Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • Nigeria to implement cyber crime law – CJN

    Nigeria to implement cyber crime law – CJN

    The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen,  on Tuesday said Nigeria was proactively taking steps to ensure that the Cyber Crime Act of 2015 was implemented.

    Onnoghen said this at the 2nd Annual Conference on Financial Fraud and Cyber Crime in Abuja.

    The conference was organised by the Federal Ministry of Justice, National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) in collaboration with Organised Private Sector (OPS).

    Representing Onnoghen, Mrs Juliet Ibekaku-Nwagwu, Special Adviser to the President on Justice Reforms, said the Ministry of Justice was ensuring that cyber crime perpetrators were prosecuted for obstructing national security.

    “Our intention is to ensure that Nigeria is proactively implementing our Cyber Crime Act of 2015 and also to ensure that we are implementing the Advanced Fee Fraud Act of 2007.

    “We want to ensure that we are looking at cross border crimes that can affect the national security of Nigeria and we are taking proactive steps in that direction.

    He said that Nigeria was in a critical situation and if nothing was done to tackle cyber crime issues in the government and across private sector, the country might become subject to gruesome cyber attacks.

    “At that point it will be difficult for us to come out from it,” he said.

    According to him, trainings and collaborations are ongoing  among ministries, departments and agencies of government to ensure that officers are positioned to forestall cyber crime in their offices.

    “A lot of work is going on both from the office of the National Security Adviser where rapid response team is working closely with NITDA.

    Onnoghen said that work was also going on with the Nigeria Police Force, Economic Financial Crimes Commission as well as the Department of State Security Services.

    “There is an ongoing coordination platform called the Cyber Crime Advisory Committee working on developing policies and standards against cyber attack on Nigeria.

    He said that the working group was developing training programmes for law enforcement agencies, prosecutors and the financial sector.

    “We are taking steps to prevent cyber crime from becoming a problem and to prevent Nigeria from being vulnerable from such attacks,” Onnoghen said.

    Mr Chris Okeke, the Director, Cyber Security NITDA, said that the country adopting the Cyber Crime Act was a step in the right direction to ensure cyber protection.

    Okeke, however, said that before the adoption of the Act, the agency was working to protect the country’s government information system.

    “Passing the Cyber Crime into law is a great improvement and a step in the right direction, it is the way forward.

    “With the act, it is a platform and the foundation for curbing cyber crime in the country. The nation is making effort and agencies are collaborating with NITDA to ensure the effective implementation of the act.

    “You cannot introduce a software solution without ensuring that the software solution has adequate authentication, protection so that hackers don’t get access to it.

    He said that before the passage of the act, NITDA had been doing a lot to ensure that the comprehensive protections of IT solution deployed into the country were working.

    Mr Ayo Omotade, representing the OPS said that financial fraud and cyber crime was difficult to curb in the country due to lack of adequate manpower.

    Omotade said that the country needed to engage young people in cyber space education to equip more hands for its monitoring.

    “Financial fraud and cyber crimes are crimes perpetuated easily because the cyber space is difficult to monitor.

    “We have so many challenges handling the cyber space because we don’t have enough skilled manpower in the country and we are going into IT in every aspect of our lives.

    “The challenges are there and only few people can tackle them,”  he said.

    According to him, Nigeria has a long way to go in curtailing cyber crime, but the very sure way to handle it is capacity development right from an early age.

    He said this should be imbibed in the school curriculum and in different levels of education, primary, secondary and tertiary education.

    “Cyber crime education needs to come to all these spaces and counter measures should be adopted,” Omotade said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Cyber Crime Act was signed into law by former President Goodluck Jonathan on May 2015.

    The Act is to provide definitive legal machinery in Nigeria to provide for the tackling of the pervasive problem of cyber crime from all quarters both from the Information Communications Technology (ICT) sector and the legal community.

  • Group replies Dickson: Jonathan years not wasted for Ijaw nation

    Group replies Dickson: Jonathan years not wasted for Ijaw nation

    A Niger Delta rights association, the Movement for the Sustainability of Ijaw has faulted the claim by Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson that the administration of former President Dr. Goodluck Jonathan as wasted years for the Ijaw nation.

    Reacting to the statement in a press statement issued on Thursday,  Mr. Tonbra Ebitimi, National leader of the  group described Dickson as an overtly too ambitious politician  who disparages the former President, while pretending to love him.

