Tag: Jonathan

  • Jonathan and Ekiti election scandal

    Few people are likely to be surprised that the Jonathan administration has not reacted to the recording released by Sahara Reporters in which a junior defence minister claims that he was mandated by the president” to draft a couple of army officers to facilitate and coordinate a subversion of the  2014 Ekiti governorship elections. Having personalised state security institutions, and having become accustomed to suborning law-enforcement agencies for partisan, often criminal, political assignments, any president overcome with hubris enough to play the strongman can afford to treat the people with contempt. Incidentally, barring a columnist’s comments, as well as brief stories from some newspapers, the public has maintained a funereal silence over this horrifying revelation. Does this seeming lack of interest imply a feeling amongst the populace that the country has, in any case, opted out of the civilised world, owing to the barbarity of Nigerian rulers, and their impunity-hardened proclivity for criminality?

    Or, perhaps Nigerians themselves have become indifferent to their own collective plight because everybody is preoccupied with “claiming” his personal material salvation in accordance with the individualism-ethos of miracle-peddling Pentecostal neo-Christianity? That none of our civil-society associations has so far raised its voice over this affair – NLC, NBA, Roman Catholic Bishops and Guild of Editors – also gives the impression that one and all have taken the Sahara Reporters’ revelation as no more than the latest token of the moral collapse of the Nigerian state.

    Nevertheless, I am personally surprised that Jonathan’s no. 1 attack dog has not been fuming with righteous indignation at what would, if untrue, be outrageous slander of his master’s reputation. This must indeed also be an awkward time for even the urbane artists at white-washing sepulchers. But, what can the smartest geniuses at advertising deep-black as sparkling white (depending on circumstances and inducements) do in this difficult-to-deny involvement of the president in a subversion of the electoral process? For now, these professional equivocators appear to be waiting for it to blow over, seeing their boss, like the proverbial dog fated to be lost, can no longer hear the hunter’s horn.

    In a situation like this concerning the alleged involvement of powerful people in serious crime for which they have not been formally charged, and over which they themselves are keeping silent, perhaps the only way to go is by the law of probabilities. The main issue, then, is what is already known about the abuses to which the Jonathan government has often subjected the security forces, including the military, during national elections.

    All Nigerian rulers, right from Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa, have always considered it part of their prerogative to use the army for partisan political interests, including influencing the conduct of elections. However, in matters of scale, and in the brazenness of the abuse, Jonathan would appear to have been far more daring than his predecessors. It was in the Ekiti elections of June 2014, conducted when the Boko Haram insurgency which began five years earlier was still fiercely raging, that the largest numbers of troops so far were deployed for elections. Yet, the polling was far outside the theatre of the insurrection. Apart from the regular army, the Ekiti elections, as well as the ones in Osun two months later, for the first time in the country’s history, witnessed a number of uniformed, gun-toting masked men. These “soldiers” it was subsequently learnt, were used to pick up opposition party candidates, along with party officials and agents, to be either locked up, or guarded by the uniformed and masked, party thugs for the two or so days the elections lasted. Some of these masked soldiers of spurious provenance also went about the streets of Ekiti and Osun towns, shooting into the air, intimidating the populace, and causing consternation and panic. It is also instructive that during the Ekiti elections, two state governors, who are members of the APC opposition party, were prevented by soldiers from entering the state. A “chieftain” of the ruling party, a professional political thug with obnoxious reputation, from Anambra State, was however escorted by soldiers to Ekiti where local opposition politicians had already been put away to ensure that they could not monitor the process and conduct of the elections either at the polls, or at the collation centres.

    A number of questions are pertinent at this point: Were the soldiers who prevented Governors Rotimi Amaechi and Adams Oshiomhole from entering Ekiti to monitor the elections, and those who escorted Chris Uba to the state not acting under orders? What duties, under the constitution were the police minister and junior defence minister, in Ekiti to perform during ‘the elections? And finally, why were the opposition party men incarcerated during the course of the elections, only to be released without charges immediately after? Whoever can adequately explain away these questions in relation to the mysteries of what actually transpired at the Ekiti governorship elections, can as well cast doubt on the audio, and now even the video, recordings, of the conclave of criminals, haggling over how to rig the elections.

