Tag: Jonathan

  • Buhari: why I will continue to blame Jonathan, Obasanjo, others

    Buhari: why I will continue to blame Jonathan, Obasanjo, others

    President Muhammadu Buhari is not about to stop blaming his predecessors in office for Nigeria’s current socio-economic crisis.

    He insists that blaming those who steered the affairs of the country  from 1999 to 2015  when he took over is inevitable if only to remind them that they ought not to have taken things for granted the way they did.

    “I know I’m being accused in the papers of passing the buck. But passing the buck is sometimes absolutely necessary to remind people who take things for granted,” Buhari  said at the  public presentation of a pictorial book Buhari: A New Beginning and Conversation themed: Creative Youth as Drivers of the Change Agenda, at the Presidential Villa on Thursday night.

    The conversation featured  seven youths exchange ideas and highlight challenges in the creative industry.

    Buhari said: “My dear countrymen especially the youth, you have a fantastic country. God has endowed Nigeria with  human and material resources.

    “I’m going to bore you with what we met. I know I’m being accused in the papers of passing the buck. But passing the buck is sometimes absolutely necessary to remind people who take things for granted.

    “When we came in by some unfortunate coincidence… I screamed to high heavens because I had promised a lot while seeking vote.

    “I said where are the savings? There were no savings. There was no infrastructure.Power, rails, roads, there was none. What did we spend the money on? I was told buying food and petrol…

    “Where were the billions going? We conducted a study and found out that the oil marketers were committing fraud on at least one third ‎of what they were importing, which is about 25 per cent of our foreign exchange.

    “The youths must watch our elite.The condition we found ourselves, it is unpatriotic for anybody to pretend that economically we have not had a problem.

    “We have gone into the farms, I congratulate some of the governors and by the grace of God by the end of this government we will be exporting rice and grains. So all the money alleged to have been used to import will be available to sustain development.

    “I have bored you with this long explanation because there are things that could be hidden from you by those that have  mismanaged the country in the last 16, 17 years.”

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ruled the country in those  17 years starting with  Olusegun Obasanjo  (1999 – 2007), late Umoru Musa Yar’Adua (2007 – 2010), and Goodluck Jonathan (2010 – 2015).

    Buhari pledged that  his administration would set the ball rolling in terms of providing security, industrialization, manufacturing and food security.

    “I said it more than five years ago and I still mean it, we have no other country than Nigeria.We will stay here and salvage it together,” he said.

    Buhari also promised that his administration would  improve funding for creative industry in the 2017 budget with a view to creating employment opportunities.

    He said that the improved allocation will provide the requisite infrastructure for rapid transformation of the creative industry in the country.

    He asked  the youths to partner with the administration in its efforts to diversify the economy and ensure a corrupt-free society.

    The National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju  Bola Tinubu harped on the need for Nigeria to leverage on its youths as the fulcrum for development.

    Tinubu, who was represented by Osun State Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, said that the youths were instrumental to the electoral victory of the APC in 2015.

    He said: “We must create opportunities for them, empower them and carry them along in the policies we formulate.

    “I am happy this government, through the office of the Vice-President, is involved in various programmes aimed at the youth,’’ he added.

    Tinubu bought 300 copies of the book written by Buhari’s personal photographer, Bayo Omoboriowo for distribution to youths at the presentation.

    During interactive session, selected youths highlighted contributions of creative industry to socio-cultural and economic development as well as challenges facing the sector.

    Cobham Asuquo, a multi talented Artist, spoke on the unifying strength of music amongst Nigerians while  Arts Curator, Aderele Shonarewo, identified the enormous potentials of the visual arts in addressing unemployment and ensuring wealth creation.

    Ishaq Sidi Ishaq, an Actor and Film Director stressed the need for Nigeria to give priority to the film industry.

    He said that Nigeria’s film industry has been rated second in the world.

    A fashion designer, Ms Lanre Da Silva-Ajayi identified poor electricity supply and inadequate infrastructure as some of the challenges frustrating the development of the nation’s fashion sub-sector.

    The event was attended by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, some governors, traditional rulers, business mogul, Alhaji Aliko Dangote and many other personalities.

