Government in 2006.

    But he said “only parts of Yenagoa, Kaiama, Odi, Opokuma, Agudama and Tombia are benefiting from the station.”

    “This constraint has compelled every other local government, besides Yenagoa and a few communities in Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government, to depend on independently-generated power. Sagbama, Ekeremor, Brass, Southern Ijaw, Nembe and Akassa are unconnected to the national grid.”

    Kemenanabo said the transmission station in Gbarantoru was unstable.

    He said the 40 MVA connecting some communities to the national grid was no longer accountable.

    According to him, most of the current was lost, because of the poor state of the distribution system.

    Kemenanabo said it was unfortunate that the state depended on a “forced cooled single transmission station, while other state capitals, including local governments, had multiple transmission stations.”

    He said the state government sought the intervention of the Federal Government to avert imminent collapse of the only transmission station.

    Kemenanabo said the Federal Government’s intervention would ensure that the power allocated to the state was evacuated and accounted for.

    Said he: “The current situation is that the only 40 MVA transmission station is inadequate and under serious stress from overload, even as the supply is limited to the state capital and a few communities.

    “The station is on the brink of collapse and if urgent steps are not taken to upgrade it, there is imminent power outage in the state.

    “Therefore, if the Federal Ministry of Power in its wisdom is proposing the upgrade of the existing station to 90MVA and a newspaper interprets it as Mr. President seeking N1.8 billion to fund ghost projects in his state as published online, then it is most unfortunate.

    “In the interim, the quickest solution to avoid imminent power collapse in the state is to reinforce the already unstable 2×30/40MVA, 132/33KV station with a bigger one to accommodate the additional load as well as the extensions, which are yet to be linked.

    “I am glad the Federal Ministry of Power has decided to upgrade the station to 90/95MVA.”

    Kemenanabo described the allegation as a smear campaign orchestrated by a group of persons against the President.

  • ‘Don’t be friends of oil thieves’

    ‘Don’t be friends of oil thieves’

    The Army has warned its men attached to Sector 1 of the Joint Task Force (JTF), Operation Pulo Shield, against being friends of oil thieves operating in the Niger Delta.

    It said efforts to tackle oil thieves have led to increased production capacity of oil companies.

    The outgoing Commander of the JTF, Maj.-Gen. Bata Debiro, who spoke during a farewell visit to the 4 Brigade of the Nigerian Army yesterday, said President Goodluck Jonathan was worried about the activities of oil thieves.

    Debiro said most of the over 1,500 illegal refineries destroyed last year were located in Bayelsa, Delta and River states.

    He hailed the soldiers for being diligent, but urged them to show compassion, interest and passion towards fighting criminals.

    Said he: “The money from vandals will not take you anywhere. Don’t make friends with pipeline vandals. It is nonsense. Have interest in fighting these oil thieves. The oil is not for them to steal in connivance with foreigners.

    “Your effort has brought peace to the region. We should reduce oil stealing to the minimum if not stop it. Nobody will call you from Abuja to release any oil criminal. Work with the instruction given to you. Nobody will demand bribe from you.”

    Debiro added that the Army would not relent in its effort to tackle oil theft in the Niger Delta.

  • Bayelsa defends proposed Fed  Govt’s power station upgrade

    Bayelsa defends proposed Fed Govt’s power station upgrade

    •Says Jonathan not funding N1.8b phony project

    Bayelsa State government is furious over an allegation that President Goodluck Jonathan wants to divert N1.8 billion under the guise of funding a phony power station project.

    The government dismissed the allegation, describing it as misplaced, mischievous and embarrassing to the sensibilities of the people.

    The Special Adviser to the Bayelsa State Governor on Power, Mr. Olice Kemenanabo and the Commissioner for Energy, Mr. Francis Ikio, spoke to reporters yesterday in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    Kemenanabo admitted that the state was connected to the national grid through a 2X30/40 MVA transmission station at Gbarain in Yenagoa Local Government in 2006.

