Tag: Jonathan

  • Presidency deplores impeachment threats against Jonathan

    Presidency deplores impeachment threats against Jonathan

    The Presidency yesterday deplored what it called the threats of impeachment being dangled before President Goodluck Jonathan by members of the National Assembly at every given opportunity. It said the lawmakers should put the nation’s interest above any other consideration.

    Addressing reporters in Abuja yesterday, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, enjoined the legislators and other members of the public to give due respect to the office of the President, irrespective of their political affiliations.

    Okupe described conflicts between the legislative and the executive arms as normal in a democracy as, according to him, such conflicts tend to strengthen the principle of checks and balances.

    According to him, members of the National Assembly remained the best the nation has produced since the return of democratic rule in 1999. The legislature has always demonstrated its readiness to work harmoniously with the executive for the good of the people, Okupe said.

    He went on: “There are bound to be conflicts and disagreements but moderation must be the order of the day. Even in the face of conflicts and disagreements, the interest of the over 160 million Nigerians must be paramount.

    “The legislative arm of government has the constitutional right to impeach the President. But that impeachment should be the last option. It’s not that any time there is one form of disagreement or the other, the legislature will be threatening the President with impeachment.

    “There is always room for dialogue. Our democracy is new and we have to build it and allow it to grow. The legislature will be passing good laws while the executive will be executing the good laws for the development of the country”, Okupe added.

    The President’s aide said his boss decided to stop action on the proposed N5000 banknote by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) based on protests by the public.

    Okupe explained that the President’s intervention was to allow the CBN enough time to educate the public.

  • Jonathan’s extemporaneous speeches

    Jonathan’s extemporaneous speeches

    To everyone who follows his speeches, President Goodluck Jonathan comes across as someone who loves to speak extemporaneously. It helps him to communicate and channel his anger and frustrations in ways prepared speeches do not permit. Except you are a Barack Obama or a Bill Clinton, prepared speeches are often impure crystallisations of the disparate thoughts and sometimes sham reasoning of speech artists. Few leaders have the ability to be coherent outside their prepared speeches; they often stick to the text and hope the audience would be fascinated. Extempore remarks, the sort which mystifyingly enthrals the rather ineloquent Jonathan, must be handled with care even by gifted orators. As Adolf Hitler, Winston Churchill and Charles de Gaulle showed, diligent preparations must accompany extempore speeches, up to the point of honing even the accompanying gestures.

    On Tuesday, Jonathan once again threw caution to the wind with one of his lengthy unrehearsed speeches, complete with unfathomable logic, misrepresentation of history, university freshman’s reading of Marxism, and a poor laparotomy of the election that brought him into office. The occasion was the 52nd Independence Anniversary lecture held in Abuja, for which former Ghanaian president John Kuffour was invited to speak on the topic, Nigeria: Security Development and National Transformation. Jonathan’s remarks came after the main lecture, and it responded to Kuffour’s presentation but veered off in a different, controversial and uninspiring tangent. Quite apart from the fact that the topic was inappropriate for Kuffour, who would have done much better with a regional issue, the occasion helped give us another unflattering peep into the complicated and seething mind of our president.

    Proceeding from a class analysis not borne out by history, the president argues that ordinary people find it extremely difficult to survive in times of crisis where big players often survive. Beyond his examination of class survivability in times of crisis, he drives home the point that peace is a critical ingredient of economic development. But it is in fact when he discourses upon the factors that promote peace that the president yields to his well-known nostalgic passion for monarchism. “Peace is one of the cardinal marks of a leader,” the president begins magisterially. “In the monarchy in the olden days, the king had maximum power, but for your kingdom to be stable you must have the military strength. So without stability of any state it cannot develop.” In case he has lost you in the vastness of his private historical imprecision, the president is merely saying monarchies show greater tendency to guarantee peace. He does not, however, say whether ineluctably they also guarantee greater development.

    Jonathan’s pained reference to the virtue of monarchism of course shows his difficult relationship with democracy and what he sees as its insufferable insistence on checks and balances. This is not the first time he has embraced ancient forms of government and repudiated sophisticated and modern systems. Indeed, we must expect that he will continue to embrace or repudiate systems and values according to his well-known proclivities. These proclivities – his distaste for modernism, especially – will continue with him to the end of his presidency, whether that presidency terminates in one term or two.

    The president also attempted a dichotomous explanation of physical and political insecurity. The first, he says, indicates the use of guns and bombs and involves the security of the individual. The second, he fails to define, but indicates its consequence to be a lack of development. You will have to read between the lines to understand why the president felt justified to draw a puzzling line between what he categorises as two types of insecurity. After all, neither conduces to development, and both are often attended by shootings and killings. In fact, however, the president was leading to the highly suspect notion that the media is guiltier than any other institution in predisposing the country to insecurity. The press is his bête noire. When he does not hate it, he distrusts it.