    Short of a personal confession, it is obvious that only a judicial pronouncement can determine whether Jonathan indeed authorised a subversion of the Ekiti governorship polls. I am only, like any citizen is entitled to, expressing dismay at the president and his administration pretending that they are unaware of the grave allegations about their involvement. Equally grave are the implications for the president’s person and office, and for the image of the country and its people. This is as if Richard Nixon and his administration were to keep mum when the Watergate story’s dirty ramifications began to unfold. Even if Jonathan, in his usual self-and-office- compromising attitude, does not “give a damn” about what Nigerians think of his excesses, does he also not care about the standards and values which prevail in the conduct of public affairs in civilised countries, and about the opinions and feelings concerning pariahs that dare defy and defile these international usages? ‘Unfortunately, whether he takes these things into consideration or not, it is the country which ultimately suffers, just like during the regime of Sani Abacha, whose infamy Jonathan seems to be now aiming at surpassing.

    In view of the above, Jonathan should immediately empower the Chief Justice of the Federation to set up an independent panel of inquiry into the Sahara Reporters’ revelations. Should the president fail to do this, the Nigeria Bar Association should proceed to organise the probe.

    While the issue of Nigeria’s image in the international community over the Ekiti governorship elections affair is of the utmost importance, a far more crucial issue is the implications of the scandal for the current situation in Nigeria itself. In one respect, the Sahara Reporters’ revelations could not have come at a more appropriate occasion. Today, Nigeria again seems to be drifting into another crisis of political succession, a situation generated in the main by the ambitions of an incumbent ruler to do what other presidents before him have brazenly gotten away with – namely, to appropriate state powers to manipulate the electoral process to his advantage and that of his party. The eight-year rule of the loathsome moral nihilist, Babangida, was a study, as well as a variation of some sort, in this tragic political chicanery. Nor was the Obasanjo presidency much different. (In this context, I believe it is high time Abdulsalaami Abubakar, came before Nigerians to apologise for the stable-institution-inhibiting, and the pro-one-party dictatorship of a fraudulent constitution that he imposed on the country in 1999).

    Given Jonathan’s constricted and clannish worldview, unredeemed by weak character, he thinks that to fail in his bid for a second term in power would be tantamount to discrimination against him because of his ethnic origin. Hence he does not seem to care whether his schemes for re-election bring the country crashing down over his head. Jonathan should rather see his entitlement to enjoy the prerogative of even appointing the INEC chairman (not to talk of otherwise influencing elections) as comparable to exercising the antiquated divine right of kings. For, when the people decided to terminate such sweeping powers, they chopped off the heads of monarchs who resisted the tide of change. By the way, Jonathan swore to uphold something called the Nigerian constitution. So what does the faith he wears like his trademark hat say about allegiance to this sacred document? Perhaps his crowd of spiritual advisors should remind him.

  • I hate Buhari and I love Jonathan!

    I hated General Muhammadu Buhari. Intensely.

    This feeling developed in 1984. First, his non-smiling visage including that of Tunde Idiagbon, his late deputy, evoked no warmth. The apocryphal story that they wear permanent scowls because there was nothing cheerful about Nigeria’s situation at a period when South West Nigeria, encompassing his official abode, made Alawada Baba Sala the highest rated comedy show was paradoxical to me then.

    I was especially livid athis War Against Indiscipline (WAI) dictum mandating Nigerians to queue for virtually everything in a country where lawlessness is deified as wisdom. I scoffed at his directive’s impracticality against the odious rat race in Nigeria, especially in Lagos. Personally, my timely arrival at all destinations is guaranteed with a good meal for balanced legs, firmly tucking my handbag under my armpits to escape Houdini-inspired pickpockets, energetically elbowing other jostling prospective bus passengers and hopping, banana jump-style onto a moving Molue bus.  And I’m good.

    But the orientation worked. Apart from queuing, archetypal stubborn Nigerians became excellent examples of WAI-themed orderliness and discipline in thought, behaviour and expectation through eschewing all forms of indiscipline.