    But he said “only parts of Yenagoa, Kaiama, Odi, Opokuma, Agudama and Tombia are the communities benefiting from the station.”

    Added he: “This constraint has compelled every other local government, besides Yenagoa and a few communities in Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government, to depend on independently-generated power. Sagbama, Ekeremor, Brass, Southern Ijaw, Nembe and Akassa are unconnected to the national grid.”

    Kemenanabo said the transmission station in Gbarantoru had become unstable because of overload.

    He said the 40 MVA connecting some communities to the national grid was no longer accountable.

    According to him, most of the current was lost as heat, because of the poor state of the distribution system, arising from the rigidity of the network.

    Kemenanabo said it was unfortunate that the state depended on a “forced cooled single transmission station, while other state capitals, including local governments in most areas, had multiple transmission stations.”

    He said the state government sought the intervention of the Federal Government to avert imminent collapse of the only transmission station.

    Kemenanabo said Federal Government intervention would also ensure that the power allocated to the state was evacuated and accounted for.

    Said he: “The current situation is that the only 40 MVA transmission station is inadequate and is under serious stress, arising from overload, even as the supply is limited to the state capital and a few communities.

    “The station is on the brink of collapse and if urgent steps are not taken to upgrade it, there is imminent power outage in the state.

    “Therefore, if the Federal Ministry of Power in their wisdom is proposing the upgrade of the existing station to 90MVA and a newspaper interprets it as Mr. President seeking N1.8 billion to fund ghost projects in his state as published online, then it is most unfortunate.

    “In the interim, the quickest solution to avoid imminent power collapse in the state is to reinforce the already unstable 2×30/40MVA, 132/33KV station with a bigger one to accommodate the additional load as well as the extensions, which are yet to be linked.

    “I am glad the Federal Ministry of Power has granted to upgrade the station to 90/95MVA”.

    Kemenanabo described the allegation as a smear campaign orchestrated by a group of persons against the President.

  • Presidency  wades into  Ugborodo crisis

    Presidency wades into Ugborodo crisis

    •Invites stakeholders to Abuja

    •DMI team storms Warri, quizzes actors

    President Goodluck Jonathan has waded into the crisis in the oil-rich Ugborodo community in Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State.

    The peace effort came against the backdrop of a visit by a team from the Department of Military Intelligence (DMI) to Warri yesterday.

    President Jonathan invited key players in the crisis to Abuja for a meeting aimed at finding a solution to the crisis, which has claimed three lives in the past four days.

    A source close to the main players told The Nation: “The invitation was conveyed by a top aide to President Jonathan on Sunday night.

    “The President directed each side in the conflict over the control of Ugborodo Community Trust Fund to attend the meeting with five delegates.

    “The two factional chairmen – Chief Thomas Ereyitomi and David Tonwe – are expected to attend the meeting, which will take place at 10am tomorrow at the Villa.”

    It was learnt that attendees are expected to be in Abuja today for the meeting.

    The Nation gathered that DMI officials stormed Warri from Lagos yesterday and quizzed some of the key players and stakeholders in the crisis.

    It was learnt that the security operatives would also query top naval officials over their alleged complicity in the conflict.

    A section in the conflict alleged that naval personnel aided their opponents in the Saturday clash.

    A source said a top official at the Forward Operation Base in Escravos was summoned to the DMI over the matter.

    The Navy has denied reports that its personnel were involved in the shooting, during which three locals at Arunto, Ugborodo allegedly died on Saturday.

    An indigene, Mr. Femi Uwawa, accused the Navy of complicity in the death of three persons on Saturday.

    But the Flag Officer Commanding, Central Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy, Rear Admiral Sidi-Ali Hassan Usman, who briefed reporters at the Nigerian Naval Ship (NNS), Warri, yesterday said: “No naval gunboat was involved in any operation, which led to the shootout or the alleged loss of lives, as reported.

    “It is equally important to say that the fracas was between Arotun and Madagho communities. The task force remained neutral in the crisis.”

