Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • ‘Missing’  N500b…SURE-P in stormy waters

    ‘Missing’ N500b…SURE-P in stormy waters

    Who owns SURE-P? That is the question raised following the claim by the Senate that N500 billion SURE-P fund was missing. The Minister of Finance, Budget Office and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) have all washed their hands of the programme initiated to utilise savings from the partial removal of subsidy on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) in 2012. Nduka Chiejina reports.

    One of the agenda of the Federal Government is the progressive deregulation of the petroleum industry, which gave birth to the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P). It was established January last year by President Goodluck Jonathan after the subsidy from Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) was partially removed.

    The Occupy Nigeria protest took centre stage to protest the hike in pump price of fuel from N65 to over N141, before it was reduced to N97, after negotiation between the Organised Labour and the Federal Government.

    The SURE-P was set up as an interventionist committee to manage the proceeds from fuel subsidy removal. It is funded with the difference or the savings which would have used to subsidise PMS had there been full subsidy for the product. By implication, the difference between N65 per litre cost of PMS as full subsidy and N97 the price of PMS from partial withdrawal of subsidy is what the government uses to fund SURE-P. The money thus saved is shared among the three tiers of government.

    In order to ensure the proper management of the funds that would accrue to the Federal Government from the partial withdrawal of subsidy, the government decided to inaugurate a committee for the purpose.

    Accordingly, the President set up the SURE-P Committee, with Dr. Christopher Kolade as Chairman.

    The mandate from the President to the SURE-P Committee is to ‘deliver service with integrity’ and ‘restore people’s confidence in the government’. The terms of reference are as follows: Determine in liaison with the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the subsidy savings estimates for each preceding month and ensure that such funds are transferred to the Funds’ Special Account with the Central Bank of Nigeria; approve the annual work plans and cash budgets of the various Project Implementation Units (PlUs) within the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) and ensure orderly disbursement of funds by the PlUs in order to certify and execute projects; monitor and evaluate execution of the funded projects, including periodic Poverty and Social lmpact Analysis (PSIA); update the President regularly on the programme; Periodically brief the Federal Executive Council (FEC) on the progress of the programme; appoint Consulting firms with international reputation to provide technical assistance to the Committee in financial and project management; appoint external auditors for the fund; and do such other things as are necessary or incidental to the objectives of the Fund or as maybe assigned by the Federal Government.

    The Committee is supported by a Secretariat that will also be responsible for communication and press briefings.

    Fund Management

    SURE-P, in carrying out the set mandate of reinvesting the Federal Government’s share, established a fund management structure. In the structure, the Director-General, Budget Office of the Federation (Director-General, Budget Office) is designated as the Accounting officer for all SURE-P activities. The Account of the programme is, therefore, domiciled in the Office of the Director-General, Budget Office of the Federation.

    After the Committee has approved payments for projects, the Chairman signs the approval, then the DG Budget Office, as Accounting Officer, processes the approvals, after which the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) makes payments directly to beneficiaries.

    Programme Structure

    In line with the adopted operational structure, individual projects are managed by Project Implementation Units (PIUs) that are located within Federal Government Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs). Projects and programmes oversight are managed by the SURE-P Committee working through its steering committee and seven subcommittees. This aspect of the SURE-P programme structure has been described as drain pipe of public funds as it is seen as a duplication of the duties and functions of MDAs with regards to project management.

    The subcommittees are extensions of the committee to provide direct supervision to the projects. The Committee also has a Secretariat that provides technical and administrative support to both the Committee and its subcommittees, and provides information to stakeholders and the general public.

    By the end of November 2012, N62, 423,351,736.58 had been expended on capital projects; N325,525,292.27 went into the committee’s running cost (secretariat services).

    The expenditure summary shows that maternal child health by federal ministry of health gulped N3,803,152,276.13; public works by FERMA used N4,000,000,000.00; mass transit by infrastructure bank, went away with N8,900,000,000.00; East-West Road by ministry of Niger Delta equally gulped N8,148,855,134.04; N28,296,238,063.10 was spent by federal ministry of Works on roads and bridges; Railway by federal ministry of Transport received N9,275,106,263.31 and N325,525,292.27 was spent on Secretariat services by SURE-P, bringing the total to N62,748,877,038.85.

    In 2014, N273.14 billion has been budgeted for extra capital under the SURE-P scheme to further complement the overall capital outlay in 2014. According to the 2014-2016 Medium Term Fiscal Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and the Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF and FSP) document, “the SURE-P budget is added to the outlay in the regular budget, the consolidated expenditure rises to N4.77 trillion, of which the consolidated capital budget in 2014 is N1.45 trillion (about 30.44 per cent of total expenditure).”

    N35,549,000,000 was shared from the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) by all the tiers of government so far, and as Nigeria’s gross monthly revenue continues to dwindle, state governments have advised the federal government to invest some of the Subsidy Reinvestment Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) funds into petrochemical industries.

    The advice was given to the federal government following what the states called lack of proper and full harnessing of Nigeria’s resources.

