Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • National Dialogue: ‘Jonathan’s delegates must not have voting powers’

    National Dialogue: ‘Jonathan’s delegates must not have voting powers’

    ACTIVISTS, politicians and other Nigerians have expressed shock at reports that Senator Femi Okorounmu-led conference committee would want President Goodluck Jonathan to nominate 120 members of the proposed National Dialogue.

    They ask the President to reject the recommendation, otherwise an impression will be created that government is bent on influencing the proposed dialogue negatively.

    Olawale Okuniyi of Project Nigeria, told The Nation that having such a large number of government delegates in the proposed National Dialogue is unacceptable.

    The PRONACO chieftain said: “The right thing is that the original federating elements in the entity called Nigeria should nominate or elect the delegates, not the government in power.

    “Even if government must nominate delegates, it should not exceed about three percent and such delegates must not have voting rights, they should, at best, operate just in advisory capacity, while the delegates representing the original federating entities should constitute the real delegates with voting powers. That is our position.”

    On whether he would support the idea of using the current geo- political zones as the basis of nomination of delegates for the conference, Okuniyi said the idea may be alright “since the geo- political zones are essentially made up of the original federating entities, “but in so doing, we must be careful to ensure fair representation and not just to lump up the geo- political zones, since there are some elements of marginalisation within the zones.”

    Chief Maxi Okwu, a presidential candidate in the last presidential election, said that the idea of government delegations in national conferences in Nigeria is not new.

    According to him, the reason governments in Nigeria insist on nominating delegates “is the need to protect some selfish interests. But there should not be any special interest. There is the need for all interests to collapse into general national interest. So, I do not subscribe to the idea of government planting delegates that will try to thwart the people’s interest. I think it is a minus. We have already established acceptable interests that should be protected. They include the interests of the federating units, professionals, including trade unions, etc.”

    Asked the criterion he would prefer to be used in nominating delegates, Okwu said, “I go for zones. I used to go for ethnic nationalities, but I am now convinced that the zones will provide a fair basis of representation.”

    Also responding, Dr. Maxwell Odosu, a political scientist in Lagos, said: “it seems too early to pick up quarrels over alleged number of delegates the government of President Goodluck Jonathan would nominate. This is not the first time in Nigeria a president would be nominating delegates for a national conference.

    “I think we should be concerned more about the quality of the men and women he should nominate. We should also worry about the issues to be discussed and the way the conference would be conducted,” he said.

    Over the years, the number of government delegates in national conferences and their roles have remained a contentious issue.

    The debate was also intense during the General Ibrahim Babangida’s Constituent Assembly of 1988 and the General Sani Abacha’s Constitutional Conference of 1994/95. At both conferences, chaired by Justice Anthony Aniagolu and Justice Adolphus Karibi-Whyte respectively, government was accused of manipulating the process.

    The Babangida conference had 113 Federal Military Government nominees in an assembly of 563 members, representing about 20.07 percent.

    Of the 380 members of the 1994/95 Constitutional Conference of the late Abacha, he nominated 94 members or about 24.74 percent of the entire conference.

    During the 2005/2006 National Political Reform Conference, (NPRC), organised by former President Olusegun Obasanjo, and chaired by Justice Niki Tobi, Obasanjo nominated 50 out of about 400 members.

    Nigerians have continued to frown at such large number of government delegations, describing it as desperate attempts by power hungry leaders to thwart the wishes of the people. Okwu, Okuniyi and other respondents called on Jonathan to make a difference this time around.

  • Sack Oduah, Allison-Madueke now, lawmaker tells Jonathan

    Sack Oduah, Allison-Madueke now, lawmaker tells Jonathan

    CHAIRMAN, Committee on Information, Strategy, Security and Publicity of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Segun Olulade, has called on President Goodluck Jonathan to relieve the Minister for Petroleum Resources, Dieziani Allison-Madueke and her Ministry of Aviation counterpart, Ms. Stella Oduah, of their duties without further delay.

    The lawmaker was reacting to the letter written by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor to the president in which he alleged that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has failed to remit $49.8billion crude oil proceeds to the Federation Account.

