Tag: Mr President

  • When creative minds missed Mr. President

    They are, arguably, the best. Their professions have etched Nigeria on the world map. Their sector is worth billions. It is Nigeria’s Creative industry. Its members would not forget in a hurry the night President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan treated the industry’s bigwigs to an evening of  exhibitions, music, performances at the Eko Hotels & Suites, Lagos. It was also one full of reflection and deliberations on how to develop country through creative endeavours. Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME and EVELYN OSAGIE were there.

    Imagine a room full of stars. Imagine the glitz and paroxysm of emotions at a fête for stars.

    That was the feeling that evening when President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan brought together under one “large roof” the choicest of the country’s Creative Industry.

    Although the night has come and gone, but its frills and thrills would not be easily forgotten many in industry have said.

    Tagged: An Evening with President Goodluck Jonathan, the epoch-making event was meant to celebrate members of the Creative Industry, which includes creative writing, film, music, visual arts, photography, in the past 100 years. Men and women of “the arts” thronged the Banquet Hall of the impressive Eko Hotels & Suites, Lagos, with pride written all over their faces. It was their night of glory for putting Nigeria on the world map. And so they came exquisitely dressed for the occasion – some wore outfits that made loud statements for their art forms. Art works of different generation of artists welcomed guests to the event, powered by Zenith Bank.

    There were comedy, dance and musical performances by artistes, such as Onyeka Onwenu, Asa, Timi Dakolo, Omawumi, Sunny Nneji, Cobhams, Lara George. The audience also watched documentaries chronicling the history of the diverse art forms in Nigeria, such as music, visual arts, literature, film, etc.

    With the theme, Creativity Moving Nigeria, the peace songs by an all-star-cast led by King Sunny Ade – along with Kate Henshaw, Chinedu Ikedieze (alias Aki) and Osita Iheme (alias Pawpaw), Zaaki Azzay, Segun Arinze, Rita Dominic and Waje – helped set the pace for the evening.

    The night was meant for revelries turned out to be one of sober reflections and deliberations as the creative community called for the implementation of the National Endowment for the Arts and building of structures to enhance the growth of the industry.

    Since they were meeting with Nigeria’s “Number One Citizen”, most of its members said they came with lots of expectations and questions for Mr President, who was later represented by the Minister of Culture, Tourism and National Orientation, Chief Edem Duke.

    This change in the event, the minister said, was not deliberate; but for an unpleasant event that occurred few hours before, they would have had him to themselves for the whole night – a feat which was not so easy to achieve given his tight schedules and theirs as well.

    He praised the achievements of the creative community, saying “truly, the Nigerian creative community has positioned itself as the primus interpares amongst the different socio-economic platforms of this nation”.

    Duke said: “Mr President has asked me to express his appreciation to the creative community… as we define our country’s position in the comity of nations. That while we sit back in our comfort zones, these gathering of stars whom are gathered in this room tonight, by their creativity, by their innate talent, with which nature and God has endowed them, have continued to win hearts and minds for Nigeria. Sadly, only a few hours ago, a few of us and indeed the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, began to make our way to this venue. We heard the unfortunate incident in Kano that shattered the peace of the nation. Tonight the peace of our nation has been shattered. Tonight the bloods of our compatriots are flowing. People went out in Kano today to pray in supplication to God to bring peace to this country but so many of them never returned home. As we commemorate 100 years of our nation; as we look at the achievements from the years of our forbearers until today, as we commemorate this evening to the legacy and achievements of our creative industry, our heads are bowed, our eyes are bloodied by the spirit of this nation…

    “Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, who is already in the building… to pay compliments to the sweat of our creative community, says to tell you he will join us in the course of the evening because for him as a leader of the biggest black nation on the surface of the earth, the challenge of insecurity, the challenge of insurgency is one that breaks his heart and he sees the futility of trying to divide this country. He sits tonight reflecting on the events of the last few hours.”

