Tag: Ibikunle Amosun

  • Amosun to insurgents: sheathe your swords

    Amosun to insurgents: sheathe your swords

    Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun has congratulated Muslims on the successful completion of the Ramadan fasting.

    The governor urged insurgents to sheathe their swords in adherence to the teachings of Prophet Mohammed (SAW).

    In a statement yesterday in Abeokuta, the state capital, by his Senior Special Assistant on Media, Mrs. Olufunmilayo Wakama, the governor urged Muslims to continue to pray for peace and stability of the nation, particularly during this trying period.

    Amosun, who noted that Islam is a religion of peace, enjoined those behind the bombings in parts of the country to sheath their swords in the spirit of the season and in adherence to the teachings of Prophet Mohammed.

    He said this is the best way the aggrieved could find peaceful means to express their grievances.

    Amosun said: “As Muslims, we must not allow the significance of the season to be lost on us. We have fasted and prayed in the holy month for Nigeria so that the nation can overcome its current challenges. I enjoin you all to continue to demonstrate this spirituality as you support and show love to one another.”

    The governor wished Muslims a joyous celebration.

     

     

  • Group to present Ogun governor’s biography

    Group to present Ogun governor’s biography

    THE biography of Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, entitled: “The Indelible Footprints,” will be presented on Saturday, August 2 at the MKO Abiola Stadium,  Abokuta, the state capital.

    At the event, Ogun State citizens and Nigerians who have contributed to the development of the state and have also distinguished themselves in various fields will be honoured with awards.

    The award and book presentation is being organised by the Gateway Professionals. The Gateway Professionals are indigenes and non- indigenes who are stakeholders in Ogun State.

  • Amosun approves N120m bursary allowance for students

    Amosun approves N120m bursary allowance for students

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun approved yesterday N120m as bursary for Ogun State indigenes studying in tertiary institutions in the country.

    Amosun said his administration would continue to provide the needed supports to students of Ogun State origin to lighten their cost of studies.

    The governor, who gave the approval for the payment of the bursary while addressing the students who staged a  peaceful protest to his Oke–Mosan Governor’s Office, urged the students to harmonise the lists of their colleagues to ensure that citizens of other states  were not deliberately or erroneously made to profit from the largesse.

    According to him, the conflicting students list submitted by their respective institutions caused the delay in the payment of the bursary allowance.

    He said the conflicting list put the total sum of the bursary award at over N900 million as against N120 million, adding that the sharp difference in figure was questionable and totally unacceptable to his administration.

    Amosun said: “I want to assure you that by next month, August, the entire outstanding bursary will be paid and what is expected from you is that in the next two weeks, I will be glad to see the list of all the members and I promise. We will instantly swing into action to see that, come August, next month, you receive your bursary.”

    The National President of National Association of Ogun State Students (NAOSS), Bolaji Sanni, lauded the governor for his sensitivity to their plights, pledging that they would abide by his instruction.

     

  • Amosun’s aide flays LP

    Amosun’s aide flays LP

    FORMER Governor Gbenga Daniel’s faction of Ogun State Labour Party (LP) has been condemned over its criticism of Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s interactive session with civil servants.

    A spokesperson of the factional LP in a statement, claimed that the meeting was designed to deceive the civil servants as well as a reaction to the Ekiti governorship election.

    But the Special Assistant to Amosun on Print Media, Olusola Balogun, yesterday, dismissed the factional LP.

    Balogun said the meeting, which was part of activities to mark the 2014 Civil Service Week, was not a reaction, but Amosun’s way of showing affection for the civil servants and addressing issues that borders on workers’ welfare.

    “If this factional spokesman was well informed, he would have been told that the Head of Service, Mrs. Modupe Adekunle, explained in her opening speech at the beginning of the event, tagged: ‘A day with the governor,’ that the event was postponed by seven days due to certain work schedules that involves both the governor and top civil servants in the state.

