Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • Africa to get peace-keeping stand-by force

    Africa to get peace-keeping stand-by force

    An Africa Stand-By Force to deal with crises on the continent is on its way following the nod given the proposal yesterday by the two-day Paris summit on peace and security in Africa.

    President Goodluck Jonathan hailed the project as a welcome development.

    He said at the end of the summit that Nigeria remains committed to global peace keeping and the formation of the specialised force to take control of security challenges in Africa.

    The outfit is expected to be in place not later than 2015 to enable the continent take charge of its own security.

    President Jonathan said: “We totally support it because we also believe that by having a robust stand-by force, it is much better than the ad-hoc contributions by nations.

    “They can mobilise very quickly whenever we have challenges and there is the need to deploy them.

    “So, we support it and we thank the president and people of France for supporting Africa in this regard.”

    The president said that a stand by force dedicated to conflicts resolution will assist the continent in nipping any crisis in the bud before escalation.

    “When you have this stand-by force, they now have an operational order covering the whole of Africa. Anywhere there is conflict, it will not require UN resolution, but a host country’s invitation and an endorsement by the AU,” he added

    The Stand-by Force, he said, should be elastic in its composition and contribution by member states of the African Union.

    Pointing out that Africa is a major trading partner to France and Europe, he said that the peace in the continent should be of paramount concern to them.

    “You cannot have people to trade with if there are crisis. Though you can trade on weapon, but that is just a negative aspect of trade. To have balance of trade and robus economic develop-ment, nations must be at peace.”

    The president called on France and the European Union to assist in the formation of the Stand-by Force through capacity building, training and provision of sophisticated equipments..

    He said that ECOWAS had a similar force which had assisted in responding to crises in some member states.

    “At the beginning of ECOWAS, it was meant to concentrate on economic issues but we have seen that you cannot achieve that without interfering in the internal affairs of member states.

    “We realised that you cannot talk about the economy in a very unstable state. State must be stable before you can manage their economy, so whenever we have situation that we need to intervene, we intervene. And that has brought some reasonable stability,” he said.

    President Jonathan also said that Nigeria is not considering sending troops to the trouble region of the Central Africa Republic.

    According to him, the federal government will consider other form of assistance that could be rendered to the troubled nation.

    He noted that apart from the fact that Nigeria has troops in a number of West African countries, it is facing its own security challenges of Boko Haram insurgence.

  • PDP chieftain begs ASUU to end strike

    PDP chieftain begs ASUU to end strike

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Richard Lamai, has appealed to the striking Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to call off the lingering strike.

    He, expressed disappointment at the protracted strike and the insensitivity with which the future of Nigerian youths was being treated.

    He, however, said ASUU should not see calling off the strike as a mark of weakness but as a demonstration of their patriotism and commitment to better the lot of Nigerian students.

    The National Coordinator of Project Reloaded, made the appeal at the Maitama Headquarters, Abuja.

    He wondered why there seems to be no end to their demands in spite of the federal government’s firm commitment to addressing the problem.

    “As a matter of fact, several well-meaning Nigerians within and outside the country have pleaded with ASUU to reconsider its hard stance on the matter. We all are in agreement that something drastic needs to be done to salvage the education sector. This was what informed the setting up of NEEDS assessment committee by President Goodluck Jonathan which Governor Gabriel Suswam of Benue state was appointed to chair.

     

    “The Nigerian student has suffered enough and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) should sheathe their sword by calling off the strike and partner with the Federal Government to build a sustainable and effective educational system,” he said.

     

  • FG empowers 3,500 youths, women in Oyo

    FG empowers 3,500 youths, women in Oyo

    THE Federal Government has empowered a total of 3,500 unemployed youth and women under the Subsidy Re-investment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) project in Oyo State.

    While launching the programme in Ibadan on Saturday, President Goodluck Jonathans who was represented by the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Chief Emeka Wogu, noted that those who benefited from the project comprised 1,982 males and 1,518 females.

    According to Jonathan, all the beneficiaries of the project are currently working in 144 service units spread across all the 33 local government areas of the state.

    He added that the beneficiaries had received a total of N246.8 million as stipends, while a total sum of N29.9million had been remitted to the state as running/management cost between February and September 2013.

    While receiving the minister on Saturday, the state governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi said, “When you look at a state with about 10 million population and we are saying only 1,000 or 2,000 people have benefited, to me, this is terribly low.”

