Tag: Goodluck Jonathan

  • Reforming local government for efficiency

    Reforming local government for efficiency

    It is the closest to the grassroots. But, in terms of service delivery, it has not sufficiently lived up to its billings as the beacon of hope for rural dwellers. Although local governments are created for the purpose of easy administration at the local area, many of them are always struggling to perform their statutory functions due to financial constraints. As the appendage of the state government, the structure is under-developed. Not only are councils performing below expectation across board, its prospects as an autonomous unit of administration is slim.

    As stakeholders converge on the City Hall, Lagos today for a critical review of the local government system, the problems of the supposedly third tier of government are on the front burner. The theme of the workshop organised by the Lagos State Gubernatorial Advisory Council chaired by the foremost scholar, Prof. Adebayo Williams, is: ‘Reforming Local Council for service delivery’. Discusssions will focus on the public perception of councils in Lagos State, the role of the legislative arm of local goverment, management of public funds and expectations of Lagosians from local governments.

    Expected at the workshop are council chairmen, their deputies, secretaries, council treasurers, managers and councillors.

    There are puzzles: Why is the council underfunded? Why do state governments perceive the local government, not as a tier of government, but more or less an extension of the state ministries and departments at the local level? Why are structures for function performance weak at the council? Why is the impact of the local government not felt?

    In the last 65 years, councils have operated under various nomenclatures as rural governments, urban councils, local authorities, district councils, town councils, local governments, municipal councils or local council development areas. Either under the military regime or civilian dispensation, local governments have always been relegated to the background.

    A political scientist, Boniface Ayodele, described the local government as a victim of the lopsided federal arrangement. He recalled that while councils were grappling with challenges of growth in the First Republic under the regional arrangement, their challenges multiplied under the military rule, despite the reforms introduced by successive administrations. “The constitution has not specified that the council is a third tier, unlike what we have in India and other countries. Here, it appears that they mere local agencies of the state administration for the purpose of interface with the countryside”, he said.

    Under the military regime, local governments were created by the Federal Government. In 1999, the existing 774 councils were listed in the constitution. Since then, it has been difficult for the state government to create additional councils. When new councils were created by the Lagos State Government through the instrumentality of the House of assembly, they were not listed in the constitution. The Supreme Court did not condemn the process. But, it pointed out that they were incohate.

    Currently, money is allocated to the councils by the federal government from the Federation Account. This is irksome to the states, which is vested with the power to create or dissolve the councils under the constitution. Last year, the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, called for the upgrading of the council into the third tier, based on the clamour for council autonomy by some stakeholders. But, pro-federalism crusaders opposed the suggestion, saying that only two tiers, a central government and states, which are coordinate with the central government as component units, constitute the making of a true federation.

    There was future over the reduction of the tenure of the elected local government from three to two years by some governors. In some states, governors even indicated that they would appoint supervisors, advisers and other aides for new council chairmen. The channels for disbursing council funds have also become a bone of contention. When money is allocated to the councils, it does not go directly to the councils. It is deposited in the State/Local Government Joint Accounts (JAC). At the JAC Committee meeting, the council is a junior partner. There are allegations by local government workers that governors indulge in diverting council allocation through controversial deductions. The illegal deduction compelled President Goodluck Jonathan to suggest the separation of the State and Local Government Accounts. But, the move was criticised by the governors and their commissioners.

    According to experts, the modern local government system is an engendered specie. Unlike the councils of pre and independence eras, local governments have grossly failed to generate employment. It has not stemmed the rural/ urban migration by youths due to the absence of economic, social and recreational facilities. Also, the council has become an avenue for private accumulation by elected chairmen and councillors.

    According to the United Nation’s Office of Public Administration, local government is “a political sub-division of a nation or state, which is constituted by law and has substantial control of local affairs, including the powers to impose taxes or to exact labour for prescribed purposes. The governing body of such an entity is elected or otherwise locally selected”. But, renowned political scientist Prof. Godwin Odenigwe, pointed out that this grassroots structure is meaningful, if council really becomes the closest unit to the people in the true sense of the word. He argued that governance at local level means “communities and towns organised to maintain laws and order, provide some limited range of social services and public amenities and encourage the cooperation and participation of the inhabitants in joint endeavours towards the improvement of their living”.

    The “1976 Guidelines for a reform of local government in Nigeria” defined local government as the “government at local level exercised through representative councils established by law to exercise specific powers within defined areas. These powers should give the council substantial control over affairs as well as the staff and institutional and financial powers to initiate and direct the provision of services and to determine and implement projects so as to complement the activities of the state and federal government in their areas and to ensure, through devolution of functions to these councils and through active participation of the people that local initiative and response to local needs and conditions are maximised” Justifying the need for a viable local government, the former Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters, the late Major General Sheu Musa Yar’Adua, submitted that, “if stability at the national level is to be guaranteed, a firm foundation for a rational government at the local level is imperative”.

    Many analysts have noted that local government can be a solution to the participation crisis. It means an increase in the structures of participation and responsibility. However, this argument may be reduced to the elite’s cravings for more access to power and state resources.

    The foundation of local government system was erected on the colonial policy of indirect rule by the British. Up came the Colonial Native Authorities in rudimentary forms from 1890s to 1930s. To rule the colonised tribes through the existing chiefs and community elders under the emerging system was cost-effective. The approach was very successful in the northern part of the country where subjects defer to their Emirs and chiefs in an atmosphere of stratification, and class and caste system. In the West, it was partially successful because the rulers’ actions were moderated by age-long checks and balance procedures, which prevented the exercise of absolute power. In the East, it was almost a failure. It was difficult to identify the traditional authorities in the essentially traditional kingless society Thus, chiefs-in-council was established in the 30s and 40s.