    The statement said: “We believe that only a stone-hearted traitor would move against a man who regularly comes to his rescue in times of danger.”

    The group further compared Dickson to Brutus, a villain who dealt Caesar the heaviest blow from his hidden hand while pretending to be a friend.

    “Initially, we did not believe that such toxic arrow could be shot from the bow of a political godson in the direction of his highly revered mentor and fellow kinsman. But having waited for about two days for Dickson’s clarification or rebuttal to no avail, we have no choice but conclude that the attack was a carefully orchestrated denunciation trained to achieve a desired end.

    “We suspect that the aim was to rubbish the achievements of the Jonathan administration, pull down its vestiges, and damage the former President’s persona as a prominent Ijaw leader.”

    The group noted that the statement was one Dickson shouldn’t have made, no matter the weight of the disdain and grudge he nurses against the former President and his immediate family as no other politician or governor had attacked Jonathan in a similar way.

    “ Those other governors did not descend to the gutter like Dickson did; not because of their love for the former President, but because their conscience would not let them lie against Jonathan, by describing his time in office as wasted, like Dickson did.

    “ It is instructive that Dickson is not only Jonathan’s godson but the Governor of his state! Ordinarily, he should be the one to rise to Jonathan’s defence in all circumstances, even when others are criticizing him. Unfortunately, the reverse is the case. Like Brutus, his knife is the first to go in.

    “ But does Dickson really have any good case against Jonathan? We don’t think so because we are all witnesses to the successes recorded by the Jonathan administration towards not only advancing the cause of the Ijaw, but also working assiduously to make life better across the country.

    “We are also aware of how much the former President boosted Dickson’s political career by supporting his gubernatorial ambition while still President. Even out of power Jonathan gave his all to team up with Dickson against a very formidable opponent; an unconditional support that helped him win a second term.

    “We will not condemn Dickson. But we won’t hesitate to let him realize that the unkindest cut, the ultimate treachery is usually not from the enemy. It is the blow thrown from the hidden hand of the one pretending to be a friend. We can only warn him that Karma rewards every man according to his deeds,” the group stated.

     

  • Former President Jonathan scores Wike high

    Former President Jonathan scores Wike high

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan has praised Gov. Nyesom Wike for delivering the dividends of democracy to the people of Rivers.

    Jonathan made the remark on Thursday in Port Harcourt while inaugurating the second Npkogu bridge, as part of the second anniversary celebration of the Wike administration.

    The Former President said that the performance of the Governor has endeared him to the electorate.

    ‘’ Gov. Wike has performed wonderfully well in governance. I have no regrets that he is the Governor of Rivers State. I am happy that the governor has opened up Rivers State through projects, ‘’ he said.

    “Wike has shown so much commitment to infrastructural development. The whole of Rivers State is now a construction yard, ” Jonathan said.

    Jonathan noted that the appreciation for the outstanding performance of Gov. Wike was beyond party lines.

    The former President stressed that acting President Yemi Osinbajo had also acknowledged the developmental strides of the Governor when he visited the State.

    Jonathan lauded Rivers people for their support throughout his eight years in national politics, while expressing joy to be part of the occasion.

    Gov. Nyesom Wike stated that Nigerians had seen the difference between good governance and false promises in the two years of the APC government.

    Wike said that the decision to invite the former President to inaugurate the project was a clear message to Nigerians that Jonathan would not be abandoned.

    “We are not politicians that when anything is wrong, they sing different song. Rivers State is a different place, ‘’ he added.

    ‘’ When we believe in you, we believe in you. We are different from other Niger Delta states. We can say it with all authority, ‘’ Wike said.

    “We cannot come out in the public and begin to castigate our own. Those who do that, should have a rethink.

    ‘’For us, it doesn’t matter, even with the blackmail against Jonathan, we will continue to back him, ” the Governor said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria [ NAN ] reports that the two bridges constructed by the Wike administration link Nkpogu to the state capital.

    The Commissioner of Works, Mr. Bathuel Harrison said that the Second Nkpogu Bridge would ease the traffic challenges in the area.

  • Jonathan, Tinubu, Murray-Bruce, others in Minna for IBB daughter’s wedding

    Jonathan, Tinubu, Murray-Bruce, others in Minna for IBB daughter’s wedding

    Former President, Goodluck Jonathan on Friday led other top dignitaries which comprised of state governors, business moguls, Senators, top politicians and the who is who in the country at the wedding between the daughter of former Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida and Alwak Lawal Ibrahim.