    While expressing hope over the country’s future in the 100 years, Duke said that Nigerians, particularly the creative industry, have a role play in ensuring peace and unity ensue. “When will insurgency stop being the defining element of Nigeria? When men and women in the creative industry and community are exercising and exploiting their innate talents and creativity to advance the frontiers of our achievement. So we must all stand up against the insurgency, we will move this nation forward to ensure the transformation we desire and ensure that our children and our children’s children will find a wonderful country to live in,” he said.

    The creative community brought the teething issues inhibiting the growth of the industry to the fore, while calling for better framework and endowments that would enhance the progress of the industry and its players. Each sector of the industry came chronicling its contributions to the industry’s growth.

    Renowned artists, Bruce Onobrakpeya said Nigeria’s arts were the first things to put Nigeria on the world map, saying “the so- called “primitive art” were ahead of their time and influence artists like Picasso”. He, therefore, called for the implementation of the National Endowment for the Arts to empower the artists.

    He said: “The occasion therefore gives me another opportunity to plead with Mr President to look into two areas which need urgent attention to facilitate the growth. The first is the implementation of the National Endowment for the Arts, which include social welfare for the artists and grants to empower them to take care of their various associations and carry out projects. Art workshops initiated by NGOs will be enhanced if they also become beneficiary of the National Endowment. The second is the building of infrastructures to help showcase artistic products. Top on the list is the National Gallery of Modern Art. This is in fact long overdue.  There is also the need for Artists’ village and indeed Artists’ communities within the various estates being developed in our cities.”

    While praising President Jonathan’s support to the film industry by way of grants and towards the hosting of his association’s 2014 convention in Ibadan, Oyo State, the President of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), Remi Raji, sought further conversation with the government on the ways and means of building structures and institutions for the benefit of Nigerian writing and Nigerian writers.

    According to him, Nigerian writers had won all possible international literary awards available in the world – such as the Orange Prize, the Man Booker, Caine Prize, the Fonlon-Nichols, and the Nobel Prize for Literature.

    Raji said: “As we salute you for being Nigeria’s number one Nollywood fan, we, the body of authors, in close associations with publishers, librarians, editors and booksellers, and other groups with interests in literacies, would also like to open a conversation on how to support the creative industry further, on how to support the Book industry, on how to support ANA as the largest body of writers on the African continent, indeed, on how to build enduring structures and institutions for the generality of our country’s creative industry. You have been a supporter of Nigerian literature; the Bring Back the Book project, which has been very dear to you, is a mine of ideas in which ANA is most pleased and interested.

    He urged members of the creative industry, particularly writers, to renew commitment to the cause of healing this nation of the malaise called “Insurgency”. “As artists, and artistes, we must heal by our creativities: we must continue to paint it; we must continue to sculpt it; we must dramatise it; we must continue to compose and score it; yes, and for Memory, we must write  it. Admit it or not, paint it, perform it, act it, install it, weave it or sing it, it must still be written about.

    “The centrality of writing for a nation for historical and scientific purposes cannot be overemphasised. It is for these reasons among others, that this occasion becomes a good opportunity to reinvent our interest as a nation in the book and the knowledge industry. We must bring back the book to end the incendiary of ignorance in the land. We must, at the insistence of our resolve, continue to lend our voice to the call to bring back the book, bring back all our beauties to end the pockets of uglinesses around,” he said.

  • Reps reject state of emergency’s extension

    Reps reject state of emergency’s extension

    THE presidential request for the extension of state of emergency in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states was rejected yesterday in the House of Representatives.

    The Senate also failed to take a stand on the request, following the invasion of the National Assembly’s complex by policemen.

    After an executive session yesterday, Chairman of the House Committee on Media and Public Affairs Zakari Mohammed gave reasons for the rejection.

    He said: “Based on Hon. Leo Ogor’s motion, we have not extended the emergency rule. Rather, we have asked the President to rely on the Section 8 of the Armed Forces Act, which empowers him to deploy the military to troubled spots.

    “We relied on that, bearing in mind that if we had approve this today, it would have been the fourth in the series.

    “You remember emergency rule started in May, 2013 and therefore, we have done three extensions. If we had extended it again today, that would have been the fourth in the series. And in anything you are doing, you should be able to take stock to be able to see whether or not that action you are taking is yielding results.