    Thirty-one years ago, Buhari foresaw that leaders’ ability to effectively lead is always dependent on the quality of followership behind him which Indiscipline obstructs in Nigeria.

    Economically, I blamed his austerity measures for causing reduction in my pocket money despite my Economics tutor’s adulations of Buhari’s removal or reduction of national expenditure excesses, startof Nigeria’s first vicious anti-corruption war, reducing the balance of payment deficit by tightening importation and executing 15 percent cut from his predecessor President Shehu Shagari’s 1983 Budget.

    Consequently, total capital expenditure decreased by 16.08 percent, capital defence expenses by 80.9 percent, while agriculture, transport and communication, education and health spending decreased by 78.7 percent, 76.1 percent, 58.2 percent and 58.7 percent respectively.

    These austere policies alienated him from the elite.  Probably, the country’s international airports would overflow with the rich departing Nigeria immediately upon his announcement as the country’s new president.

    Again, I smirked at his tenure’s controversies. Many journalists and politicians bemoaned Decree No. 4. Human rights groups flayed him for his government’s decision to execute drug peddlers. These issues among others denigrate peoples’ fundamental human rights. My distaste grew. Recently, an American friend prodded me to soft-pedal on Buhari because interpretations of profound political events continually evolve. “Even Abraham Lincoln is still vilified in certain parts of USA today for abolishing the slave trade,” he said.

    Then, a revelation from Dora Akunyili, the indomitable former Director General of Nigerian Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and former Minister of Information thawed me. She returned the remainder of allotted funds to PTF’s coffers after returning from a company-sponsored foreign medical trip while working, on secondment from University of Nigeria, with Buhari, the chairman, at Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF). The overwhelming positive impression she made on him led to Buhari’s recommendation of her when former President Obasanjo approached him for help in appointing a cerebral, bold and incorruptible NAFDAC’s DG to rid the nation of counterfeit drugs. Akunyili was Igbo and a born-again Christian. Buhari is Fulani and a devout Muslim. To Buhari, what mattered was the content of her character; he is neither a religious extremist nor a tribalist.

    Still, I mocked his perennial ambition to rule Nigeria again. I wondered why him? I dismissed him as lacking today’s energy and dynamism in tackling the country’s myriad problems. However, as the nation experienced three civilian leaders since 1999 without a commensurate improvement in Nigeria, I had an epiphany. Why not him? He is very fearless, disciplined and passionate about changing Nigeria. At his age, embezzlement cannot be his political aim. And as rumours spread about his health, I noted his vigour and lucidity outshine that of some in my generation. Besides, I churlishly cherish the idea of burdening Buhari with the job since his ilk saddled us with them in the initial analysis.

    Now, I love President Goodluck Jonathan. His affable persona and Mosaic dove-like demeanour is endearing. His ascension to power, never through vaulting over-ambition, but by events proudly proclaimed by his loyalists as predestined via positive happenstances provoked a fervent envy at his lot. In typical Nigerian copy-cat syndrome, the name, Goodluck, quickly became a fad. His trajectory from “having no shoes”to gaining a doctorate degree and variously occupying the topmost offices at state and national level is a record yet unmatched on Nigeria’s political landscape.

    Jonathan’s unemployment panacea as contained in his Transformation Agenda especially fascinated me for the plan noted “unemployment surged from 11.9 percent in 2006 to 14.6 percent in 2007 and 21.1 percent by January 2010.” Noticing the plan’s solutions, I practically swooned.That admiration quickly faded. No decisive or profound happenings occurred to concretise the hero-worship. Granted, we cannot beckon on Utopia overnight, but after six years of Goodluck, many previously employed when he created the plan are now jobless. Reno Omokri, Jonathan’s former special assistant on social media, said over 250,000 Nigerian youths are employed. Certainly, not from the general population but probably within the rehabilitated and amnestied militants now buying warships or moving from point A to point B in luxury jets.  Even, those are hardly half of that statistic.

    Everythingis in shambles. Equally troubling is Obasanjo’s revelations that Jonathan squandered $25 billion left by his administration in the Excess Crude Account and depleted $45 billion foreign reserves, which increased to about $67billion under Yar’Adua, to $30 billion. The response, that the balance is now $34.4 billion, is laughable.