    Olulade described as “stinking” the retaining of both ministers in the federal executive council in spite of allegations of gross inefficiency and corruption levelled against them since the inception of this administration.

    While expressing worry that the president has not done enough to tackle the issue of corruption in the country, Olulade noted, “This is the first time in the history of Nigeria that we are seeing reckless female ministers in government. If Mr. President fails to do the needful, the National Assembly should bring the erring ministers to book.”On the recent letter written by former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo to President Jonathan, Olulade advised Jonathan to take the matter in good faith by addressing critical issues of national importance raised in it.

  • Grateful father :Alampasu has turned  me to a celebrity

    Grateful father :Alampasu has turned me to a celebrity

    Tomi Alampasu, father of the Nigeria’s Under-17 World Cup hero, Dele, revealed how his son stopped him from riding commercial motorbike (Okada) since he has become a celebrity. He spoke to Taiwo Abiodun

    TOMI Alampasu, father of Golden Gloves winner, Dele, is revelling in the joy of his new-found status as a celebrity on the strength of his son sterling performance at the recently concluded 2013 FIFA Under-17 World Cup in the UAE.

    The modest home of the Alampasus in Itoki in Ifo Local Government Area of Ogun State has turned into a Mecca of some sorts since Dele rose against all odds to help the Golden Eaglets win a record fourth World Cup title in November.

    “I thank God that Dele has brought so much honour to our family and I have become a celebrity,” the fairly old man said. “Before now, people hardly noticed or greeted me, but since my son’s performance with the Under-17 team, I have become popular and people now greet me with honour and respect.”

    To say that he is a proud father is an understatement. According to him, it is like a dream seeing his son shake hands with the high and mighty in the society. “I was excited when I saw my son shake hands with President Goodluck Jonathan the other day. Who I am I to meet these people? What qualification do I have? Me, an ordinary person? But I thank God my son has made it, and I am very proud of him.

    “I only saw past Nigerian Heads of State from a far distance. I saw General Obasanjo face-to-face after he left government and I equally saw General Muhammad Buhari (Retd) in the stadium when he came to campaign, but after that I did not see any other heads of state except on television,” he said.

    When our correspondent visited the Alamapasus, it was obvious that their home needs an urgent renovation and the old man said he was hopeful that the success of his ward would eventually translate to something meaningful in earnest. According to the old man, he hopes to complete his house which is still under construction even as he narrated his son’s obscurity-to-stardom stuff.

    He said: “I feel happy that it has turned out well for my son as I could remember when our parents used to fight and discourage us that we should not play football when we were young; saying we were idling away our precious time .

    “I did the same thing when my son started and I used to quarrel with him but God has His own purpose for him and the family. My son is a great boy, from childhood he used to go out playing football and would not come home early from school and always in dirty clothes while I used to quarrel with him and spank him, believing he was doing a wrong thing.

    “When he could not cope any longer, he came home one day to inform me that he was no longer interested in going to school but insisted that he wanted to learn a trade and become an artisan and he chose welding. Which I totally agreed with and I gave him my blessing, and said with all pleasure that I was in support of the trade, not knowing that he had another thing in mind – he had deceived me!”

    He continued: “For days, I was not seeing him at his working place where he was serving as an apprentice. At a point, I wanted to arrest his boss, whose shop is close to my house where he was learning the trade, when I did not see him; we searched for him for a very long time. Thank God that I saw him at last, but when I saw him he was in a football boots and I had to plead with him to come back home, but he ran away from home for years.

    “But my people used to see him in football kits either while he was on his way for training or was going somewhere to lay his head. Then I was moulding bricks to eke out a living, in addition to my using my motorcycle for commercial purposes. When nothing was forthcoming I started on full time riding a commercial motorcycle, okada, to make money.

    “It was after a long time that he eventually got in touch with me when he wanted to sign some document for visa. He didn’t spend up to two weeks before he went to Abuja from where he called me and said he had been invited to Abuja. I advised him to be of a good behaviour. But I must confess to you that I did not regret his running away to play football because it has eventually bore good results!