    The governor advised that such a life-transforming programme should be done without any political consideration.

    Ajimobi said if the Peoples Democratic Party-led federal government discriminates against members of the other political parties in the management of SURE-P, its aims would be defeated.

    He therefore called for the setting up of a committee comprising representatives of both the federal government and state governments in each of the 36 states of the federation that would run the programme.

    When constituted, the committee, Ajimobi noted, would ensure synergy between the federal government and the state governments on the SURE-P scheme and other similar empowerment and poverty alleviation programmes of states government.

  • Jonathan hails election of Aliu as ICAO  President

    Jonathan hails election of Aliu as ICAO President

    President Goodluck Jonathan at the weekend hailed the election of Olumuyiwa Bernard Aliu as the President-elect of the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).

    He described Aliu’s emergence as the first African and Nigerian to be elected as ICAO President “historic.”

    Jonathan, who was represented by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Chief Anyim Pius Anyim, reassured the organisation of Nigeria’s continued support.

    Anyim, who spoke in Abuja at a State Banquet Dinner held at Trancsorp Hilton in honour of Aliu, expressed gratitude to God on his election as ICAO President.

    He said, “The election of Olumuyiwa is indeed historic; he is the first African and Nigerian to be so elected into this position. It is a historic event. We express thanks and gratitude to the Almighty God for the election of Olumuyiwa Bernard Aliu as the ICAO President.

    “On behalf of the government and people of Nigeria, I would also like to express our gratitude for the tremendous support given to Dr. Aliu’s candidature by the African Union (AU), all member states of ICAO, AFCAC and United Nations members.

    “Dr. Aliu could not have achieved this without the support and goodwill of Mr. Roberto Kobeh Gonzalez. It is also worthy to mention that the election of Dr. Olumuyiwa Bernard Aliu as ICAO’s Council President was also made possible by his excellent technical experience and knowledge of the global aviation industry.

    “His works at ICAO over the years has been exemplary, and will no doubt become an asset to the organisation. Since becoming a Member State of ICAO Council in 1962, Nigeria has continued to make valuable contributions to this organisation.”

     

  • Prince Tonye Princewill at a crossroads

    Prince Tonye Princewill at a crossroads

    The talk in town at the moment is the decision of Rivers political bigwig, Prince Tonye Princewill, to declare support for President Goodluck Jonathan and his hesitation in quitting the PDP even after Governor Rotimi Amaechi had bid farewell to the ruling party.

    It will be recalled that in 2007, he ran for governorship on the platform of the now defunct Action Congress. In the build-up to the 2011 governorship election in Rivers State, he had deployed his political machinery, Princewill Political Associates, to campaign for Governor Amaechi’s re-election.

    But political observers believe that he is currently in a quandary as to the political path he would follow, considering that the Presidency may throw its weight behind Nyeson Wike in the 2015 governorship election.

  • Anxiety over plot to declare Amaechi, Wammako, others’ seats vacant

    Anxiety over plot to declare Amaechi, Wammako, others’ seats vacant

    Desperate Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders renewed yesterday their push for the removal of the five governors who dumped the party for the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The plan is to use the court to declare vacant their seat, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    The governors are Rotimi Amaechi(Rivers), Murtala Nyako(Adamawa), Rabiu Kwankwaso(Kano), Aliyu Wammako(Sokoto) and Abdulfatai Ahmed(Kwara).

    The hawks in PDP are said to be considering filing an ex-parte motion at any high court which will lead to a declaratory order asking the governors to leave office immediately.

    But President Goodluck Jonathan is said to have asked the PDP leaders behind the plot to pull the brakes on it because of its likely consequences on the nation’s political environment.

    One of the lawyers engaged in filing the suit last night however said: “We have not yet filed any document in court.

    “I think the President has not agreed with the PDP leaders who are pushing the matter. The President has asked them to stay action.”

    It was learnt that some PDP leaders were shocked by the threat which the defection last Tuesday might pose to the PDP’s electoral fortunes.

    They were said to have agreed on creating legal hurdles for the governors.

    It was learnt that the party has already secured the services of a 10-man legal team, including Chief Alex Iziyon (SAN), who is more or less the counsel to the President; Phebian Ajogu (SAN), Austin Alegeh (SAN) and a Northern constitutional Lawyer.