    “We would be doing more good if Mr. President relies on that more because, if we are adopting a particular stand and is not giving us the desired result, we should be able to change course.

    “ So, I think that is what we came out from the executive session we had, where this issue was looked at closely.”

    Zakari said other sessions have buttressed the fact that that lawmakers were tired of the emergency rule since it was not yielding results.

    He said this also informed the motion moved by Hon. Leo Ogor, “to at least for him ( President)  to explore constitutional provisions, rather than emergency rule.”

    “Emergency rule is expected to elapse today (yesterday) and if the House is in session, it means that you need just two days before you renew it. But if you are not in session, you can wait for 10 days maximum to be able to effect it,” Zakari said.

  • Mr. President has no absolute powers

    President Goodluck Jonathan after the ill-feelings of the penultimate week following his suspension of the Central Bank Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, has been in celebratory mood, as his government rolls out the drums in celebration of our country’s 100 years of existence. A major blot on the canvas of the celebrants is however the ongoing war between the murderous Boko Haram elements and the Nigerian Military. Unfortunately while the chief celebrant, President Jonathan, is shouting on top of his voice at every turn, that the 1914 amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorate is not a mistake, the Boko Haram insurgents are recklessly shooting to death everything within their site, in Bornu, Adamawa and Yobe states.

    Before the Boko Haram killings supplanted the Sanusi saga, in the media, President Jonathan tried to soften the public outcry. At the media chat, called to explain the suspension of Sanusi, Mr. President when asked whether he has powers to suspend the bank chief, enthused: “the president has absolute powers …” However in his address at the centenary conference, Mr. President, said, concerning the Boko Haram mayhem, “in concert with our regional and global partners, we will continue to respond strategically and decisively to this scourge …” Privately I had remonstrated that the President should have said that he has absolute powers to deal with the scourge, just like he claimed with respect to the Sanusi challenge.

    But does a democratically elected President Jonathan has any absolute powers, in the exercise of his duties; not to talk of where neither the constitution nor the principal act grants him the power so exercised? The answer is an ABSOLUTE no. Such a claim by the President – a constitutional authority – to have ‘absolute power’ must be a faux pax; for ‘absolute powers’ is an aberration for any constitutional authority. This was the guidance for Obaseki JSC, in the celebrated case of Military Governor of Lagos State vs Ojukwu, when he held: “the Nigerian Constitution is founded on the rule of law, the primary meaning of which is that everything must be done according to law, it means also that government should be conducted within the framework of recognized rules and principles which restrict discretionary power…”

    As earlier held by the learned Justice in the same case, “in the area where rule of law operates, the rule of self-help by force is abandoned.” Considering that the embattled ‘substantive Governor of Central Bank’ has taken his case to the court, I shall restrain my self to general comments on the exercise of governmental powers under the prevalence of rule of law. No doubt, the President is a creature of the 1999 constitution as amended, and as such his powers derive from the constitution and other laws lawfully made under the constitution. Instructively, Nnaemeka Agu JSC, in Tukur vs Gongola State, held: “this court has said it several times that the provisions of the constitution ought to be read and interpreted as a whole in that related sections must be construed together”.

    In the 1999 constitution, the executive powers of the federation are provided principally in section 5 of that constitution. The principal provision is section 5(1)(b) which provides: “subject to the provisions of this constitution, the executive powers of the federation shall be vested in the President … and shall extend to the execution and maintenance of this constitution, all laws made by the National Assembly and to all matter with respect to which the National Assembly has, for the time being, power to make laws.” The further powers of the President with respect to Central Bank is within the provisions of the Central Bank Act 2007; being a law made by the National Assembly. Where a lacuna is deemed to exist in the law, the executive authority has no powers to fill in the blank spaces.