  • Recession: Why I will continue to blame Jonathan, Obasanjo – Buhari

    Recession: Why I will continue to blame Jonathan, Obasanjo – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has given reasons why he will continue to blame previous administrations for Nigeria’s current economic challenges.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) which ruled the country for 16 years had former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo in charge from 1999 to 2007, late Umoru Musa Yar’Adua from 2007 and 2010 and Goodluck Jonathan from 2010 to 2015.

    Speaking at a public presentation of a pictorial book titled: “Buhari: A New Beginning” and Conversation themed: “Creative Youth as Drivers of the Change Agenda,” at the Presidential Villa on Thursday night, Buhari said those that were in charge in the last 17 years took things for granted despite God’s huge blessings for Nigeria.

    The conversation had seven selected youths exchanging ideas and highlighting challenges in the creative industry.

    Buhari said: “My dear countrymen especially the youths, you have a fantastic country, God has endowed Nigeria with human and material resources.

    “I’m going to bore you with what we met, I know I’m being accused in the papers of passing the buck. But passing the buck is sometimes absolutely necessary to remind people who take things for granted.

    “When we came in by some unfortunate coincidence, I scream to high heavens because I had promised a lot while seeking vote. I said where are the savings? There was none. There was no infrastructure, power, rails, roads, there was none. What did we spend the money on? I was told buying food and petrol.

    “Where were the billions going? We conducted a study and found out that the oil marketers were committing fraud on at least one third ‎of what they were importing, which is about 25 per cent of our foreign exchange.

    “The youths must watch our elites. The condition we found ourselves, it is unpatriotic for anybody to pretend that economically we have not had a problem.

    “We have gone into the farms, I congratulate some of the governors and by the grace of God by the end of this government we will be exporting rice and grains. So all the money alleged to have been used to import will be available to sustain development.

    “I have bored you with this long explanation because there are things that could be hidden from you by those that had mismanaged the country in the last 16, 17 years.”

     

  • Jonathan visits IBB, Abdulsalami in Minna

    Jonathan visits IBB, Abdulsalami in Minna

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday paid a private visit to former military president, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (retd) and former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar (retd), at their Hilltop homes in Minna, Niger State.

    Jonathan’s first stop was at Babangida’s residence and he spent about one hour with the ex- military ruler before proceeding to Abubakar’s residence.

    He was accompanied on the trip by a former Minister of State for Finance, Bashir Yuguda and his former Chief of Staff, Chief Mike Okhiadome.

    Babangida and Jonathan met behind closed door for about 40 minutes at IBB’s private living room and the ex-President left the place for Abubakar’s residence few minutes later.

  • A leaf from  Jonathan’s playbook?

    A leaf from Jonathan’s playbook?

    Did the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), fearing defeat in the Edo gubernatorial election scheduled for last Saturday, lean on the Federal Government to corral the Department of State Service and the Police High Command into demanding postponement of the poll for three weeks, citing security concerns?

    That, at any rate, is the case that has been made against the APC, Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose leading the charge, as always.

    If true, it would mean that the APC took a leaf from the playbook the PDP and former president Dr Goodluck Jonathan employed in the run-up to the 2015 presidential election.  Then, virtually every indicator suggested powerfully that they would be routed at the polls.

    And so, in desperation they trotted out Sambo Dasuki, the former National Security Adviser now standing trial on multiple charges of corruption, to demand, on security grounds, that the election be postponed for several weeks.

    The real intention, of course, was to slow down the APC’s momentum, and to ensure that, having exhausted its war chest and other resources in the run-up to Election Day, it would be in no position to counter the ferocious Naira rain, beg your pardon, Dollar rain, that Jonathan loosed on the APC’s stronghold.

    It did not work.  Despite its overwhelming advantage in every department, except in the hearts and minds of the attentive electorate, the PDP sill went down to comprehensive defeat.

    So, if in today’s altered political environment the APC is predicating its electoral strategy in Edo State on Jonathan’s 2015 playbook, it must know that success is not guaranteed.

    Based on objective factors, especially on Comrade Governor Adams Oshiomhole’s sterling achievement in office, the APC should romp to an easy victory.  But there is nothing objective about politics, suffused as it often is, with factors that defy rationality.  For evidence, you do not have to look beyond Ekiti and Ayo Fayose, aforementioned.