    A source said: “We learnt that the PDP is either considering filing a motion ex-parte or pushing for accelerated hearing of its application.

    “But some leaders of the party are in favour of a motion ex-parte. Once the application is granted, the five governors will be asked to vacate office immediately or be ejected from office.

    “In fact, the PDP is banking on the invocation of Section 221 of the 1999 Constitution to support its application. This Section was invoked by the Supreme Court to declare Amaechi as the Governor of Rivers State.

    “The party is claiming that the governorship tickets of the five governors belong to the PDP and not the occupants.

    “Also, we learnt that the party might apply the principle of ‘Case Stated’ to compel a Federal High Court to ask for interpretations of Section 221 from the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court to seal the fate of the governors at the lower court.”

    As at press time, a meeting of the APC governors was being convened at Kano Governor’s Lodge in Asokoro District, Abuja.

    The session, expected to be closed door from 9pm, might go far into the night.

    One of the APC governors , who spoke in confidence, said: “This is our first meeting after five PDP governors joined the progressives club. We are going to chart the way forward for the party to make the merger of the New PDP and the APC to work.

    “We will also take time to discuss issues affecting our governors, including plans by the PDP to declare the seats of the five governors vacant.

    “The PDP is capable of any mischief; we are also going to put our legal team on standby.”

    The National Chairman of the merged New PDP, Alhaji Kawu Baraje, said: “There is no law backing the declaration of a governor’s seat vacant.

    “Why are they just talking now when some PDP governors have joined the APC? I was the one who received ex-Governor Ikedi Ohakim when he defected from PPA to PDP. Was Ohakim’s seat declared vacant? Wasn’t Governor Isa Yuguda in ANPP before joining PDP? What of Governor Theodore Orji of Abia State who defected to PDP from PPA. Did all these governors vacate their seats?

    “This is not the first time the PDP has tried to declare the seats of our members vacant. Some of our members in the National Assembly have actually sued Bamanga Tukur.”

    Another leader said the conditions for removing governors are contained in Sections 188 and 189 of the 1999 Constitution.

    Section 188 reads in part: “A governor can be removed by reason of death, resignation, impeachment, permanent incapacity or removal in accordance with Section 188 or 189 of this Constitution.”

    Section 188 says in part: “The Governor or Deputy Governor of a State may be removed from office in accordance with the provisions of this section.

    “Whenever a notice of any allegation in writing signed by not less than one-third member of the members of the House of Assembly is (a) presented to the Speaker of the House of Assembly of the State; (b) stating the holder of such office is guilty of gross misconduct in the performance of the functions of his office, detailed particulars of which shall be specified.

    Section 189 says in part: “The Governor or Deputy Governor of a State shall cease to hold office if (a) by a resolution passed by two-thirds majority of all members of the Executive Council of the state, it is declared that the Governor or Deputy Governor is incapable of discharging the functions of his office; and (b) the declaration in paragraph (a) of this sub-section is verified, after such medical examination as may be necessary, by a medical panel established under subsection (4) of this section in its report to the Speaker of the House of Assembly.”

  • Jonathan off to Germany, France

    Jonathan off to Germany, France

    President Goodluck Jonathan left Abuja yesterday night for Germany enroute Paris, France, to attend the Summit on Peace and Security in Africa.

    According to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, 50 heads of state and government are expected to participate in the Elysee Palace Summit to be hosted by President Francois Hollande.

    The statement reads: “The United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-Moon, heads of European institutions and leaders of Africa’s sub-regional and continental organisations, such as the African Union and ECOWAS, will also participate in the summit.

    “President Jonathan will be accompanied by the First Lady, Patience Jonathan, relevant ministers and the National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd).”

    Jonathan will stop over in Germany for a private visit on his way to Paris and return to Abuja on Saturday.

  • Jonathan: NSA to meet governors over Boko Haram

    Jonathan: NSA to meet governors over Boko Haram

    President Goodluck Jonathan has directed National Security Adviser (NSA) Col. Sambo Dasuki to meet with the governors of the three states mostly affected by the Boko Haram insurgency, with a view to evolving a workable solution to the crisis.

    The presidential directive followed the insurgents’ attacks on an Air Force base in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, on Monday in which many lives were believed to have been lost and facilities damaged.