    “In fact, I still remember that Mrs. Adekunle told the packed hall at the June12 Cultural Centre, that she had to put a call to someone in Abeokuta to cancel the event when she realised that she and her team of top civil servants on the entourage of the governor could not make it back to Abeokuta before 4p.m. The governor also corroborated her position when he took to the podium.

    “One then wonder where the Labour Party guy got the idea that the event was a reaction to an unrelated event in far away Ekiti,” Balogun argued.

    The governor’s aide maintained that Amosun, from his first week in office, left no one in doubt about his sincerity and desire to correct the wrongs and abnormalities foisted on the state by some people now masquerading as modern-day advocates of workers’ welfare.

    “I am sure workers in the state civil service too would readily attest that Governor Amosun prioritised their welfare. He ensures nothing impedes the payment of their salary and allowances even when the Federal Government defaulted in the release of statutory allocation to states.

    “But my joy is that the highly articulated Ogun civil servants are not deceived by this unsolicited advocacy from Labour Party. They know who their friends are,” Balogun said.

    The aide also slammed the criticism of the governor’s promise to re-start the car and housing loan schemes.

    “I am not surprised the Labour Party man was at sea on where the funding for car and housing loans would come from. They deserve our sympathy though. They deserve our sympathy because of their hollow intellectual capacity, which cannot accommodate anything developmental,” he added.

     

  • Amosun’s aide flays LP

    Amosun’s aide flays LP

    FORMER Governor Gbenga Daniel’s faction of Ogun State Labour Party (LP) has been condemned over its criticism of last week’s interactive session Governor Ibikunle Amosun had with civil servants.

    A spokesperson of the factional LP had in a statement claimed that the meeting was designed to deceive the civil servants as well as a reaction to the Ekiti governorship election.

    But the Special Assistant to Amosun on Print Media, Olusola Balogun, in a statement yesterday, dismissed the position of the factional LP as a figment of its own warped imagination and a further display of hollowness the former governor’s men.

    Balogun said the meeting, which was part of activities slated to mark the 2014 Civil Service Week, was not a reaction, but Amosun’s way of showing affection for the civil servants and addressing issues that bothers on workers’ welfare.

    “If this factional spokesman was well informed, he would have been told that the Head of Service, Mrs. Modupe Adekunle, explained in her opening speech at the beginning of the event, tagged: ‘A day with the governor,’ that the event was postponed by seven days due to certain work schedules that involves both the governor and top civil servants in the state.

    “In fact, I still remember that Mrs. Adekunle told the packed hall at the June12 Cultural Centre, that she had to put a call to someone in Abeokuta to cancel the event when she realised that she and her team of top civil servants on the entourage of the governor could not make it back to Abeokuta before 4p.m. The governor also corroborated her position when he took to the podium.

    “One then wonder where the Labour Party guy got the idea that the event was a reaction to an unrelated event in far away Ekiti,” Balogun argued.

    The governor’s aide maintained that Amosun, from his first week in office, left no one in doubt about his sincerity and desire to correct the wrongs and abnormalities foisted on the state by some people now masquerading as modern-day advocates of workers’ welfare.

    “I am sure workers in the state civil service too would readily attest that Governor Amosun prioritised their welfare. He ensures nothing impedes the payment of their salary and allowances even when the Federal Government defaulted in the release of statutory allocation to states.

    “But my joy is that the highly articulated Ogun civil servants are not deceived by this unsolicited advocacy from Labour Party. They know who their friends are,” Balogun said.

    The aide also slammed the criticism of the governor’s promise to re-start the car and housing loan schemes.

    “I am not surprised the Labour Party man was at sea on where the funding for car and housing loans would come from. They deserve our sympathy though. They deserve our sympathy because of their hollow intellectual capacity, which cannot accommodate anything developmental,” he added.

     

  • Two Ogun flyovers ready

    Two Ogun flyovers ready

    •Govt installs traffic light with camera

    The flyovers at Itoku and Sapon in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, have been completed.

    Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure Olamilekan Adegbite said they would be opened soon.