    “He has senior brothers but his name has overshadowed the rest of them all. He’s my fifth child but his name has now overshadowed others and everybody now call me Baba Dele!

    “He couldn’t have been where he is today if he had not done what he did, though I was not happy then. I bought about three clothes for him before he ran away and recently I threw them away for they did not size him again. But one thing I noticed in him is that despite his hustling he had never stolen a pin from anywhere and I did not hear any bad news about him.”

    Dele may have taken after his father in many respects following his father’s declaration that he was in love with the beautiful game of football in his younger days.

    “I didn’t joke with football and acting (theatre) when I was young,” he revealed. “All the scars on my body were as a result of the football.

    “Our environment was rough then and there was no exposure as such. When I left secondary school, I joined the military, but I later ran away the third month because I could not cope. I thank God, I really thank God that, through Dele, things are going to be better.

    “Before, I used to go to functions to watch when I had money but when I had no money I couldn’t go out because I had to use my meagre resources for the children. When I saw my son sitting with big people I was elated. When I watched the President of FIFA giving my son an award, I was happy.

    “The children we have today want freedom, they should be allowed to be playing their ball, if it is theatre or acting they should be left alone, we should give them the freedom. The lesson I learnt here is that we should leave these children alone to do what interests them most,” he said, even as he looked for a better life.

    “Some said I was once a butcher at Idi-Iroko, yet I don’t know how to cut meat into pieces,” he said in his jocular manner.

    “Some said I was a carpenter; in fact, many have said so many things about me but the fact is that I was using motorbike (okada) for commercial purposes. Hardship made me to join the league of okada riders, one can’t say he is happy riding an okada; it is borne out of frustration. There is no money in it except one is fortunate to meet a philanthropist who can afford to give you money. Okada money is peanuts, your clothes would turn brown. What is in okada? It is a wahala(difficult) job!

    “The very day my son was decorated by the president, that was when I stopped riding okada and my son came to warn me that anytime he sees me riding okada he would not be happy with me.

    “He said: ‘daddy, you know I am a champion now, if I am told that you are still riding okada I will be annoyed. I should not see you riding okada again’, and I don’t pray anything should push me to doing that kind of job again.

    “Before I became popular I was the only one living here; nobody even recognised me. But now the way I am being greeted has changed. Those who were not greeting me before are now greeting me and those who were not my friends before have become my friends.

    “I thank God I did not have a useless boy, he was born in 1996. Hs name is Runkonayon Dele Alampasu, we are from the Egun tribe from Badagry,” said the friendly old man, who intoned that Dele has truly lived up to the meaning of his surname Alampasu, which in their dialect means a warrior that cannot be confronted of defeated!”

  • Jonathan, Obasanjo meet in Kenya

    Despite the war of words between President Goodluck Jonathan and former President Olusegun Obasanjo, they were among the dignitaries that attended the 50th Independence Anniversary celebration of Kenya in Nairobi on Thursday.

    While Obasanjo had written a letter with grave allegations against Jonathan, the latter had dismissed the letter as self-serving and highly-provocative.

    But prior to the commencement of ceremony at the Safaricom Stadium in Kasarani, Nairobi, Kenya, Obasanjo paid a surprise visit to Jonathan.

    He visited Jonathan at the Intercontinental Hotel, Nairobi where they had a private breakfast together.

    At the venue of the event, Obasanjo, who sat quietly, was making calls on his mobile telephone at interval throughout the event.

    Speaking at the event, Jonathan called on all Kenyans to unite together.

    He said that there was no alternative to unity if Kenyans must move their nation forward.

    The destiny of Kenya, he said, lies with its people and as such the people must strive hard to take their country to a greater height.

    Expressing happiness that Rhaila Odinga was present at the event and working with President Uhuru Kenyatta, he said: “Nobody can love you more than Kenyans, so you all have to jointly develop your country. All Kenyans should come together to form an inclusive society.

    “Africa since 2007, many African countries like Kenya have been celebrating 50 years of independence and freedom, our founding fathers talked of political freedom to be followed by economic freedom.”