    The Senate alleged last week that N500 billions missing from the SURE-P funds as only N300billion of the estimated accruals of N800 billion could be accounted for. This is not the first time SURE-P funds have been declared missing. The Plateau State House of Assembly recently said it discovered over N3 billion unspent SURE-P fund in the state since January 2012.

    The Chairman of the House Ad hoc Committee on the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme, Mr Dalyop Mancha, said the committee discovered that both the State and Local Governments attracted fund from the SURE-P since January 2012, which the two tiers did not disburse to the beneficiaries.

    The state finance commissioner was said to have told state legislature that “the funds were intact and that the account have so far received the sum of over N3 billion arising from a monthly allocation of N218 million”.

    However, no government agency wants to own up to having control over SURE-P. Officials of the Budget Office of the Federation, the agency mandated to serve as the account hub of SURE-P said they could not speak concerning SURE-P citing civil service hierarchy and pointing squarely to the office of the minister of finance which supervises the office.

    But when Prof. Kame Okonjo was kidnapped, her daughter and Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said “with regards to the case of SURE-P, there is a totally different process that I have no control over”.

    An official of the Budget Office told The Nation that they do not have up to 50 per cent of the purported N800 billion and accused the Senate of distracting the office from promptly preparing the 2014 budget prior to the President’s submission to the National Assembly with claims of the missing N500 billion. They refused to be dragged into the debate over the whereabouts of the N500 billion until they have concluded work on the 2014 budget.

    The officials of the office said they work with what the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) remits to it and any claims of missing funds should be directed to the NNPC. They also wondered if the N800 billion allegedly funneled to SURE-P was for the three tiers of government or for the Federal Government alone.

    As at September 2013, the Federal Government said it had paid out N25 billion to contractors handling the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme fund (SURE-P) projects.

    This disclosure was made by the SURE-P office in Abuja, which also revealed that the SURE-P committee has approved the appointment of workers supporting the programme on Maternal and Child Health in some states.

    The contractors, who benefited from the N25 billion pay out include Dantata and Sawoe construction company for handling the Abuja-Abaji-Lokoja road (Abuja-Sheda junction) and the 510 kilometre Kano-Maiduguri (Kano-Wudil-Shuarin) road dualisation scheme.

    Also paid was the China Civil Engineering Construction Company (CCECC) for handling the rail project running from Idu-Kaduna and the Jebba-Kano rail line rehabilitation.

    Other companies paid for the SURE-P projects according to the programme’s office in Abuja were Messers Raynold Construction Co for work on the East-West road section 3 (Port Harcourt-Eket) and Benin-Ore-Shagamu section 1.

    Reserved West Africa was paid for the work on the Eastern rail line projects from PortHarcourt-Markurdi and Nigeria Construction Limited for the Enugu-Onitsha road dualisation.

    Costain West Africa was paid for work done on the railway rehabilitation from Jebba-Kano and Messers Gitto Construzioni for the work on the Abuja-Lokoja road.

    According to Senator Kabiru Marafa (Zamfara, APC), a member of the SURE-P Senate committee, N800 billion had been generated so far from subsidy as against N300 billion claimed by SURE-P.

    Marafa said: “This committee wrote to the relevant organisations that benefit from this SURE-P when it was inaugurated. It was said that the subsidy regime was going to be N32 a litre and this committee wrote the NNPC to ascertain the quantity of fuel being imported from the time this subsidy programme started.

    “NNPC replied the committee that from January 2012 to December 2013, which if you calculate it will give about 21 months… they gave a breakdown of the quantity per month. When you put up everything, it comes to roughly 25 billion litres per month.

    “Now, if you multiply 25 billion by 32, you get about N800 billion, and what SURE-P told us when they came here when we invited them was that they collected about N300 billion at N15 billion flat rate per month. So if you multiply 21 by 15 billion, you will get about N315 billion. So what we are talking about is the amount involved, which is N500 billion, where is it? That is what we wanted NNPC to tell us.”

    The NNPC has absolved itself from the SURE-P allegations. The corporation described the allegation linking it to the Sure-P budget as a comprehensive falsehood, noting that the Corporation has no connection whatsoever with the disbursement and appropriation of funds to the Sure-P Committee.

    In a statement last Wednesday by the Acting Group General Manager, Tumini E. Green, the NNPC said Sure-P budget is managed by a Committee made up of eminent Nigerians.

    It said: “NNPC is neither a member of the Sure-P Committee nor does it pay any money into the Sure-P account for any reason whatsoever. The budget is the responsibility of other requisite statutory authority. The committee superintends over the disbursement and the execution of the various social welfare projects.”

    Not a few have also queried some SURE-P projects. Some of the programmes are considered not to have direct impact on the people. In a state, SURE-P fund is said to have been used to buy donkeys. “That is scandalous in this age”, said a source.

    In Niger State, has concluded move to partner with the Niger State Development Company (NSDC) to construct a Three Star Hotel at the cost of N436 million.

    The state SURE-P Director General, Alhaji Hassan Nuhu, said the effort was initiated to create employment for youths.

    He said contract for the hotel had been awarded to Fourth Dimension Limited, adding the project was expected to be completed in 10 months and handed to the state government.

    Nuhu said: “The contract has been awarded to a reputable firm that has track record of performance for the construction of a Three Star Hotel to add value to Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi Conference Centre.”