    This brings the number of flyovers built by the Governor Ibikunle Amosun administration to three.

    Adegbite said: “The construction of bridges and roads across the state will boost socio-economic activities and reduce the traffic bottlenecks experienced daily by commuters. The administration’s huge investment in road infrastructure is not only to beautify the state and curtail accidents but also to open up the state and make it investment friendly.”

    Also, the State Bureau of Transportation (BOT) has started installing Intelligent Traffic Signal (ITS) on newly constructed roads.

    Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Transportation Gbenga Opesanwo said ITS is better that semi-automated traffic lights, adding: “We have completed the pilot phase of the deployment of ITS lights. These lights have cameras and sensors which detect the density of traffic and manage it accordingly. These components are expandable and can be used for sundry purposes, including addressing security issues. Information captured would be shared among relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), including security agencies, as may be necessary.”

  • Ogun govt, LP aspirant disagree over multi-billion road projects

    Ogun govt, LP aspirant disagree over multi-billion road projects

    THE Labour Party (LP) gubernatorial aspirant in Ogun State, Mr. Gboyega Nasiru Isiaka, has faulted the ongoing road projects of the state governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, saying they have no direct positive impact on the people, particularly the poor.

    Isiaka, who contested the April 2011 governorship election in the state on the platform of the Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN), said money being used to build bridges that are under-utilised could have been channelled to ventures that would have benefited the people more.

    According to him, since the construction work on the road projects are being handled by the expatriates, it has not created jobs for the unemployed youth in the state.

    The former Managing Director of Gateway Holdings during the administration of Otunba Gbenga Daniel spoke at the weekend in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, while fielding questions from reporters at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Guest Night, an interactive programme of the Ogun State Council of NUJ.

    Isiaka also dismissed Amosun’s educational policy, construction of model schools and promise of free, qualitative and affordable education.

    The governorship aspirant, who was a key player in the administration of Otunba Gbenga Daniel, also defended the immediate past government’s decision to concession all the state’s assets, particularly the state-owned Gateway Hotels to private investors, adding that the Amosun-led government has not come up with a better approach to address the issue.

    The state government has, however, justified its massive investments in road construction and other infrastructure.

    Speaking through the Commissioner for Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, the government noted that the completion of the new roads will attract investors, in addition to creating direct and indirect jobs.

    Adeosun said: “Infrastructure like roads bring businesses, business brings employment and people need somewhere to live and landlords get money. Look at the roads we are opening in areas where there were no roads. People are now saying they want to go there to put up factories and they are going to employ local people.

    “If you don’t have roads, nobody will look for you. Now, big companies are coming and are saying we want to relocate our head offices to Ogun State. They have to employ our people. It can’t just be direct employment only, there is also indirect employment. If a factory comes somewhere, somebody has to carry the people to work, somebody has to cook for them to eat, somebody has to supply diesel and so on.

    “So, the truth is, those roads people feel is not bringing anything, soon you will begin to see big companies that can employ 2000, 5000 workforce setting up in Ogun State. And I think that is something we should all be very, very excited about.”

     

  • Sorry state of Oba Prison

    Sorry state of Oba Prison

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun State was at the Oba Prison in Abeokuta on Democracy Day to share the joy of the day with the inmates and probably grant some of them reprieve, but what he saw shocked him. ERNEST NWOKOLO reports.

    All over the world, the concept of prison and imprisoning is not to punish but to correct offenders through an in-built mechanism designed to bring about an effective Reformation, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (RRR) of the inmates.

    And it is also usually patterned in such a way that by the time the offenders served out their time, either in full or they get pardoned before their term ends, the initial faulty conscience that instigated criminality would have been so reformed to a degree where they would feel sufficiently sorry for the offence committed and also acquire moral strength upon eventual release into the normal society, to say no to the same or similar conducts that sent them to jail in the first place.

    And not surprisingly, some inmates do acquire vocational skills at the end of the day, while others intelligent enough and willing, are also given an opportunity to obtain tertiary education, ostensibly to enable them adjust effectively when the prison doors flung opened for them to go home and join their families and members of the larger society.

