Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • Jonathan’s frank advice for daughter, husband

    President Goodluck Jonathan has advised his newly married daughter, Faith and her husband, Godswill Edward to try as much as possible to solve their  matrimonial problems and not to rely on him and other family members.

     He gave the advice while speaking at the wedding reception of the new couple at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.

     Jonathan noted that their advice as parents may not be the best for the new couple in their matrimonial problems as they belong to different generations. He described their period as ‘analogue’ and that of the new couple as ‘digital’.

     While thanking those that attended the wedding and well-wishers, he said that a day any parent is giving out his daughter in marriage is a day of glorious sadness.

     He said:  “ My advice is that, today is a very special day we are all smiling and dancing but also note that there will be periods when the relationship will not work smoothly. That is a part of the life of husband and wife.”

     “There is no couple that will not have some moments when their faces will not be too bright, but it depends on how you reach out ……. and really find time to understand themselves. And we pray that you have a really happy married life and we will continue to pray for you as your parents.”

     Continuing, he said: “Our duties as parents is to continue to pray for you, to encourage you and if there are some issues you feel we can solve, you can tell us. But don’t depent on your parents to solve your matrimonial problems. If you have disagreement with your husband…., don’t always run to parents or get advice of your mother or father, sometimes, they will not give you the best advice. Because your parents are analogue people while you are digital generation.”

     “So, we don’t belong to the same generation and so don’t expect us to give you the advice of the modern way of life. But we will encourage you to succeed,” he added

     The Chairman of the occasion, former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon said: “Marriage is about give and take. No matter the problem that may come your way, never allow the day to pass without resolving the problem through prayers and love.”

    “It is only you that can make it a success. Look at your parents and emulate them.” He said

    The new couple, who were conveyed from the church to the reception on horse-carriage, cut the cake under the direction of the wife of the Senate President, Helen Mark, while some dignitaries gave their verdict on what they have witnessed during the cake cutting and as the couples fed one another.

    Wife of the Vice President, Amina Sambo said “We have seen love and care”

    On her part, the wife of the former Head of State, Fati Abubakar “We have seen a couple radiating love and we hoped that they will sustain this to the end.”

    At the wedding reception on Saturday were the Speakers of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, Aliko Dangote, Femi Otedola, and Chairman of PDP Board of Trustees, Tony Anenih.

    Governors at the reception included Jonah Jang (Plateau), Emmanuel Uduaghan (Delta) Theordi Orji (Abia), Gabriel Suswam (Benue), Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom), Ibrahim Shema (Katsina) and  Liyel Imoke (Cross Rivers)

    Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Anyim Pius Anyim was also at the occasion along with some  ministers including  Olajumoke Akinjide (FCT State), Emeka Wogu (Labour) and Diezani Alison-Madueke (Petroleum).

    Among the artiste that performed at the occasion include Iyanya, D’Banj.

  • Amaechi, Obasanjo, others attend Jonathan’s daughter’s wedding

    The Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi was among governors that attended the wedding of President Goodluck Jonathan’s daughter, Faith at the National Ecumenical Centre, Abuja on Saturday.

    The relationship between Amaechi and the first family has not been too cordial since the last Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) elections in Abuja last year.

    Amaechi, who is presently the Chairman of the NGF, won the election with 19 votes against Plateau State Governor, Jonah Jang’s 16 votes. Jang left the election venue to form a parallel NGF.

    He has since defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) along with some other governors.

    The Rivers Governor attended the wedding despite the series of crises that have engulfed Rivers State since the NGF election.

    He however left the church by 10.30 a.m. before the service ended.

    The couple Faith and Godwill Osim Edward were joint in marriage after declaring their marital vows.

    The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor E.O. Adeboye ministered at the occasion.

    He spoke on five areas including the bride, bridegroom, and unmarried youth.

    Quoting Ephesians Chapter 5, verses 22 to 25, he said that the success of the marriage largely depend on the head of the family.

    He urged the wife to submit to the husband if she wants peace in the home, irrespective of the passion for women liberation globally.

    Adeboye also urged the Bridegroom to listen to the advice of the Bride.