    Minna, the capital of Niger state was a bevvy of activities as dignitaries gathered for the wedding between the last daughter of former military President, General Ibrahim Babangida and the Sarkin Sudan of Gombe, Alwak Lawal Abdullahi.

    The security around the Minna metropolis and roads leading to the Uphill Mansion of Babangida was tightened as early as 7:00am.

    The state Governor, Alhaji Abubakar Sani Bello was on hand to welcome guests at the Minna airport. Former President Jonathan and his wife, Dame Patience Jonathan were among the first dignitaries to arrive at the Minna Airport

    The wedding fathia began at 2:00pm.

    The Chief Imam of Wushishi, Shrek Habibu Wushishi conducted the wedding prayer which lasted for twenty minutes while a bride price of N500,000 and ten cows was paid and collected by General Mohammed Inuwa Wushishi who also gave out the bride.

    The Governor of Gombe state, Alhaji Ibrahim Dankwambo received the bride on behalf of the family of the groom.

    Dignitaries at the wedding include, former President Jonathan and his wife, Dame Patience Jonathan, former Vice President, Nmamdi Sambo, APC Chieftain Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, Aliko Dangote, Senate President Bukola Saraki, Speaker of the House of Representatives Dogara Yakubu, PDP Chairman, Ali Module Sheriff.

    Governors of Taraba state, Architect Darius Ishaku, Plateau statE, Simon Lalong, Kano state, Alhaji Abdullahi Gaduje, Nasarawa state, Alhaji Tanko Almakura, Jigsaw state, Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar.

    Former PDP Governors, Sule Lamido, Emmanuel Uduaghan, Alhaji Attahiru Bafawara, Isah Yuguda, Mahmud Shinkafi, Ibrahim Shema, Abubakar Dakingari, professor Osumbo, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu.

    General Garba Duba, Senator Magoro, AVM Hamza Abdullahi, Olu of Kuta, Oba Hamid Adekunle, former PDP Spokesman, Professor Alkali, General Aliyu Gusau, Senator Ben Obi, Senator Ben Murray Bruce, Chairman UBA, Tony Elumelu, One of the Directors of Vanguard, Alhaji Ahmed, Dr. Ekwesileze Nwodo, former FCT Minister, Alhaji Modibo, Alhaji Yayale Ahmed, Senator Sanusi Dagash.

    Others include Senator Ayim Pius Ayim, Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, MD Dornic Aviation, Mark Snoxell and wife, Wife of Ooni of Ife, Olori, Wuraola Ogunwusi, Alhaji Muhammed Abacha and wife, Former Governor Chukwuemeka Ezeife and former Minister of Works, Mike Onolemenme.

    Imo state Governor, Rochas Okorocha congratulated General Babangida saying that he is the happiest man on earth, “President Babangida should be the happiest person, he has accomplished his mission because he came, he saw and he conquered.”

    He advised the newly Wed to always pray and communicate with each other at all times, “most marriages break up because of lack of communication and prayer. Marriage is all about communication, I urge the couple to communicate at all times.”

    Niger state Governor, Alhaji Abubakar Sani Bello congratulated the newly weds urging them to be patient with each other and pray at all times especially in challenges.

  • Sambo holds private talks with Osinbajo at villa

    Sambo holds private talks with Osinbajo at villa

    Former Vice President Namadi Sambo on Wednesday paid a visit to Acting President Yemi Osinbajo and both held private discussions.

    Sambo said the visit was a usual familiarisation.

    He added that “I have come to visit Mr Vice President and the Acting President as a usual familiarisation visit.

    “As you know, former presidents visit Mr President and former vice presidents visit incumbent vice president,’’ he told correspondents after the visit.

    Sambo said he was happy to meet his former staffers during the visit and thanked them for according him good reception

    “I am happy to see all of you our old colleagues here and I want to thank you very much for this very good reception.’’

    When prompted to disclose what both discussed, he declined, saying it was private.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that as Sambo climbed the staircase to approach the office of the Vice President, Osinbajo received him on the corridor and led him inside.

    Sambo was Vice President to former President Goodluck Jonathan who handed over power to President Muhammadu Buhari on May 29, 2015.

