Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • Presidency tackles Dasuki over North East

    Presidency tackles Dasuki over North East

    …Says Dasuki’s false claims should be ignored

     
    The Presidency on Monday denied the claims by former National Security Adviser, Colonel Sambo Dasuki, which maintained that the Goodluck Jonathan administration cleared the Northeast of Boko Haram terrorists to make elections possible in 2015.

    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on media and publicity, Garba Shehu, said that the remark was untrue and should be dismissed.

    According to him, the claim was another attempt to rewrite the history of Nigeria.

    He said “The superlative claims by the former National Security Adviser, Colonel Sambo Dasuki that the Goodluck Jonathan administration cleared the Northeast of Boko Haram terrorists to make elections possible in 2015 is untrue and should be dismissed as an attempt to deceive Nigerians with blatant lies.

    “The claim as contained in a new book by a journalist is just another unfortunate attempt by inglorious Nigerians to rewrite the history of our country in such a way as to cover the sins of the past.

    “We will have to read the entire text to offer a full and adequate response.

    “As a public relations goon for the former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, the author did not surprise anyone by dismissing the acclaimed successes of the Muhammadu Buhari administration in the fight against Boko Haram, claiming that this government simply took the glory for the achievements of the previous government in the war against terrorism.

    “For those interested in the facts, as at the time elections were held in March 2015, a number of local government areas in northeast Nigeria were completely under the control of Boko Haram–to the extent that elections in those areas had to be moved to safe areas. The residents of areas such as Gwoza, Banki, Kukawa, Monguno, Bulumba, Baga, Gamboru Ngala, Dikwa, Mafa, etc., were able to vote, not in their hometowns but in refugee camps in other parts of Borno State, under special arrangements made by INEC.” he

    He explained that many residents of the North East have returned to their homes as Boko Haram was eradicated from their areas since the Buhari administration came into power.

    According to him, institutions such as schools, police stations, markets and courts have been reestablished or in the process of being reestablished in many of the areas.

    He said that despite Mr. Dasuki’s attempt to rewrite history; Nigerians could not have forgotten the embarrassing stories of failed weapons that plagued Nigeria’s military during the previous administration.

    He also pointed out that under the previous administration, there were cases of unserviceable weapons, expired ammunition and fake armored vehicles, which caused untold grief to valiant armed forces on the battlefield, with arms exploding Willy nilly and guns failing to fire.

    “It is for trespasses like these that the Buhari administration is determined to get to the bottom of the 2.1 billion Dollars arms procurement scandal and ensure that no single one of the culprits goes scot free.

    “The truth, as a matter of fact is that the monster of terrorism got bigger and more daring due to the incompetence and misgovernance of the last administration and no amount lies and fiction can change that,” he stated.

  • Saraki urges all to be calm over new school curriculum

    Saraki urges all to be calm over new school curriculum

    The President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, has urged all stakeholders in  education to remain calm on the new nine-year Basic Education Curriculum to enable the National Assembly to look into various issues involved.

    Saraki made the call while receiving a delegation of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), who paid him a courtesy visit in Abuja on Wednesday.

    He assured the delegation that the Senate Committee on Basic Education would investigate the complaints by the association on the curriculum with a view to making it acceptable and satisfactory to all religions.

    Explaining the background to the introduction of the policy, Saraki said the process began in 2010 when the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan came up with a series of reforms.

    “This is with a view to reduce the number of subjects in school curriculum.

    “As leaders, we must continue to seek and find solutions to problems.

    ‘’You will remember that in 2010, the past administration came up with reforms on how to reduce the number of subjects at the basic education level.

    “There were about 20 subjects at that time, and subsequently they were reduced to 12.

    “In the process of implementing those reforms, we have this problem. Why I am saying this is so we don’t leave here and believe that it was done to favour one religion over the other.

    “Now the reform is clearly not working. So our responsibility is to look into that reform and make it work.

    “I am sure that there was no intention to make one group feel disadvantaged with this new school curriculum.