    This is because the power to make laws for the federation is effectively vested in the National Assembly, by section 4. This includes the power to make laws for matters within the exclusive legislative list, of which Banking is item number 6. Of course where an executive choose to fill in the blank space for an extant law, apart from the clear intent of usurping the legislative powers, which it does not posses, it also amount to self help. Again in Military Governor of Lagos State vs Ojukwu, supra, Oputa JSC, adopted the Black Law Dictionary definition of self help, which defined it thus: “taking an action in person or by a representative with legal consequences, whether the action is legal or not; for example, a self-help eviction may be a landlord’s removing the tenant’s property from an apartment and locking the door against the tenant.”

    The learned Justice also succinctly held that: “the rule of law presupposes: that the state is subject to the Law; that the judiciary is a necessary agency of the rule of law; that governments should respect the right of individual citizens under the rule of law; and that to the judiciary is assigned both the rule of law and by our constitution the determination of ‘all actions and proceedings relating to matters in dispute between persons or between government or an authority and any person in Nigeria’”. The learned jurist observed that even during the World War 11, Lord Atkins, was still able to hold concerning United Kingdom: “in this country, amid the clash of arms, the laws are not silent. They may be changed but they speak the same language in war as in peace. It has always been one of the pillars of freedom, one of the principles of liberty for which on recent authority we are now fighting …”

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  • Mr. President should declare his intention now

    As the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC released the time table for next year’s election, activities for the election could be said to have started.

    Just recently, President Goodluck Jonathan was speaking on CNBC Africa that he was waiting for the go-ahead from INEC for him to declare his intention on whether to contest or not.

    We Nigerians assume with the release of this time table, it behoves on President Goodluck Jonathan to make his intention known to all Nigerians to douse the already tense atmosphere in the polity.

    Also, his declared intention now would afford Nigerians to measure his achievements.

    The development in the country as regards this administration’s wish to move it forward calls for more concerted efforts on the part of Nigerians, whether to give Mr. President another mandate of governing them for another four years, which would shape or mar their collective aspirations.

    Nigerians would be at a vantage position knowing the kind of leadership that would be saddled with the responsibility of giving the country leadership needed for the overall development of the country.

    Bala Nayashi, No 1 Yashi Area, Lokoja

  • Mr President, save Nigeria

    Mr President, save Nigeria

    Before it is too late

    I am constrained to make this an open letter to you for a number of reasons.

    One, the current situation and consequent possible outcome dictate that I should, before the door closes on reason and promotion of national interest, alert you to the danger that may be lurking in the corner.

    Two, none of the four or more letters that I have written to you in the past two years or so has elicited an acknowledgement nor any response.

    Three, people close to you, if not yourself, have been asking, what does Obasanjo want?

    Four, I could sense a semblance between the situation that we are gradually getting into and the situation we fell into as a nation during the Abacha era.

    Five, everything must be done to guard, protect and defend our fledging democracy, nourish it and prevent bloodshed.

    Six, we must move away from advertently or inadvertently dividing the country along weak seams of North-South and Christian-Moslem.

    Seven, nothing should be done to allow the country to degenerate into economic dormancy, stagnation or retrogression.

    Eight, some of our international friends and development partners are genuinely worried about signs and signals that are coming out of Nigeria.

    Nine, Nigeria should be in a position to take advantage of the present favourable international interest to invest in Africa – an opportunity that will not be open for too long.

    Ten, I am concerned about your legacy and your climb-down which you alone can best be the manager of, whenever you so decide.

    Mr. President, you have on a number of occasions acknowledged the role God enabled me to play in your ascension to power. You put me third after God and your parents among those that have impacted most in your life. I have always reported that God only put you where you are and those that could be regarded as having played a role were only instrument of God to achieve God’s purpose in your life. For me, I believe that politically, It was in the best interest of Nigeria that you, a Nigerian from minority group in the South could rise to the highest pinnacle of political leadership. If Obasanjo could get there, Yar’Adua could get there and Jonathan could get there, any Nigerian can. It is now not a matter of the turn of any section. It has been proved that no group ethnic, linguistic, religious of geographical location – has monopoly of materials for leadership of our country. And no group solely by itself can crown any of its members the Nigeria CEO. It is good for Nigeria. I have also always told you that God has graciously been kind, generous, merciful and compassionate to me and He has done more that I could have ever hoped for. I want nothing from you personally except that you should run the affairs of Nigeria not only to make Nigeria good, but to make Nigeria great for which I have always pleaded that you and I will always do so. And it is yet to be done for most Nigeria to see.