  • $15.5m fraud: Absence of EFCC’s prosecutor stalls Dudafa’s trial

    $15.5m fraud: Absence of EFCC’s prosecutor stalls Dudafa’s trial

    The absence of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) prosecutor on Wednesday in Lagos stalled the ongoing trial of Waripamo-Owei Dudafa, a former Senior Special Adviser on Domestic Affairs to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Dudafa is standing trial at a Federal High Court, Lagos, over alleged concealment of 15.5 million dollars (about N4.8 billion) which the former Nigeria’s First Lady, Mrs Patience Jonathan, has laid claim to.

    He was charged alongside two others, a lawyer, Amajuoyi Briggs, a senior staff of Skye Bank , Adedamola Bolodeoku, and four companies.

    The four companies are Pluto Property Development Company Ltd, Seagate Property Development Company Ltd, Transocean Property Development Company Ltd, and Avalon Property Development Company Ltd.

    At the resumed hearing of the case on Wednesday, the court informed the defendants that the EFCC prosecutor, Mr Rotimi Oyedepo, had written a letter seeking for an adjournment.

    The letter stated that the prosecutor was on a national assignment outside the court’s jurisdiction.

    Responding to the EFCC’s letter, Dudafa’s counsel, Mr Gboyega Oyewole, said it was an “unfortunate situation” for the defendants.

    He said if the defendants had acted that way, EFCC would have accused both the court and the defence of delaying the proceedings.

    “Rotimi Oyedepo is not the only lawyer in EFCC, the commission has the largest lawyers’ chamber in Nigeria. It is an unfortunate situation, and I urge the court not to grant the application.”

    Also, counsel to the second defendant, Mr Ige Asemudara, said he was surprised that the prosecutor would not be in court because of a “national assignment” which was not well explained.

    He, therefore, urged the court not to grant the application.

    Counsel to the third defendant and the four companies, Mr Joseph Okobieme and Mr Jeff Kadri agreed with the submissions of the first and second defendants.

    The lawyers urged the court not to grant the adjournment, but to dismiss the charge against the defendants.

    In his ruling, Justice Babs Kuewumi, said the court would adjourn the case in the interest of justice.

    He fixed Sept 13 for continuation of trial.

  • Daily Times to celebrate heroes, heroines

    The country’s foremost newspaper, The Daily Times of Nigeria (DTN), on Friday said it would begin its 91st anniversary with honouring some eminent Nigerians and an exhibition on May 16.

    DTN, regarded to as the nation’s heritage newspaper, will honour three Presidents, including Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria, Nana Kufo-Ado of Ghana and former President Goodluck Jonathan also of Nigeria.

    The Publisher DTN, Mr Fidelis Anosike and Chairman, Anniversary Organising Committee, Aremo Olusegun Osoba said in a joint statement that the event and the AA top level National and Historic Exhibition on Nigeria would hold at the Abuja International Conference Centre.

    President Muhammadu Buhari will be awarded with Nnamdi Azikiwe Leadership Award; President Nana Akufo-Ado of Ghana with Babatunde Jose Leadership Award and ex-President of Nigeria, Dr Goodluck Jonathan with Ernest Ikoli Leadership Award.

    The Nigerian Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, will be confined with the Politician of the Decade Award and Abia Governor, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu with the Good Governance Award alongside seven Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode (Lagos) and Ibrahim Dankwabo (Gombe).

    Others are Bindo Jubril (Adamawa); Nyesom Wike (Rivers); Willie Obiano (Anambra); Yahaya Bello (Kogi) and Atiku Bagudu (Kebbi), who are also billed to receive the Good Governance award at the event.

    Gov. Dankwabo of Gombe will also be honoured with the Governor of the Decade Award.

    In the private sector, business icon, Mr Tony Elumelu, Chairman, Heirs Holding and UBA, will be crowned with Man of the Decade Award.

    Other awardees are Mrs Ibukun Awosika, Chairman, First Bank Plc, who will be conferred with Woman of the Decade Award, while Pastor Paul Adefarasin, will bag Life Impact Award.

    The publisher, Pinnacle Communications Ltd., Nduka Obaigbena, and other Nigerian Media icons such as John Momoh, Linda Ikeji, and Chris Ubosi completed the list.

    The theme of the exhibition, “Nigeria through the Times’’ will be hosted at the foyer of the Abuja International Conference Centre on May 16, 2017 from 3 p.m. till 6 p.m.

    “The exhibition will also be hosted in Lagos at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA), Victoria Island Lagos, from June 1 to June 6.

    “The exhibition is aimed at bringing back to our memories, the vision and struggles of our founding fathers who laboured vigorously for the Nigerian Independence.