    Under the arrangement, the SURE-P will provide 70 per cent of the cost while the Niger State Development Company will provide 30 per cent balance of the cost of the project.

    He said: ” But we will not embark on any ground breaking ceremony, rather we have instructed the contractor to keep the work schedule so that the project is completed with the 10 months period effective from October 1, 2013 so that the July 2014 handover and inauguration date is achieved.”

  • President warns against disruptions  in higher  institutions

    President warns against disruptions in higher institutions

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday decried the challenges facing the Education sector, especially incessant strikes in tertiary institutions.

    The President described the disruptions in Nigeria’s educational institutions as “unnecessary.”

    He urged stakeholders to be conscious of the impact of such breaks on the children, institutions and the nation.

    Jonathan spoke in Abuja at the opening of the second National Education Innovations Exhibition, organised by the Federal Ministry of Education.

    Jonathan said there was need for a dialogue when there was conflict.

    As a result of competing challenges, the President said it was not always possible to have enough resources to support education.

    Jonathan, who was represented by the Supervising Minister for Education, Nyesom Wike, advised tertiary institutions to seek external funding for the sector.

    He said: “We must demonstrate a sense of patriotism in dealing with situations that involve the future of our children and country. We need to be conscious of the impact on our children, institutions and the country, of unnecessary disruptions in our educational institutions. We need to emphasise dialogue where there is a conflict or when any sort of misunderstanding arises. This is the civilised approach of doing things.

    “We have much investment in higher education, but the challenge is getting value for the nation. This value is in relation to quality education and research output. Our institutions must provide the leadership in providing the knowledge to move the country forward.

    “We are stakeholders in the Education sector. For this reason, we must promote quality education delivery and understand that as a result of competing challenges, it is not always possible to have enough resources to support the sector (Education).

    “It is, therefore, for this reason that our institutions, especially at the tertiary level, should be considering every avenue of attracting external support through research, grants as well as through the provision of services.”

    Jonathan said it was because of the government’s determination to encourage research and innovation, that 11 higher institutions had been given between $4 million to $5.5 million in diverse areas.

    These include food security, vaccines and drugs development, technical and vocational education, infectious diseases, renewable energy, software engineering, mineral and metallurgical engineering, environmental protection and multimedia as well as cinematography.

    The President said the high impact fund were in five phases and “provided over N109 billion to support tertiary institutions in enhancing their capacity as centres of excellence.”

    He added: “The African Centres of Excellence, for which we have provide a seed grant of $15 million, is another initiative to promote research and innovation in our society.

    “The comprehensive rehabilitation of the laboratories of our polytechnics is a major impetus to encouraging our leading technical and vocational institutions to get into the business of innovation. Fifteen billion naira was expended on ensuring that the 51 federal and state polytechnics have laboratories that meet modern technical and vocational education standard.”

    President Jonathan also urged educational institutions in the country to link their output to the needs of national development to fast-track growth.

    The President urged higher institutions to collaborate with the private sector to ensure that their works reached the wider society.

    Jonathan said: “I congratulate our educational institutions for what they are showcasing. I, however, state that we still have challenges ahead in relation to linking the output of our institutions to national development.

    “It is in this regard that our institutions must look critically at relating their work to the needs of society. Our higher institutions must work to develop collaborative arrangements with the private sector to enhance getting their work into the wider society. One of the advantages of events as this is that it will link the private sector to works of our institutions.”

    Wike, whose speech was read by the Acting Permanent Secretary, Mrs Hindatu Abdulahi, said Nigeria could not occupy an enviable space among nations without having upwardly mobile and globally competitive citizens with knowledge, skill, innovation and added value.

     

  • Club Owners congratulate Jonathan, NFF

    Club Owners congratulate Jonathan, NFF

    The Association Nigeria premier league club chairmen and Managers (club owners) have hailed the superb performance of the Nation under 17 golden Eaglets for the record victory at the just concluded teenage world cup in Dubai, UAE. The body in a statement jointly signed by the Ag. chairman Barr. Isaac Danladi (Nasarawa utd) and the Ag. Secretary Alloy Chukwuemeka (ABSFC) described the Eaglets performance as excellent with the highest degree of commitment and patriotism. The club owners praised the NFF, the NSC and above all President Goodluck Jonathan for his high spirit of sportsmanship and support which earned Nigeria the Goodluck to victory. They however urged the president to give more supports to the NFF to ensure outright qualification of the Super Eagles for the senior World Cup.

  • We won’t hand  over polio in 2015,  says Jonathan

    We won’t hand over polio in 2015, says Jonathan

    Tambuwal promises judicious use of $50m JICA loan

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday promised that his administration will not hand over polio to the next government in 2015.

    Jonathan spoke in Abuja at a forum of the Presidential Task Force on Polio Eradication, organised by the Federal Ministry of Health, at the Banquet Hall of the State House.

    At the forum, some governors were given awards for eradicating polio in their states.

    Awards were given for last year’s Best Performing States in each of the six zones.

    The winners are: Ondo State (Southwest), Cross River (Southsouth), Kogi (Northcentral), Anambra (Southeast), Borno (Northeast) and Zamfara (Northwest).