    But the Oba Federal Prison in Abeokuta, Ogun State, presents a different picture.

    Tucked in a remote area off Abeokuta and with barely two accessible roads, perhaps only during the dry season, the happenings and plights of the 538 or so inmates in the facility remain largely out of the awareness of others.

    This makes help or visitation by family members, non-governmental organisations and other humanitarian agencies to the inmates difficult. Even in an emergency situation, there are no prison vehicles to evacuate those having health challenges.

    There are no medical doctors or pharmacists to handle inmates’ ailments, save one nursing officer. No drugs to treat the ailing ones and even the surrounding are not hygienic enough as evidenced in the hot pungent foul odour oozing out from the body of some of the inmates. No fewer than four deaths were said have been recorded there in the last five months, prompting many to express the fear that such incidents might be occurring regularly there.

    To mark Nigeria’s Democracy Day, last Thursday (May 29), the state governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun and a team of Committee on Prerogative of Mercy visited the prison.

    Amosun was there to see the possibility of granting amnesty to some deserving inmates but he could not believe what he saw. He visited Ibara prison, Abeokuta, earlier same day where he granted amnesty to 15 inmates.

    But the governor, who was accompanied to Oba prison by the state’s Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mrs. Abimbola Akeredolu, Health Commissioner, Dr. Olaokun Soyinka, Head of Service, Mrs. Modupe Adekunle among others, broke down in tears, saying where the inmates are kept is “shameful”, “appalling” and “dehumani-sing.”  He expressed the fear that something “contagious” could be lurching inside Oba prison.

    Amosun was particularly saddened by the plights of the over 50 per cent of the inmates who are being ravaged by strange diseases and could not access medication.

    He was passionately touched upon listening to the inmates who in their frail and gaunt state, pleaded for clemency lest they die before the conclusion of their cases.

    The Nation gathered that some of the inmates had spent up to seven years awaiting trial.

    Others have their case files either lost or got muddled up as to be unable to know the charges for which they were being tried.

    Amosun said, “for me it was like coming to share the Democracy Day with them, to see the possibility of commuting those on death roll to life imprisonment or release some that have few years to go after considering their record.

    “But the condition is dehuma-nising and appalling. If we have any intention of correcting them by sending them to prison, I think this is not the way. It is so bad everybody has to accept responsibility for what has happened.

    “Indeed, I put it there (in the visitors’ note) that it is like they are being sent to be killed here. Just look at their condition, Ibara is old but you could see that the inmates are still full of hope. They can be corrected but not the people here.

    “I think it is a big shame and I feel so ashamed really that I am a governor in this kind of condition that I have seen, you could see these people, they are traumatised, they are dehumanised, very appalling. I have the feelings that they are being sent to the grave there, just look at their condition.

    “They can be corrected but look at the people here, more than 50 per cent of them is either, they are not alive or they are very sick; all of them being ravaged. I think we need to do something.  I am not happy seeing fellow Nigerians this way. They may have been criminals at one point in time. I also realise that some of them have been there awaiting trials for upward of 5 – 6 years, some of them sevens years, then there is a problem.

    “I am not exonerating myself, governance is a collective thing, those of us in the positions of authority like this, we should be able to take responsibility. It is the Federal Government that is saddled with the responsibility of taking care of the prisoners but we as a state too, we should do something.”

    Also, the state Commissioner for Health, Dr. Olaokun Soyinka, who observed the state of the prison, told The Nation some of the inmates are likely to be suffering from tuberculosis, festering scabies and sexually transmitted infections.

    Soyinka said the state would mobilise its medical team and logistics to attend to urgent health challenges facing the prisoners, blaming their plights on shortage of basic drugs and health officers in the prison’s clinic.

    Soyinka said: “there is something we can do. I think one of the problems, is scarcity of resources, they don’t even have drugs and supplies in the clinic that is in there. We are going to assist them with that. Our outreach will be combined with the federal services to assist them.