    For five capacities in which you find yourself, you must hold yourself most significantly responsible for what happens or fails to happen in Nigeria and in any case most others will hold you responsible and God who put you there will surely hold you responsible and accountable. I have had opportunity, in recent time, to interact closely with you and I have come to the conclusion painfully or happily that if you can shun yourself to a great extent of personal and political interest and dwell more on the national interest and also draw the line between advice from selfish and self-centered aides and advice from those who in the interest of the national may not tell you what you want to hear, it will be well. The five positions which you share with nobody except with God and which place great and grave responsibility on you are leadership of the ruling party, headship of the Federal Government or national government, Commander-in-Chief of the Military, Chief Security Officer of the nation, and the political leader of the country. Those positions go with being the President of our country and while depending on your disposition you can delegate or devolve responsibility, but the buck must stop on your table whether you like it or not.

    Let me start with the leadership of the ruling party. Many of us were puzzled over what was going on in the party. Most party members blamed the National Chairman. I understand that some in the presidency tried to create the impression that some of us were to blame. The situation became clear only when the National Chairman spoke out that he never did anything or acted in any way without the approval or concurrence of the Party Leader and that where the Party Leader disapproved, he made correction or amendment, that we realized most actions were those of the Chairman but the motivation and direction were those of the Leader. It would be unfair to continue to level full blames on the Chairman for all that goes wrong with the Party. The Chairman is playing the tune dictated by the Paymaster. But the Paymaster is action for a definitive purpose for which deceit and deception seem to be the major ingredients. Up till two months ago, Mr President, you told me that you have not told anybody that you would contest in 2015. I quickly pointed out to you that the signs and the measures on the ground do not tally with your statement. You said the same to one other person who shared his observation with me. And only a fool would believe that statement you made to me judging by what is going on. I must say that it is not ingenious. You may wish to pursue a more credible and more honourable path. Although you have not formally informed me one way or the other, it will be necessary to refresh your memory of what transpired in 2011. I had gone to Benue State for the marriage of one of my staff, Vitalis told me that you had accepted a one-term of six years for the President and that by the time you have used the unexpired time of your predecessor and the four years of your first term, you would have almost used up to six years and you would not need any more term or time. Later, I heard from other sources including sources close to you that you made the same commitment elsewhere, hence, my inclusion of it in my Address at the finale of your campaign in 2011 as follows:

    “…PDP should be praised for being the only party that enshrines federal character, zoning and rotation in its Constitution and practices it. PDP has brought stability and substantial predictability to the polity and to the system. I do not know who will be President of Nigeria after Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. That is in the hand of God. But with PDP policy and practice, I can reasonably guess from where, in term of section of the country, the successor to President Jonathan will come. And no internal democracy or competition will thereby be destroyed. The recent resort to sentiments and emotions of religion and regionalism is self-serving, unpatriotic and mischievous, to say the least. It is also preying on dangerous emotive issues that can ignite uncontrollable passion and can distabilise if not destroy our country. This is being oblivious of the sacrifices others have made in the past for unity, stability and democracy in Nigeria in giving up their lives, shedding their blood and in going to prison. I personally have done two out of those three sacrifices and I am ready to do the third if it will serve the best interest of Nigerian dream. Let met appeal to those who have embarked on this dangerous road to reflect and desist from taking us on a perishable journey. With common identity as Nigerians, there is more that binds us than separates us. I am a Nigerian, born a Yoruba man, and I am proud of both identities as they are for me complementary. Our duties responsibilities and obligations to our country as citizens and, indeed, as leaders must go side by side with our rights and demands. There must be certain values and virtues that must go concomitantly with our dream. Thomas Paine said “my country is the world,” for me, my country I hold dear.