    It may well be, on the other hand, that the Department of State Service and the Police High Command have in their possession credible and indissoluble evidence that some miscreants were set to launch a campaign of murder and mayhem across several states at the time scheduled for the election.

    They were in possession of this intelligence, and yet did not prevail on President Muhammadu Buhari to cancel a well publicised election-eve trip to Benin City to campaign for his party’s candidate?   That must be accounted a grave dereliction.

    Did they come by the intelligence between the President’s visit and the commencement of voting? That would have left them little time to analyse and verify it to the point of judging it credible enough to warrant arresting an election process already well under way.

    In the end, it may well have been a classic instance of “better late than never.”  Better to act precipitately on intelligence that may even be hazy, better to act from an abundance of caution than fail to act and thus yield the day to the merchants of murder and mayhem.

    One can concede all this and yet deplore the language the DSS and the Police High Command employed in conveying their reservations, namely that they could not guarantee the safety of anyone who went ahead to stage or participate in the election.

    The language is, of course, not new.  One recalls former Police Inspector-General Sunday Adewusi’s chilling warning to those who might be thinking of standing in President Shehu Shagari’s way:  The riot police, armed for battle, would descend upon them like mad dogs, and there would be no consequences.  They would kill, and they would go.

    One also recalls another police chief, Abubakar Tsav, head of the Lagos Command in the time of the brutal dictator Sani Abacha.  Whenever civil society organisations indicated that they were about to stage peaceful protests, he would urge parents and guardians to keep their children and wards indoors because the police could not guarantee their safety if they ventured outdoors.

    This is self-indictment of the highest order, disavowal even, of their constitutional responsibilities.

    If the Department of State Service and the Police High Command cannot guarantee the safety of citizens engaging peacefully in lawful activity, if they cannot contain and thwart those who would wantonly attack law-abiding citizens, of what practical use are they to society?

    Beyond this, the role of the DSS and the Police High Command in causing the Edo State gubernatorial poll to be postponed raises anew questions about Nigeria’s peculiar federalism.  It is offensive to the Federal Principle that the Centre should be vested with the power to determine when and how an election is to be held in a constituent State.

    Sooner or later, they will have to resolve this and other issues which lie at the heart of Nigeria’s malaise.

     

    Now this, From Himself the Igodomigodo:

    To those who cannot see beyond the estimable Patrick Obahiagbon’s magniloquence — and they abound plenteously — hereunder is a testimonial to his punctiliousness and to the celerity with which he conducts business, being his engaging and recondite response to the Open Letter I addressed to him in this space last week:

    My own Oga and Senior Brother:

    I must posthaste begin this piece by apologising that my response to the very weighty and crucial issues you have raised with the scintillating brilliance of a luminiferous mind is coming a clear 24 hours late.

    I was eager to respond with the agility of a monkey but for the whirligig of the governorship contestations in Edo State just now.  But permit of me the imprimatur to reassure you my brother of my supreme aplomb regarding the fact of the good people of Edo State returning APC to governance.

    They won’t be voting in APC because we have been Angels my senior brother but they will resoundingly do so because the Comrade Governor has been able to admiringly retrieve the paraplegic ship of state from the vice and pestilential grip of political pachucos and economic philistines and cornucopiously satiated the utilitarian question and performed multum in parvo.

    May I also thank you exceedingly and through you most Nigerians who do understand that my stoic equanimity and sangfroid predilection in the face of de die in diem socio-political putrescence and economic makosa dance, cascading from all facets of our institutional orifices, certainly does not stem from fecklessness or Olympian aloofness.

    You said it all, my brother, when you posited the fact of my being incommoded by my extant asphyxiating rules of engagement.  Let me, however, reassure you that this has been one immolation in my life reminiscent of the 12 labours of Hercules to the extent that I have had to “laugh without laughing and to laugh even when in serious pains”, if I may paraphrase one of our distinguished Nigerian writers.

    I pray that your latitudinarian spirit of Pantagruelian discernment never suffer atrophy as your aburo burst out from the trammelling jack of lantern of bureaucratic bubbles in futuro.

    My respect and admiration always SIR…

     

  • Jonathan’s man, King, defects to APC in Akwa Ibom

    Professor Richard King, a close ally of former President Goodluck Jonathan, has defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Akwa Ibom State.