    Feeding expenses is skyrocketing yet the Central Bank of Nigeria says inflation is less galloping now because it is at 9.50 one-digit rate and food import bill reduced from N1.1 trillion in 2011, to N648 billion in 2012, “placing Nigeria firmly on the path to food self-sufficiency.” But that statement rings hollow on any shopping excursions at Lagos’Mile 2 commodities market.

    In the 1960s, Nigeria was ranked an emerging economy alongside Malaysia and Singapore. Under Peoples’ Democratic Party’s rulership within 16 years, Nigeria declined from being a low middle-income country and amongst the 50 richest countries worldwide to one of the 30 poorest. Today, Singapore has the third highest per-capita GDP globally and Malaysia’s, $14,800.

    Nowadays, our bedfellows are Somalia and Syria.

    Jonathan’s buck-passing is mind-boggling. He said his inheritance of Nigeria’s problems excuses his inability to provide quick solutions. But, Jonathan’s emergence and continuing candidacy is on PDP’s platform,the same party under which the nation’s woes worsened. This implicates him. It is Jonathan’s conditions of service to provide solutions to Nigeria’s problems. He willingly applied for the position. And with or without a lion-like heart, Jonathan ought to have delivered. He did not.

    Not surprisingly, I am no longer enamoured with Jonathan or his continued rule.

     

    • Ogunbayo writes from Lagos.

  • Nwabueze, others to parley with Jonathan, Buhari

    Nwabueze, others to parley with Jonathan, Buhari

    Eminent leaders of thought and leading political activists under the aegis of the Nigeria Consensus Group  are set to interface with the two leading presidential candidates Dr. Goodluck Jonathan and General Muhammadu Buhari on their plans for the political restructuring of Nigeria

    Addressing reporters in Lagos,   their spokesperson Olawale Okunniyi said the leaders will scrutinise the candidates.

    “Since the extension of the 2015 elections, our leadership has come under intense pressure from both associates and key players in the ongoing electoral process to take a stand and tilt its influence one way or the other

    This has triggered a series of informal consultations expected to dovetail into a major national agenda setting parley initially slated to hold on March 3, but now rescheduled to hold in the second week of March for strategic reasons“

    The group also informed that its initial consultations have already observed the possibility of a nation wide imbroglio in the aftermath of the 2015 elections, which, according to the body, can only be nipped by a “credible Coalition Government of National Unity formed basically  to initiate an elected Constituent Assembly for the restructuring of Nigeria along the lines of democratic federalism for constitutional democracy and popular governance to thrive in Nigeria”

    Okunniyi, however expressed hope that both Dr. Goodluck Jonathan and General Mohammadu Buhari will be available, cooperative and submit themselves to the impartial scrutiny of these leaders of thought and leading political activists in the country to enable the body make popular intervention on the 2015 elections

  • Group queries Jonathan over renewed Boko Haram war

    Group queries Jonathan over renewed Boko Haram war

    A group, the Patriotic Nigeria, has berated the Federal Government for waiting till election period before intensifying the anti-terror war.

    The group said in a statement that many have died in the hands of the insurgents.

    Its media consultant, Idowu Quadri, said the Federal government allowed the carnage to continue for six years before intensifying action terrorists.

    He said the President decided to take a decisive action because he was confronted with a looming defeat at the general elections.

    “Though it is relieving to hear various stories of the successful raids by the Nigerian Army and the allied forces on the insurgents, but every patriotic Nigerian must interrogate this issue very well and demand to know what brought about the delay in taking the appropriate military actions,” the group said.

    The group accused the Federal Government of abdicating its responsibilities towards the citizens by failing to confront the Boko Haram menace as timely as was necessary. It added that Nigerians have confidence in the Army, Navy, Air Force, Police and other security agencies whose collaborations could have brought an end to the carnage.

  • Jonathan seeks quick end to fuel scarcity

    Jonathan seeks quick end to fuel scarcity

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday directed the concerned government agencies to take immediate steps to end the fuel scarcity in the country.