    “The exhibition is exclusively documented by The Daily Times and retained in its very rich archives.

    “The historic event shall showcase the history of Nigeria viz-a-viz the colonisation era.

    “The rise of Nigerian nationalism, pictorial exhibitions of historic constitutional conferences, emergence of political parties, the Nigerian independence pictures,’’ the statement said.

    It added that “The Daily Times first issue of June 1, 1926, the Daily Times independence edition, October1, 1960, landmark editorials of the Daily Times will be displayed.

    “Also, Photographs of the editors of The Daily Times publications and memorable front pages from Daily and Sunday Times are features of the exhibition.

    “The Times Heroes Awards 2017, which comes as icing on the anniversary cake, will hold at the Abuja International Conference Centre Conference Hall from 6.30 p.m. on May 16, 2017.

    “The Awards are instituted to honour deserving heroes who have distinguished themselves in various endeavours and whose activities have positively impacted lives,’’ a legacy the Times Nigeria has canvassed over the years,’’ it said.

    DTN said that the anniversary planning committee noted that the 2017 anniversary was consolidated because the last awards by the Daily Times was in 1996 when the organisation marked its 70 years anniversary.

    “Henceforth, the Times Heroes Awards will now be an annual award.

    “Notable icons of the Daily Times are Sir Adeyemo Alakija, Ernest Ikoli and Alhaji Babatunde Jose.

    Others are late Chief Innocent Oparadike; Araba Tola Adeniyi, Tunji Oseni, Onukaba Adeniyi-Ojo and others.

    “The event, expected to attract people from all walks of life aims at the promotion of humanitarian cause, such as the issues of the Internally Displaced Nigerians (IDPs),’’ the anniversary committee added.

     

     

  • Court rules on Oronsaye’s no-case submission May 9

    Court rules on Oronsaye’s no-case submission May 9

    FCT High Court, Maitama, will on May 9, rule on the no- case submission by Steve Oronsaye, former Head of Service of the Federation, facing N190 million corruption charges.

    Oronsaye was also the Chairman, Presidential Committee on Financial Action Task Force, set up by former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    He was docked for breach of trust and diversion of N190 million meant for the committee he chaired.

    The judge, Justice Olasumbo Goodluck, had on March 1 adjourned the ruling until May 4; again on May 4, he adjourned the case until May 9 at the instance of the court.

    The prosecution called six witnesses to prove his case and also closed its case on Nov. 15.

    On Dec. 9, the defence filed no-case submission, saying that the prosecution does not have any case against the defendant.

    In his submission, the defence counsel Chief Kanu Agabi (SAN), argued that there were omissions of essential elements in the charges against his client.

    He said on that account the charges were imperfect.

    Agabi said that the charge was initially 2- count, later amended to 7-count.
    He said that was a sign that something was wrong with the charge from the beginning.

    He said that the prosecution did not specify the amount that was entrusted to the defendant, nor the mandate of the committee the defendant chaired.

    Agabi also said that no evidence of personal use of the fund that the defendant was accused of misusing,but mere allegations.

    He said that no offence proven by prosecution to warrant the defendant to enter defence and therefore urged the court to grant his no-case submission.

    Responding, the prosecuting counsel, Mr Offem Uket, told the court that the prosecution has proved its case, adding that the defendant should enter his defence.

    Uket said that it was not right to bring up the issue of imperfection of charges now, as it is against the provisions in Sections 220 and 221 of Administration of Criminal Justice Act, (ACJA) 2015.
    He urged the court to dismiss the no- case submission

     

  • Will Paradise be postponed, again?

    Will Paradise be postponed, again?

    I have been thinking of the year 2020.

    This must seem capricious, given the exigencies and the sheer volatility of the moment.   Need I recite the litany that everyone knows so well?

    Twenty-wetin’?  I can almost hear the reader gasp in disbelief.  Twenty-wetin’?

    But those who are not too far gone in their cynicism, especially those among them who have also been paying close attention to what some of the best authorities have been saying, will have no difficulty apprehending  that the year 2020 must now be the focus of the national policy dialogue.

    To cite just two of the best authorities aforementioned:  The World Bank Group said six weeks ago that the recession had bottomed out and would end soon.  And only last week, the Minister of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, drawing on a report from the Central Bank of Nigeria, said the recession was fast tapering off and would end by June.