    After ruminating on the axiom that says the pen is mightier than the sword, the president goes ahead to suggest that by reflecting “these unending political conflicts in the media, whether print, electronic or social media, it brings a lot of insecurity to the system and sometimes people begin to doubt your government.” He places at the doorstep of the media the blame for the people’s lack of confidence in his government and leadership style. In essence, he would have preferred the media to shut out political conflicts and live in denial as the government often does.

    It seems all but evident that Jonathan wishes to court the media but doesn’t know how. Indeed, he naively believes that once the media embraced him, all would be well. Hear the president: “The media environment that should have helped our transformation agenda is being used negatively… The way Nigerians challenge and abuse me… yes, the president has enormous power, but if you use that enormous power to some extent you will look like a dictator.” If we disentangle his fustian on press freedom, which freedom he shockingly believes to be a privilege, from the other parts of the speech we would reach an even more disturbing false bottom in his logic about the powers of the president in a democracy. He erroneously thinks the president has enough powers vouchsafed to him by the constitution to be a dictator if he likes, but he plaintively regrets his inability to use that facility. The truth is that he does not have the powers he thinks he has, and worse, cannot even indulge himself as he wants.

    In his apportionment of blame for insecurity, he refers to the problem the flawed 2007 election gave him and his predecessor, and then compares that poll with that of 2011 and concludes, with unrestrained self-glorification, that the latter was more credible. But he appears baffled that so soon after an election he gave top marks he had become deeply unpopular. According to him, “Immediately after that election, not quite six months, the kind of media hype that started hitting us made us to stop and ask where is this coming from? I said I did not just come out from the blues to contest the election, I was deputy governor for six and half years, I was a governor for one and half years, I was a vice president, and before election, I was the president up to April when the elections were conducted, people knew me. So within this period, including when I even acted, if I was that bad would people have voted for me?… But the media condemned me.”

    Jonathan says the criticism he was subjected to so soon after the elections made him stop and ask where it was coming from. There is absolutely no truth in that statement. Neither he nor his aides stopped to ask where the problem was coming from. He simply concluded that some people were manipulating the situation to make his government seem incompetent, for which he now blames the ‘political’ (not the ‘professional’) media. In his opinion, the fault has to lie elsewhere, not in his lackluster style, not in his goofs and gaffes, not in his retrogressive ideas of government and governance, not in his improper grasp of economic and political issues, and not in his ordinary and uninspiring vision of a modern and progressive society. He cannot grasp the fact that between the two main candidates in the 2011 presidential poll, the electorate voted for him because he appeared safer, not better nor more cerebral nor more principled, and that barely a few months after the election the people recognised they were sold a pig in a poke, for which they have reacted very vigorously in the fashion that now confounds him.

    Jonathan gives a brief of his political career, wondering whether the people did not consider these before they voted for him. The truth is that they neither knew him nor, even more mortifyingly, knew that he had apparently reached the end of his tether as governor, and that both the office of president and the virtues of democracy, not to talk of the concepts of freedom of speech, rule of law and federalism, were above his ken. The six months he speaks about is the period it took the people to discover their folly in opting for the safer rather than the better.

    Jonathan exceeds himself in his extempore speech by reiterating his discredited views on the subsidy protests of January. As he put it: “Look at the demonstrations on fuel subsidy; look at the areas these demonstrations are coming from, and you begin to ask, are these the ordinary citizens that are demonstrating? Or are people pushing them to demonstrate? Take the case of Lagos, Lagos is the critical state in the nation’s economy, it controls about 53 per cent of the economy and all tribes are there. During the demonstration in Lagos, people were given bottled water that people in my village don’t have access to, and people were given expensive food that the ordinary people in Lagos cannot eat… They go and hire the best musician to come and play and the best comedian to come and entertain. Is that demonstration?”

    It is no use trying to convince a deeply resentful president that he is wrong. The more you try to persuade him, the more implacable he gets. This columnist covered the January subsidy protest from beginning to the end and saw no coordinated attempt to feed the protesters or assuage their thirst. A few good Samaritans gave out tokens, but they were so insignificant that it would be sheer exaggeration to consider these orchestrated. Food hawkers were there to make money, and musicians and comedians, whom some presidency officials deprecated as clowns, jostled to get attention, and would have paid to have their moment in history. Meanwhile, the president sat paranoid in Abuja and relied on misleading reports. And because he does not read his country’s newspapers, which he believes to be manipulated by politicians, he failed to educate himself on the true position of the protests.

    But much more than believing falsehood, Jonathan once again proves his long-running resentment towards Lagos, a city he sees as snobbish but which has done nothing to assist in spite of acknowledging its centrality to the Nigerian economy. How is it the fault of Lagos if the president’s village does not have access to bottled water, and why on earth must he compare the city to his village? Does he know the kind of food ordinary Lagosian eats? Shortly after he sent troops to quell the protests, he denounced Lagos elite as pampered and their children, whom he claimed rode five cars, as spoilt rotten. Who can forget also that while campaigning for votes in 2011, he attempted to instigate other ethnic groups against Lagosians using false statistics? Yet, he is surprised that he is challenged and abused, and regrets not having the powers of a monarch to do as he pleases and the ability of a propagandist to manipulate the media in his favour. He is shocked that barely six months into his presidency, his romance with the people came to an end, even though he did nothing to sustain that romance and has repaid the votes he garnered with scorn and ill will. It is no credit to his learning and office that every time he encounters challenges and repudiation, his instinctive defence mechanism is to take refuge in the values and systems of the feudal past of his longings.