    The Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, disclosed this to State House correspondents at the end of Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting presided over by President Jonathan.

    Stressing that the scarcity will soon disappear, the minister said the financial aspect of the dispute with the oil marketers had been settled, while the physical aspects which include loading of fuel to various states of the federation are presently being addressed.

    She also disclosed that a press conference on the fuel scarcity will take place at 2pm on Wednesday in Abuja.

    The minister also disclosed that FEC approved N326, 095,875.00 for the procurement of temporary office building located at Plot 1072 Cadastral Zone b10, Dakibiyu District, Airport Road, Abuja, for the Investments and Securities Tribunal.

    She said: “The tribunal has over the years been grappling with the challenge of regular payment of rent on its office accommodation as well as threats of eviction from the rented office accommodation which has become an annual occurrence with the attendant embarrassment.

    “The procurement will be funded from a grant of N410, 004,829.81 by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to the tribunal based on a request by the Minister of State for Finance for the office building, pool vehicles for judges and other operational purposes.”

    “After deliberations, council approved the contract to procure temporary office building located at Plot 1072 Cadastral Zone b10, Dakibiyu District, Airport Road, Abuja, for the Investments and Securities Tribunal (IST) in favour of Messrs El-Davido Properties and Engineering Services Limited in the sum of N326, 095,875.00 inclusive of VAT with a delivery period of three weeks.”

    The Minister of Environment, Laraba Malam, disclosed that FEC approved the National Policy framework on Nigeria Polychlorinated Biphenyls Management.

    She said: “The overarching objective of the policy is to strengthen government’s capacity to manage, monitor and control the Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) and also ultimately phase out the use of PCBs in the course of protecting human health and the environment.”

     

     

  • Jonathan wades into Ebonyi crisis

    Jonathan wades into Ebonyi crisis

    A five-member governors’ panel constituted by President Goodluck Jonathan to resolve the crisis in Ebonyi State met at the State House, Abuja, yesterday for hours.

    Members are Governors Gabriel Suswam (Benue); Sule Lamido (Jigawa); Saidu Dakingari (Kebbi); Sullivan Chime (Enugu) and Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom).

    They were mandated to resolve the face-off between Governor Martin Elechi of Ebonyi State and his deputy, Dave Umahi, which has split the State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Umahi is believed to be championing an impeachment move against Elechi, with the support of majority of members of the House of Assembly.

    Briefing State House correspondents at the end of the meeting in Abuja, Suswam said the solution to the crisis had almost been found.

    He said Elechi did not storm out of the meeting, but left at the end of the meeting to catch a flight home.

    Suswam said: “I don’t think he (Elechi) stormed out of the meeting. We ended the meeting properly, and I believe he had a flight to catch, so he was rushing.

    “Yes, the Ebonyi problem was one of the issues discussed. We have almost found a solution to that problem. The meeting ended peacefully. I don’t think Elechi stormed out of the meeting. I think the governor was rushing to catch a flight.”

    He said the meeting also discussed the general elections.

    The governor said PDP was sure of victory and dismissed insinuation that some candidates were campaigning for themselves without campaigning for Jonathan’s re-election.

    He said: “I don’t think that is true. People have ways of campaigning. As a senatorial candidate, there is no way I can be campaigning for my seat alone without campaigning for the President.”

    Elechi, who left the Presidential Villa with Umahi, refused to answer reporters’ questions.

    Umahi, the PDP governorship candidate in the coming elections, urged Elechi to respond to the allegations levelled against him by the House of Assembly, instead of embarking on a smear campaign.

    In a statement issued in Abakaliki yesterday, he asked the governor to defend himself on the eight-point impeachment notice and refrain from pointing accusing fingers at the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and himself.

    The statement signed by Abia Onyike, Umahi’s director, Media and Publicity, said it was clear that Governor Elechi had a running battle with the Assembly for a long time over several issues, which the House described as bordering on constitutional breaches.

     

  • Why Yoruba will reject Jonathan, by Southwest APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC), Southwest Zone, yesterday described last week’s summit by some Yoruba elders and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders as “the gathering of strange bedfellows”.