    Niger State won the award for the most improved state.

    Jonathan announced a national honour for the Co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Mr Bill Gates.

    He hailed Gates for his commitment to rid Africa of health challenges.

    The President noted that besides helping Nigeria to fight polio and providing life-saving tools, Gates also assisted the country’s agriculture.

    He also hailed the President of Dangote Foundation, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, for supporting the government in all sectors.

    Jonathan thanked the traditional rulers for their roles in fighting polio.

    He said: “For those who have won this award, the challenge is that we will not want to see polio in your state again. Otherwise, we will wipe out the award. You now have very strong partners, a partner with the Federal Government to eradicate polio.

    “Like Dangote mentioned, there is no reason we should not eradicate polio by 2014. Let me assure you that the Federal Government is totally committed to eradicating polio. We promise that we will work hard because we don’t want to hand over polio to another government in 2015. With the support of all stakeholders present here, I believe we will succeed in our commitment to eradicate polio.

    “I charge you all to be so committed, especially as the elections are coming. In fact, from the analysis I was just briefed now, I’m really surprised that in 2011 there was a lapse and it was attributed to the elections. I learnt that during campaigns for elections, politicians think more about winning the elections and forget about other things…”

    Announcing the honours for Bill Gates, Jonathan said: “As the President and Commander-In-Chief, I hereby confer on Bill Gates one of our prestigious titles, the Commander of the Federal Republic (CFR). His decoration will come up during the award ceremony in December.”

    House of Representatives Sepaker Aminu Waziri Tambuwal has assured Gates and Dangote that the $50 million JICA loan for Nigeria’s fight against polio would be well utilised.

    Gates told Tambuwal during a visit yesterday that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Dangote Group, in conjunction with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), initiated a new $50 million loan conversion mechanism, called the JICA loan conversion, for Nigeria.

  • Descent into fascism?

    Not a few Nigerians are worried at the way governance is drifting in our country under the guise of politics. Even more are annoyed that President Goodluck Jonathan seems unperturbed by this descent and may in fact be enjoying it. And unfortunately at the centre of this fall is the Nigeria Police.

    Penultimate Sunday seven state governors from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were meeting at the Kano State Governor’s Lodge in Abuja when midway or thereabout into their deliberations, the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Asokoro Police Station, Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Nnanna Amah barged in and ordered them to stop and disperse immediately claiming he had orders from above not to allow the meeting.

    Understandably the governors, members of a breakaway faction of the party called new PDP were shocked. This was how Kano State governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, the host, described the event: “We were discussing in my sitting room when the DPO came in and asked us to disband. We were discussing how to approach Mr. President and come up with a stand when invited, but this meeting was disrupted by a DPO. We didn’t offend anybody, but like criminals, a DPO was sent to disrupt our meeting.” Kwankwaso went on to say that not even when Nigeria was under military rule did anything like this happen.

    The DPO did not disclose who it was ‘above’ that gave him that order, but in the Nigerian situation it is safe to assume that the order came from the Presidency via the Inspector-General of Police Mohammed Abubakar.

    The rabidly pro Jonathan camp will vehemently deny this and even call anybody that suggests this was the situation names. But whatever they chose to say would not remove the fact that the Nigeria Police under IGP Abubakar has been used more as agents of oppression and suppression of any view(s) and action(s) that are not in tandem with the second term project of Dr Jonathan.

    How do you explain the situation in Rivers State where the Commissioner of Police Mbu Joseph Mbu enforces the law the way it suits his political paymasters? He is in open confrontation with the State governor, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, one of the G-7 governors and opposes virtually everything the government is doing or wants to do that involves the people gathering. He has banned every political rally or gathering of the sort, disrupting such where the governor and state government are involved yet allowing the Grassroots Democratic Initiative (GDI) of Amaechi’s main opponent and Coordinating Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike to meet freely and canvass for support. But anything gathering for Amaechi must be prevented or disrupted even if violently. This has been going on a long time and both the president and the Inspector-General are conspiring to remain silent fuelling belief that they are solidly behind CP Mbu.

    Just last week the IGP announced a ban on rallies and gatherings around and at airports nationwide. The announcement came on the back on the police preventing Amaechi’s supporters from going to Port Harcourt international Airport at Omagwa to welcome visiting leaders of the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) who were in Rivers State to woo the governor and his supporters into APC. Meanwhile the First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan who goes about with almost a battalion of policemen each time she visited home (Port Harcourt) and her supporters have free access to the airport.

    The Abuja police action against the G-7 was not the first time. The police had, not too long ago, similarly gone to the Sokoto Governor’s Lodge in Abuja to stop a gathering of the governors, but were not so lucky, as the governors fixed that venue as a decoy and actually met at a secret location. Known members, supporters and sympathisers of the new PDP are being similarly harassed routinely by the police in Abuja and the Ministry of Federal Capital Territory. The FCT authorities have threatened to demolish properties being used by the new PDP either as party secretariat or for meetings. In Bayelsa, Gombe and a couple of other states, nPDP leaders and supporters are being hounded by the police.