    “There are all sorts of health challenges they are exposed to, malaria, tuberculosis, most likely some have sexually transmitted infections like HIV/AIDs, some have scabies and there are malnourished people there, it is a mixture, there are certain things that are systemic that would take the prison system to correct but there are other things we can assist with and the health insurance would also assist.”

    WhenThe Nation met the Comptroller of Prisons, Ogun State Command, Mr. Olalere Joseph, he said they are working to make the prison perform its reformation role on the inmates but complained of the command being handicapped in a number of ways.

    “The challenges in Oba prison are peculiar ones. It is not that we don’t have space but we are grossly having shortage of staff. I’m not the one to give directive to employ more staff. It is at the discretion of the National Headquarters to recruit.

    “They know we have shortage of staff. We send returns and we have been requesting for more hands. And until recruitment is conducted, there is no way you can get staff.

    “On the issue of the medical needs of the inmates, it is not standard enough, we don’t have enough personnel to man the clinic, the Oba prison you are particular about, we have one nurse there, there are supposed to be three staff, but only one person is doing the shift, even if there is no vehicle to take them to hospital.”

    On the way the inmates are kept which is predisposing them to many challenges,  Joseph said the essence of putting suspects or convicts in prison is to ensure that no escape occurred but where there not enough hands, the inmates have to be housed where few staff can manage.

    “The essence of putting them in prison is to ensure that they do not escape for security purposes, we have to manage the space, where we would be able to monitor them closely.

    “It is just unfortunate that things are not working the way it is supposed to work, there is provision for this aspect of reformation of inmates but the facility are not standard enough to do this aspect of reformatory programme.

    “All the workshops need total rehabilitation. I’m talking of Ogun State command. We need to equip the workshops with necessary tools for all the vocations carpentry, bricklaying, furniture making, weaving, tailoring and a host of others. “

    And a sociologist, Dr. Sola Aluko-Arowolo, said the prison is generally supposed to reform inmates, but rued that most of the nation’s prisons may not be able to perform that primary function because of paucity of personnel and lack of even basic infrastructure.

    Aluko-Arolwolo, who is a lecturer at the state-owned Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago – Iwoye, said since the prison is a “total institution” which takes absolute control over whoever that is in its custody, the “authority of the prison determines what happened to the inmates.”

    He cited the case of Dr. Nelson Mandela, who was able to study and obtained a degree in law while serving jail term in Robin Island, South Africa, because the authority made the prison environment conducive for inmates to achieve whatever noble cause they set their minds upon.

    But the don noted that the experience in Nigeria is different, saying it is not uncommon to see 20 people huddled together in a cell meant for two or three inmates.

    This, he reckoned, stretched the prison facilities thin, breed unhygienic surrounding, health challenges, psychological problems, aggressive behaviour and peer influence that sabotage the prison’s reformative efforts on inmates.

    He admitted that inmates do have some rights, particularly those not convicted for capital offences like murder or robbery, and urged family members and right – based non-government organisa-tions to legally hold the government or its agents accountable for any dehumanising treatment.

    He said in the event of ‘wrongful death,’ it is possible to press charges against the government if it can be established that inmate’s death followed negligence or denial of right to basic things that could have saved life by prison authority.

    Suggesting some ways out of prison congestion, the university Don said more courts and judges should be made available so that criminal cases can easily be sorted out quickly.

    Aluko-Arowolo also said the prison should first be reformed before it can reform inmates and recommended a situation where convicts could be made to serve their terms productively by engaging in farm settlements, roads construction and other ventures to make them useful to themselves and the society.

    He equally advised that an extensive use of alternative dispute resolution of cases, where some minor offences could be settled without recourse to the court. According to him, this would reduce the congestion in prisons that followed the prolonged trial of cases of suspects on awaiting trial.

  • OOU and its struggle for survival

    SIR:  After four years in exile, I returned to what looked like a new-improved OOU in June 2013. Between then and now, it seems to me that one of the big debates that should occupy everyone’s mind, and take place, both at Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye  and  Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s executive  meetings, over the next one year is what becomes of the institution, and what  model of governance and management is most appropriate for  OOU.