     

    He warned the relations of the couple to avoid interfering in the marriage.

    He reminded the congregation of the coming marriage of the Lamb between Jesus Christ and the righteous on His second coming.

     

    Adeboye urged the congregation to truly give their lives to Christ in order to partake in the marriage of the Lamb and not the marriage of the anti-christ.

    Vehicular and physical movement around and within the Central Area of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) were hampered on Saturday due to the marriage.

    There was grid lock in some areas leading to the venue.

    Reception followed immediately at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.

    Among the governors who attended the marriage in the church include Theo  Orji (Abia State) and Martin Elechi (Ebonyi State).

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in a white Agbada, arrived at the church wedding few minutes after 11a.m after Adeboye’s sermon had ended.

  • Jonathan approves deployment of  Perm Secs

    Jonathan approves deployment of Perm Secs

    President Goodluck Jonathan has approved the deployment of some Permanent Secretaries.

    They are: Mr Linus Awute, from the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), General Services Office, to Ministry of Health;

    Malam Mohammed Bukar, from the Office of the SGF, Special Duties, to the Office of the SGF, General Services Office,

    Mrs. Winifred Oyo-Ita, was deployed from the Ministry of Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs to Ministry of Science and Technology; Mrs. Rabi Jimeta, from the Ministry of Science and Technology to the Ministry of Environment.

    Mr Taye Haruna, was moved from the Ministry of Environment to the Ministry of Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs.

    The Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (HCSF), Alhaji Bukar Goni Aji, directed that all handing and taking over should be completed on or before Wednesday, April 16.

     

  • Ondo by-election: ‘Obanikoro militarised Ilaje’

    Ondo by-election: ‘Obanikoro militarised Ilaje’

    •INEC’s decision’ll spell doom for Jonathan, says LP chieftain
    A chieftain of the Labour Party (LP) in Ondo State, Prince Banji Okunomo, has asked Minister of State for Defence Musiliu Obanikoro to explain what he was doing with soldiers on the day of the Ilaje Ese-odo Federal Constituency by-election.

    He urged the authorities to probe Obanikoro’s presence in Ilaje on the Election Day.

    Okunomo warned that the declaration of the by-election inconclusive by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) would “spell doom”, if it is not reversed.

    Speaking yesterday on Sun Rise Daily, a programme on Channels Television, the former Ilaje Local Government chairman said should INEC be allowed to hold a supplementary election, “despite the fact that a winner emerged in the election”, the commission would be leaving a precedent that will affect the ambition of President Goodluck Jonathan in the 2015 presidential poll.

    He said INEC’s declaration of the election as inconclusive because there was no voting in Arugbo Ward 11 does not hold water because before the poll, the commission announced that election would not hold in the area because of the activities of militants protesting against the implementation of the amnesty programme.

    Okunomo said nothing should delay the declaration of a winner in an election that held in 21 of 22 wards, adding: “The electoral body knew abinitio that there won’t be election in the affected area and that it would not affect the overall election. That was why it went ahead to conduct the election, only to turn around because it wants to do the bidding of some money bags and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) bigwigs.

    “The environment was militarised by people who had no business in the area on the Election Day. Why did Obanikoro lead soldiers to Ilaje on that day?”

    On the possible consequence of INEC’s action, if not addressed, the LP chieftain said: “I am afraid that should the powers that be refuse to call INEC to order now and declare the LP candidate winner, this will create serious problem for the PDP in the presidential election.

    “What that will mean is that if elections fail to hold in states where a state-of-emergency was declared in the Northern part of the country for security reasons, elections held in other parts of the country would be assumed useless.

    “What is currently playing out in the Ilaje/Ese-odo by-election is an agenda by some people, who want to prove they are popular where they are not. Ondo State is not a place where people can come to show their might. The bitter lesson learnt by those who tried to do same in the October 20, 2012, governorship election should be enough warning that Ondo is not a place to occupy.

    “The rational thing to do at this time to protect our fragile democracy is to allow wisdom prevail and declare the LP candidate, Mr. Kolade Akinjo, who polled the highest votes in the by-election, winner.”