  • Mu’azu as PENCOM chairman, wrong

    Mu’azu as PENCOM chairman, wrong

    SIR: If the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan is truly committed to fighting corruption which is an endemic disease that has eaten up every facet of Nigerian society, crippled our economy, impoverised our citizens and deprived our nation of sustainable development, then the recent appointment of former Bauchi State governor Ahmed Adamu Mu’azu as chairman of Nigeria Pension Commission (PENCOM) is a most puzzling appointment indeed.

    There is no point going over the antecedents of the former governor of Bauchi State.

    But the truth of the matter is that when Malam Isa Yuguda took over as governor of Bauchi State on May 29, 2007, the new government instituted a Judicial Commission of Inquiry headed by Justice Bitrus Sanga to bring to light what happened under the stewardship of Mu’azu between 1999 to 2007. The commission gave ample opportunity to the former governor as required by law to defend himself and his government but instead opted to go on self exile and remained in Dubai for over three years.

    And what did the commission come up with? The commission found out that the former governor misappropriated the sum of over N20.8 billion within eight years as the chief executive of the state. For this, it indicted and banned the former governor from holding public office for a period of 10 years.

    Now the pertinent question is why President Jonathan would choose to have this individual in his government.

    If I may refresh our collective memory, in Lafia, the Nasarawa State capital at the flag-off of his campaign tour, President Jonathan promised Nigerians that “if elected, his administration will not sweep any crime under carpet no matter how big or small”.

    He said further that “there will be no scared cows”. For a President who made such declaration publicly to have in his team a man accused of defrauding his state shows that he was merely mouthing anti-corruption war just to please gullible Nigerians. It is ridiculous that despite the avalanche of well-placed and notable sons and daughters of Bauchi State, it is Adamu Mu’azu that the President found worthy to head the pension agency. The implication of the appointment of Mu’azu is that the President is saying that the work done by the Judicial commission of inquiry and its pronouncement on the former governor is of no consequence.

     

    •John Akevi

    Bauchi

  • Letter to the President: “Third Term” as the Road to Anarchy

    Letter to the President: “Third Term” as the Road to Anarchy

    Two weeks ago I promised I will reproduce today an open letter I wrote to former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, a little over seven years ago which somewhat predicted the sad and tragic predicament he’s found himself in recently, following his own earthshaking letter to his estranged godson, President Goodluck Jonathan. Hopefully, President Jonathan, his praise mongers and attack dogs – and the rest of us – will learn the lessons of the letter, among which are that we should always at least try to practise what we preach and always remember that in the end what we sow is what we reap. Below is the letter edited for space:

    Dear Mr. President,

    Last week, I reproduced in these columns an open letter I wrote to you 17 years ago on the occasion of the publication of what was your magnum opus titled Constitution for National Integration and Development. In reproducing the letter as a reminder that our past will always catch up with us, if we refuse to learn from it, I said the letter was a prelude to another one I had decided to write to you. This is the letter.

    It will be my second since you returned to power on May 29, 1999, this time as elected president. The first letter was published on these pages on May 11, 2005, nearly a year ago. In that letter, I said that you should learn the lesson that power is ephemeral and you should therefore perish the thought of overstaying your welcome. The letter was titled “The lesson of Power” and it was about “rumours” at that time that you, or at least your henchmen were scheming for a third term, some would say a lifetime agenda. For a long while you yourself artfully dodged questions on the issue, most famously when the visiting President of the World Bank, Mr. Paul Wolfowitz, asked you point-blank whether or not you wanted to extend your tenure.

    Sir, if you were an artful dodger of questions about extending your stay in office, several of your henchmen were categorical in their denials of such a scheme. Notable among these deniers were Deputy Senate President, Alhaji Ibrahim Mantu, your erstwhile political adviser, Professor Jerry Gana, your inter-party affairs adviser, Alhaji Lawal Batagarawa, and Chief Onyeama Ugochukwu, who until recently was executive chairman of the well-endowed Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC.