    “The present generation of African leaders must work hard on science and technology as well as industrialisation, so that there could be economic development and freedom.” He said.

  • CBN: we’ve varsities’ N200b cash

    CBN: we’ve varsities’ N200b cash

    •ASUU’s strike illegitimate, says Presidency

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has written to the Accountant-General of the Federation, confirming the execution of the N200 billion in the Revitalisation of Universities Infrastructure Account.

    The confirmation was conveyed through a memo to the Accountant General, dated December 10.

    A copy of the memo, signed by CBN’s Deputy Governor (Operations), Tunde Lemo, was circulated by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe yesterday.

    Lemo’s memo said: “I write to confirm the execution of the following mandates by the Central Bank of Nigeria for funding of the above mentioned accounts.

    “I wish to further confirm that the available balance in the aforementioned account is N200, 000, 000, 000 (Two Hundred Billion Naira only).”

    Okupe, who addressed reporters yesterday, said with the execution of the mandates, the strike has lost its legitimacy.

    The spokesman maintained that President Goodluck Jonathan is fully committed to the implementation of the agreements reached with ASUU leadership.

    He added that a Needs Assessment Implementation Committee, which has ASUU representatives on board, would be inaugurated today to fast track the utilisation of the released funds and tackle infrastructural deficiency in the university system.

    The President’s aide said: “Government has received a number of representations from eminent Nigerians and stakeholders on the need to temper justice with mercy regarding the ultimatum issued to the striking lecturers.

    “Government appreciates the fact that some universities have either resumed academic activities or announced resumption dates in line with the directives earlier issued by the Committee of Pro Chancellors.

    “Now that evidence has been provided as to the availability of N200 billion for immediate disbursement to universities, we expect that ASUU will call off this strike so that normalcy will fully return to our campuses.

    “Government does not intend to victimise anyone who participates in a legitimate strike action.”

    Okupe assured ASUU on its three other demands, saying the government has no reason to reject the conditions.

  • Union goes spiritual

    Union goes spiritual

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yesterday declared a three-day fasting and prayer to seek divine intervention in its protracted dispute with the Federal Government.

    The decision was taken at the union’s congress held at the Faculty of Arts, University of Ibadan.

    The congress, which was presided over by the Chairman, Dr Olusegun Ajiboye, stressed the need for God to visit the Federal Government to do the needful and document the resolutions of the meeting with the President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The congress listed three prayer points- the need for God to touch the heart of the Federal Government to be committed towards funding public education and develop the nation; that God should protect ASUU leadership as they travel and for the purpose of the strike to be actualised.

    Ajiboye said the union do not need newspaper confirmation from the President that N200billion had been deposited with the Central Bank of Nigeria.

    He said it was impossible for anybody who has not opened an account with a bank to request a balance.

    Ajiboye accused the Federal Government of keeping the students at home.

    The Chairman hinted that the union has the machinery to suspend the strike within 24 hours once the grey areas in the resolutions have been sorted out.

    He said: “Our position is that it will be foolish to return to classes without anything to show for five months of strike. Why is the Federal Government afraid of documenting the resolutions it reached with the union. We are still expecting the response from the President.”

  • Mandela:  Jonathan’s shocking prognosis

    Mandela: Jonathan’s shocking prognosis

    Nothing reveals the essential President Goodluck Jonathan as when he extemporises. The speeches may turn out not to be inspiring or even informative, nor sometimes offer his audience any philosophical guide or lessons. However, they always reveal his mind, which is often inscrutably disengaged; his ideas, if they can be so described; his scope, using the most conservative measurements; and his limitations and worldview. Last Sunday, at the Aso Villa Chapel, Dr Jonathan once again gave the country stellar performance from his rich repository of innocent, youthful outbursts. The occasion was hardly appropriate, seeing that it was a memorial service in honour of Nelson Mandela, but his conclusion was unmistakeable, even as it was highly controversial and deeply wounding. The speech was largely extempore, but it came from jottings. Had it been a prepared speech, it would probably have been weeded of its many blatant flaws, baits and unreflective provocations.