     

  • Jonathan to  inaugurate plants

    Jonathan to inaugurate plants

    President Goodluck Jonathan will inaugurate the Multi-Billion-Naira Phases 3 and 4 of the Abuja Water Treatment Plants tomorrow.

    Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Senator Bala Mohammed said the inauguration will take place at the Lower Usuma Dam on Bwari Road, Abuja.

    A statement by the Assistant Director/Chief Press Secretary to the FCT Minister, Muhammad Sule, said there were an existing Phases 1 and 2 water treatment plants treating 10 million litres of water per hour.

    The new ones will treat additional 20 million litres per hour (20,000M3/HR), thereby making it 30 million litres per hour.

     

  • Muslims and the National Conference: the case of blaming the victim

    Muslims and the National Conference: the case of blaming the victim

    Almost exactly nine years ago this month, I wrote the article with the title above on these pages (precisely on March 16, 2005) in reaction to the composition by President Olusegun Obasanjo of his national conference. With President Goodluck Jonathan’s version, history – the manipulation of religion for power – seems, except for the change in personnel, to have merely repeated itself. Indeed only worse; the in-your-face brazenness of the student, compared to his now estranged master, in defending the indefensible margin of Christians (309 out of 497, i.e. about 62%) to Muslims (184, i.e. about 37%) in the composition of his conference in a country where, according to the 2014 usually reliable CIA Factbook, the ratio of Muslims to Christians to others is 50:40:10, truly boggles the mind.

    The controversial issue of the religious composition of this country is a subject matter for probably another day. For today the following is an abridged version of what I wrote nine years ago for its relevance to President Jonathan’s national conference:-

    The controversy surrounding the composition of the leadership and membership of the National Political Reform Conference has once again brought to the fore the importance of the mass media in shaping public opinion and in policy making and implementation.  When President Olusegun Obasanjo decided to make virtually the entire leadership of the NPRC Christian and also decided to give them a nearly two thirds majority edge over Muslims in its membership in a country he himself says is 50:50 Muslim/Christian, he knew he could count on the conspiratorial silence, if not the support, of most of the Nigerian mass media in his flagrant breach of the same Nigerian Constitution he has sworn to defend.  Clearly the president has not been disappointed.  Three weeks into the Conference, there has been a deafening silence from most of the Nigerian mass media over the president’s blatant act of injustice.

    Worse still, those of us who have dared to complain about this injustice are being portrayed as unreasonable.  The Secretary of the Conference, my good friend, Reverend Father Mathew Hassan Kukah, himself an object of the protest, albeit not over his person, has even dismissed the protesters as “irresponsible”.  To which another friend, but this time a scion of the Hausa-Fulani ruling family in Kano, Lamido Sanusi Lamido, has in effect said, Amen.  “Kukah”, he said in his trenchant defence of the reverend father in the Daily Trust of last Monday, “is absolutely correct.  It is irresponsible”.

    Sanusi said his intervention was to stop the debate over the composition of the NPRC from degenerating into a purely religious affair.  “An urgent Muslim intervention,” he said, “is required before the debate becomes one between Muslims and Christians.”

    Sam Ndah-Isaiah, the editor-in-chief of Leadership, was correct in his argument in his article last Monday, titled Seeing through the president’s mischief, that the president did what he did to divide and rule Nigeria, the North in particular.  Like Sanusi, Sam was, however, wrong to conclude that the proper response to the president’s mischief was to have kept quiet, lest he achieved his objective.  “Many of those talking today,” said Sam, “have made the president’s day.  They have helped him achieve his objective.  The people are now divided, helped by the legitimate anger of those protesting.”