    ‘’This is why this Senate will direct our Committee on Education to look at the reform and find out why it is not working with the relevant stakeholders,” he said.

    Earlier, the leader of the delegation, Prof. Charles Adisa, called for the intervention of the National Assembly to ensure genuine respect for Nigeria’s Constitution.

    Adisa, who represented, the CAN National President, Rev. Samson Ayokunle, said: “We also call for the abolition of obnoxious laws that infringe on freedom of worship.”

    He said CAN wanted Islamic Religious Knowledge  and Christian Religious Knowledge to be offered separately, while Social Studies and Civic Education should be merged.

    Adisa also said the federal and state ministries of education should employ more teachers for religious subjects.

    “This will allow students to opt for religious studies of their choice in all public schools in Nigeria,” he added.

    Adisa noted that the Constitution was supreme over any other consideration.

    He stressed that Chapter 1 of the Constitution states the fundamental human rights of Nigerians, including freedom of religion.

  • Goodluck Jonathan’s son-in-law shot in Calabar

    Goodluck Jonathan’s son-in-law shot in Calabar

    •Police say it’s ‘3rd or 4th’ attempt on his life

    A son-in-law of former President Goodluck Jonathan, Prince Goodwill Edward, is now lying critically ill in a hospital in Calabar, after he was shot by unknown gunmen in his residence in the Cross Rivers State capital on Friday.

    Edward is the Special Adviser on Youth Affairs to Governor Ben Ayade of Cross River State.

    He was attacked at his State Housing Estate home in Calabar.

    The severity of his injuries could not be immediately ascertained neither was the name of the medical facility he was rushed to.

    Edward who hails from Abi local government area of Cross River State, married Jonathan’s daughter in a very lavish and publicized wedding in 2014.

    Police Commissioner Hafiz Inuwa confirmed the incident although he said the matter was yet to be officially reported to the police.

    He also said the Friday attack was the “third or fourth” attempt on Edward’s life.

    “As at now I’m talking to you there is no official report about it. We are not going to wait until the matter is reported,” Inuwa said.

    “We are the police, we know our responsibility. Even if they have a reason for not reporting, we are not going to sit down until the matter is reported.

    “We have the responsibility and will investigate and by the grace of God we will go after those responsible.”

    Asked if he knew why the matter had not been officially reported to the police, he retorted: “How can I know why they have not come to report? I am a new person in the command. I did not even know that this had happened before.

    “It is just coming to me now that this is the third or fourth time that they have attempted him. If we stumble on anything I will let you know.”

  • Alleged link with Boko Haram: Court frees Ndume

    Alleged link with Boko Haram: Court frees Ndume

    About six years into his trial, a Federal High Court in Abuja has freed Senator Ali Ndume (All Progressives Congress, Borno State) of terrorism related charges brought against him in 2011 by the Goodluck Jonathan government.

    In a ruling this afternoon, Justice Gabriel Kolawole upheld Ndume’s no-case submission and proceeded to discharge and acquit him.

    The judge said the prosecution failed, through evidence led, to link the defendant (Ndume) to the offences alleged, to warrant his being called to enter defence.

    Justice Kolawole noted that although Ndume admitted volunteering information to the Department of State Services (DSS), the Police and other security agencies, no representatives of any of the agencies were called as witness by the prosecution.

    Ndume was charged with among others, withholding information about the operations of Boko Haram and having link and communicating with some of its leaders.

    The defendant had, in his no-case submission, claimed to have been involved in negotiation with Boko Haram leaders at the instance of the then Federal Government led by President Jonathan.

    He said former Vice President and the Director General of the DSS during Goodluck Jonathan’s administration were aware of his interactions with a Boko Haram member, Ali Konduga.

    He said his link with Konduga, who has since been convicted on terrorism related charges, was at the behest of the presidential committee set up under the Jonathan government to help address security challenges in the North-East part of the country.