    Let nobody call this optimism unfounded.  At the height of the recession, the government’s main problem was how to find the money to pay all the bills.  Now the money has been pouring in from sources expected and unexpected in such abundance that the problem now is how to spend it.  The wheel has turned full circle, from the oil-boom days of General Yakubu Gowon’s regime.  The good old days are about to return, even if only slowly

    Then, an acute shortage of foreign exchange, the U.S. dollar especially, virtually grounded manufacturing. Now, there is so much foreign exchange in supply that the banks which used to hoard them and sell to buyers at rates that it would be polite to call usurious, are literally begging customers to come buy.  But takers are few and far between.  They are stuck with a glut.

    Only three years now stand between our exit from the one and our entry into the other; between a desultory 2017 and a 2020 full of the great expectations encapsulated in Vision 20:2020

    Here is the first of several Vision Statements, formulated in 1999:

    By 2020, Nigeria will have a large, strong diversified, sustainable and competitive economy that effectively harnesses the talents and energies of its people and responsibly exploits its natural endowments to guarantee a high standard of living and quality of life to its citizens, The Statement continued.

    The whole thing had begun life as Vision 2010, in the time of the debauched dictator Sani Abacha. He inaugurated the Vision 2010 Committee in September 1996 and charged it to produce a report no later than September 1997. The Committee was chaired by Ernest Shonekan, whose tragi-comic pretence of being head of state Abacha had tolerated for 83 days before summarily kicking him out back in 1993.

    Its remit was, first, to determine why, some 36 years after independence, national development lagged         far behind Nigeria’s vast potential and, second, to envision where Nigeria should be in 2010, five decades  after attaining sovereign rule.

    In reality, the whole thing was to provide a setting for Abacha to transform himself into a civilian president, under a new Constitution that would grant him two six-year terms.   He did not live to pursue his scheme

    On taking office in 1999, President Olusegun Obasanjo exhumed the Vision 2010 document, dusted it up, breathed new life into it and projected it as the blueprint for catapulting Nigeria to the league of the 20 biggest economies in the world by the year 2020.  His bid to amend the constitution to allow him a third term —to implement Vision 2020, among other projects — crashed on a procedural vote on the floor of the Senate.

    On succeeding Obasanjo, President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua  more or less embraced Vision 2020, renamed Vision 20: 2020, but his mantra was The Seven-Point Agenda.  Until he died two years after taking office,  it was hard to tell which was goal and which was mechanism: The Vision, or The Agenda

    Among its specific targets:  By 2020, a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of not less than $900 billion and national per capita income of not less than $4,000 per year, and generation of 60,000megawatts (mw) of electricity by 2020.  These targets, Vice President (as he then was) Goodluck Jonathan said while launching the Vision Document, might even be achieved earlier.

    In fact, Jonathan could hardly wait until 2020 for Nigeria to be counted in the league of world’s 20 largest economies.  His administration re-calibrated the economic data and came up with the finding that Nigeria, not South Africa as was generally supposed, had far and away the largest economy in Africa, and the 16th largest in the world.  And as if the Vision was not sufficiently freighted already, he grafted an Industrial Revolution on it.

    Given present realities, it seems clear that the targets set out so clearly and eloquently in all the Vision documents are unlikely to be achieved.  When 2020 comes three years hence, will Paradise be postponed again?

    That won’t be the first time.

    Most of the good things in Vision 20:2020 and its antecedents were supposed to bring should have become commonplace some 17 years ago, in 2000, the magical year that marked all at once the end and the beginning of a decade, a century and a millennium, a conflation that occurs only once in a thousand years.

    That was the year Paradise was going to be regained.

    There would be education for all, health for all, shelter for all, water for all, transportation for all, food for all, clothing for all, shelter for all,  and money for all. There would be absolutely no need to worry about admissions into schools and universities, for there would be enough places for everyone.  Hunger would vanish from the land, and so would homelessness and disease.

    When they were peddling these nostrums in the 1980s, the target year of 2000 seemed quite safe.  Almost like a thief in the night, it came and went.  But the Paradise it promised never came.  In Nigeria, it was postponed, until 2020.  And now that 2020 is nigh upon, and with everything indicating that the targets are unlikely to be achieved, will Paradise have to be postponed again, perhaps to 2030, 2040, even 2050?

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (2017-2020)  two years late in the making, treads basically the same paths and promises the same outcomes as the Vision Documents I have here examined, though couched in far less portentous tones.  One can only hope that it will fare better than what came before.