    Both Sanusi and Sam seem to assume that national unity is an end in itself and so no amount of injustice can justify any act that undermines it.  The huge irony of this assumption, at least on Sanusi’s part as Father Kukah’s defence attorney, is that Kukah himself does not share it.  On the contrary he seems to detest it with a passion.  “God,” he said the other day in a paper he presented last year at the Conference on Peace organised by the Northern Governors’ Forum, “is a God of justice and therefore cannot let injustice into His Sanctuary.  We are under no obligation to promote peace, if that peace is not founded on justice…”

    Father Kukah went on in that paper to say whereas the duty of religious leaders is to point out the right way, that of politicians is to provide the vehicles to take us to our destination.  And if politicians provide rickety vehicles, religious leaders, he said, have a duty to raise hell against such a contraption.  No fair-minded person, not even Sanusi in spite of the passion of his intervention, can say that the architecture and structure of the vehicle Obasanjo has provided for the National Conference are sound.

    Sanusi questions the assumption that “there is something like a ‘Christian’ or ‘Muslim’ position in a national Conference…”  He questions the assumption on the grounds that there are divisions within the religions themselves.  Surely, however, Sanusi knows that divisions within people of the same faith, tribe or region, has never stopped them from having common positions on issues that are basic to their identities.  For example, no Muslim, whether he is Maliki, Shafi’i, Hannafi or Hambali, or whatever, will reject Sharia or subscribe to the doctrine of secularity.

    In case Sanusi is not aware, one of the hidden agenda of the convener of the conference is to finally banish so-called political Sharia from the Constitution, through some sleigh-of-hand.  For, among the amendments a committee under Professor Jerry Gana, the president’s political adviser, is proposing there is one which says “If any other law, customary or religious practice is inconsistent with the previsions of this constitution, this constitution shall prevail, and that other law shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void”.  This amendment is meant to replace section 1 (3) of the existing constitution.  The difference is the seemingly innocuous phrase “customary or religion practice”, a phrase that has been smuggled into the provision behind the back of the constitutional reform committee chaired by Deputy Senate President, Ibrahim Mantu.

    Even though a Muslim cannot reject Sharia as long as he believes in Islam, such a Muslim member of the Conference may or may not stand up for so-called political Sharia. But any Muslim member would be foolish to think that a non-Muslim member of the Conference will go out of his way to defend a Muslim’s cardinal belief in Sharia.

    “Many Muslim Northerners, the present writer included,” says Sanusi, “do not care about the religious identity of competent Nigerians appointed to an office whatsoever, so long as they consider their constituency to be the whole nation in the conduct of their official functions” (Emphasis mine).

    Sanusi is right that religion, or for that matter, region or tribe, ideally should not matter in such things.  But he himself has entered a sensible caveat about the behaviour of public officials.  He has also admitted that there is no such thing as an objective person.  Invariably we are objective only to the extent that we know we cannot get away with our prejudices.  The way the National Conference was composed, the majority can easily get away with their prejudices.

    This is why our Constitutions since 1979 have emphasised the importance of government reflecting the federal character of the nation in its conduct and composition.  The relevant section in all those constitutions obligates government to “(ensure) that there shall be no predominance of persons from a few states or from a few ethnic or other sectional groups in the government or any of its agencies.”

    It bears repeating that Obasanjo blatantly violated this provision as far as the religious character of this country is concerned and it amounts to adding insult to injury for anyone to say those who have complained about this injustice are being unreasonable or even irresponsible.

    Before now when the Christian leadership, specifically the then Archbishop, now Cardinal, Olubunmi Okogie and Primate Sunday Mbang, as former national presidents of the Christian Association of Nigeria, used to complain – sometimes justifiably, sometimes not, as we shall see next week when, God willing, I write on the issue of our next census – that Christians were being discriminated against, no one ever called them irresponsible.

    When The Guardian wrote an editorial on October 7, 1992, saying that the presidential primaries that year under General Ibrahim Babangida’s transition were unacceptable because “the two presidential candidates that will emerge at the end of the day are from the same part of the country – the Far North… This is disturbing given the national composition of the country,” no one said the newspaper was irresponsible.

    Last but by no means the least, when Father Kukah himself said the actions of Obasanjo in the wake of the Kaduna religious riots of 2000 and the Plateau crisis of last year were prejudicial to Christians in his article Plateau: State of Emergency as a metaphor in The Guardian of May 30, 2004, no one said he was irresponsible.  Needless to say he himself could not have seen his protest as irresponsible or even unreasonable.