    The Senator was arraigned on December 12, 2011 on a four-count charge relating to terrorism charges. He was accused of, among other counts, sponsoring the Boko Haram sect, maintaining a link with the sect member and failing to disclose the phone number of Konduga, which was alleged to be in his (Ndume’s) possession.

    The prosecution commenced trial on July 3, 2012 and closed its case on June 22, 2016, after calling nine witnesses, following which Ndume opted for a no-case submission.

    Ndume’s lawyer, Rickey Tarfa (SAN) had, while adopting his no-case submission on June 6 this year, urged the court to discharge and acquit his client on the ground that the prosecution was unable to establish a prima facie case against the defendant.

    Tarfa said the prosecution was unable to lead sufficient evidence link his client with the offences alleged.

    He said Ndume’s contact with Boko Haram came about when the senator was a member of the Presidential Committee on Security Matters in the North-East of the country.

    Reacting to the court’s decision, Ndume dressed in white robe (agbada and white cap) thank God for spearing his life to witness his acquittal.

    “I thank God for spearing my life. Many Senators, who have cases against them have died, but here I am and well. I am grateful to God,” he said.

  • PDP can never be the same again – Okupe

    PDP can never be the same again – Okupe

    A former Senior Special Assistant on Public Affairs to former President Goodluck Jonathan, Dr. Doyin Okupe, has announced his exit from the crisis-ridden Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    In a statement he circulated in the media yesterday, Okupe cited the party’s protracted leadership crisis, saying the PDP no longer has any future.

    According to him, the PDP no longer exists in his ward as a single unified party and whichever way the judgment of the Supreme Court goes in the pending legal tussle, the party can never be the same again.

    Its current direction is difficult to discern and I am convinced that even when the much-expected judgement from the Supreme Court is given, the future of the party is not likely to be significantly affected whichever way the judgement goes.

    “There seems to be too much deception, selfishness and gross nepotism in our polity nationally.”

    Okupe regretted that political parties had lost their importance and identities.

    “Once the candidate is Northern, his party is immaterial; all northerners, irrespective of their professed party affiliations, will vote for him.

    “This is the major reason why there has been a total absence of opposition in the country in the last two years, and may probably be responsible for the polarisation and sharp ethnic divisions we are currently witnessing in the country.

    “In the East, there is intense anger and loud call for secession, in the Southsouth, there is absolute indignation and very resolute demand for total control of their resources, while the Southwest is bellicose and hell bent on true federalism and restructuring, which many prominent northerners openly oppose for good or for bad.”

  • Wike: I have been very matured – Amaechi

    Wike: I have been very matured – Amaechi

    Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi yesterday denied allegations by Governor Nyesom Wike that he wasted Rivers State’s money when he was governor.

    He said contrary to the allegation by Wike that his wife and family were into government business, he said his wife was trader.

    The minister spoke in Kaduna after an inspection of the facilities at the Kaduna Inland Dry Port.

    He said: “They have a governor who is a child by accident of Goodluck Jonathan because I don’t want to attribute it to God but by whatever, he entered the office and starts talking about my wife and my family.

    “When I was the governor, nobody would have had access to any government business, not even my wife and siblings and even as minister nobody will have access to government business because it is not a family business but a government business.

    “The problem with Nyesom Wike and I want to say it clearly that if he does not shut up his mouth and do his work, I will bring his wife into focus.

    I have been very matured not to bring his wife but if Wike does not close his mouth and talk about my wife anymore, I will bring out his wife.

    On whether his wife collected any contract or money, he said: “My wife will never. We don’t do family  business. All I care about is transparency, my wife is a trader, she buys and sells and Wike knows that.”

    On the accusation that he squandered money, the minister said: “You believe that? The man who said I have $50 million in Lagos and could not prove it is the same man you believe? The man that said I didn’t pay salary until I left office and he later says no, it’s pension I didn’t pay? You believe such man?

    “First he doesn’t know how to speak English, he is poorly dressed and you bring me into focus with that kind of a man?