    Jonathan yesterday in Gombe at the second North East Economic Summit, restated his administration’s commitment to ending all terrorists’ activities’ and insurgency by employing various strategies of conflict resolution.

    The Summit was attended by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, Northern Governors Forum Chairman Aliyu Babangida, who is also the governor of Niger State, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Lamido Sanusi Lamido and the governors of Yobe, Bauchi and Borno.

    There were also notable businessmen and technocrats from all walks of life.

    Although the President said he disagreed with the school of thought that seems to suggest that poverty and illiteracy should be blamed for the growing acts of terrorism in the region, he explained that he was committed to fighting the menace as peace remains a prerequisite for economic development.

    He said Dasuki had been instructed to meet with the Governors of Yobe, Borno and Adamawa, with a view to defining a workable solution that would elevate the region. His words: “We do not believe that poverty and illiteracy are solely responsible for the security challenges in the region. But we believe that without peace, there can hardly be any economic activity. And to show our commitment to peace, we have established the service division of the Nigerian Army in Maiduguri. Peace is a prerequisite condition for development in the area. “Without peace it will difficult for the private sector to invest in the region. That is why we are pleading with you to use the traditional method to work with the youth to ensure peace. The government will work with any area that peace has returned to rehabilitate the place.

    “I have directed the NSA to meet with the three states mostly affected by terrorism and insurgency to define a shared vision and workable strategy that would elevate the region.”

    Noting that his first priority as a President remains the economy, Jonathan listed agriculture, education and infrastructure as key elements that would propel the troubled region to rapid growth, if the security challenges can be collectively tackled. “We have never denied the need to give the region the support it needs to develop. I reject the characterisation of the region as poor and backward because we believe such characterisation is based on misconception. It’s history is rich, with great leaders for over 1000 years.

    “The Northeast is endowed with abundant natural resources, mineral resources and there is hardly any cash crop that cannot be grown in the region. It is a zone that is blessed and which can produce wealth for this country. We are, therefore, committed to doing all within our power to end the security challenges in the Northeast and help the region to develop to its full potential,” he said. The President advised the six governors from the region to ensure more access to education, in addition to an improvement the quality of education with special emphasis on girl/child education. “The people must be exposed to tertiary education, I was born by poor parents. What makes me to stand before people like you today is because I had the opportunity to receive university education. The statistics quoted now is not recent and I believe the governors in the region have done more and by the time we update the statistics, that would be reflected”’, he noted.

    Chief Host of the Summit and Governor of Gombe State, Alhaji Ibrahim Dankwambo, praised the President for his passion to develop a region whose development has been stalled by the activities of insurgents. The governor urged the President to develop what he called a Marshall Plan that would help the people of the region, noting that the quantum of resources needed to scale up development in the region is far beyond what the states can raise internally. He said destiny, geography and commerce brought the states together, hence the organisation of the Summit, which seeks a rapid transformation of the sub-region for sustainable economic development.

    “The pervasive security challenges continue to take their toll on the development of the region. All major indices are particularly at the lowest compared to other regions. The quantum of resources required is by far beyond what the states can afford but a reconstruction strategy should be developed to help the youth and resettle displaced persons. There ought to be a Marshall Plan towards helping the people of the region,” Dankwambo said.

  • APC governors to President: reassess your strategy

    APC governors to President: reassess your strategy

    The Progressive Governors Forum (PGF) yesterday accused President Goodluck Jonathan of not having a security agenda for the country.

    The Forum said the President was fixated on being re-elected in 2015 instead of protecting Nigerians.

    The governors, in a statement through the Director-General of PGF, Mr. Salihu Mohammed Lukman, asked the President to reassess his security strategy.

    The statement said: “The Progressive Governors Forum (PGF) wishes to commiserate with the People and Government of Borno State over the recent attacks on Maiduguri airport, Air Force base and other areas of the state by Boko Haram insurgents and the ensuing loss of lives and property.

    “The security situation in several parts of the country has continued to deteriorate despite the extension of the State of Emergency in some states and the trillions of naira supposedly spent on security.

    “As it were, notwithstanding the fact that nearly one-third of this year’s Federal Government budget was devoted to defence and security, few Nigerians actually feel safe.