    All these are happening under the president’s watch and the Commander-In-Chief and his Inspector-General of Police are seeing nothing wrong here and saying nothing. PDP elders and the Bamanga Tukur faction are enjoying it. As long as the shoe is on the other foot no problem; but there is a problem here. Our democracy is under threat. Freedom of association, freedom to dissent, freedom of choice et al are being trampled upon by Jonathan’s police just to drive fear into the opposition and make Nigerians submissive to the president’s 2015 ambition.

    Nigeria is gradually being turned into a police state where opponents of government are either haunted into submission or punished for cooked up offence(s) using the apparatus and agents of state. This is the way of fascists. Although this looks like stretching the argument too far, the signs are there that President Goodluck Jonathan could lead us down that road if he is not called to order. And the only body that can do that is the National Assembly. But can this Assembly do it? Yes, if the will is there.

    But I have my doubt if this will ever happen. This National Assembly is sharply divided. While the House of Representatives might be willing to call the president and his IGP to order, the Senate often acts with too much restraint at times bordering on total submission to the will of the president. Not a few Nigerians believe that this Senate, when the chips are down, will always side with President Jonathan even at the risk of this democracy.

    But for how long can and should the senate continue to shield the president and tolerate his excesses? At what point would the Senators act and stop this culture of impunity that is the hallmark of Jonathan’s presidency. Make no mistake about it, the president is a gentleman, as all have acknowledged, but he is grossly incompetent. Doing the routine things alone would not make Jonathan a great leader neither also would he’s being nice. Taking major political decisions in the interest of the state, even if such hurt personally would put him up there as one of our finest; and he can start by calling the IGP and his boys to order, or rather allow the police to work without political interference. He should also rein in the excesses of his supporters especially his Ijaw kinsmen; and not forgetting Madam, the First Lady.

    A good place to start would be in Rivers State where a combination of his wife’s interest, the inordinate ambition of the Coordinating Minister of Education Nyesom Wike, his own second term interest and the uncompromising stance of state governor, Rotimi Amaechi are threatening the peace and security not only of the state but also the wellbeing of Nigeria’s democracy. In between put in a partisan police commissioner and you get the picture of what is going on in Rivers State.

    Some of these the president acknowledged in his speech at the centenary celebration of Port Harcourt last week, but he should not just stop at the talking, he should walk his talk and do the needful and douse the tension, not just in Rivers state but also nationwide. He should be mindful of how he uses the police lest we fall into fascism. State governors are not ordinary Nigerians to be harassed by the police just because they disagree with the president. Enough of this, Mr President.

  • Can Oyinlola work with Tukur?

    Can Oyinlola work with Tukur?

    The Appeal Court’s judgment that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) should reinstate its estranged National Secretary, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, has generated ripples. Assistant Editor GBADE OGUNWALE examines the implications of the verdict for the self acclaimed party in Africa.

    Former Osun State Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola has cause to smile. The Appeal Court has ruled that he should be reinstated as the National Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). But he has also not renounced his position as the National Secretary of the Baraje faction.

    The puzzle is: can Oyinlola work harmoniously with the National Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur?

    The Okuku-born politician is at war with the party that launched him into partisan politics 14 years ago. The party is also at war with him.

    Little did the chieftains guess that the intra-party wriggling, which was triggered by the distribution of party positions a year ago, would fester. The members of the National Working Committee (NWC) led by Tukur came into office amid the controversy. The PDP national convention, which held in Abuja on March 24, last year, was the bone of contention. Many chieftains complained that they were excluded from the exercise.

    A crisis broke out between Tukur and Oyinlola, few days after the party officials were sworn-in. The 2015 presidential elections divided the two leaders. While Tukur is believed to be supporting President Goodluck Jonathan for a second term; it was difficult for the President to get the secretary’s support.

    The relationship between the two leaders degenerated when they started exchanging memos. Oyinlola accused Tukur’s aides of usurping the functions of the national secretary. He drew the attention of the chairman to extant establishment manual guiding the day-to-day running of the secretariat. Responding to Oyinlola’s memo, Habu Fari, for Chief of Staff to the national chairman, cast aspersions on the office and person of the national secretary.

    Things started falling apart at the PDP secretariat. Miffed by what he described as the aide’s insolence and disregard for constituted authority, Oyinlola demanded Fari’s sack. It degenerated to open confrontation between the chairman and the national secretary. The furore died down when Tukur eventually fired Fari. But that did not end the animosity between the chair manand the scribe. On September 11, 2013, Tukur and Oyinlola took one other to the cleaners. Tukur had through his Special Adviser on Media, Oliver Okpara, described Oyinlola as an incompetent official, whose politics is at variance with the prevailing political dispensation.

    The chairman also accused Oyinlola of getting into elective positions through the “back door”, citing his ouster as the governor of Osun State by the Court of Appeal in 2010 and his removal from office as the PDP National Secretary. Tukur also accused Oyinlola of directing his frustrations at him, since he was removed as National Secretary. he said: “Under normal circumstance, he should not be heard to resort to platitudes or righteous pontifications on the ideals of democracy and the rule of law.