    Prof. King was a member of G-22, the group eyeing last year’s governorship seat in Akwa Ibom State on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    But the group boycotted the primary, which produced Governor Udom Emmanuel, because of what it called the impunity of one man’s desire to control the state perpetually.

    Speaking during his defection yesterday at the party’s office in Uyo, the state capital, Prof King said the PDP was crumbling because its cement of impunity could no longer hold the pieces together again.

    The expert noted that the immobility of the party will not make the collective aspirations of Nigerians a reality in the face of the party’s internal conflicts and wrangling.

    He said:  ”PDP can no longer yield our desired dreams. It is so disappointing to note that the party is no longer a worthy vehicle that can meaningfully and copiously avail a capacity to rue in and deliver the objectives of democracy to Nigerians and Akwa Ibom people.

    “It is to this chagrin, and having been totally dissatisfied with administration and the running of affairs of the PDP in Akwa Ibom State that I and my party faithful this day declare for the APC. I urge you all to also embark on the massive cross-over from a sinking ship in turbulence to a party of focus, vision, objective and a strong commitment to meaningfully changing and redefining the future of our great country Nigeria.

  • N5b libel suit against Jonathan: Why MEND supports out-of-court settlement

    N5b libel suit against Jonathan: Why MEND supports out-of-court settlement

    Govement for Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND) has explained its support for Chief Edwin Clark’s out-of-court settlement with the Okah brothers in a N5 billion libel suit against ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.

    MEND, yesterday, in a statement by its spokesperson, Jomo Gbomo, said the out-of-court settlement was in the interest of the Niger Delta, especially at this critical point when the crude oil and gas-rich region, its key actors and stakeholders must speak as one for peace and development.

    The militant group said: “MEND endorses mediatory and conciliatory moves by Chief Edwin Kiagbodo Clark to reconcile the Okah brothers -Henry and Charles – with ex-President Goodluck Jonathan on the threat of the brothers to file a N5 billion libel suit against the ex-President at the Federal High Court in Abuja.

    “Our endorsement is coming after Chief Clark held an exploratory meeting regarding amicable and peaceful resolution of the issue with the former President during the week in Abuja. Chief Clark also invited and met separately with counsel to the Okah brothers, Timipa Jenkins Okponipere, on September 1, 2016 in Abuja.

    “The meetings dwelt essentially on an out-of-court settlement of the N5 billion libel suit against the former President. The meetings also dwelt on efforts to find sustainable solutions to the Niger Delta crisis.

    “We are convinced that reconciliation between the Okah brothers and former President Goodluck Jonathan is

  • Jonathan govt looted Nigeria dry, says Oni

    Jonathan govt looted Nigeria dry, says Oni

    •‘Ekiti does not need flyover now

    The Deputy National Chairman (South) of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Segun Oni, has criticised those calling for the resignation of President Muhammadu Buhari on the management of the economy, branding them as mischievous and wicked.”

    Oni said the prevailing socio-economic hardship being faced by Nigerians was a consequence of alleged mismanagement of the economy and unprecedented looting of the treasury witnessed in the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.

    While contending that Buhari did not cause the economic downturn, Oni urged Nigerians to be patient with the President and give him the support to turn around the nation’s fortunes, which was allegedly squandered by the last administration.

    Oni spoke at the weekend during a civic reception in honour of  the Vice Chancellor, Federal University, Oye Ekiti (FUOYE), Prof. Kayode Soremekun, by residents, led by the Oloye, Oba Oluwole Ademolaju.

    The former Ekiti State governor promised that the economy will be revamped given efforts by the Federal Government to ensure a turnaround, which he noted are yielding results.

    He hoped the APC would regain Ekiti State at the 2018 governorship election to deliver the state from alleged misplacement of priorities and poor governance by the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) government.

    Oni said: “It is not possible for Nigerians not to get the results they are getting now, given the wanton depravity and extreme perverseness of the administration of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan”.

    “Have you seen an economy where marabouts are given such humongous cash simply because somebody wants to win an election and return to power at all cost. Those urging the President to resign are mschievous. Buhari did not cause what we are witnessing today.

    “We are talking about those who were not content with stealing just money but even crude oil. Its was like hiring vandals to situate and superintend over the fortunes of a country. That administration committed a lot of atrocities and visited mindboggling crimes upon the people. They just looted Nigeria dry.”