    However, a university don, Prof. Kunle Ajayi, pointed out that the Native Authorities encountered a number of problems. The size of each native authority was small and its closed-door recruitment policy and lean resources made it difficult for them to attract qualified staff. There was no evidence that the Native Authorities, including the Sole native Authorities, Chief-In Council, Chief-and-Council and Federated Authorities, were democratic in nature. Thus, it was very difficult to evolve a common approach to local government development. Since the colonial masters appointed them, the participation of educated nationalists in those structures was delayed. Also, since they lacked trained staff, specialised functions, especially the provision of water supply and education, became difficult.

    However, between 1950 and 1955, the trend changed. Elected councils emerged in Lagos, Eastern and Western Regions. The East set the pace, followed by the West in 1952, with the promulgation of the Local Government Law, which introduced a tier structure of democratic government in the council composed of 25 per cent of traditional rulers. In those early days, when illiterate traditional rulers and young educated nationalists cohabited as councillors, misunderstanding brewed between the two classes. These tensions found expression in the protracted crises between the late Chief Bode Thomas and the Alaafin of Oyo, the late Alhaji Adeniran Adeyemi 11 in Oyo Council and the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and the Akarigbo of Remoland, the late Oba Williams Adedoyin, in Remo Council.

    Historically, it was the glorious era of council administration. The elected councils were given a measure of autonomy in financial and personal matters, and general administration. They had a wide range of functions, including primary education, health, police, and judiciary. In the West, council prisons also existed. To enhance performance, they had the power to levy education and general rates. In the North, the traditional rulers held sway for a longer period in the Native Authority, unlike in the South where the participation of educated citizens fostered pupilage in local administration. But in both North and South, corruption was rampant. Modern politicians who served as councillors, including Alhaji Ahmadu Bello and Adegoke Adelabu, were even arraigned before authorities to render accounts as councillors and heads of councils.

    Between 1960 and 1975, local government was on the decline in power and responsibility. Attention was focused on the federal, regional and state governments. In fact, local governments were reserved for failed House of Assembly and Representatives candidates. In the West, the new Local Government Law of 1960 abolished the council’s power to levy education and general levies. The grants promised by the regional government was not fully paid. Between 1964 and 1974, the local council in the country lost a number of major functions. These include local government police and prisons. In the East, councils lost power of control over primary education. The outbreak of the civil war also affected the operation of the local government system in the East. That was the situation until 1976 reforms which introduced the position of a ceremonial chairman working hollow along with the secretary, who was empowered as the chief executive. However, in 1989, presidential system was introduced at the local government, with the chairman becoming the chief executive presiding over an executive team of supervisors on one hand a team of councillors forming the legislative arm. Thus, there were checks and balances. The 2002 reforms undertaken by Obasanjo Administration more or less reinforced the 1976 input.

    However, while it is stipulated in the 1999 Constitution that democratically elected local governments are fully guaranteed, nearly half of the 774 local governments sharing allocations from the federal treasury are administered by caretaker bodies set up by governors. The governors’ second term ambition always shape the council polls as they often make sure that those elected as chairmen and councillors are lackeys who would coordinate their battle for second term at the grassroots.

    A sociologist, Prof. Peter Ekeh, highlighted many challenges confronting the local government system. The State University of New York, Buffalo, United States lecturer said that they are designed to “serve as receptacles of their allotted share of the largesse from petroleum oil revenues distributed from the Federation Account”. He frowned at the shrinkage of official responsibilities and lack of service-delivery culture, unlike the earlier era. Their viability, sustainability and survival are also in doubt. Ekeh observed that most local governments would collapse, if they do not receive regular allocations from the central government. Apart from under-funding, other challenges include identity and role crisis, constitutional crisis, poor administration, lack of economic viability, and inept council bureaucracy. However, none of these challenges invalidate the justification for grassroots government.

    Former Secretary to Lagos State Government Olorunfunmi Basorun described the local government as the den of the deadwood. He lamented that some council engineers are mere technical employees. “Officers are ill-trained and there is lack of expertise. The councils are poorly managed, poorly monitored and poorly assessed,” he added. But, he conceded that if they are positioned for effective performance, they can satisfy local yearnings. “The federal and state governments are distant levels of administration, aptly insensitive to local concerns and expectations. It is the council government the people can call their own because it is expected that they should have more access to it. But, today, the functions of the council are hijacked by the federal and state governments in the areas of primary education refuse disposal and markets,” he stressed.

    Local government scholars have evolved three approaches for the study of the local government system.

    The exponents of “Democracy and Accountability School of Local Government” perceive the local government system in its democratic character. To them, procedures in it should be open, transparent, verifiable, result-oriented and accountable. Local government is viewed as a training ground for political leaders. Thus, it is believed that career politicians can use the local government as a lever for acquiring political training and leadership qualities by first contesting as councillors at the local government area. That scope of apprenticeship may have been widened with the introduction of presidential system at the council level. The implication is that councillors who have been exposed to the ‘know how’ of law making at the council level may proceed to the Houses of Assembly, Representatives and Senate. Lord James Bryce, who is a supporter of this school of thought, had this in mind when he remarked that local government is that school of democracy and the best guarantee for its success is the practice of local self-government.

    In the same vein, John Stuat Mill declared that local government is one of the free institutions which provide political education, especially the public education of citizens using the instrumentality of the council administration. This political education induces participation in the council affairs by people who are remote from the state and federal governments.