    Finally, and as a fitting summary of his worldview, Jonathan lets us into the secret of his fortitude and indifference. Hear him: “For me, if I see somebody is manipulating anything, I don’t listen to you; but when I see people genuinely talking about issues, I listen. I am hardly intimidated by anybody who wants to push any issue he has. I believe that that protest in Lagos was manipulated by a class in Lagos and was not from the ordinary people.” With this syllogism, the president rounds up his philosophy of governance in the most unspeakable fashion. It does not matter whether the critic is right, as long as the president thinks the troublemaker is instigated, he will not listen. How can he tell who is instigated and who is not? Again, it hardly matters; the president gets intelligence report, or perhaps he simply makes up his mind anyhow he fancies. And if the critic is wrong, as long as he is not instigated, then the president will listen. If this is not recipe for both autocracy and misrule, nothing else is.

    The much we know about the president comes from his extemporaneous nuggets. There will be many more of such gems before his term ends. Every time he orates, we imagine we have reached the nadir that no human can possibly plumb. But every such time, we have been mistaken. In the months ahead that chasm will be dug deeper than we think him capable, for it is now clear that though Jonathan is gifted in many areas and speaks with the candour that is unusual in these climes, his talents are altogether suited only to ages past. Lagos had better take heart, and all critics, whom the president dismisses as calumnious, must reconcile themselves to contending with a man whose values and philosophy are hewn from the granite of a completely different era.

     

  • The joy of listening

    The joy of listening

    It is good to revisit the national awards and suspend the N5,000 note

     

    Being so wonderfully made, the human body hosts a pair of ears, one hanging on either side of the head. But just one mouth is enough, judged the maker. There are also two eyes.

    The reason is simple and well known. We should hear better, see more and speak less. But the world is full of men and women who break this divine order. Relationships have been destroyed because of scanty information picked up by the ear. Marriages have crashed beyond repair owing to what was not properly heard or what was stubbornly shut out of the ear. International relationships have suffered the same fate for pretty much the same reason. The ambition of Mitt Romney, the United States Republican presidential candidate, for instance, may well go up in smoke, thanks, partly, to what he heard or chose to hear about his rival, President Barack Obama. A country’s leadership has been alienated because leaders refused to listen to their longsuffering people.

    To the grief of Nigerians, their progress has, for decades, been frozen by the insensitivity of their leaders. Many have come and gone, leaving little more than horror in the memory of the people they so brazenly disdained and overlooked. They never listened when their spoke. They did nothing when their people shouted.

    Two developments suggest, however, that the insensitivity ice may have begun to thaw. Consider the national honours recently awarded a large number of Nigerians and friends of Nigeria. Nigerians across the board poured out their criticism of the exercise, not because there were no worthy recipients but rather because the standards have been so distressingly lowered that we can no longer tell the hero from the villain, the hard-worker from the slothful, or friend of the country from its foe.

    The awards went on as planned but President Goodluck Jonathan has, thankfully, said unworthy awardees will have their honours recovered and that a committee will screen recipients and ascertain their bona fides or otherwise. Many see this as bowing to the people’s wish. I see it as listening to the people to whom it is often said power belongs. Among recipients of the honours were our victorious physically challenged athletes fresh from London with Paralympian medals. The striking thing about this is the fact that the athletes were not originally on the honours list, a fact that many criticised before the awards.

    You would be justified to ask why the honoured were not first screened to select the worthy among them and cast aside those with dodgy profiles. Nonetheless, setting up the vetting committee is a good move. It represents a start. We can hope, though, that the committee will indeed do its work, pencil down awardees with unprincipled backgrounds and hand the list to the President. What next? The Presidency should chalk up the courage to ask the unworthy awardees to step forward and hand over their unmerited medals. That is the right thing to do. It may not look like the tidiest thing but in the circumstances, it is a good way to begin to correct a messy national pastime, and credit, I believe, will go the commander-in-chief. It is in the same way that he will get plaudits for including sports heroes and heroines living with disability. I see it as moving forward even if the fuel of propulsion is supplied by those labelled critics, those who sought to be heard for the right reasons.