    His simple thesis was that given the nature of Nigerian politicians, a nature he gratuitously bestowed upon other African leaders somewhere along his speech, Nigeria could never produce someone as great as Mandela. It is not clear why he thought and spoke so negatively, and especially on that sombre occasion when it was more useful to draw upon the nuanced lessons of Mr Mandela’s life and to gently prod his wary audience into emulating the life of the departed icon. The relief, however, though this is not an excuse, must be that at least it was not a prepared speech that benefited from the introspection and research expected of the leader of 170 million people.

    It was clear that the Jonathan speech reflected something much more insidious than the topic of Mandela’s example which it pretended to address. Dr Jonathan’s Aso Villa speech betrayed the anger and frustrations he has endured in the past few years. Indeed, there are few occasions since he assumed the presidency when he has not ventilated his bitter reservations about his critics, most of whom he believes are unfair and wicked. Not too long ago, he even concluded that he was probably the most vilified president in the whole world. That of course was an exaggeration, but this has not deterred him from responding furiously to every criticism with characteristic lack of presidential dignity.

    Nothing will mollify the rage and disgust Dr Jonathan feels for his critics. And though he cleverly used pronouns such as ‘we’ and ‘us’ as the subject of his discourse, it is clear he did not and could not have meant himself. He was referring strictly to others – his enemies, opponents and critics. If proof is required, all you need do is read his speech closely, and you will discover that he referred to himself only in those places where he talked of leaders who were criticised in the early years of their reign, but canonised as their reforms began to yield fruits. Dr Jonathan’s literary sleight must, therefore, be de-emphasised in order to have a proper understanding of the bitterness that caused his speech to misfire badly last Sunday.

    During the memorial service in honour of Mr Mandela, the president established the foundation for his drastic conclusion in the following words: “In fact, if you listen to those of us who are politicians, from all political parties, the way we talk; some of us speak as if Nigeria is their personal bedrooms that they have control over. Read the papers, listen to the radio and television and the social media and see how politicians talk; we intimidate, we threaten, show force in our communication. This definitely is not the virtue of great men. They are certainly the vices of tiny men.” Apart from the brutal inappropriateness of that kind of talk at a memorial service, the president seems undisguisedly and a little shamelessly flustered. He is bothered that his critics are relentless and aggressive. His was, therefore, a plaintive, hopeless cry for relief.

    Yet, his arguments showed more pointedly that the label he sought to slam on his traducers in fact depicts his style and that of his aides such as the effusive Doyin Okupe, the cynical and hyperbolic Ahmed Gulak who thinks the ruling party owned Nigerians, and the scaremongering Nyesom Wike who personifies the immoderation that assails presidential corridors. Much more than any of his critics, Dr Jonathan has spoken with much thunder and meanness like someone who sees Nigeria as his bedroom, and has trampled on the freedoms and liberties of his countrymen with such ferocity that few would dispute a description of him as a monarch.

    Finally, to cap a bad speech, the president then deadpans: “Sometimes when I listen to politicians, the ones older than me, my contemporaries and some even the younger ones, I come to the painful conclusion that it would be probably easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a politician to be truly great.” It is hard to explain his pains. Clearly, the president does not have an understanding of what great leadership is all about, whether as it relates to its metaphysical properties, or the discipline, sacrifices, charisma, intuition, and the often unfathomable intellect that constitute its rubric. Unable to understand these properties, Dr Jonathan simply chose the wrong moment and wrong place to trivialise the topic and to make sweeping and pejorative judgement about his country’s fallibilities.

    Even discounting the many howlers in his speech, such as when he used ‘pressurised’ for pressured, and his appalling misunderstanding and misconception of China’s developmental trajectory, the speech was still a very bad attempt at justifying his cynicism of fellow politicians and pessimism of Nigeria’s self-belief. All his Sunday speech showed was not why Nigeria could not produce its own Mandela, but how unable he is in adequately grasping the concept of leadership. The closest he came to understanding the idea was when he spoke glowingly about Mr Mandela’s fine attributes, the icon’s great skill in uniting peoples, forgiven his enemies and exhibiting humility. He then added the contradistinctive observation of bad leaders who sought vengeance and practised repression. It was almost as if the president forgot what he has been doing in Rivers State.