    Related to the democracy school of thought is the “Accountability and Control School of Thought”. When locals file out to cast their votes for the chairmen and councillors, they are participating in council affairs. It is incumbent on the local electors to elect men of proven ability, intellect and competence. If they elect the right people, there will be development in the council. If they elect fraudsters, they suffer under-development. How to use the voting right effectively as a weapon of choice, change and rejection of leadership is the sole pre-occupation of this school of thought. It is a free choice with lots of implications for the citizens and the local polity. For example, if corrupt men and women are elected, they will drain the council treasury. Ajayi said: “If inexperienced people are elected, they will hinge their lack of performance on learning on the job. If competent people and men and women of honour and integrity are elected, they will deliver the dividends of democracy to the people”.

    The third is the “Responsibility School of Thought”. As a structure very close to the locality, local councils should serve as essential instrument for the performance of basic services, which could be best administered locally, based on the intimate knowledge of the needs, conditions and peculiarities of the areas concerned. Among these are chieftaincy, marriage, markets, local schools, primary health care and refuse disposal. Owing to lack of expertise, working tools and enormity of the challenge, refuse disposal and construction of markets, have been taken over by some state governments.

    However, Prof. Ekeh attested to other specialised functions of the councils, which account for its peculiarity. These include sanitary inspection, town planning, water supply and market management by Town Councils, and local security, which is now prohibited by the constitution. Before their derailment, old town and city councils performed these functions creditably and with minimum difficulties. “The personnel of such high profile town governments as Lagos Town Council rivaled that of the Central Government in the quality of employees they attracted. Thus, such giants in the history of Nigerian public service as Dr Ladipo Oluwole and Chief Adegbeji Salubi were employees of the Lagos Town Council in the 1930s and 1940s.

    The three schools provide a further linkage of ideas. The people elect, retain and fire councillors and chairmen, thereby giving expressions to the democratic character of the councils. The elected men perform clearly stated functions and they should be accountable. This makes them, to earn the respect of the local polity which may decide to send them to the state or federal in furtherance of their services to the people.

    How are operative content accorded these linkages? The democratic foundation of the councils in this dispensation is doubtful. Ayodele pointed out that councils have become working tools in the hands of ambitious political leaders. Since chairmanship and councillorship candidates run on the platforms of competing political parties for elections, there is the tendency to impose them on the councils. Thus, those invariably elected are the candidates of political barons and godfathers, and not essentially the candidates of the people. As bastions of corruption, councils have often disappointed the people by their sheer ineptitude and lack of initiative. Council chairmen are usually overwhelmed by the resources at their disposal, although the funds are not enough, if they are development-conscious. To buttress this, a report by the Jide Jimoh House of Assembly Committee on Local Government Appropriation in Lagos State had harsh words for many council chairmen, who demonstrated lack of competence, to the detriment of the people they were elected to serve.

    Experts who have lamented the window-dressing approach to council administration stressed that the love of money, rather than the desire to serve, has been the motivation for jostling for chairmanship and councillorship seats at the councils. The poor quality of budgeting and project implementation by the councils attest to the poor standard of the councils across the country. Many chairmen and councillors lack the training to know these technicalities.

    While on tour of the Lagos councils, following his assumption of office in 2007, Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN), was confronted by the rot in many council areas. Frowning at the ineptitude, he suggested some targets, which he said the chairmen should aspire to meet so that they could deliver dividends of democracy to the people.

    Many have argued that the internalisation of service-delivery orientation could prepare council operators for higher tasks at state and federal levels. This is why local government is viewed as a training ground for political leaders. A career politician is expected to use the lowest tier, or the third tier, as a lever for acquiring political training and leadership qualities by first contesting as councillors.

    In this regard, Lagos councils have served as training grounds for future leaders at regional, state and federal levels. They include Chief Rotimi Williams, Prince Tajudeen Olusi, the late Chief Mumuni Adio Badmus, Chief Ganiyu Dawodu, Chief Enoch Ajiboso, Chief Lanre Rasaq, Dr Tola Kasali, Hon. Toyin Hamzat, Hon. Sesan Olanrewaju, Senator Adekunle Muse and Senator Ganiyu Solomon. In the earlier dispensation, the late Awolowo, Bello, Ajasin, Chief Bode Thomas, Mazi Nbonu Ojike, Adegoke Adelabu, and Alhaji Shetima Ali Mongonu began their elective political careers as councillors. That was the bright side of the earlier councils.

    As elected agencies of the people, councils must be accountable to the people, who must continue to wield control over their functionaries. If corrupt men and women are not elected as chairmen and councillors, many corrupt politicians would be prevented from climbing the hierarchy of government at state and federal levels.

    However, the hands of the state governors have been heavy on the councils.

    The governors always postpone local government elections. Since the law says there should be elected councils, it is illegal to postpone it or refuse to hold it on time. Also, since it is the governor that will constitute the local government electoral commission, council elections are held in an atmosphere of minimal electoral reforms, making the opposition parties to be edged out of the local electoral process.

    The first step in decentralisation of power, for the pupose of reaching out to the rural areas and connecting the countryside with the state and federal government, is through the local government system.

    Since the localities differ across the diverse country, the peculiarities come to the fore through the sheer performance of those critical local functions dictated by local interest.

    In this regard, five important factors cannot be compromised:

    • For local government to bring itself nearer to the people, the people must have input into the policy formulation and decision – making process at all times, either directly or through their representatives in the local legislature.

    • Local government reflects the character of self-government when indigenes and residents participate directly its administration, composition of functionaries, and general staffing.

    • Wider participation of the people in the affairs of the council should foster a sense of belonging.

    • Local government should encourage initiatives and development of leadership potentials from the grassroots. To that extent, it can become a training ground for future state and national leaders.