    A much earlier Paradise envisioned in the Second National Development Plan (1970-74) launched shortly after the end of the civil war, a time of giddy optimism when Nigerians thought all things possible and petrodollars poured at a rate that overwhelmed the national exchequer, should not pass unremarked.

    The goals of the Plan were to establish Nigeria firmly as

    • a strong, self-reliant nation;
    • a great and dynamic economy;
    • a just and egalitarian society;
    • a land of bright and full opportunities for all citizens, and
    • a free and democratic society.

     

    It hardly got off the drawing board.  Less than a decade later, President Shehu Shagari was setting up a Presidential Task Force, supervised by one of the most influential members of his cabinet, to import rice.

    Some five decades and several Vision Documents later, how to produce enough rice for Nigeria’s teeming population lies at the heart of the national policy dialogue, and the prospect of generating enough electricity recedes with each passing day.  Toothpicks remain high on the import list.

  • Goodluck Jonathan Must Return to Keeping the Golden Silence

    Even fools are thought wise if they keep silent, and discerning if they hold their tongues – Holy Bible, Proverbs 17:28 NIV
    In the months that followed his loss of the 2015 Presidential Election, former President Goodluck Jonathan maintained a silence that has now been proven to be golden. His measured silence in the aftermath of his loss was interpreted by some as a confirmation that he is not as clueless as he was reputed to be in the years he was Nigeria’s number one citizen. For the period of time he kept sealed lips about his disastrous presidency, he gained something akin to a cult following with several calls for him to be honored internationally.
    A new book that chronicled Goodluck Jonathan’s epic loss of election as a sitting president, “Against The Run of Play”, authored by the Chairman of This Day editorial board, Mr. Olusegun Adeniyi, has however removed every iota of doubt that the former president is not only clueless but will end his days on earth with his persistent diminished mental capacity. He could have left the narration of what went down to boot him out of office to another key player in his government and the world would have continued to worship him as opposed to the demystified simpleton he has confirmed himself to be.
    The revelations Jonathan made in the book are far from being explosive being that the enlightened population of the country were already in the know of what he is now passing off as the equivalent of a memoir, only that he possess not the capacity to undertake such tasking engagement to save even his own life. Even those without inside knowledge of the government could have successfully hazarded guesses as to the series of bungles that was the Jonathan Presidency.
    Even at that,  it was a chance for the former President to acknowledge his failure and tacitly apologize to Nigerians in the hope that they will forgive his celebrated shortcomings. He instead engaged in his usual ego trip and blame game in which everyone else except himself was responsible for what went wrong. Nothing confirmed his cluelessness more than this singular attitude, a man who was never and is still not willing to take responsibility when the buck stops at his desk.
    By his own admission, the Jonathan Presidency was toxic to the point of threatening global stability and world peace. It is the only plausible reason for former US President Barack Obama, ex-British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Francois Hollande would have backed President Muhammadu Buhari to win the election against a man who had amply demonstrated that he thinks in narrow terms that are restricted to his ethnicity and religious sect.
    Nigerians must not give up on curing the delusion that made Jonathan conclude that the anti-corruption efforts equal an harassment of his family, friends and associates. We have been traumatized sufficiently in the recent months with the mind boggling amounts in foreign currencies being uncovered at different locations across the country or being recovered from individuals that turn out to be related to Jonathan in one capacity or the other, which makes almost all the cases of mind boggling corruption reported in recent times to have the imprint of Jonathan – all over them.
    If this shameful outing, like the failed bid to revive a comatose PDP, is another of the re-branding efforts towards 2019 then it has failed woefully on a scale that should make the former President ask his spin-doctors for a refund. He should similarly ask for refund from the spiritualists who are deceiving him with vision of a 2019 return to Aso Rock since he is more likely to end up in jail for the thefts that took place under his watch than to again bear the title of “Mr President”.
    Jonathan’s temerity in brazenly attempting to rewrite history and exonerating himself of wrongdoings is possible because of the false convention of allowing the immunity granted Presidents to subsist, even after they leave office. The former president had counted on this when he allowed the monumental perfidy that was the legacy of his administration. With the favour he has done in clarifying the extent of his intellectual prowess, albeit using third party to get the job done, the free counsel to him is to return to maintain the code of silence. If he ever has to pen a literary work again, it should be; “How Not to Govern a Great Nation”.
    Okanga writes from Agila, Benue State.