    The second indication that leadership insensitivity may be giving way is the reported presidential directive that the N5,000 naira note matter be put on hold. Ever since Central Bank Governor Mallam Lamido Sanusi made public his intention to introduce the jumbo currency at the dizzying printing cost of N40b, Nigerians of all stripes have not ceased to condemn it. Some feared it will trigger inflation. Not necessarily, said a few of those we call economists who should know. Then the fear was also expressed that the proposed heavyweight note will simply help our traditional treasury looters and the corrupt to do what they do better. But neither Sanusi nor the government has dismissed this fear. Nor has the CBN chief nor the government convincingly explained the imperatives of the N5,000 note, anyway. Will the economy crash without it? Will the naira gain any weight with its introduction? Will it bring jobs? What inspired the idea? For as long as it lasted, the matter further distracted the country and its people.

    Now, the President’s directive will calm nerves, another pointer to a new direction. Still, there is something to ponder. One report said the suspension was to enable Sanusi to carry out enough publicity on the new note. That will be unhelpful. I hope the word suspension, in this case, is only an official expression for termination or dead and buried, as one newspaper put it.

    If that is the case, it will indicate that the people have a voice and can indeed be heard when they speak. If we are stepping into a new era of healthy national awards, it points to a new Nigeria where leaders and those they lead are not necessarily always at loggerheads. It is inspiring and productive for both parties. That is the joy of listening to the people.

     

    .Reactions to this column will be printed next week

  • Jonathan leaves for New York for UN meeting

    Jonathan leaves for New York for UN meeting

    President Goodluck Jonathan is to leave Abuja today for New York at the head of Nigeria’s delegation to the 67th General Assembly of the United Nations.

    The President of the 67th Assembly, Mr. Vuk Jeremic of Serbia, announced at its opening on Tuesday that having consulted widely on the matter, he has chosen “bringing about adjustment or settlement of international disputes or situations by peaceful means” as the overarching theme for the General Assembly’s work over the next 12 months.

    On the president’s entourage are Governor Isa Yuguda (Bauchi State), Godswill Akpabio(Akwa Ibom), Senator Philip Aduda, Isa Ashiru Mohammed, as well as the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru, Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr.Ngonzi Okonjo-Iweala, Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Deziani Alison-Madueke, Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Adoke (SAN) and Minister of Trade and Investment, Mr. Segun Aganga.

    In addition to participating in the 67th Session of the General Assembly, President Jonathan is also scheduled to meet with other world leaders including the Presidents of China, France, South Korea, Brazil, Bulgaria, Finland and Switzerland in New York.

    He will also deliver a statement to the high-level meeting on the Rule of Law at the United Nations Headquarters and join the Prime Minister of Norway, Mr. Jens Stoltenberg with whom he currently serves as co-Chairperson of the UN Commission on Life-Saving Commodities for Women and Children in presenting its report to the Secretary-General, Mr. Ban Ki Moon.

    President Jonathan will also attend a high-level meeting on the Nigerian economy, meet with the Chairman and top executives of the global oil giant, Exxon-Mobil, attend a reception hosted by President Barack Obama of the United States and the Secretary-General’s High-Level event on the eradication of Polio.

  • Wake—not ‘wake keep’

    Wake—not ‘wake keep’

    THE GUARDIAN of September 18 welcomes us to the hall of infamy this week: “The people displaced by the flood apart from being exposed to the inclement weather of mosquito bites resulting into (in) widespread of….”

    “But like (as) I said….”

    “Funeral obsequies…” Just obsequies

    “Christian wake keep service” Call to eternal glory: Christian wake—not ‘wake keep service’ or ‘wake keeping’ as commonly and incorrectly used.

    Last week’s edition of this medium almost crippled the English language with the following gaffes: “Iheanacho, former minister released” Without another comma after ‘minister’ it means two persons were involved, which was not the case.

    “2015: Only performance can earn Jonathan says PDP” A rewrite: Only performance can earn Jonathan ticket, says PDP

    “Hurray!!! (You do not need more than one exclamation mark no matter the depth of excitement!) The chairman of our great party is 77 Birthday (today)” (Full-page advert by Bayelsa State Government, THE NATION ON SUNDAY under reference)

    “That will be the icing on the cake and a true deterrence (deterrent) to others who might be planning to replicate the act.”

    “As members of the late president’s inner cabinet, they practically dictate (dictated) the pace, pulse and policy direction of government.”

    “There are different types of bags in vogue now….” No glamour in this communicative business: ‘vogue’ typifies ‘currency’ (now).

    “There are designer branded ones like….” Box bags for all seasons: designer-branded ones….

    “Another advantage is the room (roomy) space.”

    “Some guys have said that you can (could) find everything in a woman’s bag….”

    Lastly from THE NATION ON SUNDAY under review: “Congratulation (Congratulations): My wife, Suzzette, and I most heartily congratulate you for (on/upon) your worthy contributions….” “Once again, congratulations for (sic) a well deserved (well-deserved) national honour.” (Full-page advert by Chief (Barr.) Ezenwa Nyesom Wike, Honourable Minister of State for Education)

    Vanguard Special Report of September 14 fumbled: “Our grouse with (about) the ICJ judgment, GTA—Gov Imoke”

    “After two years on (in) the saddle, NFF board gives self pass mark…” (DAILY SUN Banner, September 12)

    “This conclusion was arrived at as history is trying to repeat itself again as it is wont to do….” Delete ‘again’.