    If Nigeria has not produced its own Mandelas, it is not because Dr Jonathan’s critics and fellow politicians talk as if Nigeria is their bedroom, an obvious barb directed at the top politicians of the All Progressives Congress (APC), but because only South Africa could have produced a Mandela, just as only the US could have produced a Lincoln, China a Mao Zedong, Soviet Union its Lenin and Stalin, etc. If Nigeria has a surfeit of what Dr Jonathan describes with cruel mockery as ‘tiny men’ it is because he himself, not to talk of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and others before him, had failed to seize the moment. And they failed to seize the moment because they lacked the philosophical depth to judge the moment. It is noteworthy that by his analysis Dr Jonathan writes himself off. No one will dispute his self-reproof. But Dr Jonathan’s pessimism must not fool us into thinking Nigeria does not have the objective conditions for producing great leaders.

    Great leaders can be produced in Nigeria, and will be produced when the contradictions and circumstances are ripe. Imagine, for instance, if the departing military rulers had not foisted the misfit Chief Obasanjo on Nigeria in 1999, and if he in turn had not foisted the lethargic Umaru Yar’Adua on the country in 2007? It is indeed a deep and disturbing irony that Chief Obasanjo missed the self-reproof in his televised tribute to Mr Mandela, whom he praised for turning down his (Obasanjo’s) suggestion to go for a second term, an indication both of the nobility and self-abnegation of Mr Mandela and the ignobility and self-aggrandisement of Chief Obasanjo.

    By all means let Dr Jonathan continue to give us his extemporaneous speeches, perhaps armed only with highlights of his discourse. For then, in spite of his often disapproving style and content, it would open a window into his ingenuous mind, assuring us that a few more years of Dr Jonathan would be both a costly misadventure for the country and a destiny deferred or altogether destroyed.

  • APC to Jonathan: don’t spend nation’s resources on PDP states

    APC to Jonathan: don’t spend nation’s resources on PDP states

    The All Progressive Congress (APC) yesterday sent a warning message to President Goodluck Jonathan. He shouldn’t spend the nation’s resources on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-controlled states.

    Besides, the party reconciled its members from Adamawa State, according to its Interim National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande who spoke to reporters in Abuja after the peace meeting.

    Akande said: “The reconciliatory talk is not for Adamawa State alone. We are doing reconciliatory talks for all the states of the party, where the PDP governors joined APC so that the new people coming to APC will be receptive to the members of our party. And that is exactly what we are doing with Adamawa State this afternoon. There was no query, no crisis, we just want them to know their roles and how to receive them.”

    Akande said the APC has no cause to lose its sleep over the governors’ talks with anybody, stressing that Sokoto State Governor Aliyu Wamakko put it to Mr. president that he was at the Villa to notify him (Jonathan) of his defection to APC.

    “You need to know the calibre of governors that have joined the APC. It is a pain in the neck for the PDP but it is a pleasure for the APC.”

    Former Presidential candidate Nuhu Ribadu said the case of Adamawa was not different from other states.

    The former EFCC boss urged political observers to appreciate that heavyweight politicians are joining the party and that the tendency of having some teething difficulties to tackle in order to have a strong foundation does not mean insurmountable problem.

    Ribadu said: “In Adamawa, we are working hard under the leadership of the APC to have a better understanding, to try to take off the little challenges. And the meeting of today is in furtherance of that. And we thank God that were came out big in the understanding that indeed the future is big, new and fresh and it can accommodate all of us.”

    The party also vowed to pursue the court action against the federal government on the adoption of a budget benchmark which the APC described as illegal.

    On the pandemonium over the 2014 budget benchmark, Ribadu said to the APC, as an opposition party, any issue of benchmark is unconstitutional and illegal.

    Ribadu said as a party that has a strategic interest and a stake in the affairs of the country, “we are saying the way the federal government is pursuing it is not just illegal but very unfair.”