    On the situation in Ekiti, Oni said:  “If the government is able to govern Ekiti so well there won’t be any need sending our children to school.

    “You don’t need stargazers or soothsayers to tell you Ekiti does not need flyovers when you cannot pay salaries, when many projects are left abandoned, when civil servants are dying of hunger.

    “Governor Ibikunle Amosun did not say he won’t pay workers just because he is building bridges in Ogun State. During my administration, Ekiti was No. 10 on the Human Development Index because we were No. 24 on the income per capita index.

    “I did not come into government because of money. I have never lacked in my life. I sought the opportunity to govern Ekiti because I saw a need for the intervention of genuine, people-focused administration, which my administration gave. Evidences are there.

  • PDP faults Odigie-Oyegun on alleged missing N33tn under Jonathan

    PDP faults Odigie-Oyegun on alleged missing N33tn under Jonathan

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has faulted claims by the national chairman of the All Progressives  Congress (APC), Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, that N33 trillion oil revenue was squandered under the Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

    The party said the allegation has again portrayed the ruling APC as being dangerously obsessed with the frivolity of bamboozling Nigerians with high-sounding figures just for entertainment.

    A statement yesterday by PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Prince Dayo Adeyeye, said such avoidable mischief, especially on issues bordering on the nation’s economy, has continued to hunt the nation’s image at a time of desperate need of investment from the international community.

    He said: “Since no sources were cited for this ‘important’ piece of information, we are left to guess that he may have been inspired by a recent claim by other opportunist individuals that over N30 trillion may have been lost within the period in question.

    “But should this or any other source that is yet to be verified by relevant authorities be relied upon as national information, especially as the purveyors of the half-truth always buckled when challenged for proof?”

    Adeyeye also ridiculed a recent claim by Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had recovered more than $2 trillion (about N600 trillion at current exchange rate) in 12 years.

    The PDP wondered why the APC administration was still seeking to borrow $3 billion to finance the 2016 Budget it had truly recovered $2 trillion Malami claimed was allegedly looted from the national treasury.

    It said: “The APC government has remained clueless and even confused as our economy plummeted to a level where the nation’s infrastructure has completely collapsed and Nigerians are no longer able to feed their children nor send them to school.

    “The reality of dwindling oil revenues and an economy forced into a recession by an inept administration is a challenge that requires sincerity, competence and a large dose of honesty to get us out of the woods; not the constant lies and deception that have unfortunately become the house-style in the 15-month old APC’s government.

    “We wish to therefore advise the APC Chairman, John Odigie-Oyegun, to concentrate in helping the President and his party with ideas and policies that will revamp our ailing economy, restore our dignity abroad rather than the usual tantrums just to castigate previous PDP’s administration with a view to scoring cheap political points.

    “Time for honeymoon is over. It’s now time to deliver on your campaign promises”.

  • Jonathan, Buhari and resurrection of cluelessness

    Jonathan, Buhari and resurrection of cluelessness

    EACTING to the latest Boko Haram video which showed her abducted daughter in the midst of 49 others, Esther Yakubu, the mother, groaned about the Muhammadu Buhari presidency’s helplessness in rescuing the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls seized by insurgents from Government College, Chibok, Borno State, in April 2014. Frustrated by the government’s slow pace of action over the matter, and exasperated by their dithering and waffling, Mrs Yakubu described President Buhari’s administration as ‘more clueless than ex-president Jonathan’s.’ It is impossible not to appreciate her pains. Unlike Dr Jonathan’s administration which attempted to negotiate with the insurgents but was deceived, President Buhari’s administration has yet to provide proof of any negotiation or even rescue effort, let alone knowledge of what is happening to the girls. The insurgents themselves confirm they are not speaking to anyone, directly or indirectly.

    What is remarkable about the whole abduction tragedy is the resurrection of the word ‘clueless’. It was used to the point of satiation against the Jonathan government, especially from 2012 onwards when it became obvious that the country’s social and economic troubles, not to talk of the Boko Haram insurgency, were not experiencing any amelioration. The epithet stuck like glue and dogged the Jonathan presidency to its last days in office. The ex-president lamented the insult, and his aides and political associates from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and even the Labour Party (LP) denounced the abuse. But all the efforts to exculpate Dr Jonathan failed spectacularly. The public had concluded he was to blame for everything, and there was nothing anyone could do or say to dissuade them.