    Most recently, Professor Julius Ihonvbere, who took over Gana’s job as your political adviser, dismissed all speculations about your third term agenda as political laziness. “They”, he said in an interview in the Sunday Independent of March 19, 2006, “are busy on TV and newspapers spreading stories about third term. That is political laziness”.

    Needless to say, in spite of your artful dodging and in spite of the categorical denials by some of your henchmen, the “rumours” of your third term agenda persisted. The reason, as I said in my first letter to you, was pretty obvious; there was a huge gap between what you and your henchmen said and what you all did.

    Just about two years ago, The Guardian advised you in an editorial that you should make a categorical statement denouncing rumours of your third term agenda. “Here is a case”, it said in its editorial of April 1, 2004, “where silence is not golden.” For whatever reason, you ignored the newspaper’s advice. Which was just as well. Because if you had not, and swore to it on a stack of the Holy Bible, few Nigerians would still have believed you because your denials would have been at great odds with the facts on the ground even then.

    Among those facts was your apparent determination to subvert the internal democracy of your party, the ruling Peoples’ Democratic Party, by recreating it in your own imperial image. There was also your wilful interference in the choice of the leadership of the National Assembly from the word go. Again, there was, of course, your implacable hostility towards your deputy’s well-known wish to succeed you in 2007 and your none-too-subtle denigration of anyone, notably Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Muhammadu Buhari, who showed the slightest interest in your job.

    Sir, your recent hints that only you can save Nigeria from anarchy has an antecedent. Remember you dropped a similar hint in late 2002 at the height of the threats by the House of Representatives, under the leadership of Alhaji Umar Ghali Na’Abba, to impeach you. That hint prompted the Nigerian Tribune to write an editorial titled THE ALARM ON CIVIL WAR in its edition of September 24, 2002. In that editorial it said your alarm, more likely than not, “could very well be the hollow desperate cry to those base sentiments by a man who has leaned too heavily upon his own counselling and understanding in bungling a golden opportunity”.

    Your Excellency, on May 29, 1999, Nigerians gave you a platinum opportunity, if there is such an expression, to write your name in platinum in Nigeria’s history book. I am afraid, sir, you truly bungled and squandered that opportunity and this was essentially because you allowed vengeance – vengeance against all those you believed had wronged you by wanting to hang you for treason – to become the main driving force in formulating your policies and programmes.

    Sir, you betrayed this motive by the fact that you had barely settled down in your seat as president when you set up the Human Rights Violations Investigations Commission (HRVIC), a.k.a. Oputa Panel, initially to look into human rights violations between 1993, the year you were sentenced to the gallows, and May 1999, the year you emerged from death’s shadow to become Nigeria’s second elected president. It was only after the general uproar about the Oputa Panel’s narrow focus that you extended its period of coverage to include your years in office as military leader.

    Compare your haste, sir, to the well-measured steps South Africa’s Nelson Mandela, took to set up his own Truth and Reconciliation Commission. As you know very well Mandela had more cause to seek vengeance than yourself. After all, he spent 27 years in prison compared to your own five. And the prison conditions there were probably more appalling than ours, given the racist nature of the regime that locked him up.

    At the time the Oputa Panel started sitting late 2001, you may have read a letter written to you by Malam Abubakar Gimba, author and one-time President of the Association of Nigerian Authors. The letter was published in the Daily Trust of August 27, 2001. It is one of the most inspiring pieces of literature I have read in a long time and I wish I had space to reproduce it for you.

    Sir, if you read that letter at all, it is obvious that you did not heed its wise counsel. In that letter, Gimba quoted profusely from the Holy Bible to try and persuade you, as a self-proclaimed born-again Christian, to learn to forgive any past wrongs done to you and focus on reconciliation. “The Holy Bible,” Gimba said among other things, “fully endorses reconciliation when it says (Corinthians 5:19) ‘that God (the Most High) was in Christ (may Allah’s peace be on him) reconciling the world to Himself, not imputing their trespasses to them and has committed to us the word reconciliation’ “ (emphasis, author’s). Gimba said only the tonic of forgiveness will bring about the needed reconciliation in the land and only you could start the process by injecting the antidote.