    Similarly, when he said in the same article that Obasanjo was wrong to mix religion with politics – something which I have said elsewhere is not necessarily true depending on how you mix the two – no one said he was irresponsible.  “Had General Obasanjo declared himself a born-again Christian and gone back to the farm,” said Kukah, “that would have been no problem.  But to do so and then proceed to seek political power was bound to create a problem for religion and the country, especially within the Muslim population.”

    In the last six years, Obasanjo has mixed religion and politics in the most cynical and self-serving way, culminating in his blatantly lopsided composition of the leadership and membership of the National Conference.  In the last few days he has tried to redress one but has done nothing about the other.  It is unreasonable to blame those who feel aggrieved by such an insensitive act for complaining, simply because the unity and peace of the country must be maintained.

    But then, as Malcolm X once said, “If you are not careful, the media will have you hating the people who are oppressed and loving the people who are doing the oppressing.”

  • Ohanaeze youths accuse  Jonathan of neglect

    Ohanaeze youths accuse Jonathan of neglect

    Ohanaeze Youth Council (OYC) yesterday lamented that President Goodluck Jonathan has not fulfilled the promises he made to Igbo youths, who voted for him in 2011.

    Newly-elected Youth leader Mazi Okechukwu Isiguzoro said Igbo youths worked to ensure that President Jonathan emerged, but three years after, they were yet to feel the impact of his administration.

    Isiguzoro, who regretted the high rate of unemployment among Igbo youths, appealed to the President to accommodate them in his transformation agenda.

    “We mobilised, canvassed and worked to ensure that Jonathan won, but since then, the Igbo youth have not seen any impact of his administration. We call on him to ensure that Igbo youths are accommodated in his transformation agenda. That is the only way we can assure him of our support in future,” the OYC leader said.

    Isiguzoro called on the Federal Government to set up a Southeast Development Commission just as the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to cater for the unemployed Igbo youth or include them in the N59.9 billion amnesty programme.

    He said their inclusion in amnesty would reduce kidnapping in the Southeast and make the zone to reclaim its position as the foremost commercial hub in the country.

    Isiguzoro assured that his leadership would cooperate with non-governmental organisations and relevant agencies to set up vocational centres in the Southeast.

    “I call on Southeast governors to see what they can do for the youth. They have budgets allocated to Youth ministries and we are going to ensure that we visit the states, commissioners for Youth Development or ministries of Youth Development, to ensure that the money budgeted are utilised for youth empowerment,” he said.

    He said OYC would partner the private sector to ensure they live up to their Corporate Social Responsibility, regretting that many people come to Igboland and make money, yet they do not have anything to offer youths.

     

  • Examples from Italy

    Examples from Italy

    •Nigeria has not been able to tame corruption because the will is lacking

    Corruption is no doubt a global scourge that is not limited to any country. Yet, some countries have substantially curtailed its prevalence to such an extent that it does not pose a formidable obstacle on the path of development. The existence in such countries of stringent anti-corruption laws that are strictly and impartially enforced serves as a deterrent against a thriving culture of graft. An example of such uncompromising stance against corruption was the recent conviction and sentencing to three years in prison of the Chief Executive of the Italian energy giant, Eni, Paolo Scaroni, by a court in the north-eastern town of Rovigo.

    Interestingly, Scaroni did not face legal sanction for financial fraud. Rather, he was found guilty of failing to uphold adequate environmental standards at the Porto Tolle power plant when he was Chief Executive Officer at the Italian utility company, Enel. His negligence was responsible for air pollution at the coal-burning plant in violation of Italian law. As a result of his conviction, hopes of Scaroni’s re-nomination by the government for a third term as Eni’s Chief Executive in May this year have been dashed. He also stands banned for holding public office for five years. The fact that he is described as one of Italy’s most powerful businessmen did not insulate Scaroni from justice.