    • Local government can serve as a link or channel of communication between local communities and central authorities.

    The functions of local governments are not statutorily delegated by either the state or federal governments. However, there are instances where states and federal governments can collabotarate with councils in solving some probles facing some communities.

    The functions of local government as spelt out in Section 7(5) of the constitution is as follows:

    • Consideration and making of recommendations to the state commission on economic planning or any similar body on economic development of the state, particularly sin so far as the area of authority of the council and of the state are affected;

    • Collection of rates, radio and television licenses;

    • Establishment and maintenance of cemeteries, burial grounds and homes for the destitudes;

    • Licensing of bicycles, trucks (other than mechanically propelled trucks), canoes, wheel barrows and carts;

    • Establishment, maintenance and regulation of markets, motor parks and public conveniences;

    • Construction and maintenance of roads, streets, drains, and public highways, parks, open spaces, or such public facilities as may be prescribed from time to time by the House of Assembly of a state;

    • Naming of roads and streets and numbering of houses;

    • Provision and maintenance of public conveniences and refuse disposal;

    • Registration of births, deaths and marriages;

    • Assessment of privately-owned houses or tenements for the purpose of levying such rates as may be prescribed by the House of Assembly of a state, and

    • Control and regulation of out-door advertising and hoarding, movement and keeping of pets of all dispensations, shops and kiosks, restaurants and other places for sale of food to the public and laundries.

    In addition, local governments are also expected to work hand in hand on the provision and maintenance of primary education, development of agriculture and natural resources and provision and maintenance of health services.

    Instead of performing these functions, many local government chairmen nowadays neglect them and engage in dubious empowerment programmes to cover up their non-performance of these constitutional roles.

    Questions have however, been raised about the economic viability of the councils. This is debatable. Some local governments in the urban centres have capacity to generate substantial internally generated revenue that can assist them in the discharge of their developmental functions. In the same vein, there are councils in remotest parts of the country with little or nothing to fall back to, except the federal allocation.

    Nigeria is a federal state. According to Prof. K. C. Wheare, federalism connotes “the method of dividing powers so that “general” and “regional” governments are each, within a sphere, c0-ordinate and independent”. This universally accepted proposition presupposes that, in federalism, only two centres of authority; the central and state governments, are recognised. Therefore, labeling the council as another tier of government is contentious. It must be assumed that the abuse of the powers of control over the councils by the state and federal government compelled the agitation for an increased autonomy for councils.

    Crisis between state and local governments permeate the inter-governmental relationship. Across the federation, between 2007 and 2006, council chairmen and governors were at loggerheads over illegal deduction of council funds by the states, with governors threatening to sack chairmen who raised serious objection. For example, former Ekiti Central local government chairman, Hon. Taye Fasubaa, cried out that he was being victimised for objecting to the diversion of council funds and illegal deductions by the governor. In 2012, when President Jonathan suggested that the Joint State/Council Account (JAC) should be abrogated and local governments should receive its allocations directly from the federal purse without recourse to the governors, the suggestion did not go down well with the councils.

    In recent times, chairmen whose name have appeared in the black book of the governors forfeited their offices through the dissolution of the councils, in active connivance with the Houses of Assembly.

    In Ibarapa local government, former Governor Rashidi Ladoja delayed the swearing-in of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) council chairman, who defeated the candidate of his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), at the poll. In fact, in some states in the Southeast, Southsouth, Southwest, and Northcentral, governors have resisted attempts to hold council elections, to the consternation of anxious aspirants.

    Local governments are also oppressed by the Federal Government. This suppression preceded the current democratic dispensation. In consonance with its centrist approach, the Abacha Administration dazed the country when he appointed a minister of local government.

    The 1999 Constitution, which is the legacy of Abdulsalami Administration, also created friction between the federal and state governments over the control of the local governments. The federal government insisted that states lacked the power to create more councils belong to it, claiming that all the councils have already been listed in the constitution. Former Katsina State Governor Umaru Yar’Adua, who later became President of Nigeria, had to retrace his steps by axing the newly created councils in the state, out of fear. Actually, the power to create councils in Section 8(3) is vested in the House of Assembly. But Section 8(6) gives the power to ratify the creation and list newly created councils to the National Assembly. Many are clamouring for the review of the constitution to clear this area of friction.

    In Lagos State, Tinubu Administration created additional 37 local councils. Despite the fact that they were created by legitimate state authorities, the Federal Government disagreed. The allocations due to the pre-existing 20 local governments were seized by the Obasanjo Administration. Also, the Senate refused to list the new councils in the constitution, despite the referendum that gave their creation the nod.

    In fact, in a memo to the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, who had earlier directed that the withheld allocations should be released, the Ministry of Justice advised him to terminate the newly created councils, saying that they were undermining the judiciary and challenging the authority of the federal government. Irked by the incessant harassment, House of Representatives member, James Faleke, former chairman of one of the councils not listed; Ojodu Local Council Development Area (LCDA); said: “The victimisation of Lagos councils by the federal government undermines the right of Lagosians to development”.

    How have the existing councils fared nationwide? Have they justified the people’s confidence? In Lagos, the House of Assembly members were still inundated with complaints during the town hall meetings that many chairmen showcased cosmetic achievements.

    One of the bane of the councils is the bloated

  • Kwara APC, PDP clash over comments

    Kwara APC, PDP clash over comments

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kwara State has described the comments by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as deceitful.

    PDP had, at its Sunday rally, claimed that APC was dead on arrival in the state.

    The leadership of the party put together the rally to welcome some indigenes appointed by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The PDP Caretaker Committee Chairman, Solomon Edoga, said the party would win in 2015.