    “This is because, by training and orientation, he (Oyinlola) is a slave to ‘Order and Command’ of the military. Oyinlola was smuggled in as the National Secretary of the PDP, when he was bereft of the basic competence, experience and the pedigree to hold such a sensitive position in a big political organisation like the PDP. Since his removal from office, following the patent loop-holes in the electoral process that produced him, Oyinlola has continued to besiege the portals of our courts in search of far-fetch reliefs, which are neither here nor there. Besides, he now relishes brick-bats and vitrioli on perceived enemies, especially Alhaji Tukur.

    “Unfortunately, Oyinlola has refused to understand that Tukur is not the architect of his political problems. Oyinlola’ nemesis is traceable and also has its roots in the way and manner in which he was foisted on our party. His political career will continue to nose-dive, until he undertakes a political re-think. The major mantra in PDP is adherence to the core values of rule of law and due process. In politics, rules and regulations are obeyed, for a statesman is judged by his selfless love and service to his people and not by the enormity of effusions and vituperations from his mouth or pen. Oyinlola should retrace his steps, return to the path of political rectitude, remove his military toga and dictatorial tendencies, study the manifesto and constitution of any party he chooses to join in order to have a place in our current political dispensation.

    “Oyinlola was one of those militray putchists, who held down our democracy for a long time. As a former military man, Oyinlola is an unrepentant dictator of the first-order. He lacks any credible credential to sermonise on democracy and due process, including rule of law. No self respecting party can afford the chalice of imposition of candidates like in Oyinlola’s case, which is the bane of Nigerian politics. Oyinlola’s antecedents are well-known. He has been a miliatry dictator, who suddenly became a letter-day democrat. He miraculously became the governor of Osun State and was booted out, following litigation over his election which swept him out through judicial fiat.

    “There must therefore, be something vehemently wrong with Oyinlola and his peculiar brand of politics, which always sees him mount the saddle of leadership only to be found tumbling and crashing thereafter. Oyinlola has refused to change with time. He has failed to come to terms with the fact that democratic dispensation is in place in Nigeria and that the ways of democracy are not the same with the command structure of the military. Oyinlola might have been a good military tactician,but a kindergarten politician who requires total political re-adjustment and the removal of his military toga to face the realities of the moment. Oyinlola’s differences with the chairman stemmed from the fact that he could not appreciate the essence of rule of law against the essence of rule by force. It is his lack of democratic posture that made it impossible for him to work with Tukur who is an accomplished statesman, politician and a highly successful businessman with outstanding administrative sagacity and acumen”. Many believe that the statement was full of bile.

    But Oyinlola would not let the verbal assualt go unchallenged. According to him, the party chairmnan must have gone senile, owing to his advanced age. He said: “ While I don’t want to join issues with Baba Tukur, out of respect for his old age, one can excuse him on his account of senility.

    “Tukur has gone senile. In addition, the fact that I trained as a military officer has never negatively affected my administrative capabilities and abilities. I remain a gentleman in all my services as a public officer and a politician. Tukur should attempt to do an opinion survey at the headquarters of his PDP and I can assure him that his findings would make him abdicate his position without further delay, based on the fact that he lacks the support of the members of staff, who regard his authoritative style as being responsible for the crisis in the PDP.

    “That I’m a stickler for due process is a plus for me and Tukur should find out, if I ever circumvented rules and regulations or acted in an improper manner that he (Tukur) always does in company with his co-travelers. I remember he (Tukur) once granted an interview, in which he described me as a fine officer and a gentleman. This same view was expressed by Olisa Metuh in a media interview recently. His statement shows inconsistency and poor leadership qualities”.

    Oyinlola described his brief tenure as the National Secretary as the best ever, adding that the records are there to speak for him. He stressed: “It is on record at the headquarters of the PDP, that the period I served as the National Secretary marked remarkable changes in the administration of the PDP. For instance, I made sure that all the rules and regulations of the PDP were strictly followed to the letter and that made it impossible for Tukur to appoint the Chief of Staff, which he wanted, in violation of extant rules and regulations. He also attempted to appoint innumerable special advisers, who were unknown to the establishment manual of the PDP. It is on record, and you can ask any member of the National Working Committee, that he (Tukur) used his special advisers as parallel NWC members, thus effectively undermining the leadership of the party.

    “Everybody knows that Tukur’s tenure, so far, has been the worst in the 14 years of the party and nobody should be surprised that Tukur, who came in with pre-conceived personal agenda of caging and antagonizing state governors and other interest groups in the PDP, has been a monumental failure and he is the root of all the crises within the PDP today.

    “I ask that the leadership of the PDP should subject our tenure to a management audit to be able to determine who serially violated the PDP constitution through reckless administrative actions and who attempted to sanitise the whole administrative procedure at the national headquarters”.

    The staff at the PDP national secretariat will never forget Oyinlola’s brief stay as the national secretary. Within few weeks, he ensured an upward salary review for the workers, who had been on the same salary level, since the inception of the PDP in 2008.