    Akande said: “Benchmark should never be discussed. It should never be enacted into any law. It should never be part of the budget. Benchmark is unconstitutional. The constitution says that all funds coming in should be paid into the common pool and should be shared according to the laid down regulations. So to bring benchmark is to promote corruption.”

    On corruption, Ribadu gave the President a wake up call, advising him to heed the advice of House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal.

    The speaker on Monday chided the President for waging a weak war against corruption.

    Ribadu said :”My own and what I will want to add is to talk to President Jonathan directly and say please listen: when people talk, especially serious people, people, who are in strategic positions in our country, when the tell you something, take it and improve yourself.

    “The message of the speaker to Mr. President is wake up, what you have been doing is not going well especially with the fight against corruption. And all that he (speaker) said are nothing new.

    “They are all what we as Nigerians are aware of and we see it and we live with it daily. I want to appeal to the President that as our leader, the President of 160 million Nigerians, Nigerians are telling him the reality and the truth, especially when it comes to the fight against corruption, let him listen to Tambuwal.

    “What he said is the truth. What he said is what Nigerians believe. What he said is the fundamental thing that today all of us are worried and concerned. It is a matter of telling you so that you correct yourself.”

    Reacting to plans by the Federal Government to disburse $32billion to 16 PDP governors, Akande said: “If they illegally manipulate the national treasury; it is easy for the federal government to spend its money the way it wants, but it will be illegal for them, it will be unconstitutional for them to take the money from the national purse.

    “There is the national purse and there is the federal government’s purse. If they take the money from the federal government’s purse we won’t bother; they can do that. But if they take the money from the common purse, there will be trouble.”

  • Okonjo-Iweala, two others sued over ‘forced’ retirement

    Okonjo-Iweala, two others sued over ‘forced’ retirement

    The Minister of Finance and the Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has been sued with two others for alleged unlawful termination of the employment of a civil servant who allegedly published a story about the minister.

    The applicant, Yushau Shuaibu, until his compulsory retirement on June 26, was the Chief Information Officer (SGL 14) at the Federal Ministry of Information.

    In the suit filed before the National Industrial Court, Abuja, the applicant faulted the process leading to his forced retirement.

    Sued with the minister are: the Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) and the Federal Ministry of Information.

    The plaintiff, in a statement of claim, said he was called sometime in April by the minister, demanding apologies and a retraction over one of his writings published by Premium Times, titled: Still on Okonjo-Iweala over Controversial Appointments. Shuaibu said he would rely on same at the trial of the case.

    The plaintiff said he refused to apologise to the minister because he had written similar articles on President Goodluck Jonathan and other past leaders when they were in government, especially President Olusegun Obasanjo, Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Nasir El-rufai, Femi Fani-Kayode, among others.

    Shuaibu averred that many rejoinders and commentaries were published in reaction to the write-up concerning the minister.

    According to him, he had even written articles praising the minister on the same issues.

    The plaintiff argued that despite not contravening any known law of the civil service, Okonjo-Iweala allegedly influenced his forceful retirement.

    Shuaibu is praying the court to, among others, grant an order directing the FCSC to reinstate him to the civil service and his post as the Chief Information Officer in his former ministry without any loss on seniority, salaries, position and other emoluments.

    He is also praying for an order directing the FCSC and the Ministry of Information to compute and pay him all his salaries, allowances and other emoluments due to him from July 2013 up to the date of judgment, including interest at the prevailing commercial banks’ rates on the sum arrived at.

    The plaintiff is also other reliefs.

     

     

     

    wseeking:

    *A declaration that the Public Service Rules (2008 edition) is applicable for the purposes of determining the employment of the Claimant and other matters relating to his employment in the Civil Service of the Federation.

    * A declaration that the letter of the 1st Defendant dated the 26th day of June 2013 with Reference No FC/6138/S.1/ 69/220 received by the Claimant on the 4th of October 2013 which purports to retire the claimant, a statutory employee, from the Civil Service of the Federation from the 26th of June 2013 has no force of law and is therefore illegal, unconstitutional, null and void and of no effect whatsoever being in flagrant violation of Rules 030302, 030303, 030304, 030305, 030306 and 030601 of the Public Service Rules (2008 Edition).