    “As usual he was given how many hours on television and they cut me off when I came and put disclaimer. The television station gave Wike all the opportunity to say the rubbish he has to say without facts. He has no facts and he was allowed to malign people’s character.”

    On the approval of the Judicial Commission of Enquiry by the court, he said: “How do we know how the court arrived at its decision? We were not given fair hearing. We were not even informed. There is a panel of Justices in Rivers State, which is the Court of Appeal and by the time we knew it, they took the matter from them and gave to a panel that came from Adamawa.”

    On the alleged clash between him and Senator Magnus Abe, he simply said: “I don’t know about that, only you know If I have problems with him.”

  • Malabu: Reps panel to decide on Jonathan’s invitation

    Malabu: Reps panel to decide on Jonathan’s invitation

    The House of Representatives ad hoc committee investigating the alleged corruption, malpractices and breach of due process in the award of OPL 245 is meeting today to discuss the modalities for inviting former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The report of the committee had indicted former President Jonathan for his role in the contentious Malabu fraud.

    A member of the Hon. Rasak Atunwa- headed committee who spoke under anonymity yesterday said the meeting would hold today.

    “The committee is going to discuss the modalities for his invitation just like the chairman of the committee said recently.

    “The issue is that the former President was the commander in Chief when the monumental fraud was committed and the country lost such a huge amount of revenue.

    “The committee is going to ask the President to tell us what he knows about the Malabu deal and educate us on how he could claim ignorance of what ministers he appointed were doing on his behalf, particular, when they claimed he gave the approval for such.”

     

     

     

     

  • Quit Notice: Group warns Ohaneze over Utterances

    Quit Notice: Group warns Ohaneze over Utterances

    The leader of Peoples Movement for a New Nigeria (PMNN), Alhaji Yahaya Ndu and two times Presidential Candidate of the defunct African Renaissance Party has condemned the call by Ohaneze Ndigbo on Igbo people living in the North to defend themselves against possible attack by northerners.

    Ndu, an Igbo prominent son, explained that the statement credited to the leader of Ohaneze Ndigbo Youth Council, Mazi Okechukwu Isiguzoro, would only expose the people of the South East in the North to avoidable attacks from northerners.

    It will be recalled that Ohanaeze Ndigbo Youth Council had told Igbo living in the North to prepare to defend themselves against possible attack by northerners.

    National President of the OYC, Isiguzoro, had said in Enugu that the ultimatum issued to Igbo by the northern groups was a call to arms, and should be treated as such by security agencies.

    Addressing the press Tuesday in Port Harcourt, Ndu argued that it would be difficult for the Igbo, who could not contain the herdsmen attack against them in Enugu, Abia and other part of the South East, to defend themselves against any attack in the northern part of the country.

    The former presidential candidate of the defunct African Renaissance Party, described Isiguzoro’s utterance as frightening and in bad taste.

    He also described a situation where some persons in the South East would be calling for secession, not minding the huge population of Ndigbo and their investments in the North.

    According to him, rather than supporting a breakaway from Nigeria, Ohaneze should have advised against it and insist on the restructuring of the country.

    “It is wrong for Ohaneze to have said that Igbo people in the North should defend themselves. It is in bad taste and I find it frightening. If Igbo cannot defend themselves when herdsmen attack them in their villages in the South East, is it in the North that they can defend themselves?

    “The issue of Biafra should be discussed. Town unions in Igboland and Igbo people living in the North should discuss this. I do not believe in secession and I also do not believe in the injustice against Ndigbo.

    “You (Ohaneze) cannot stay in Enugu and ask defenceless Igbo people in the North to defend themselves. The first civil war was not discussed and 50 years after, we want to make the same mistake again.

    “Some are saying the Igbo in the North should start returning, if they return, what would they train their children with? What would they feed their family with.”

    He, however, recommended an urgent national conference that would be mass-participatory to discuss the way forward for Nigeria and also consider the agitations of some ethnic groups in the country.