    “However does the separation of powers that are (is) discernible in government textbooks operate in real life.”

    “It will present events in the two chambers, record achievements, gossips and….” ‘Gossip’ is non-count.

    “The consensus of opinion in the country today….” I insist on ‘consensus’ (without ‘of opinion’).

    “Saturday promises to be a historic day in the annals of the country’s history.” Either: the annals of the country or the country’s history. Mr. Bayo Oguntuase, a popular and respected language activist, believes the extract is correct, but I disagree.

    “Except round pegs are put in round holes, the nation will be the looser (loser) for it.”

    “Whatever happens, the shooting of the minister from our initial analysis might tempt us to point all the accusing fingers toward the west.” Before the darkness: point the finger at the west.

    “Osun police impounds N650m worth of cars.” Get it right: Osun police impound….

    “US terrorist suspect to plead innocent” This way: innocence.

    “If you have crisis, you will sit down in a roundtable and resolve the difference.” Either a crisis or crises—depending on context—and resolve the differences.

    “This, therefore, means that the power and authority of governments become government of all people not just of their party faithfuls (faithful).”

    “Communities demand for new council in Yobe” For the last time, ‘demand’ as a verb does not admit ‘for’ except in noun applications.

    “If 42 years after the war, there is still what is called abandoned property, and the Igbo is (are) still….”

    “The police on September 20 gave details of its preliminary investigations into.…” Newspaper of the Year: their preliminary investigations….

    “One had expected the government to find out where the arms and ammunitions Boko Haram members use come from.” Breeding murderers: ‘ammunition’ is non-count.

    “Also, corporate bodies and wealthy individuals have been falling over themselves (one another) to host the Paralympians.”

    “For this reason, it is an affront on (to) democracy and representative government for the ACN leader to demand dissolution of the senate.…”

    “You must have read all manners (manner) of eulogies and tributes.”

    “The rumour is still making (doing or going) the rounds, an evidence that the rumour mill is in good and perfectly working condition in our dear country.”

    “We probably would have stomached the distasteful script if nobody has (had) thought hired assassins (assassins are usually hired!) should be included in the cast.”

    “The relationship between the politicians and the administrators have (has) been known to either make or mar….”

    “Ondo polls: five groups kick-off Mimiko’s re-election campaign” Phrasal verbs do not admit hyphenation. For how long shall we continue to harp on this, gentlemen of the press?

    “On Thursday, the union suspended its strike after an Abuja high court has (had), in my view, correctly, declared it illegal, its advert stating its grouse against (about) the government was published in some dailies.”

    “This is not to discountenance the possibility of groups of the men of sordid yesteryears planning to go violent.” Matters arising: apart from the clumsiness of the extract, ‘yesteryear’ is uncountable.

    “The dramatis personae was (were).…” Singular: dramatis persona; plural: dramatis personae.

    “With study centres springing up across the country, this category of students including matured (mature) persons….”

  • Strengthening  technical  and vocational education

    Strengthening technical and vocational education

    The deliverables in the education sector have been pouring in for Nigerians over the last six months at a sustained tempo. In the recent past, no administration has made more positive impact on Nigerians as regards improvements in this sector than the Jonathan administration.

    To say that the quality impact of the present administration is most felt in the basic education sector is to merely emphasize the obvious. Beyond using basic education as a source of enlightening the teeming less privileged Nigerians, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan has taken this sub-sector as a veritable tool towards addressing the employment and economic needs of the people.

    In the last seven months, the Minister of State for Education, Ezenwo Nyesom Wike has been building synergy with international development partners to ensure that a workable framework is developed to achieve the administration’s goals as regards technical and vocational education.

    For the Minister and officials of the Federal Ministry of Education, the challenge of ensuring that the teeming unemployed Nigerian youths benefit from a government programme has gone beyond the realm of rhetoric. He had explained to implementing officials and stakeholders that the zeal with which the government is pursing the actualization of the almajiri and girl-child education programmes is the same zeal that will be used to achieve the goals of vocational and technical education programme.

    In January this year, the Minister of State for Education led the team of the Federal Government to fashion out modalities of implementing the technical and vocational education framework at the Highbury College, Portsmouth in United Kingdom. The essence of developing this programme was to ensure that technical and vocational education becomes relevant to the nation and is appreciated amongst the people, especially those seeking employment in an increasingly challenging economy.

    The focus of the minister in the technical and vocational education sub-sector is create a practical environment which would transform the existing the Federal Science and Technical Colleges into centres for the impartation of lifelong entrepreneurial skills into Nigerian youths to make them contributors to the nation’s economy by being employers of labour or qualified technicians with capacity required by existing companies.

    The Minister also indicated to the international partners at Highbury College, Portsmouth, the intention of the Federal Government to establish Technical and Vocational Centres of Excellence in parts of the country with the aim of serving as models to states and private proprietors on the need to promote this form of education to the benefit of the nation.