    *A declaration that the decision of the 1st Defendant to retire the Claimant at its meeting held on the 26th of June 2013 with effect from the same date without conducting any investigation, without giving the claimant an opportunity to defend himself and without complying with the conditions precedent for retirement is contrary to Section 36 of the Constitution, Article 7 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act, cap A9, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 and the Public Service Rules 030305 and 030601 (2008 Edition) and is therefore illegal, unlawful, unconstitutional, null and void and of no effect whatsoever.

    * A declaration that the Iwuala unduly instigated the 1st Defendant to unlawfully retire the Claimant in violation of his freedom of expression guaranteed by the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, cap A9, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004

  • The Mandela oxymoron

    The Mandela oxymoron

    Writing about Nelson Mandela in the heat of this moment is like praying to God: there is a million and one thing unsaid yet everything has been said. It is infinitude – that state of endless magnitude; a greatness that is of infinite nature. Everything about Mandela is a story, an anecdote or a positive lesson that humanity must do well to learn. Hardball was thus stuck finding a fresh entrée in the Mandela repertoire. What more is there to be said? Everything has been said yet so much remained unsaid about this unusual bird flying out of Africa.

    As I pounded my gray matter an old adage came to me. The living in mourning the dead, mourns but his self. And yet another saying that your very life is your funeral; that is the way you live your life is a foretaste of the kind of funeral you will ‘enjoy’. Put more plainly, in living you are drawing up your burial progamme. As the world stand as one eulogising Mandela in cities and towns, churches and mosques it is not the fact of his death that stirs the human community but his life.

    Dear reader, you must have noticed the oxymoronic tendencies of this piece, the emerging contradictory words and phrases so far deployed. For instance, “your life is your funeral” and “the living mourns but his self.” But the Mandela oxymoron is of deeper import. How about black Africa, the dungeon of the modern world; a world of strive, poverty, hunger and ugliness sprouting an exquisitely beautiful flower named Mandela? And as we say in Africa, “the greenest sukuma wiki grows in the rubbishest dump” (Kenyan) and “from the blackest pot comes the whitest pap” (Nigerian/Yoruba).

    And as we relish our repertoire of Mandela-inspired oxymoron, how about the seeming endless streaming of eulogies by leaders from across the world, especially African leaders? Let us take just three here and see if could detect any hint oxymoronic contradictions in them. Robert Mugabe, the 89-year- old President of Zimbabwe is a contemporary of Mandela’s. While Mandela did one term as president of South Africa and turned down another term of five years when he was 76, Mugabe is on his seventh term as president and he does not seem ready to go yet. In his tribute, he described Mandela as the great African icon of liberation… a humble and compassionate leader. Say, when Mugabe transits someday, would the world hail him as a great African leader, humble and compassionate even though he stayed on the throne for almost eternity?

    Here in Nigeria, former President Olusegun Obasanjo narrated how he had asked Mandela why he would not do a second term and how the great man had retorted: How many 80-year-olds do you see still ruling a country? This was shortly before Obasanjo returned to office as president. But what did Obasanjo do after serving for two terms of eight years? He was desperate to go for a third term having forgotten Mandela’s homily so soon. He corrupted the system in his bid to suborn the constitution and he set the polity almost on a spin. Though Obasanjo cumulatively ruled Nigeria for 13 years did he win the hearts of his people? Did he achieve world acclaim? How does he compare to Mandela who did just five years?

    Lastly, we take President Goodluck Jonathan’s epic tribute to Mandela in which he said “Nigeria politicians were tiny men” compared to Mandela. Let us hear Jonathan: “Read newspapers, listen to radio and television or go to the social media and see how politicians talk. Some of us even think we are gods. We intimidate, we threaten, we show hate in our communication. These are definitely not the virtues of great men. They are shockingly the vices of tiny men.” Leaders like Jonathan (according to him,) cannot be great like Mandela because they are “tiny men.” This must be our classic, screaming Mandelan oxymoron.