    It said it was a futile effort to promote a bad product.

    The party, in a statement by its Director of Media and Publicity, Ayo Afolabi, said those championing President Goodluck Jonathan’s cause in the Southwest are aware that they are in the minority.

    The party listed reasons why Yoruba would not vote for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the March 28 election, saying he has squandered the confidence the Yoruba reposed in him since 2010.

    The statement reads: “Those championing Jonathan’s cause in the Southwest know they are in the minority and that is why, despite purporting to be acting in Yoruba’s interest, they held a conference that was not open to the public.

    “It is insulting and delusional for them to think they can decide for Yoruba people .

    “Also, that Tony Uranta and Peter Obi attended a ‘Yoruba summit’ in supervisory role from the Presidency is another addition to the list of insults to the Yoruba nation from the Jonathan administration.

    “Jonathan candidacy is unsellable. Southwest people will speak with their votes on March 28.

    “As it was in 2010, when Nigerians were united across ethnic and religious divides against bad governance; so will it be on March 28 when they will choose Muhammadu Buhari.”

  • Jonathan, PDP governors meet on 2015 polls

    Jonathan, PDP governors meet on 2015 polls

    We’ll win elections – Akpabio

    President Goodluck Jonathan, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) state governors and its governorship candidates in the forthcoming elections on Monday night brainstormed on how to ensure victory for the party in the general election.

    The Chairman of PDP Governors’ Forum and Akwa Ibom State governor, Godswill Akpabio, spoke with State House correspondents at the end of the meeting.

    He said: “The party is strategizing on how to not just win election but ensure that we win peace. It is very clear now that the opposition is in disarray. I am sure you have all seen that.”

    “Propaganda can only take you up to a limit after which the reality becomes the norm. Today, Nigerians are much more aware of what the PDP administration under President Goodluck Jonathan has been doing.

    “I want to commend not only the President but also members of the Federal Executive Council who have opened the eyes of Nigerians to know that so many things have been done in the different sectors of the economy.

    “It was as if people did not know these things because the opposition took over and they kept saying PDP was doing nothing. Yet, in four years of the President’s tenure, he has achieved far more than any President had ever done in the history of our country.

    “We are very proud of the achievements of the PDP, not just at the federal level but also at the different states. If you want to assess state-by-state, pick the opposition’s best state in Nigeria and compare it with the best state of the PDP, you will see that we tower above the opposition in all ramifications.”

    He noted that the next elections, particularly the presidential elections of March 28 will be about performance and issues.

    “Nigerians have since gone above the level of tribalism and ethnic or religion differences. God put us together in this country and He knew that we are a multiplicity of religions and tribes.

    “God brought us together, so we believe in the unity and oneness of this country. The same way we came together in 2011 and voted for President Jonathan, that is the same way we are returning him based on the fact that he has performed creditably and that the PDP has discharged its responsibilities to Nigerians to the best of its ability based on available resources.”

    He said they also met with incoming governors to explain to them the essence of mobilising their subjects to ensure that they collect their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    “Because every vote must count and it is important that we don’t get short-changed by the fact that we do not mobilise our people to go and pick their voters cards.”

    The governor also said the meeting also dwelt on internal reconciliation in the party.

    “After the major primaries that we had, we need to reconcile people so that everybody can move in our accord. I can tell Nigerians today that the party is poised for victory. The PDP is very ready to win. I am happy that the people are listening because in those days, I kept telling them that their propaganda cannot win a war. The propaganda has reached a point.”

     

  • Jonathan: nobody can intimidate PDP

    Jonathan: nobody can intimidate PDP

    President Goodluck Jonathan has maintained that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) cannot be intimidated by any party as it has performed well in the last 16 years.

    He spoke yesterday at a one-day workshop and strategic meeting for members of the PDP Ward Volunteers Scheme at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to him, his administration has opened up the various sectors of the economy and enabling more Nigerians to be involved in the economy.

    He said: “On behalf of all of us who are contesting, I thank you because when you market the party, you are marketing the candidates. You are doing well for our party.