    “The most recent attack was particularly telling as it shows that President Goodluck Jonathan has no security agenda and is only focused on retaining power beyond 2015. The result of this criminal negligence is the unabated slaughter of lives. Clearly the security structures set up in the region have been overwhelmed.

    “PGF calls on the president to reassess his security strategy and focus more on the critical issues of the day. Obviously, the strategies and tactics currently adopted by the President and security agencies drafted to the region have been ineffectual, just as they leave much to be desired.

    “While we commiserate with the Government and people of Borno State, we call on the Federal Government to immediately overhaul the tactics and rules of engagement of the security agencies deployed in Borno and other states.

    “The president, who also doubles as the Commander-in-Chief, needs to get a firmer grip as well as ensure coherence in the management of the various tiers of security interventions in the affected states. His obsession with 2015 is a dangerous diversion at a time when real courage and statesmanship are needed.

    “We, on our own part, shall continue to offer support to our colleague, Governor Kashim Shettima and to provide necessary humanitarian assistance in these extremely difficult times.”

  • Lamido’s persecution

    Lamido’s persecution

    Last month, on November 15, to be specific, President Goodluck Jonathan took a direct shot across the bows of Governor Sule Lamido’s ship in an apparent warning to the governor to reconsider his long running confrontation with the president over the 2015 presidential elections in which both have staked their claims. On that day, two sons of the governor, Mustapha and Aminu, were picked up by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), for allegedly laundering over N10 billion through several banks in which the state holds major accounts.

    Officially, the EFFC does not take orders from the president – or from anyone else for that matter. But this is only in theory. In practice it soon became notorious under President Olusegun Obasanjo, President Jonathan’s seemingly estranged benefactor who created it ostensibly to fight corruption in high places, as his battle tank for squaring and squashing opposition elements in and out of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party.

    As a good student of his erstwhile godfather it seems President Jonathan has since learnt to put the commission to good use in self-service, all in the name of fighting corruption. Ask Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State and former governor, Timipre Sylva, of the president’s home state, Bayelsa, both of whom have attracted the president’s great disaffection. Governor Lamido is thus only the latest among several of those to have attracted EFCC’s attention more for their politics than for mis-governance.

    Lamido’s offence, it seems, is not only his expression of interest in the presidency. Recently, he suggested in an interview with an Abuja based radio station, Vision FM, that the president protected a corrupt minister by refusing to act on information he gave the president that the minister had collected a $250 million bribe from an oil firm. This provoked an angry retort from the president who, through his spokesman, Dr. Reuben Abati, said the governor’s allegation was “patently bogus” and “an unacceptable and callous attempt to unjustly impugn the integrity of President Jonathan and cast aspersions on the seriousness of his administration’s efforts to curb corruption.”

    EFCC’s picking up of the governor’s sons last month was clearly an attempt to demonstrate to the world that the governor was going to equity with very dirty hands.

    That EFCC’s action was triggered more by politics than by any concern of the president about corruption will be obvious presently. Before examining the facts, however, I should make it clear that this is not in defence of the governor against the allegation of using his sons to defraud his state.

    Jigawa, as we all know, was created in 1991. Between then and now it has had seven governors, four military and three civilians. Sandwiched between the first two military governors, one under General Ibrahim Babangida who created the state and the other under General Sani Abacha who threw out Babangida’s transition government of Chief Ernest Sonekan in November 1993, Governor Ali Sa’ad Birnin Kudu, its first civilian governor, did not enjoy much resources nor had much time nor much room for initiative to make a significant difference in the state.

    The next civilian governor, Ibrahim Saminu Turaki, did enjoy all three factors: less than two years into the fully-fledged civilian dispensation under President Obasanjo, oil money, which the country’s treasury has depended heavily upon for its revenue, became no longer an object, as oil price soared through the sky; the governor had eight years to transform the state with the state’s statutory allocation; and as civilian governor he was, at least in theory, a co-ordinate, rather than a subordinate, of the big man at the centre in the governance of the country.

    As we all know, Turaki, like so many of the governors during the first eight years of the current civilian dispensation, was a disaster. The man, as we all know, hardly sat at home to work. Instead, he spent so much time globetrotting he could not make any significant impact on his state. And, as he himself testified in the course of his yet to be concluded long running prosecution by the EFCC, he used a considerable portion of his revenue allocation, under duress he said, to help fund President Obasanjo’s infamous Third Term agenda.