    Edoga added: “We are grateful to President Goodluck Jonathan for appointing some of the sons and daughters of Kwara State to important offices. He asked me to tell you that more goodies are coming.

    ‘’He asked me to tell you that the leadership of the party, led by Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, will visit the state next week.

    “PDP is Kwara, Kwara is PDP. We’ll not relinquish our right. We will not pack out of our house. We are owners of Kwara and we are going to get out of it. This occasion today would not have been possible without the leadership of the PDP in the state.”

    But the APC’s Interim Publicity Secretary, Sulyman Buhari, said: “How can any reasonable person describe a party that mobilised about 400,000 people within two months as a dead party? Do they know what a dead party is?

    “The deserted PDP without any structure in the state is an example of a dead party.

    “The gang up against our party and party leaders is a badly arranged pack of cards which is bound to scatter. Some of the unguarded statements credited to PDP leaders underscore their civility and intelligence.

    “The gathering was a jamboree with no meaningful impact or consolidation plans for the people.

    “Although people were mobilised from 16 local governments with cash and yet-to-be fulfilled promises, it couldn’t save them from the disappointment the rally represents.

    “The APC is a formidable party and Kwarans will continue to enjoy the benefits of their unflinching support to the government and our party.”

     

  • Brouhaha over oil revenue

    Brouhaha over oil revenue

    SIR: I have followed, with keen interest, the controversy surrounding the unaccounted federation account funds involving the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). It will be recalled that the CBN Governor, Mallam Lamido Sanusi caused a stir when he raised an alarm in a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan that the NNPC failed to remit crude oil proceeds amounting to $49.8 billion into the Federation Account from January 2012 to July 2013.

    However, when he was summoned before the Senate Committee on Finance in December to give insight into the letter he wrote on the controversial missing money, Sanusi recanted saying $12 billion, and not $49.8billion, was the amount discovered not to have been remitted to the account within the period. That was after a joint reconciliation committee, of which he was part, had resolved the figure to $10.8 billion. Now, the CBN Governor’s position has changed again. This time, he has put the figure at $20billion.

    Between the vociferous rebuttals of the NNPC and the disturbing inconsistencies of the CBN, there is need to reach a middle point. Since the CBN and NNPC have continued to be at loggerheads, with the one insisting on $20 billion as funds yet to be accounted for, and the other vigorously asserting that it has accounted for virtually all the funds, the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy (CME), Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has graciously recommended that the best way to get to the truth and reassure Nigerians who have been expressing strong opinions on the issue would be to set up an independent body that would do a forensic audit of all the documents and claims.

    Evidently, this should provide Nigerians with a definitive verdict on the controversy. We would recall that a similar forensic audit was deployed to investigate subsidy claims and this yielded good results and a better tighter process against fraud. With this firm stance on fairness, transparency and accountability maintained by the Finance Minister, we can rest assured that the reconciliation process will be completed with honesty and integrity, devoid of undue encumbrance from partisan interests.

     

    • Olusola Daniel,

    Kwara state.

     

  • So, Jonathan is nice?

    So, Jonathan is nice?

    What was Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, the suspended Governor of the Central Bank on Nigeria on President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan.

    Not a few Nigerians would be surprised that the former boss of Nigeria’s apex bank could have some nice things to say about the president given his strident criticism of the administration, especially its lack luster fight against corruption.

    I am a bit surprised myself but then I remember this wasn’t the first time I would be hearing such a comment being made about the president. I’ve heard from quite a number of people who are very close to him or have access to him that Dr Jonathan is a very good person who meant well for this country but is surrounded by bad people. And each time I hear this I get annoyed. Why should a good man surround himself with bad people?

    Being soft spoken, courteous and nice to people are part of the qualities of a good person, but being good goes beyond that. The ability to attract good people to oneself is also a sign of goodness. You know a man’s character by the kind of company he keeps. Show me your friend, the cliché goes, and I will tell you who you are.

    True, according to Shakespeare there is no art in knowing the mind’s construction from the face, but then if one was deceived by the blandness or innocence of the face it shouldn’t take too long for a good man to discover the bad or rotten person around him.

    It has been a while now that President Goodluck Jonathan has mounted the saddle as Nigeria’s president and leader, and from day one, he has surrounded himself with some characters that not a few Nigerians are not comfortable with, yet he found them good company. What does that say of the president himself? Take the example of the former Minister of Aviation Madam Stella Oduah. I am not sure if there is anybody in this country who does not know that Stella was and still is Goodluck’s friend and it was mainly on the strength of that friendship that she was made a minister of the Federal Republic. She was so good to Jonathan particularly through her ‘Neighbour-to-Neighbour’ organization in the run up to the president’s election that he just had to compensate her for being there for him and she was made a Minister.

    Nothing wrong in that I guess, after all you work well with people that you know and trust. But not too long after, this woman became a square peg in a round hole and almost everybody except the president saw this and complained; to Jonathan, Stella could do no wrong. Even the President didn’t see anything wrong when the two BMW limousine scandal involving the former Minister and the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) broke out. Not even the House of Representatives’ or the Presidency’s administrative panel indictment was enough to convince him to drop his friend.

    When he eventually did a couple of weeks ago, many believe it was just a desperate measure to rescue his seemingly doomed second term ambition; not out of conviction to fight corruption. The allegations against Madam Oduah are weighty enough to have warranted her immediate removal or suspension from office but the President chose not to act until he discovered that leaving Stella in office would be an unnecessary baggage that could jeopardize his re-election in 2015. Reluctantly, Stella had to go and for now scot-free.