    “PDP is not just the largest party in Nigeria, but it is the only party that has members at all voting units. There is no other party whether two, three four, five parties coming together, they cannot reach that level. PDP has members in every voting unit in this country.”

     

  • Jonathan gives I64 NYSC award winners jobs, scholarship

    Jonathan gives I64 NYSC award winners jobs, scholarship

    President Goodluck Jonathan has given automatic employment to the 164 award winners of the 2012, 2013 and 2014 batches of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).

    Jonathan, who spoke at the President’s NYSC Honours Award at the State House Abuja, said those still unemployed would be absorbed into the Federal Civil Service.

    The corps members were said to have been selected from the three batches, “based on their outstanding performances during their service years”.

    The President also announced automatic scholarship for any of the 164 awardees who wants to advance their education.

    Nine corps members, who became physically-challenged during their service year, were given N23.5 million cash under the NYSC Hope Alive programme. They had varying degrees of permanent disabilities ranging from amputated arms to amputated legs and disfigured burns from accidents.

    Ibeto Group donated N5 million to one of the nine injured corps members, who could not attend the event because of the injury.

    Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio donated N5 million to the nine corps members and Heritage Bank donated N1.5 million to each of them.

    Three best overall female corps members, one from each of the three batches, also received plaques and cash reward from the National Council of Women Society.

    Jonathan said: “Once again, I congratulate all awardees on your well merited recognition and honour. The entire nation salutes the determination, courage, discipline, commitment and hard work, which you exhibited during the service year.

    “In line with our policy of encouraging our youths  to always strive for excellence, including serving and prospective corps members, I hereby announce immediate employment of the award winners in the Federal Civil Service, as well as automatic scholarship up to doctorate level in any university of their choice across the globe.

    “I urge you to always be good ambassadors of this great country, and we shall continue to look up to you for greater vision and accomplishments.”

    He added: “On our part, we will continue to accord priority to youth development through policies and programmes that will empower them not only for economic survival, but also for future leadership roles in our nation.

    “The Federal Government will continue to initiate policies and programmes that are focussed on our youths. So far, we have put in place the National Schools Agriculture Programme, the YouWin! Programme, the youth empowerment component of the Subsidy Reinvestment Programme (SURE-P) and in no distant time, we will establish a National Youth Development Fund to ensure that our vision for empowered youth is firmly irreversible.

    “As part of our Transformation Agenda, government gave approval for the NYSC to establish a Department of Skill Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development. It is encouraging, from all indications, that the corps members have eagerly embraced this programme.

    “The NYSC Hope Alive Programme (NYSC-HAP), which seeks to identify and recognise Corps members, who had the misfortune of becoming physically-challenged as a result of injuries they sustained in the course of their National Service to our fatherland, is one programme that is very dear to me.

    “The concern demonstrated by the NYSC in identifying and recommending some of them for appointment into the Federal Civil Service, while also assisting others financially to enable them cater for their needs, is highly commendable. We must take care of the needy without hesitation.”

    He also said that the prompt response and pragmatism with which the scheme addressed issues of national emergencies had also been demonstrated in the way it  successfully keyed into the global campaign against the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease.

    But he said the ceremony would be the last combined function for more than one batch that he would entertain as the scholarship being offered now might be belated to many of the awardees, who must have furthered their studies since they completed their NYSC two years ago.

    He directed that awards for any particular batch should be given not too long after the end of the batch’s service.

    Minister of Youth Boni Haruna hoped that the gesture would spur the awardees to continue to give greater service to the country.

    “This is a challenge for you to strive towards excellence in all endeavours,” he said.

    The Director General of the NYSC, Brig. Gen. Johnson Olawumi said the 164 winners included 55 corps members from the 2012 batch, 52 from 2013 batch and 57 from the 2014 batch.

    He said they were selected by a committee made up of people of proven integrity and that the NYSC Hope Alive programme was aimed at sustaining corps members who sustained injuries during service.

    Elections in Nigeria, he said, had become more credible since corps members started participating in their conduct.

    Jonathan presented medals to the 164 corps members and took group photographs with each of the batches and the injured winners.

    He also cut a cake baked for the awardees.