    Ndu said, “The Presidency and the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the two arms of the National Assembly, in appreciation of the enormity of the danger confronting the Federal Republic, should organise a mass-participatory, all Nigerian peoples national conference from all wards of the republic and across the world where members of the Nigerian Diaspora to fashion out modalities for peaceful coexistence and prosperity of the nation from latest, October 1, 2017.”

    On the perceived injustice against the South East, he added, “What should we do against the injustices against Ndigbo? The perfect opportunity to address the issue of restructuring and bad roads in the South East should have been addressed by the Goodluck Jonathan administration.

    “Jonathan held a national conference that was not sovereign and gave limitations on the issues to be discussed.”

     

  • Ecological Fund: Learn to take responsibility, El-Rufai replies Jonathan

    Ecological Fund: Learn to take responsibility, El-Rufai replies Jonathan

    Gov. Nasiru El-Rufai of Kaduna State on Tuesday blasted former President Goodluck Jonathan on his recent comment on the N2 billion Ecological Fund granted PDP states during his tenure.

    El-Rufai said in Kaduna through his media aide, Samuel Aruwan, that the former President had failed to justify why he released the fund only to his cronies instead of all the states.

    The governor lamented that instead of addressing the moral issues raised in the interim report of the investigation instituted by the National Economic Council, Jonathan chose to resort to personal attacks.

    “He is not a man that can take responsibility for anything.

    “In March 2015, not long after making concession call to President Buhari, he summoned his pecks and ask them to reject the result of an election whose winner he had congratulated in private.

    “That effort and publicity failed spectacularly and the will of people prevailed.

    “So no one should be surprised that he is denying presiding over the discrete distribution of the ecological funds.

    “His denial begs the question, what special circumstance ensured that only states that were controlled by the PDP and its allied parties qualified for the N2 billion each.”

    El-Rufa’i accused Jonathan of running Nigeria while in power for his party and family.

    “Jonathan cannot argue with fact that the payment are in the record of ecological fund.

    “He knowingly engaged in discriminatory disbursement of federal fund; the legality of that is open to question.”

    He dismissed as disingenuous, the former president’s argument that money was also disbursed for the Green Wall Project in some northern states.

    El-Rufa’i also noted that Jonathan had failed in his response, to show where he lied regarding the disbursement of N2 billion to each of the affected states as contained in the NEC interim report on the utilisation of the Ecological Fund.

    The governor reminded the former president that the investigation being carried out was at the instance of NEC and not a personal initiative

  • Weep not for Goodluck Jonathan

    Weep not for Goodluck Jonathan

    A major ammunition with political foes of President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan which shot down his re-election bid in 2015 was the accusation that he favoured the Niger Delta region over other parts of the country. Specifically, his critics alleged that the choicest appointments he made went to Ijaw people, with Bayelsa, his home state, particularly favoured. This allegation was practically made into a song, one that played loudly and was enjoyed to the hilt by other sections of the country.

    However, those of us who are Ijaw knew this was nothing but fallacy. It was effectively shown up as such before the election, which Jonathan eventually lost to General Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC). The widespread assumption that Jonathan did so much for the Niger Delta, especially the ordinary Bayelsan, was ripped up by the former President himself. Perhaps unintended. Unknown to him at the time, he was making a rod for his own back.

    The former President, standing on the podium at the Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium, venue of the presidential campaign rally in Port Harcourt, unwittingly invited what would come to haunt him later.  With the trademark wide grin pasted on his face, he danced and waved enthusiastically to loud cheers from his supporters. While speaking, Jonathan admitted that he had done very little for the Niger Delta, but promised to make amends if re-elected. Perhaps, the admission was made in the hope that other parts of the country would view him as a non-sectional leader, while the people of the Niger Delta would be seduced into longing for four years of intensive development of the zone.

    It did not pan out either way. In fact, what happened was that Jonathan, unknowingly, invited Niger Delta activists to come up with a narrative that his five-year presidency amounted to a waste for the ordinary Bayelsan and Niger Deltan.