    Since that tour of the facilities of Highbury College, Portsmouth, officials of the Federal Ministry of Education and their counterparts at the United Kingdom based college have collaborated to ensure that a practical framework is put in place for the programme.

    On Tuesday, September 17, the Minister of State for Education and the leadership of the College met at the Federal Ministry of Education headquarters in Abuja to finalise the processes for the implementation of the partnership programme targeted at developing employment opportunities for Nigerian youths. The officials of Highbury College led by the school’s principal, Stella Mbubaegbu and Deborah See, Executive Curriculum Development and Quality Assurance presented a programme for enhancing the facilities and curriculum of the new Technical and Vocational Centres of Excellence. They also presented a training schedule for teachers and facilitators at the existing Federal Science and Technical Colleges.

    The Principal of Highbury College, Portsmouth had indicated that the school would bring its wealth of experience to bear as regards assisting the nation to build a viable economic base to tackle employment needs of the massive Nigerian youth population. She pointed out that even in the United Kingdom, vocational and technical education is now being encouraged as a source of employment generation due to the increasing drop-out from school by the youth.

    At that meeting, the Minister of State for Education stated that in line with the focus of employment generation for the youth through development of entrepreneurial skills, the Federal Government has started the process of establishing new vocational and technical education centres across the country.

    Wike said that new vocational training centres would be used as practical platforms to groom a viable workforce to develop the economy of the nation. He said that the new vocational and technical centres will train Nigerian youths in line with the employment needs of existing companies.

    “We are partnering with Portsmouth Highbury College to develop these new Vocational and Technical Colleges across the country because of the expertise of this school. We have been to the various campuses of the school in the United Kingdom and we are convinced that this partnership will achieve the desired result.

    “We are further committed to capacity building for our existing technical and vocational teachers to assist us achieve the goals of practically training our children to make them employers of labour, instead of job seekers”, Wike said.

    The planning process for the enhancement of vocational and technical education is over. Now, the Federal Ministry of Education has entered the implementation stage of the programme. The Federal Government has already started the funding of the revival of facilities, training equipment, workshops and laboratories in 22 existing Federal Science and Technical Colleges. This is a top priority.

    The additional investment in the provision of vocational and technical education training facilities underscores the significance that the Jonathan government attaches to the creation of employment opportunities for Nigerian youths. Aside the partnership that has been consummated with the Highbury College, Portsmouth, the Federal Government has a working relationship with the Korean International Cooperation Agency, KOICA, to develop the nation’s technical education sub-sector.

    The essence of the reform that has gone into this sector is to ensure that the existing and about-to-be established technical colleges in Nigeria transit from centres where theoretical learning take place to practical centres where Nigerian youths are groomed in viable technical trades which would empower them to be players in the economy of the nation.

    It goes without saying that the current economic realities in the nation dictate a more pragmatic approach towards transforming education into an avenue for resolving the development challenges of the nation. That is what the Minister of State for Education, Ezenwo Nyesom Wike has brought to the table.

     

    Nwakaudu is the Special Assistant (Media) to the Minister of State for Education.

     

  • Jonathan orders increase allocation for health institutions

    Jonathan orders increase allocation for health institutions

    President Goodluck Jonathan has directed increases in the 2013 budgetary allocation for health training institutions to ensure increase in the number of medical and dental specialists.

    The president announced the decision in Lagos on Thursday at the 30th convocation ceremony of the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria.

    The president, represented by the Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chuwku, said the step was aimed at strengthening the training of medical specialists both within and outside the country.

    Jonathan said: “Similarly, I have also directed that there be increased envelope for the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria. This will be in a step wise manner for the next two years.

    “Government has decided that 56 residents and young consultants will be sent for overseas training this year.

    “While some institutions have concluded arrangements, others have not done so.

    “The hospitals that have yet to comply should immediately do so before the end of this financial year.

    “I also want to urge the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria to support these institutions in finding appropriate placement for the residents and consultants overseas.”

    The president said that government in collaboration with health professionals in the Diaspora, Association of Nigeria Physicians in Americas, and the Medical Association of Nigeria Specialist in Great Britain had produced a medical curriculum template.

    “The curriculum to which senate of universities could adapt for use, is important to address deficient areas that have been observed in schools,’’ the president said.

    Jonathan said he was aware that the college had not benefitted from the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETfund) in spite of the challenges facing it in the area of funding.

    “I have directed the Ministry of Health and the management of TETfund to meet and explore ways and manner the college can benefit from this fund,” he said.

     

  • Jonathan suspends introduction of N5,000 notes

    President Goodluck Jonathan has directed the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to suspend the proposed introduction of the N5,000 notes.

    Dr Reuben Abati, the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, confirmed this to State House correspondents on Thursday night in Abuja.

    “The introduction is being suspended for now to enable the CBN do more enlightenment on the issue.