    There are of course many different possible models, and many points of view amongst all the stakeholders. But one might say that on the opposite ends of the spectrum are, on the one side, those who would argue that OOU is a community of scholars who should direct their own affairs by consensus, presided over by a primus inter pares such as the incumbent Vice-Chancellor; and on the other side, those who argue that today’s OOU is modern organization that needs to be run by a strong corporate-style governing body, with appropriate functions and powers delegated to it. Fortunately, both the Vice-Chancellor and the Governing Council are capable, and have managed within short time to rescue the institution from total collapse and academic jingoism deployed on the staff and students during the dark era of Professor Wale Olaitan. That was a period no one would want to remember!

    OOU’s path to regain its lost glory is long and could be accelerated if the sincere efforts of the present administration is complemented by the state government. Nobody ever thought that results could be ready on time again in OOU; No one ever thought staff morale could be slightly boosted above average again? Did anyone ever think it would not be business as usual at OOU? Discipline is taking a strong footing again, and that is a sign of good leadership. Workers and students once again can be proud of OOU. Indeed, there are signs that better days are coming back. There are reasons to once again believe in the great OOU which was in the past the number one choice for admission seekers and dedicated academic and non-academic staff.  However, the state government has not been forthcoming in playing its role effectively. Governor Amosun should wake up and come to the reality that university is a serious business which must be invested in heavily to yield results. No serious nation plays politics with education at any level, it is a social responsibility.

    It is surprising to read on the pages of newspapers that the state government has disbursed N21 billion to the state’s tertiary institutions in the last three years. The conditions of the campuses and morale of the staff do not justify this huge amount.  Irregular payment of salaries and wages, lack of basic teaching and learning facilities and inconducive offices are still major concerns at OOU and others.

    From the look of things, OOU has a system of governance and management that is responsive, flexible and decisive, but lacks financial capacity to meet its needs. The current management seems to be up to the task but the government on the other hand is not sensitive to the views, needs and interests of those who make up the university community.  Unless the government backs the management with political will and required funds, the governing council meetings will become debating chambers that often miss the real issues of strategy and direction. As the university is struggling to find its feet again, its needs should be subjected once again to a strategic review, these needs deserve proper attention. It is not clear that they are receiving it, yet. The first step, which would be in the right direction, is for the state government to take on the responsibility of paying wages and salaries in full, and stop the existing sharing formula. OOU should be allowed to use its internally generated funds to fund research and staff development.

     

    • Tola Osunnuga,

    Ago-Iwoye

     

  • Discordant tunes

    Discordant tunes

    There is this friend of mine who has this habit of always calling me each time he felt worried about happenings in the polity.

    “Ol boy”, he said last Friday when I picked his call. “What kind of government is Jonathan running in this country?” he asked referring to the federal government. “Can’t they get their acts together? In one breath he is ordering an all out military onslaught on Boko Haram, and at the same time granting amnesty to the terrorists. Which one are we to believe?”

    And before I could even attempt a response he launched into his second concern about happenings in the country. He is worried that the All Progressives Congress (APC), the main opposition party in the country, and in his enlightened estimation, the only hope of rescuing Nigeria from the misrule of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), does not seem to be getting its acts together. He is particularly worried about the seeming civil war within the APC in Ogun State with Governor Ibikunle Amosun and former governor Olusegun Osoba at daggers drawn. “What does Osoba wants?” he asked but quickly added that Amosun should also take things easy and learn to respect his elders.

    I could sense that he was feeling very bitter and the best I could do as a friend was to calm him down and assure him that Nigeria ‘go survive’ even when I share most of his concerns.

    We later went into those things that friends talk about for a few more minutes before he hung up.

    Coming a day after the celebration of the so called Democracy Day to commemorate the 15th anniversary of Nigeria’s return to democratic rule, and about six weeks after over 200 school girls were abducted in Chibok, Borno State by the terror group, Boko Haram, I sat back after the conversation to reflect on the two issues he raised.