    If Jonathan is such a good man as we are being told, then he shouldn’t have surrounded himself with the likes of Madam Oduah. Yes, nothing has been proven against the former Minister yet but the President would help Nigeria and his cause by releasing the report of the administrative panel that probed the car scandal and allow the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to handle the case and any other alleged cases of corruption involving her without any pressure or interference.

    If the President is such a good person then why is he still keeping Deziani Allison-Madueke as Minister of Petroleum with alleged cases of monumental corruption going on in that industry especially within the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). We’ve heard about 20 billion USD oil money reportedly missing for which the suspended CBN Governor was apparently being punished. Forget about the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria report on Sanusi’s CBN, it was just a convenient excuse to ease out a pain in the arse. Why wait till now to act on the council’s report that had been ready since March.

    This is not excusing Sanusi from accounting for his tenure as CBN Governor. If he had done anything wrong, particularly fraudulent, he should be punished. I am not one of his fans, but why punish him now after blowing the whistle on the missing oil money? And why not all those people involved in the missing money as well?

    The fraud in the oil industry dates back to the discovery of oil in Nigeria and has seemingly defied all actions taken by successive administrations to curb it. Most if not all of Jonathan’s predecessors are guilty, but then none of them has been described as nice the way Jonathan is being portrayed. So, if he is a nice and good person, then he should get rid of those bad people in our oil industry; he should start from his cabinet.

    If Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the coordinating Minister for the Economy as well as Finance Minister (whatever that meant) is sitting there comfortably with all these fraud allegations flying around, then I am afraid, she too had joined them. May be she is one of those bad people surrounding our ‘nice’ President.

    There are still many of them like that parading the corridors of power in Abuja. But like I asked earlier, why should a good person surround himself with bad people? The answer is simple, he too must be bad because like minds work together.

    Today we speak well of the likes of Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe and Alhaji Ahmadu Bello even after they are no more because of the good things they did when they were in power or had access to power. They didn’t achieve all those good things alone, they were helped by the good people they invited into their government. So, if Jonathan cannot attract or invite good people into his government, then he himself is bad. Shikena.

    One last thing to add. We’ve heard so much about how good and nice President Jonathan is, but people are not coming out to talk about his unforgiving spirit. I heard he doesn’t forgive. If you are in doubt ask former Bayelsa Governor Timi Silva or his namesake Timi Alaibe the former NDDC boss. Both are from Bayelsa State like President Jonathan. What a nice man!

     

     

  • PDP battles to reclaim Imo

    PDP battles to reclaim Imo

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has re-launched efforts to reclaim Imo State during a mega rally at the Dan Anyiam Stadium in Owerri.

    At the event, national leaders of the party gathered to correct what they described as the mistakes, which cost the party the governorship election in 2011.

    During the rally attended by President Goodluck Jonathan; Vice President Namadi Sambo; National Chairman of the party Adamu Mu’azu; Chairman, Board of Trustees (BoT), Chief Tony Anenih; Senate President David Mark; PDP governors and founding members of PDP in the state, who left the party over alleged injustice, returned to the fold.

    They are former Governor Chief Achike Udenwa; Senator Ifeanyi Ararume, the lawmaker representing Imo East; Senator Chris Anyanwu; Mike Ahamba (SAN); among others.

    At the rally, the speakers, including President Jonathan, said the party would reclaim Imo State.

    The Chairman of PDP Governor’s Forum, Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio, said the return of the members meant that the party had recovered its winning streak and would regain power in 2015.

    “We are not just here to receive the returnees, but also their supporters. With what we have seen, PDP will recapture Imo State. The will of God is that in 2015, PDP’s flag will be hoisted again in Imo Government House.”

    The Senate President said Imo had been a PDP state and was on the verge of returning to the fold, adding: “Whatever happened in past was already history. In fact, Imo has returned to the PDP fold. We have made a strong statement by the turnout of people today.”

    His deputy, Ike Ekweremadu, said the party was poised to win Imo governorship election.

    Said he: “In 1999, we controlled Southeast states until Imo and Anambra were ‘captured’ by the opposition. But we have come to reclaim Imo.”

    Anenih said he hopedPDP would regain power in the state next year.

    He said: “With the return of our members, the job is done. All we need do now is to play the politics of inclusion. Nobody should be left behind. We should avoid the mistakes of the past and unite to achieve our goal. Our coming here to receive the returnees has shown the importance of the project to reclaim Imo.”

    Mu’azu said: “The journey to recapture Imo has begun and the new leadership of the PDP is committed to reclaiming the states we have lost, following internal problems.”

    According to him, “at the commencement of this democratic dispensation, PDP won elections in Imo, but due to internal wrangling, we could not hold on to power. Even incumbent Governor Rochas Okorocha was a PDP member.

    “Now that we have found answers to our problems and with the returnees, I want to assure you that Imo State has been reclaimed.”

    He appealed to the aspirants that “this is a new PDP and only our best will be fielded during the next poll.”

    House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha, one of the likely governorship aspirants, said: “Imo is a PDP state and today we have begun the journey to reclaim the state. We made mistakes in the past, but we are back. We misunderstood ourselves and power slipped off our hands. But today, our brothers, who defected, are back. This is one of the things we need to return to Douglas House.”

    President Jonathan described the rally as a reunion, which would strengthen the party.

    Said he: “We are here for a unity rally because our brothers, who defected, have returned. We are celebrating a reunion of the PDP. The party will be stronger than before. PDP is the only stable party in the country. We will continue to play a major role in the democratic dispensation.”

     

  • Presidency denies plans to install military govt

    Presidency denies plans to install military govt

    The Presidency denied yesterday a report alleging that President Goodluck Jonathan was planning to install a military governor in Borno State.