    “Yes, President Jonathan has directed that the implementation of the new N5,000 note be suspended for now.

    “This is to enable the apex bank to do more in terms of enabling Nigerians to understand why it proposed it in the first place.

    “So, for now, the full implementation is on hold,” he said

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the CBN recently announced that it would introduce the note, and coins to replace the current N5, N10 and N20 notes.

    The policy was endorsed by the National Economic Management Team, an advisory body coordinated by the Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    NAN, however, recalls that both the Senate and the House of Representatives have passed separate motions calling for the suspension of the introduction of the note. (NAN)

  • The Jonathan they don’t know

    “They” in this piece refers to all the cynics, the pestle-wielding critics, the unrelenting, self-appointed activists, the idle and idling, twittering, collective children of anger, the distracted crowd of Facebook addicts, the BBM-pinging soap opera gossips of Nigeria, who seem to be in competition among themselves to pull down President Goodluck Jonathan. This army of sponsored and self-appointed anarchists is so diverse; many of them don’t even know why or how they should attack the President.

    The clear danger to public affairs commentary is that we have a lot of unintelligent people repeating stupid clichés and too many intelligent persons wasting their talents lending relevance to thoughtless conclusions. Hold on. I don’t want to be misunderstood. I am not saying nobody should criticize the Nigerian President. I spent some time learning that legal maxim: “volenti non fit injuria”. Public position comes with its own share of risks and exposure. But the twittering, pinging, Facebook crowd of the new age must be guided by facts.

    Hold your stone. Don’t haul it yet. Shhh. Wait, Mr. Alaseju! I have spent the last fourteen months working with President Jonathan. I have followed him everywhere. I can write a whole book on his Presidency so far, but you won’t get to read that until much later. I have heard that some people are protesting that they will not buy the book if it gets written. Well, your choice. What I can report, for now is that he is a grossly misunderstood President. Too many people are unfair to him. They criticize him out of ignorance. They abuse him out of mischief. And the opposition doesn’t make things easy at all. Can we look at a number of issues?

    You say he is a clueless President. You are wrong. He is not clueless. Nobody is more committed to the Nigerian Project than President Jonathan. In spite of unforeseen challenges which his administration has had to contend with, President Jonathan is doing his utmost best to positively transform Nigeria. Ordinary Nigerians know and appreciate this. Those parading themselves as leaders of the opposition who claim that the President has lost the support of Nigerians represent only themselves and their selfish interests.

    President Jonathan is a clever, methodical and intelligent man, who is very adept at wrong footing all the persons who make an effort to second-guess or under-estimate him. He understands the complexity of Nigeria. He is acutely conscious of the historicity of his emergence as Nigeria’s No. 1. He knows that he is here as the leader of all Nigerians. He knows that he is a representative of all common persons, particularly the children of all blue collar workers who never wore shoes or got a chance to eat three-square meals, and whose mothers and aunties could never be part of policy-making processes.

    When he spoke about not wearing shoes as a child, he meant that as a metaphor for the disparities in the Nigerian system, and the urgent need to redress inequalities. But I have heard some persons responding literally that Nigerians should never vote for a man who never wore shoes. How simplistic. Attention needs to be drawn to the fact that a rooted, people-sourced President who seeks to transform Nigeria, and who campaigns on a platform of transformation, will necessarily be opposed by those who consider themselves the children of Empire builders, those who think that their ancestors built Nigeria. Wrong.

    The Ijaws, the fourth largest ethnic nationality in Nigeria, have as much right to have their son as President as every other Nigerian group. But Jonathan doesn’t even dwell on this. I have never heard him utter an ethnic statement. He sees himself as the President of all Nigerians. He is at home with every group. He is focused on the challenges of nation-building. He wants to transform Nigeria. He wants to unite the country. He is determined to promote the country. And he is doing so already. He knows Nigerians want regular power supply. He is working at it. That is why we have crossed 4, 400 MW.

    He knows Nigerians want infrastructure. That is why he is telling Bi-Courtney to fix Lagos-Ibadan Expressway or get out. That is why he is telling a particular Minister to fix the East-West road and get it fixed quickly. That is why he has directed the relevant agencies to get corrupt persons to answer for their misdeeds. That is why he is strengthening Nigeria’s foreign relations. That is why he is transforming the agriculture sector, from a contract-awarding, fertilizer distribution enterprise into big business. And more… The reason President Jonathan does not go into a song and dance routine is because he knows that true rebranding of a nation is a projection of positive things that are already happening.

    They say he is “tribalistic”. Not true. How many Ijaws are in President Jonathan’s inner circle? Very few, I can tell you. There are of course, all kinds of persons who go about telling people that they have the President’s ears and eyes. They would even tell you that they think for the President! I used to have nightmares whenever I heard that, but it no longer bothers me. I have since learnt that some Nigerians consider it fashionable to wear false garments.