    A confirmation of this was delivered by Jonathan himself after he lost the re-election bid. It was at a state banquet held in his honour by Governor Henry Seriake Dickson at the Dr. Gabriel Okara Cultural Centre in Yenagoa on May 29, 2015.

    The occasion, brimming with Jonathan’s close aides, officials of his government and the crème de la crème of the Ijaw nation, was akin to a stock-taking exercise. Addressing the gathering, Jonathan said he thought Bayelsans would boo him for neglecting them but was amazed by the level of love the governor and the people of the state have shown him.‘‘…When you are in high office and you finished serving, you are afraid of going back home, … at the late hour, it dawns on you that you could have done that, you failed to do this, you failed to do that… you begin to fear whether the people that come to receive you will curse you, hoot at you,” Jonathan thundered.

    Clearly stated by the former President was that despite his administration’s neglect of Bayelsa State, Governor Dickson’s support for him never wavered. What, perhaps, went unstated was that Governor Dickson also remained steadfast despite the former President’s wife undisguised attempts to humiliate him.

    As a matter of fact, mutual friends of the duo were persuaded that Governor Dickson’s affection for the former President was like that of a son for the father, a state of affairs that angered many Ijaw activists like me.

    We believed that such strong affection for a man, whose administration neglected the Ijaw nation, amounted to a betrayal of the Ijaw cause for which Isaac Boro, Melford Okilo, DSP Alamieyeseigha fought and died.

    The former President would, again, confirm Governor Dickson as a dependable ally. The confirmation was made during the run-up to the December 2015 Bayelsa State governorship election, which Governor Seriake Dickson won.

    On 8 September 2015, while making a strong case for the re-election of Governor Dickson, the former President described the governor as a man of uncommon leadership qualities and a ‘‘trusted and dependable person’’.

    Thus, when the news media erupted with the reports, on 16 May, that Governor Dickson accused Dr. Jonathan of neglecting the Niger Delta during his five-year presidency, it came as no surprise to me. Why? Jonathan himself had admitted doing so. The governor made the remark at the annual Isaac Adaka Boro Day celebration at the Izon Warri in Yenagoa.

    After a careful reading of the governor’s speech, I realised-as any reader capable of reflection should-that Dickson’s comments were directed, exclusively, at the political elite, notably ministers and other appointees of the Jonathan administration. In very clear terms, the governor pointed out the studious refusal of people in this category to team up with him in his efforts to develop the state.

    Even then, it would require a mighty effort not to be tempted to interpret Dickson’s remarks as suggesting that Jonathan wasted the chance by the Ijaw to develop the Niger Delta because he was the leader. The leader, by nature, provides direction to the led. Not the other way.

    Ijaw leaders invested significant efforts, time and resources in the quest for true federalism, resource control and an opportunity to have one of them lead the country as president.

    The strength of this agitation, arising from decades of minority oppression, led the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo to say: “I look forward to the day, not in the far distant future, when an Ijaw would be president of our Republic and a Birom or vice versa.”

    Awolowo’s hopes were fulfilled when Dr. Jonathan got the chance. Did he use it well for the Ijaw nation? He has answered the question by himself.

    It is important for every Nigerian to understand that there should be adequate collaboration between the government of Bayelsa State and the Federal Government principally because the challenges posed by the environment cannot be surmounted by the state government alone.

    The dip in revenues accruing to the states of the federation makes this doubly difficult. The failure of the former President to adequately take care of the Niger Delta has been seized upon by the Buhari administration to reject requests for collaboration from the Bayelsa State government.

    The Buhari’s administration’s default question is: Why did such collaboration not take place when a Bayelsan was President?

    While I am not an admirer of Governor Dickson, I am persuaded that his disappointment with the former President is well founded. I think this is the position of well-meaning Ijaw person. It is a fact that oil exploration started in Ijawland, precisely in Oloibiri, Ogbia Local Government Area. Despite prosperity the country has seen from oil, Ijawland remains grim and in the grip of poverty and environmental degradation.