    The report alleged that the Presidency had identified a retired Army General to be appointed as the military administrator of the state.

    Despite the state of emergency declared in the state and two other Northeast states, Borno has been the most hit by Boko Haram insurgents.

    Speaking last night, the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President, Dr. Reuben Abati, described the report as another mischievous attempt in the media to portray the Federal Government in bad light.

    He reiterated the commitment of the Jonathan administration to adhere to the rule of law.

    Stressing that the report did not make any sense, Abati said the country’s constitution did not make provision for military rule in a civilian regime.

    Rather than take such illegal step, he said the Federal Government would extend the state of emergency if the need arose.

    Said he: “It is preposterous; it does not make any sense. This is one of the states where government has declared a state of emergency twice, and on the two occasions, it did not remove the governors.

    “No where does the constitution recommend military rule over civilian rule in a democratic setting like Nigeria. This is a government, which has placed emphasis on strict adherence to the rule of law.

    “If there is need to extend the state of emergency in the states currently observing it, government will do so and not remove a democratically-elected governor. To suggest that the Federal Government is trying to impose a military government in a democratic dispensation is far-fetched.

    “Let it not be another mischievous attempt in the media to project government in bad light.”

  • Electoral Offences Tribunal

    Electoral Offences Tribunal

    •US’ timely reminder of the Uwais panel’s recommendation

    The clamour for a law to establish Electoral Offences Tribunal, in Nigeria, before the 2015 general elections, got a boost last week. The latest support came from the United States Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Mrs. Linda Thomas-Greenfield, who led a 23-man team to the third meeting of the Nigeria-US Bi-National Commission, in Abuja. According to the under-secretary, her interactions with Nigerians show that many of them are in support of such a tribunal. She promised that the commission is working to make the 2015 election ‘the most peaceful, free, fair and credible election’ in Nigeria’s history.

    This is one intervention by a foreign official that we identify with. So, we urge the National Assembly to hearken to the umpteenth call for the passage of the law, to establish this important tribunal. To ignore the urgency for the tribunal will amount to playing the ostrich, considering the tension in the polity. Indeed, in the country’s history, electoral malfeasance has never been as worse as in the current democratic dispensation, particularly during the 2007 general elections. We recall that it was the condemnation that greeted that electoral fraud that led late President c, to establish the Justice Muhammad Uwais panel, which among other recommendations, suggested the need for an electoral offences tribunal.

    Regrettably, the government of President Goodluck Jonathan, which is a direct beneficiary of the electoral malfeasance of the 2007 elections, has shown lukewarm interest in the creation of this body. Also, members of the National Assembly, some of whom benefitted from that electoral brigandage to climb to national prominence, appear uninterested in ensuring that the recommendations of the Uwais panel become law. This joint interest in the benefits of electoral philandering, is perhaps why we needed a reminder from a foreign diplomat, of the importance of such a piece of legislation.

    It must be borne in mind that when partisans threaten violence against electoral brigandage, it is an indication of frustration with the absence of justice in the electoral process. So, while condemning threats of post-election violence, we believe the best antidote is to allow the will of the people to prevail. This will be achieved by ensuring that elections are transparently conducted, and where there are infractions, that the culprits are effectively brought to justice. No doubt, the persistent failure to bring past election riggers to justice over the years helps to embolden potential riggers.

    Indeed, if the National Assembly is determined to give Nigerians a free, fair and credible election, the bill can be given a top priority to ensure its expeditious passage, before this year’s Ekiti and Osun elections. We consider the two elections a prelude to the 2015 general elections. We are also worried that if the two elections are tainted by rigging, the political parties, and the electorates will become distraught of the process going into next year’s election. The consequences will be that the loser may be unwilling to accept defeat, and that could lead to violence.

    With the seething security crisis that has engulfed the north eastern part of the country; every effort must be made by the executive and legislative authorities, to ensure that election- induced crisis is not added to the combustible mix. So, we expect that President Jonathan and the leadership of the National Assembly will find wisdom in the need to urgently pass the electoral offences tribunal law, in the interest of our nation. They must realise that there is no gaming on this score, unless of course they do not care about the country.

  • Desperate president, haughty prince

    Desperate president, haughty prince

    He had it coming.” “It serves him right.” “About time.” “De man too do, sef”

    The subject of these sentiments and many more of like vintage, expressed again and again across media platforms, is of course Malam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, who was sent packing from the gubernatorial suite at the Central Bank of Nigeria last week by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Sanusi had planned to leave that powerful office on his own terms. In the manner of royals used to determining when they come and when they go and how long they stay, he had served notice that he would not seek an extension of the statutory term of five years. He might well have thought that, by that singular stroke, he had at once positioned himself to assert the autonomy that goes with the position and insured himself against the abject groveling and the shabby compromises that public officials often have to make to hold on to their jobs.

    He did not grovel. But he carried on in the manner of someone who could not be touched, said his numerous critics. He was all too ready to express an opinion on every subject under the sun and even beyond. He talked far more than he listened. It was as if he was conducting a crusade against the Establishment of which he was a part.

    He turned a purely technocratic job into a political forum and invested it with power and authority that went far beyond what its creators envisaged. He reveled in controversy. He dispensed public funds as if he was stricken with the Mansa Musa syndrome. Sometimes, it was as if he saw the CBN and its sprawling bureaucracy as an extension of the Kano emirate court.

    All in all, his numerous admirers countered, he has been a breath of fresh air in the mouldy corridors of high finance. He called attention to issues the authorities would rather conceal, such as the extortionate salaries and allowances legislators appropriated unto themselves under the table, and the opacity of the reporting system on oil export earnings. He spent public money judiciously, for beneficent ends.