    In a bid to fight corruption and improve the country’s corporate accountability, the Italian government has directed state-controlled companies to dismiss any director found guilty or indicted for certain crimes. Silvio Berlusconi, who served as Italian Prime Minister at various times for nine years, was on August 1, 2013, convicted of tax-fraud by the final appeal instance, Court of Cassation, and sentenced to four years imprisonment and a public office ban for two years. True, three of the four-year sentence is pardoned and Berlusconi will do unpaid social community work rather than face direct imprisonment since he is over 70 years old. That does not mitigate the damage done to his reputation. This is because he has been banned from the Senate and barred from serving any legislative office for six years.

    These examples from Italy show that it is indeed possible to effectively fight corruption where there is the requisite will. The necessary conditions to achieve this objective include the requisite water-tight legislation, strong anti-corruption agencies with the institutional autonomy to discharge their functions as well as an efficient and transparent legal/judicial system. The absence of all these ingredients in the Nigerian context has made her much trumpeted anti-graft war little more than a farce.

    In Nigeria, the anti-graft agencies are too feeble and are most times constrained from taking decisive action against corruption for political reasons. Even when suspects are charged to court for corruption, it is all too easy for clever lawyers to find technical loopholes in our laws to get their clients off the hook. Aside from the pervasive corruption that characterises the judiciary, the process of prosecution can be so complicated and cumbersome. The consequence is that cases are needlessly prolonged with frequent adjournments as well as endless appeals and cross appeals from one judicial level to the other.

    This situation encourages brazen corruption since perpetrators of such acts are confident that they can enjoy political protection and that, even if discovered, they can exploit the loopholes of the legal process to escape justice. Thus, corrupt bank chief executives as well as those charged with embezzling humongous amounts through pension fund and fuel subsidy frauds, for instance, are all walking free despite on-going theatrical court trials. The bottom-line is lack of the political will, particularly on the part of President Goodluck Jonathan to fight corruption despite his frequent affirmations to the contrary.

     

  • Remove Fayose now, aggrieved PDP members urge Jonathan

    Remove Fayose now, aggrieved PDP members urge Jonathan

    Aggrieved Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members in Ekiti State have given President Goodluck Jonathan five days to nullify the primary that produced former Governor Ayo Fayose as the party’s flag bearer in the June 21 governorship election and order a fresh one.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Ado-Ekiti after a meeting, the aggrieved members, led by Mrs. Feyisayo Fajuyi, said: “The PDP’s constitution was fundamentally breached as congresses did not hold in whole seven of the 16 councils in the state. Massive rigging occurred in many of the councils where the congresses were said to have held.

    “We urge the President to immediately reverse the sham that produced Fayose as our party’s flag bearer. What we are saying should be clear to every sincere Nigerian. PDP never held a primary in Ekiti and so, there is no candidate for the party yet.”

    They blamed the PDP leadership for “open bias”, saying former Rivers State Governor Peter Odili presided over “a fraudulent primary that lacks legitimacy”.

    The aggrieved members urged the president to nullify the primary, adding: “Time is ticking fast against the party as the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has fixed a timetable for the election.”

    Others at the press briefing were Chief Abel Fayori (Irepodun/Ifelodun); Chief C. Ajayi (Ise/Orun); Mrs. Foluke Adetunji (Ekiti West); Biodun Ajibadeola (Ikole-Ekiti); Comrade Oluwalana Ayobami (Youth President) and Comrade Akinola Adams (Ijero-Ekiti).

    They said: “The media is definitely aware of the events that led to the emergence of a supposed flag bearer of our party. The details were made available to Nigerians through the media by the authorities and leaders concerned.

    “As we have said and will continue to say, you cannot build something on nothing. If a university student undergoing a six-year course is discovered to have used a forged certificate in the fifth year, he would be removed from the system immediately. The amount of years he has spent will amount to nothing. President Jonathan must order a fresh primary, as the one said to have been conducted was fraught with fraud on a large scale.

    “With the party’s national hierarchy pretending that all is well, we took it upon ourselves to encourage our large followership to wait for Mr. President’s return, upon which we believe he will intervene with other respected party leaders.

    “Today makes it the 16th day of our waiting for a redress by such interventions. While waiting, some leaders have been persuaded to abandon the truth and settle in criminal compromise. We jointly, as a group, and individually dissociate ourselves from being a part of moving on at the looming peril of failure at the coming poll.