    The Presidency qua Presidency is staffed by key officials from all parts of the country. The Secretary to the Government of the Federation is from Ebonyi State. The Chief of Staff and the Head of the President’s Secretariat are both from Edo, the Protocol Liaison Officer and Principal Private Secretary are from Adamawa, the Chief Detail is from Borno, the Aide De Camp (ADC) is from Kogi, the Perm Sec, State House is from Benue, the State Chief of Protocol is from Kwara, the Special Adviser, Media and Publicity is from Ogun, the Chief Physician to the President is from Rivers. Only the Chief Security Officer, the Special Assistant, Domestic and the Special Adviser, Research and Strategy are from Bayelsa.

    When he is in the office, and he gets there early every day, and works till very late, he is exposed to all categories of Nigerians. He runs a modern and open Presidency. He is on Facebook, Twitter, email, SMS, BB, and he reads. And he writes. This is not a provincial President. The intelligentsia, his immediate community, should support him to do his work.

    President Jonathan was the first Nigerian leader to appoint a woman as his Chief Economic Adviser as well as the Nigerian leader who opened up the Nigerian Defence Academy to women. And he took affirmative action in political appointments to a higher level by reserving 35% of all appointive positions in government for our women folk.

    The facts in this regard are incontrovertible. Under President Jonathan, women occupy very strategic positions (Petroleum Resources, Education, Co-ordinating Minister/Minister of Finance, Water Resources, Minister of State, FCT, Minister of State, Defence, Minister of State, Foreign Affairs 1, Minister of State, Niger Delta) and the headship of many of the MDAs. The President’s commitment to Nigeria is total. All his children school in Nigeria. Even his dress code promotes Nigeria.

    They say Mr. President drinks. My friend and colleague, Etim Etim, called the other day to say that whatever may be the challenges on this job, he could affirm that I am at least enjoying. “What with all the choice drinks on every trip,” he said. I told him, “No, we don’t drink.” He protested. He thought I was lying. He had heard that kain-kain is a staple fare on presidential flights. I told him No. We are not allowed to touch alcohol. Alcohol is not served during official duties. Yes, when there is an international function, wine is served, but nobody gets drunk around here. That will amount to an act of indiscipline. The President himself does not allow alcohol to be served at his table. But when you go to social media they tell you something else. Lies. Lies. Lies.

    I have even heard that the President spends billions on feeding. Well, I have enjoyed the privilege of eating at the President’s table. What does he eat? Fish pepper soup. Cassava Bread. Slices of yam. Rice. Boiled plantain. Fruits and vegetables. He fasts when he chooses, and fasts all month during Ramadan and Lent. And because he takes his exercises and keep fit regime seriously, he eats very little. Okay, he drinks coffee. And yet there are people out there who keep claiming that there is a feast in the Villa every day. They say at every meal, the table is decorated with roasted turkey, and every delicacy under the sun. Lies. Lies. This President is not a glutton. We have a disciplined, hardworking president who enjoys his privacy, and the company of intelligent people.

    Here is a man who is an epitome of loyalty and simplicity. The thing about the President’s critics is that they just cannot accept that someone with his simplicity can be their President. This is the Saul Complex. Saul could not accept the fact that somebody as simple as David could be favoured by God. And just like Saul threw the spear at David out of uncontrollable jealousy, these critics are out to throw any kind of spear to see which hits the target, hence all their lies about the President.

    Let me end by saying that the President is a simple man but simplicity is not naivety. If simplicity were to be naivety then the world would not be where it is today because it is simple men like Abraham Lincoln, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, and Kwame Nkrumah, who have shaped the world that we live in by simplifying what others have complicated.

     

    Dr. Abati is Special Adviser (Media and Publicity) to President Jonathan

  • Jonathan to address UN General Assembly

    Jonathan to address UN General Assembly

    President Goodluck Jonathan has been listed among first 38 Heads of State that will speak at the general debate of the United Nations General Assembly commencing on September 25.
    In a provisional list of speakers for the General Assembly 67th session obtained by the News Agency of Nigeria in New York on Wednesday, the president would address the session in the afternoon.
    According to the list, Jonathan is on number 16 out of 23 speakers.
    The heads of states to speak along with the president were those from Rwanda, Switzerland, Argentina, Senegal, Finland, South Africa Panama, Jordan, Hungary and Pakistan.
    Others are: El Salvador, Turkey, Gabon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Slovakia, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Czech Republic and Afghanistan, Uganda’s Vice President, and Spain Head of Government.
    Also 15 countries, which their heads of state had been listed in the morning session of the same day , were Brazil, United States, Serbia, Morocco, Benin, Cyprus, Qatar, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Georgia, Dominican Republic, France, Lithuania, Honduras and Namibia.
    On Tuesday, the General Assembly opened the session with an urgent call for cooperation to tackle the economic and political uncertainties being experienced in many parts of the world.
    The new President of the 193-member body, Vuk Jeremic of Serbia, had said that “Peace and security is a prerequisite for the stability needed for global eco
    nomic growth, sustainable development and social progress.”