    He also ensured that all outstanding allowances owed the staff were cleared. Up to now, the workers testify to the fact that Oyinlola brought a new lease of life to the PDP. So, it was bad news for the workers when a Federal High Court in Abuja, on Friday, January 11, voided Oyinlola’s election as the National Secretary. On January 14, the party replaced Oyinlola with his deputy, Onwe Solomon Onwe, as the Acting National Secretary, pending the time a new national secretary would emerge. Justifying Oyinlola’s replacement, Tukur said: “Pursuant to the powers conferred on the National Chairman by Chapter V Section 35 (1), 35 (1)(b), as well as section 36(2) of the constitution of the Peoples Democratic Party, (as amended), the Deputy National Secretary of the PDP, Barrister Solomon Onwe, is hereby directed to assume duties as the Acting National Secretary of the PDP. Barr. Onwe shall, by this directive, conduct all correspondences of the party, issue notices of meetings of the National Convention, the National Executive Committee, the National Caucus and the National Working Committee as stipulated in the Constitution of our great Party.

    “This directive takes immediate effect and is hereby communicated to all the levels and offices of the party”. Many said the speed with which the national chairman replaced Oyinlola with Onwe smacked of vindictiveness.

    But the party defended the chairman, saying that the action was in compliance with the court judgment that voided Oyinlola’s election. The statement, dated January 15, 2013 and signed by Metuh said: “The National Working Committee wants to make it very clear that what happened was nothing more than obedience of a court judgement, and the consequential application of the relevant sections of the party’s constitution. Section 45 (1) states that if a national officer of the party is removed or resigns from office, he shall immediately hand over to the National Secretary all records, files and other properties of the party in his or her possession. Section 45 (2) states that inthe case of the National Secretary, he shall hand over to the Deputy National Secretary.

    “We want to make it clear that our great party is a law abiding party, which bases its conducts and activities on internal democracy and rule of law. Whatever a court of competent jurisdiction decides on any matter involving the party, the PDP will have no hesitation in obeying and implementing the judgement”. Metuh, in that statement had acknowledged the fact that Oyinlola had appealed the judgment and that the case was pending before the Court of Appeal”.

    Metuh also gave a commitment that the party would accord Oyinlola immediate recognition, should he win the appeal.

    He said: “In any event, reports have indicated that Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola has appealed against the court judgement and the NWC wants to say that, as soon as the appeal is decided, the party will, in the same way as it did in the case of the Federal High Court ruling, obey the appeal decision”.

    Now that the Appeal Court has ruled in Oyinlola’s favour, will the PDP honour its own word?.

    However, when he was contacted, the National Publicity Secretary said that the matter has not been discused because the chairman travelled out of the country. He also said that the party’s National Legal Adviser said he did not have a copy of the ruling yet. Metuh promised that the leadership of the party would meet today to take a decision.

    The ruling party, according to analysts, have some options. The party can appeal the ruling at the Supreme Court or reinstate Oyinlola in the spirit of reconciliation.

    Also, since Tukur and Oyinlola are not the best of friends, the party should broker peace between them, so that they can cohabit peacefully at the PDP secretariat.

    But, are politicians good in mence mending?

  • PENGASSAN: Local content law not working

    PENGASSAN: Local content law not working

    The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has said the local content law signed by President Goodluck Jonathan to give indigenous oil and gas companies’ sense of belonging in the sector has not had meaningful impact on the oil and gas sector.

    Its National Executive Committee member, Mr Foluso Oginni, who spoke to reporters, said the country’s contracts in the oil and gas sector are dominated by the international oil companies leaving the crumbs for the indigenous ones.

    According to him, the international oil companies are violating their expatriate quota, giving them the opportunity to bring in various services, which can be taken care of by Nigerians.

    Oginni recalled the situations where some international oil companies brought in artisans from abroad, adding the development is a reflection that these companies have little or no regard for the content laws.

    He noted that the international oil companies flout the local content laws in connivance with corrupt immigration officials, which assisted them to bring in all manner of expatriates’ into the country.

    Oginni, while giving his support to the ongoing House of Representatives probe of major oil and gas companies for flouting the nation’s local content law, said the development would go a long way in curbing the companies’ excesses.

    He implored the lawmakers to also beam their searchlight on the activities of corrupt immigration officials, who assist the oil companies to make mess of the nation’s content law, explaining that doing so would enable the Federal Government and policy makers re-evaluate the import of the law with a view to enabling to achieve its set objectives.

    On the increasing crude oil theft in the country, he said the Federal Government has not demonstrated the required seriousness to nip the practice in the bud, wondering why the Federal Government with its security apparatus, continually raised the alarm over the helpless situation of the theft in the country.

  • Nigeria, Gambia push for democratisation of UN Security Council

    Nigeria, Gambia push for democratisation of UN Security Council

    President Goodluck Jonathan and his Gambian counterpart, President Yahya Jammeh, yesterday restated Africa’s demand for the urgent reformation of the United Nations Organisation.

    The two leaders, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, to President Jonathan Dr. Reuben Abati, made the call when they met in Banjul during Jonathan’s state visit.

    A communique at the end of their meeting reads: “The two presidents reiterated the need for the reformation of the Security Council and the United Nations System in its entirety so as to reflect current realities.”

    “They expressed their conviction that the African continent should be equitably represented in world governance through a better presence on the Security Council and in agencies of the United Nations.”