    However, addressing a meeting of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in late August 2012, some two years into his presidency, Dr Jonathan had complained painfully: “I’m the most criticised president in the whole world. I can tell this noble audience that before I leave, I will also be the most praised president…Sometimes I ask, ‘Were there roads across this country and Jonathan brought floods to wipe out these roads?…Or, we have power and I brought hurricanes to bring down all infrastructure?…So, were there massive irrigation projects in the north where agriculture can thrive and massive farms, and Jonathan brought drought to wipe out these farms (in) under two years?” It was clear Dr Jonathan was unable to give concreteness to the people’s pains, nor to appreciate their yearnings.

    Sadly, President Buhari, if care is not taken, will also begin to validate the people’s impression of his dithering, miscomprehension and inattentiveness. Like Dr Jonathan, he has been unable to respond well to the country’s socio-economic troubles, considering how he and his aides and supporters constantly accuse his predecessor of being responsible for the country’s woes. But he is reminded that the people voted for him specifically because they lost faith in Dr Jonathan’s capacity and ability, and would therefore appreciate if they were not constantly reminded of the former president’s failings. President Buhari has, however, stuck to that single narrative, immobilised, it seems, by the overwhelming consequences of his predecessor’s failure to right the wrongs of the distant past. Dr Jonathan himself, as is evident from the quotation above, blamed his predecessors for the woes he was unable to tackle.

    Already, many PDP leaders, including some of its vociferous and self-appointed spokesmen, have described the Buhari administration as clueless. They cite his approach to forming his cabinet, a task he reluctantly began and concluded after many months of pussyfooting. They also cite the lopsidedness of his appointments, drawing a comparison with that of Dr Jonathan. And they also take a number of social and economic indicators, particularly the exchange rate, to validate their impression of what they describe as President Buhari’s cluelessness and incapacity. On the other hand, the Buhari administration reminds Nigerians that Dr Jonathan’s administration laid the foundation for the economic chaos being experienced. But for the PDP and its strident spokesmen, if not increasingly the generality of Nigerians, the epithet of cluelessness being attached to the Buhari administration will become more plausible as the socio-economic indicators worsen.

    But much more than the PDP and its self-appointed spokesmen, Mrs Yakubu, mother of the abducted Dorcas shown on the Boko Haram video, may become the most powerful proselyte of the disdained word being deployed against the Buhari administration. Neither she nor any parent of the abducted girls can understand why the government has found it difficult to decide what to do about the abduction. Boko Haram, the parents and the public know, has called for negotiation and even gone ahead to  give conditions for dialogue. A few individuals, including the three people recently and curiously declared wanted by the military, have offered their services to negotiate with the insurgents. Instead, the public has been fed contradictory statements, both from government spokesmen who insist without corroboration that they were negotiating in camera, and the president himself who has repeatedly said he had no idea where and how to locate or identify Boko Haram leaders or the abducted girls.

    The release of the new video is both a desperate attempt by Boko Haram to put pressure on the government and parents of the abducted girls and an indication that they are running out of time to stave off final and comprehensive defeat. It is perhaps in response to that pressure that the military has lashed out at those who offered to link the government with the sect, perhaps believing that either one or all of them were instrumental to the release of that unfavourable video. Some members of the public could also begin to suspect that by arresting the two intermediaries, who have now been admitted to bail, the military or the government could in fact be uninterested in resolving the thorny issue or be inclined to force the arrested people to disclose information the authorities believe they possess. Overall, it is hard to see how the recent steps taken by the military would lead to a resolution of the matter.

    If the resurrected word ‘clueless’ is not to stick on the Buhari administration — for the Jonathan administration is receding in the people’s memory — the president will have to take, among other great measures on the economy, firm and quick action to resolve the Chibok abduction logjam. He has not shown any inclination to do something profound and substantial about the problem beyond giving assurances that the sect would be defeated and the girls returned home. Indeed, it is even more evident that by not concretely and publicly displaying readiness to negotiate, he seems to be saying unfortunately that the detained Boko Haram militants are more valuable than the abducted schoolgirls. This is the impression the parents of the girls and the BringBackOurGirls campaigners say they have got from the government’s direct and indirect signals.