    Since the 15th April abduction of these girls, the Goodluck Jonathan administration has been going forward and backward, blowing hot and cold at the same time with little to show for it in terms of tangible achievements that could raise our hopes that our girls would return home quickly and safely. It’s been all movement no action. The federal government could not even speak with one voice.

    Granted the fact that Jonathan failed to respond openly, as if in denial, to the abduction of the girls until about three weeks later, what manner of response have we been getting from the government ever since it came out, albeit belatedly, to admit that our girls are missing?

    When the whole world expected a robust and tough response, at least in the open, from the federal government, the Minister of Interior, Abba Moro, the man under whose watch many job seekers were killed during the ill-fated Nigeria Immigration Service recruitment exercise, came out to announce that the Jonathan administration was ready to negotiate with the terror group, but the backlash forced the government to back out of that statement and launched into a policy flip-flop on the rescue/return of the Chibok girls.

    And when we all thought that the administration had learnt its lesson from that Moro’s statement, Boni Haruna, another of Jonathan’s ‘emergency’ ministers and latter day friends opened his mouth to announce amnesty for Boko Haram, at least for those insurgents who renounce violence and lay down their arms. Haruna, Jonathan’s Minister for Youth Development, claimed the president had actually granted the amnesty. A day or so later the presidency said there is no amnesty on the table.

    With such policy summersaults and discordant tunes coming out from the presidency one begins to wonder how our partners in this war again terror, especially against Boko Haram would see us; inconsistent, unreliable?  More importantly, the insurgents would probably be laughing at us and see the federal government as an unserious partner, if at all they, or some among them is contemplating peace or ceasefire.

    If we want to negotiate the release of the girls, fine, but we don’t have to tell the world that we are talking to the terrorists for their release. We can still be fighting Boko Haram and at the same time negotiating with them on how to bring our girls home peacefully and safely. After all, the United States just secured the release of its only servicemen captured by the Taliban in its war against terror, after reaching a secret agreement with the terrorist group. Sgt Bowe Bergdhl, 28, was released by the Taliban in exchange for freedom of five of its members held in Guantanamo Bay by the US. No noise was made while negotiations were going on and the US has not relented in its fight against Taliban while the terrorists have also not renounced violence and terror.

    Granted the fact that this is a new territory (fighting terror) for our government, but by now it ought to have learnt how things like this are done, at least from those that had passed through that route before. This kind of policy inconsistency could put government negotiators in harm’s way in their dealing with Boko Haram or whoever were the abductors of our girls.

    I am not surprised that the military high command denied knowledge of the Australian negotiator reportedly appointed by the Federal Government; I don’t expect the government also to admit there is such a person(s). Things like these are never done in the open or openly admitted, they are only acknowledged if and when they went well. All we are interested in is #Bring back our girls,  safely. How Jonathan and his team does that is left to them, but they should stop disgracing themselves and the country in the public and before the international community with their lack of coordination. The discordant tunes must stop and the presidency must speak with one voice. Make your position clear Goodluck Jonathan on this matter and Nigerians would follow.

    On the seeming civil war in Ogun APC and by extension in some other chapters of the party, I just hope that the opposition would not shoot itself in the foot and gift the presidency to Jonathan again in 2015.

    The Jonathan government is discredited already but the APC should not help it bounce back into reckoning by its own internal wrangling. The leaders of the party known and unknown must step in to resolve the crisis in Ogun APC before it snowballs into another thing that could thwart Nigerians genuine efforts at sending Jonathan and PDP packing next year. Suffice to say that the era of godfathers in our policy is gone, it never served us well. Whoever has been elected should be allowed to rule. What some people did not accept when they were governors they should not force it down the throat of others. As Yoruba would say, ti a ba fi agbo fun eegun, a nfi okun e si le ni, meaning literally, when you give the ram to the masquerade you release the rope.