    Jonathan had earlier thanked President Jammeh and Gambia for conceding West-Africa’s non-permanent seat in the United Nations’ Security Council for 2014-2015 to Nigeria.

    He assured the Gambian leader that Nigeria will effectively represent and promote the interests of West Africa and Africa during its tenure on the Security Council.

    They also agreed on the need for African leaders to take more concerted action to accelerate the pace of regional and continental economic integration.

    Both leaders called for faster action towards the removal of obstacles and impediments to greater intra-regional and intra-continental trade and economic activities in Africa.

    They also called for the urgent re-invigoration, rationalisation and harmonisation of Regional Economic Communities in Africa as a necessary step towards full continental economic integration.

    At the bilateral level, they resolved to strengthen and re-energise the Nigeria-Gambia Joint Commission with a view to diversifying and strengthening cooperation between the two countries in all the sectors.

    They also analysed other prevailing regional, continental and international problems such as the state of affairs in Guinea-Bissau, Syria and the Middle-East.

    The two presidents reiterated the call for a speedy return to constitutional order in Guinea-Bissau in accordance with the pertinent decisions adopted by ECOWAS, the African Union and the United Nations.

    During the visit, President Jonathan commissioned the new Chancery building of the Nigerian High Commission in Banjul and also met with members of the Nigerian community in The Gambia.

     

  • Jonathan in fresh consultation over S/West ministerial nominees

    Jonathan in fresh consultation over S/West ministerial nominees

    President Goodluck Jonathan is to hold a fresh round of consultations with Southwest Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders and stakeholders to guide him on the ministerial nominees’ list from the zone.

    Reliable party’s sources told The Nation that following weeks of unending uproar within the party in the zone over some names allegedly listed by the president for ministerial appointments, Jonathan may have resolved to consult wider on the issue.

    It was learnt that the president is staying action on nomination from the Southwest until his planned consultation.

    A source said one of the meetings may take place as early as Tuesday.

    The names of Minister of Transport in the Abacha government, Chief Ebenezer Babatope and PDP chieftain in Osun State, Alhaji Fatai Akinbade, are reported to be on the list.

    It was even reported that the duo may have appeared before some security agencies for screening as part of the process leading to their confirmation as members of the federal cabinet.

    But some prominent leaders and members of the party in the zone are uncomfortable with the possible appointment of the duo.

    The Nation learnt that a group of PDP stalwarts from Osun State led by a former deputy national chairman of the party, are opposed to the choice of Akinbade as replacement for Erelu Olusola Obada.

    The group feels Akinbade, a governorship aspirant of the party, who has led a faction of the party for years, is too sectional to be made a minister representing the state in the federal cabinet.

    A source said: “Akinbade is a good material for ministerial appointment, no doubt. But when you consider his place in Osun politics in the last four years, you will understand why some of us feel he cannot be minister at this point in time.

    “The minister we need now is a non-aligned person who can and will be able to carry all sections and groups within the party along without being cast in the toga of a factional leader.”

    The Nation learnt that opposition to Babatope’s nomination is largely from outside Osun State.

    The ex-Minister of Transport is said to have been nominated to fill the zonal ministerial slot vacated by Olugbenga Ashiru from Ogun state.

    Another party chief familiar with the development said: “We are saying it is not logical to have two vacancies and you fill the two vacancies from one place out of the six places available.

    “We have six states in the Southwest. The slot vacated by Ashiru is not for Osun State. It is for the whole zone.

    “Given the fact that election is fast approaching, it is advisable to give the slot to a state like Lagos where the president can garner huge votes.

    “One minister is enough to galvanise Osun for the PDP. We need more than one person to make impact in Lagos.”

    Buoyed up by the President’s instruction to the national leadership of the PDP that would-be ministerial nominees must be widely accepted within their political blocs, some party leaders had drawn his attention to the widespread opposition plaguing the choices he has allegedly made, especially in the Southwest.

    The Nation learnt that prominent PDP leaders in Osun State are rooting for the replacement of Akinbade’s name with that of Engineer Ezekiel Adeniji, Chairman, Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA) while there is a strong move from Lagos and Ondo states to have one of their own replace Babatope.

    Sola Oke, Remi Adiukwu-Bakare, Deji Doherty and Ade Dosunmu are still featuring prominently on the lips of those seeking the removal of Babatope’s names from the ministerial nominees’ list.

  • Strike: University lecturers  meet on Monday

    Strike: University lecturers meet on Monday

    Lecturers of the government owned universities will on Monday hold a referendum to decide on the continuation of the four-month long Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike.

    It was learnt that Local chapters of the union in each campuses have invited members for the crucial meeting for during which they will be briefed on the outcome of the 13- hour long meeting ASUU Executives had with the President Goodluck Jonathan and other officials of the federal government.

    The briefing will be followed by votes by the members in favour or against the continuation of the
    strike.

    Though some members of the union are still skeptical about the promise of the government there are indications that the referendum will favour ending the strike.

    According to a union member, referendum is always conducted before a strike is embarked upon or called off.

    The ASUU embarked on a strike to demand the implementation of the 2009 agreement with government on July 1.