    The Information minister, Lai Mohammed, has talked of secret discussions with Boko Haram contacts, a fact the sect’s videos have refuted. The president on the other hand gives only the impression he is wrought-up over the abduction, and the military’s spokesmen assert the sect has been destroyed as a fighting force. However, no one can bank on their words. They had said the sect’s leader Abubakar Shekau was dead; now it seems he is not dead after all. So, no one can really say with certainty what the government is doing and how far it has gone. Is the Buhari administration really as clueless as Mrs Yakubu and the PDP say it is? If it is not, then, beyond platitudes, the administration must feel it owes the public some explanations, and be prepared to tell them just how far it has gone. Surely, prisoner swap is not rocket science.

    More, if the Buhari administration is not to attract the kind of opprobrium the Jonathan administration exposed itself to, especially given the parlous state of the economy, they have a responsibility to bring the Chibok abduction to a swift and satisfying end. Boko Haram leaders have thrown them a lifeline. The government should take it if it does not illogically think the detained insurgents are more valuable in detention than the captive schoolgirls set free. The Jonathan government fell principally because of fears about a declining economy it was incapable of mitigating, and its prolonged inability to rescue the Chibok girls. Now the economy is in full decline with no prospect of a rebound anytime soon, and the girls have withered (dead or married off) in captivity. Even if it resolves the Chibok nightmare, the government will still be unable to obviate the epithet of cluelessness until the economy is revived. It is worse if the administration is unable to achieve both.

  • Report links Jonathan to Niger Delta Avengers

    Report links Jonathan to Niger Delta Avengers

    Despite his denial, ex-President Goodluck Jonathan has been allegedly fingered in the formation and activities of the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA).

    Also, findings by the security have confirmed that oil installations were mined before the May 29, 2015 handover to President Muhammadu Buhari.

    These are the basic points of intelligence report, already made available to the Presidency but which is still being studied.

    Last August 7, Jonathan denied having any links with NDA, restating his commitment to the nation’s unity.

    The intelligence gathering was said to be a confirmation of a similar claim by the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta(MEND).

    According to a top intelligence source, who spoke in confidence last night, the NDA was formed as a Plan B option before the 2015 general election.

    The source said the initial plan was to ask the NDA to declare Niger Delta Republic immediately after Jonathan’s defeat but the ex-President was believed to have prevailed on the group to shelve the idea.

    The NDA  was said to have been resuscitated after the Federal Government launched a massive probe into the mismanagement of the oil sector.

    The revelations from the probe were said to have overwhelmed the ex-President, who felt he and ex-First Lady Patience Jonathan were being targeted.

    The source said: “We have intelligence report that it is true that the ex-President has been meeting with the NDA militants before the general election.

    “The initial plan was to declare Niger Delta Republic after Jonathan’s electoral loss but the NDA members were taken aback when the ex-President conceded.

    “Findings confirmed that the ex-President and others being probed, resuscitated the NDA plan when the Federal Government initiated a probe into the oil sector.

    “We suspect that the ex-President is afraid that the way the investigation in the oil industry was going, he and his wife will be questioned.

    “The fact that some of the conditions  put forward by the NDA, including not going after Government Ekpemuopolo Tompolo, and stopping investigation of all corruption probes, have confirmed some of the intelligence.

    Responding to a question, the source added: “Intelligence report also showed that the evidence of the attacks of oil installations was planned before May 29. The NDA and other militants had mined these installations before the handover.

    “But following the probe of the oil sector, they were mandated to start detonating it.

    The source added: “Intelligence report also indicated that a former Coordinator of Amnesty Programme Kingsley Kuku and  a former National Publicity Secretary of PDP, Olisa Metuh might have played some key roles in the formation and operation of NDA.”

    But both Metuh and Kuku have also denied any role in the activities of NDA.

    When contacted, a high-ranking government source, who wants to remain anonymous, said: “It has been known in government circles that Jonathan may be behind the NDA. The speed with which he denied the allegation spoke volumes.

    “Despite the denial, the allegations have refused to go away.

    “His allegation that MEND is after him is to divert attention from his roles as the mastermind of the NDA . His morbid fear of being investigated alongside his wife is behind what is going on. Investigation has revealed massive looting under his administration. His alarm was just to pre-empt being probed.”