    On two occasions, I have had

    opportunity to work for my

    successors to the government of Nigeria. On both occasions, I never took the easy and distabilising route or ethnic, regional or religious consideration rather I look the enduring route of national, uniting and stabilizing route. I worked for both President Shagari and President Yar’Adua to succeed me not just because they are Moslems, Northerners or Hausa-Fulani, but because they could strengthen the unity, stability and democracy in Nigeria. We incurred the displeasure of ethnic auvinists for doing what was right for the country. That is in the nature of burden of leadership. A leader must lead no matter whose ox is gored.

    In the present circumstance, let me reiterate what I have said on a number of occasions. Electing Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, in his own right and on his own merit, as the President of Nigeria will enhance and strengthen our unity, stability and democracy. And it will lead us towards the achievement of our Nigeria dream.

    There is press report that Dr. Goodluck Jonathan has already taken a unique and unprecedented step of declaring that he would only want to be a one-term President. If so, whether we know it or not, that is a sacrifice and it is states manly. Rather than vilify him and pull him down, we, as a Party, should applaud and commend him and Nigerians should reward and venerate him. He has taken the first good step.

    Let us encourage him to take more good steps by voting him in with landslide victory as the fourth elected President of Nigeria on the basis of our common Nigerian identity and for the purpose of actualizing Nigeria dream…”

    When you won the election, one of the issues you very early pursued was that of one term of six years. That convinced me that you meant what you told me before my Speech at the campaign. Mr President, whatever may be your intention or plan, I cannot comment much on the constitutional aspect of your second term or what some people call third term. That is for both legal and judicial attention. But if constitutionally you are on a strong wicket if you so decide, it will be fatally morally flawed. As a leader, two things you must cherish and hold dear among others are trust and honour both of which are important ingredients of character. I will want to see anyone in the Office of the Presidency of Nigeria as a man or woman who can be trusted, a person of honour in his words and character. I will respect you for upholding these attributes and for dignifying that office. Chinua Achebe said, “One of the truest test of integrity is its blunt refusal to be compromised. It is a lesson for all leaders including you and me. However, Mr President, let me hope that as you claimed that you have not told anybody that you are contesting and that what we see and hear is a rumbling of overzealous aides, you will remain a leader that can be believed and trusted without unduly passing the buck or engaging in game of denials.

    Maybe you also need to know that many party members feel disappointed in the double game you were alleged to play in support of party gubernatorial candidates in some States where you surreptitiously supported non-PDP candidates against PDP candidates in exchange for promise or act of those non-PDP Governors supporting you for your election in the past or for the one that you are yet to formally declare. It happened in Lagos in 2011 when Bola Tinubu was nocturnally brought to Abuja to strike a deal for support for your personal election at great price materially and in the fortune of PDP gubernatorial candidate. As Chairman of BOT, I spoke to you at that time. It happened in Ondo State where there was in addition evidence of cover-up and non-prosecution of fraud of fake security report against the non-PDP candidate and his collaborators for the purpose of extracting personal electoral advantage for you. In fact, I have raised with you the story of those in other States in the South-West where some disgruntled PDP members were going around to recruit people into the Labour Party for you, because, for electoral purpose at the national level, Labour Party will have no candidate but you. It also happened in Edo State and those who know the detail never stopped talking about it. And you know it. Ditto in Anambra state with the fiasco coming from undue interference. If you as leader of the Party cannot be seen to interests of such Party candidates have to be sacrificed an the altar of your personal and political interest, then good such to the Party and I will also say as I have had occasions to say in the past, good luck to Goodluck. If on the altar of the Party you go for broke, the Party may be broken beyond repairs. And when in a dispute between two sides, they both stubbornly decide to fight to the last drop of blood, no one knows whose blood would be the last to drop.

    In such a situation, Nigeria as a

    nation may also be adversely af

    fected, not just the PDP. I wish to see no more bloodshed occasioned by politics in Nigeria Please, Mr. President, be mindful of that. You were exemplary in words when during the campaign and the 2011 elections, you said. My election si not worth spilling the blood of any Nigerian. From you, it should not be if it has to be, let it be. It should be from you, it should not be if it has to be, let it be. It should be from you, let peace, security, harmony, good governance, development and progress be for Nigeria. That is also your responsibility and mandate. You can do it and I plead that you do it. We all have to be mindful of not securing Pyrrhic victory on the ashes of grant values, attributes and issues that matter as it would amount to hallow victory without honour and integrity.