    Above all, his numerous admirers said, he had rescued the banking sector from the grip of a powerful mafia that had since the time of military president Ibrahim Babangida turned the industry into an organised racket.

    Sanusi had three months left on his term. To Abuja which had been chafing under his strictures, three months seemed like an eternity. If he could not be removed, surely he could be neutralised and kept so busy fighting for his name and honour that asking inconvenient questions would be the last thing of his mind?

    So, they got the Department of Dirty Tricks to work up to the most intrusive and titillating detail an alleged dalliance between Sanusi and a female executive at CBN they said he had employed without following the rules. From intercepted text messages the twain were alleged to have exchanged, you could almost hear the moan of ecstasy and the joy of conquest.

    The Department of Dirty Tricks blanketed the media with these salacious reports, hoping that the public would rise in indignation, declare any public official involved in such conduct guilty of “moral turpitude” and unfit to hold high public office.

    There were indeed those who reacted in exactly that manner. Some even went one better, demanding that Sanusi be hauled before the nearest Sharia court, tried summarily and sentenced to public flogging or lapidation.

    But by and large, the stories gained no traction in the media or in public discourse

    So, the authorities fell back on the bureaucratic expedients of audits and queries. That didn’t work either. With his accustomed hauteur, Sanusi disputed the competence and authority of the sources of the queries that did reach him and refused to respond. Nor would he resign as President Jonathan requested.

    He says he heard of but was never served with the documents released after his ouster charging him with reckless and incompetent management of public funds and hinting darkly at big-time sleaze.

    That is hardly surprising. Abuja had had more than enough. It was time to unsheathe the sword of presidential power; time for the formerly shoeless boy from the creeks to teach the haughty prince from Kano who has never lacked for anything a lesson in realpolitik he seems to have forgotten: Power will always find a way.

    Didn’t Sir Ahmadu Bello, Sardauna Sokoto, and premier of Northern Nigeria depose and banish to Azare, in what was then Bauchi Province, the now former CBN governor’s iconoclastic uncle, Muhammadu Sanusi, who served as Emir of Kano between 1954 and 1963? Did the heavens fall?

    So who or what can stand in the way of a President vested with the powers of a leviathan in his resolve to dismiss an official he can no longer work with? The Constitution only says the official cannot be dismissed without the consent and approval of the Senate. It does not say that you require any such approval to suspend him.

    So, go at him, and do so with petulant vindictiveness. Humiliate him on the world stage; suspend him from office while he is conducting business in Niamey, in Niger Republic, on the nation’s behalf.

    Such shabbiness harks back to what military president Babangida did to Prince Tony Momoh.

    For weeks, rumours of a cabinet shuffle had been swirling, and Momoh, the regime’s Minister of Information, was one of those being mentioned as likely casualties. So, before setting out at the head of a delegation to represent Nigeria at ceremonies marking the end of slavery in the Caribbean nation of Guyana, Momoh had gone to Babangida to ask whether he should proceed, in view of rumours that he was going to be dropped in the impending cabinet shuffle.

    “You believe that?” Babangida remonstrated. “Common, Tony. How can we drop our resident philosopher from the Federal Executive Council?’’

    Whereupon he wished Momoh a pleasant trip.

    Momoh’s plane was streaking across the Atlantic when Dodan Barracks announced that he had been dropped from the Federal Executive Council. By the time the plane touched down, he had been stripped of all authority to transact any business on behalf of the Federal Government.

    Sanusi’s media acolytes and retainers unwittingly contributed to his present grief when they dared Dr Jonathan to dismiss him and face dire consequences. Their taunts did little to restrain Dr Jonathan and may well have emboldened him.

    For now, Sanusi is gone. But the issues he raised will not go away until they are addressed forthrightly. Of these, none is more urgent than an answer to the insistent question: What happened to $20 billion in oil receipts?

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • I can suspend CBN Governor – Jonathan

    I can suspend CBN Governor – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan has insisted that he has the powers to suspend the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
    Responding to questions during the Presidential Media Chat on Monday, Jonathan said ” I will tell you yes. The President has absolute powere to suspend the CBN Governor. ”
    “The CBN is not even well defined in the Nigerian Constitution. If you look at the Nigerian Constitution, Section 153 talks about executive bodies like Federal Character Commission, Civil Service Commission, Independent National Electoral Commission, the Judicial Service Commission about 14 of them. These are clearly defined. The President appoints, but the Senate must clear, for the president to remove anybody he must go through the Senate.
    ” CBN as the number one bank is not even well defined in the Nigerian Constitution, but the CBN law makes provision that to appoint the governor and deputy governors of CBN and executive directors, president appoints and send to the Senate. But the President has oversight over the CBN, so if anybody tells you that the CBN is a different country, it is not true because for the CBN to change the Colour of the Naira, the President must approve,” Jonathan stated.

  • Media Chat: Six questions Jonathan must answer

     

    As another edition of the Presidential Media Chat holds Monday evening, some questions are bogging the minds of Nigerians which President Goodluck Jonathan must answer.

    Here are some:

    Polytechnics lecturers in the country have been on strike for months what is being done to meet their demands?

    Will you be a candidate for the 2015 Presidential election?

    Are men of the Nigerian Armed forces capable of battling the Boko Haram insurgents?

    Is it true that you cannot sack the Petroleum Minister despite various allegations against her and the ministry?

    With the coalition of opposition parties in the APC and the defection of governors from your party, what are the electoral chances of the PDP in the elections this year and in 2015?

    You don’t seem to have the powers to suspend the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, why did you not get the approval to take the decision?

    What other questions should the President answer?