    It would have been amusing, were it not for its seriousness, that some people are making an issue of Governor Dickson’s observation, which Jonathan himself publicly admitted.

    Even if Jonathan had not admitted, evidence would have declined to support any grand claim he would make. The failure of the Jonathan administration to build the East-West Road, the only highway linking the Niger Delta region with the East and West, and his neglect of the federal road to Bayelsa State and the one to his community in Otuoke would have punctured any confected narrative of good performance.

    Dickson, it bears repeating, is not a man I admire. But his courage is an attribute I cannot dismiss. One of the first roads he constructed within his first year in office was the road from Sagbama to Toru-Orua, his community.

    So, my advice to those who love Jonathan more than he loves himself is:  If they must weep, they should weep for the grotesquely underdeveloped Ijaw nation, not for Jonathan, who frittered an opportunity to correct the wrongs of the past.

    For those with little or no knowledge of the Ijaw, they remain one of the world’s most oppressed people. A little background could help put the Ijaw situation in sharper focus. Bayelsa is the only homogeneous Ijaw state. It is the hub of neglect and therefore, agitation in the Niger Delta region.

    By nature, the Ijaw are activists, an attribute imposed on them by their challenging environment. It was this environment that gave rise to Major Jasper Isaac Adaka Boro, a native of Kaiama, Bayelsa State. Boro and his colleagues famously launched the 12-Day revolution against the Nigerian state, the foundation for the Niger Delta struggle.

    The founding fathers of Bayelsa State wanted the state they were agitating for to be the Jerusalem of all Ijaw scattered across Nigeria. It was against this background that late Governor DSP Alamiesiegha, nicknamed “Governor – General of the Ijaw nation” gave appointments and scholarships to Ijaw irrespective of whether they were from Bayelsa or not. The pattern has continued under Dickson, who was famously described by Alamieyeseigha as his successor in the Ijaw struggle.

    The implication is that a Bayelsa governor must attend to the needs of all Ijaw people, as he is viewed as a governor of the Ijaw nation. Bayelsa State was also conceived to only offer opportunities to only Ijaw.

    It also explains why Bayelsans tend to see public funds as something to be shared among themselves. I can say with authority that before Dickson became governor, public servants in the state were not paying Personal Income Tax. Similarly, citizens were not paying electricity bills, as they were borne by government.

    Bayelsa, as stated earlier, sits atop vast oil and gas deposits. Oloibiri in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State was where oil was first struck in commercial quantities in Nigeria. This has counted for nothing, with the treacherous terrain serving as impediments to wholesale development by successive state governments. This is made worse by inadequate or half-hearted interventions by the Federal Government, which has also continued to ignore agitation for more accruals. Successive state governments did their best and the current one is doing same, within the limits of its resources. Their efforts, however, have been like a drop in the ocean.

    This is why it is important to have a State/Federal Government collaboration on projects such as the Brass LNG, construction of an airport, deep seaport, good road networks to the oil terminals. There is no doubt that these big-ticket projects are way beyond the financial capacity of state government, even if it does nothing else for 10 years.

    One cheering news is that Dickson is building an international airport which, when completed, will transform the economy of the state but he must pay off salary arrears being owed public servants or else we boo him!

    The Jonathan presidency raised hopes. Jonathan was expected to allot oil wells to interested Ijaw businessmen and hit the Atlantic, where Ijaw people’s wealth lies, on three fronts: Brass, Oporoma- Koluama and Ekeremor-Agger. These fronts host the oil terminals, but are inaccessible to motorists. The prevalent belief in Bayelsa is that the state cannot develop until it has access to the sea. Having access not only entails building roads, but also having a deep seaport and an airport to make the state play an active role in the Gulf of Guinea.

    These, sadly, did not happen under Jonathan.

    • Comrade Soweibo is a Niger Delta activist based in Yenagoa and wrote in via soweibo50@gmail.com