    Enter Sule Lamido in 2007. Anyone who had been to the state since then, as I have, would agree that the difference between Jigawa before Turaki and Jigawa under Lamido is the difference between night and day. Dutse, the state’s sleepy capital, for example, has since become home to its civil servants who, before Lamido, used to go to work daily from Kano. And except, of course, they never meant what they said, all very important visitors to the state, including President Jonathan, have had only praise for the way the governor has vastly transformed its infrastructure in education, housing, health and road network, among others.

    So even if in the end it turns out that the governor used his sons to steal from his state, at least he has some mitigating circumstances for his alleged action. This much, I am afraid, cannot be said of many states in the country, including the president’s home state, Bayelsa, where incredibly huge gaps exist between the levels of development and the resources that have accrued to those states.

    This does not, of course, mean Lamido’s sons should not be prosecuted and their father exposed as someone who preaches what he does not practice. By all means prosecute them if you have a prima facie case against them and expose their father as a hypocrite if you can prove it.

    What, however, Lamido’s almost universally acclaimed performance means is that there are many, many, many more deserving cases for EFCC’s attention than the governor’s. Anyone with even the most casual acquaintance with Nigeria’s political-economy can reel off at least a dozen such cases before you can say the C word. But the three examples that follow are enough to prove the fact that Lamido’s case is by far more politics than about the president’s concern for good governance and transparency.

    Easily the most glaring of such cases is that of Malabu Oil and Gas, reportedly controlled by Chief Dan Etete, a former Oil minister under General Abacha. According to several newspapers, including The Economist (June 15) of London, two years ago, a consortium of Shell and Eni/Elf which had controversial stakes in the oil well, OPL 245, paid nearly $1.1 billion to Malabu, reportedly on orders of the president, as settlement over a long running dispute with Malabu on the ownership of the lucrative oil well.

    The payment was made to Malabu against the background of the fact that Etete had been a fugitive from France convicted in the country for money laundering in 2007 – a conviction upheld in 2009, following his appeal. The payment was also made against the background of the fact that EFCC was yet to conclude its investigation of an allegation that Etete had fraudulently acquired the company.

    According to Premium Times (September 30), an investigative online newspaper, the former minister, in turn shared the money paid to his company into several dubious accounts, some of them owned by close political associates of the president’s.

    Clearly this payment, which the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed Bello Adoke, tried to rationalise away during a public hearing of a House committee investigating the deal, as voluntary with government acting only as an “obligor” and “facilitator”, reeked to high heavens of the worst form of cronyism, to put it mildly. Even more clearly Lamido’s N10 billion alleged corruption pales into insignificance compared to Malabu’s $1.1 billion, which comes to nearly N184 billion.

    Second, there was an earlier case of the president versus a publication called Spynet Magazine. In its maiden edition in August 2007, it accused him of perjury in declaring his assets and liabilities during his tenure as deputy governor and governor of Bayelsa, and eventually as vice-president under Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, as demanded by the Constitution. Days after the publication its premises were ransacked by the State Security Services and its editors detained. To date nothing more has been heard of the case. Not even after the president has angrily told the public, following persistent demands that he declares his assets and liabilities publicly as was done by his predecessor even though the Constitution does not demand such public declaration, that he doesn’t “give a damn” what the public thought of his refusal to do so.

    Finally, there is the case of the paradox of worsening insecurity in the land, especially from Boko Haram insurgency, in the face of the huge budgetary allocation to our security forces since 2009. One glaring illustration of this is the fact that the Army Chief, Lt-General Azubuike Ihejirika, has lately been complaining of an under armed and under equipped military confronting Boko Haram. The paradox is, however, not surprising, considering credible allegations that one security institution recently spent over N600 million to construct an artificial grass football pitch for the recreation of its staff!

    By all means let the EFCC go after each and every thieving government official and his relations and cronies, if the commission has good cases against them. However, since it has neither the time nor resources to do so, equity demands that it begins with the more glaring cases.

    Surely all three cases above are much more demanding of the EFCC’s attention than Lamido’s case. When the commission is seen clearly to pick and choose mostly cases of only those perceived as opposition elements, it can only open itself and the presidency it reports to through the minister of Justice and attorney general of the federation, to accusations that it is merely fighting a selective, and therefore futile, war against corruption.