    He concluded his letter by quoting, again from the Holy Bible, the parable of the rejected cornerstone. You were, he said, destined by God to lead our national reconciliation. “Think about it,” he said. “In particular (think about) Psalm 118:22 ‘The stone which the builders rejected has become the chief cornerstone’.

    “Your Excellency, Mr. President” Gimba finally said, “you were once rejected. Then the Lord restored you to His Grace. Now you are our chief cornerstone. You must do the Lord’s will.”

    Sir, instead of doing the Lord’s will, you chose to do your own will. You chose to avenge those you believed had wronged you either directly, by sending you to the gallows, or indirectly by not raising a finger to protest your ill-treatment. This vengefulness has been apparent from, among other things, the way you have formulated your annual budgets since 1999 and even more so from the highly selective manner you have implemented those budgets to reward groups and sections of the country in your good books and punish those you dislike.

    The vengefulness is also obvious from the way you have tried to divide and rule Nigerians by a most cynical manipulation of ethnicity and religion, mainly through thinly disguised sponsorships of sectional and sectarian associations, even as you yourself condemned such associations as reactionary and divisive.

    Sir, your vengefulness coupled with your apparent belief that you alone know best what is good for Nigeria is what has led the country into its current serious political crisis, a crisis that may lead to anarchy and even into a civil war if we are not careful. Already, there are ominous dark clouds hanging over the country, dark clouds created by your administration’s use of the security forces to harass and intimidate opposition elements pursuing their legitimate rights of free speech, free association and lawful assembly.

    These harassments and intimidation are camouflaged as the need to maintain law and order. The hypocrisy of it all, however, is laid bare by the fact that last week as your administration was prosecuting some members of the Atiku Vanguard for forming, managing and supporting what it called an illegal organisation working for the Vice-President, you yourself were busy setting up the Obasanjo Solidarity Forum.

    Sir, the only way to avoid the manifest danger facing the country is for you to sincerely and unequivocally denounce your third term agenda. Most Nigerian’s would probably not believe you even if you do but you can still convince them if your own actions and those of your henchmen begin to speak louder than your words.

    You know, or at least should know, very well that many of those now telling you that you are indispensable – the Colonel Ahmadu Alis with their crude and silly metarphours about not changing clothes when they are not dirty, the Navy Captain Olabode Georges of this world with their equally crude and silly metarphours of not changing pilots when the aircraft is yet to reach cruising level – all these characters said the same thing to leaders like military president General Ibrahim Babangida, and to your tormentor, General Sani Abacha. You can bet your last kobo they will say the same thing to whoever succeeds you.

    They say the time to quit is when the ovation is loudest. Regardless of what your courtiers tell you, right now probably more Nigerians are jeering your administration than cheering it. The fact is that in spite of your brave attempts at political and economic reforms there is more insecurity, sorrow and misery in the land than when you first returned. Your administration may peddle statistics of your achievements, but in the end it is the human effect that matters.

    The fact is that in spite of your brave effort, you have woefully failed to stop, much less reverse, the rot in our infrastructure like electricity, refineries, higher education and health. One area you seem to have achieved something was telecommunication, with the establishment of mobile phones. Even here the achievement is marred by the inefficiency of the system and its outrageous cost to the consumer, not to mention the terrible and scandalous mess which Pentascope made of Nitel, the nation’s fixed line carrier.

    In the light of all these signal failures it is tempting for you to want to extend your tenure. Sir, you must resist that temptation with every ounce of your strength. Mr. President, Sir, no one, and absolutely no one, is indispensable to his country or cause. As you know very well, the graveyard is full with bodies of many who thought or believed they were indispensable. You owe yourself and Nigeria not to be counted among those who suffered such grand delusions about themselves. If you persist you will only be leading Nigeria down the road to anarchy. At the end of it all, you would then have gone down in Nigeria’s history as its arch-villain instead of one of its heroes.

    May God Almighty give you the strength to avoid such a tragic end to a once glorious career.