    “The purported primary itself was a daylight rape on democracy and it was widely acclaimed as unacceptable by majority of the party’s stakeholders.”

    Expressing readiness to leave the PDP and “opt for a better and more assuring option”, should efforts fail to have a fresh primary conducted, they said: “The likelihood of loss is too great and glaring in the coming election in Ekiti. Unless the president does the needful now, we run the risk of being branded a party of unrepentant criminals.

    “We await Mr. President’s intervention to prove that the PDP’s surname is not fraud and neither is its middle name corruption. True leaders are never passive or negatively active. We await Mr. President’s action and positively too.”

     

  • Culpable buck passing

    Culpable buck passing

    •Jonathan’s Boko Haram blame game in Bauchi is a presidential disgrace.  But it was a counter to gubernatorial recklessness 
    President Goodluck Jonathan’s March 29 charge in Bauchi, that North East governors should take the blame for the Boko Haram insurrection, is culpable presidential buck passing.

    But being a riposte to Adamawa State Governor, Murtala Nyako’s allegation that the president was incapable of, or uninterested in tackling Boko Haram, in a paper he presented at a Washington DC, USA symposium, it was a reaction to gubernatorial recklessness.

    It is well and truly condemnable when the president and governors engage in mutual buck passing, over a serious security issue as Boko Haram, when they should closely cooperate to solve the problem.

    The setting of both blame games is no less condemnable. The president launched his unwise tirade at a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) zonal rally in Bauchi. Governor Nyako made his provocative presentation in the United States, at a symposium from March 17-19, organised by the US Institute for Peace, which invited all the 19 northern governors.

    It was soulless for President Jonathan to go to Bauchi; and attempt to tar North East governors on Boko Haram — and all of this on the hustings. Yet, the same president could not create time to visit the same North East to condole with the victims’ families, even when Boko Haram slaughtered innocent pupils of Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, in Yobe State. It is the height of presidential folly to deny traumatised locals the needed compassion, yet go back to the same area to brag you would sweep the polls.

    On the other hand, it was culpable lack of statesmanship that made Governor Nyako to frontally attack the president on a foreign soil, suggesting President Jonathan was comfortable with the Boko Haram tragedy. It was a classic example of how not to politicise a living nightmare, in a foreign capital.

    There simply must be a limit to playing politics with Boko Haram, and both the president and governor deserve severe knocks for their indiscretion.

    That said, what should concern every right-thinking Nigerian is how to face down and defeat Boko Haram, and not what political capital anyone could claim from a pestilence that has claimed lives of hundreds of innocent Nigerians. On Boko Haram, what Nigerians expect is close cooperation, not fierce competition, between the president and governors of that affected region. Even then, the president must always show leadership, befitting his office as the highest in the land.

    Still, the buck passing has revealed ugly underbellies, from which the two camps can learn and make amends.

    The president focused on the process leading to Boko Haram, and was spot on, on the allegation that neglect of primary and secondary education in the areas has created a ready and willing pool of Boko Haram recruits. Though there has been a counter-argument that Boko Haram harbours not a few educated cadres, frustrated and angry at the unjust Nigerian system, the neglect of basic education is no less valid.

    The governor, on the other hand, focused on the grotesque final product: the Boko Haram pestilence, to which the Jonathan Presidency seemed to have little clue, until quite recently, when the terror group’s capability appears reduced to soft targets; and its attacks restrained to local areas, as against an earlier period when it bombed, killed and maimed virtually the whole North at will.

    The presidential and gubernatorial camps should take some positives from their mutual macabre dances. The president cannot afford to pass any buck. He is commander-in-chief and has a monopoly of command of the Nigerian state’s security agencies. Passing the buck is a sign of weakness, not of strength — and it is crassly un-presidential.

    The North East governors, on the other hand, must swallow the bitter pill and scale up their commitment to basic education of their citizens. Even if the bulk of the present generation cannot be saved, the future generation of youths must not be beyond redemption.