    Whatever may be the feud in PDP and no matter what you or your aides may feel, you, as the Party Leader, have the responsibility to find solution, resolve and fix it. Your legacy is involved. If PDP as a ruling Party collapses, it will be the first time in an independent Nigeria that a ruling political party would collapse not as a result of a military coup. It is food for though. At the prompting of Governors on both sides of the divide, and on encouragement from you, I spent two nights to intervene in the dispute of the PDP governors. I kept you fully briefed at every stage. I deliberately chose Banquet Hall at the Villa to ensure transparency. Your aides studied all the recordings of the two nights. But I told you at the end of the exercise that I observed five reactions among the Governors that required your immediate attention as you are the only one from the vantage point of your five positions that could deal effectively with the five reactions which were bitterness, anger, mistrust, fear and deep suspicion. I could only hope that you made efforts to deal with these unpleasant reactions. The feud leading to the factionalisation of the Patty made me to invite some select elders of the Party to mediate again. Since I was engaged in assignment outside the country, I was not able to join the three members of the elders group that presented the report of our mediation to you. I was briefed that you agreed to work on the report of our mediation to you. I was briefed that you agreed to work on the report. It would appear that for now the ball is in your court as the Leader of the Party. I can only wish you every success in your handling of the issue. But time is neither your friend nor that of the Party in this respect. With leadership come not just power and authority to do and to undo, but also responsibility and accountability to do and to undo rightly, well and justly. Time and opportunity are treasure that must be appreciated and shared to enhance their value and utilitarianism.

    It is instructive that after half a

    dozen African Presidents have

    spoken to me to help you with unifying the Party based on your request to them and I came in company of Senator Amadu All to discuss the whole issue with you again, strangely, you denied ever requesting or authorizing any President to talk to me. I was not surprised because I am used to such a situation of denial coming from you. Of course, I was not deterred. I have done and I will continue to do and say what is first, in the best interest of Nigeria and second, what is in the best interest of the Party. I stand for the aims, objectives, mission and vision of the founding fathers of the Party, to use it as a wholesome instrument of unity, good governance, development, prosperity and progress of Nigeria and all Nigerians. I have contributed to this goal in the past and no one who has been raised to position on the platform of the Party should shy away from further contribution to avoid division and destruction of the Party on any altar whatsoever.

    Debates and dialogues are necessary to promote the interest and work for the progress of any human institution or organization. I such a situation, agreements and disagreements will occur but in the final analysis, leadership will pursue the course of action that benefit the majority and serve the purpose of the organization, not the purpose of an individual or a minority. In that process, unity is sustained and everybody becomes a winner. The so-called crisis in the PDP can be turned to an opportunity of unity, mutual understanding and respect with the Party emerging with enhanced strength and victory. It will be a win-win for all members of the Party and for the country. By that, PDP would have proved that it could have internal disagreement and emerge stronger. The calamity of failure can still be avoided. Please, move away from fringes or the extremes and move to the centre and carry ALL along. Time is running out.

    I will only state that as far as your responsibility as Chief Security Officer of the nation is concerned for Nigerians, a lot more needs to be done to enhance the feeling of security amongst them. Whether one talks of the issue of militancy in the Niger Delta, the underlying causes of which have not been adequately addressed, if addressed at all, kidnapping, piracy, abductions and armed robberies which rather than abate are on the increase and Boko Haram which requires carrot and stick approach to lay its ghost to rest, the general genesis of Boko Haram and the reasons for escalation of violence from that sector with the widespread and ramification of the menace of Boko Haram within and outside the Nigerian borders, conventional military actions based on standard phases of military operations alone will not permanently and effectively deal with the issue of Boko Haram. There are many strands or layers of causes that require different solutions, approaches or antidotes. Drug, indoctrination, fundamentalism, un trafficking, hate culture, human trafficking, money laundering, religion, poverty, unemployment, poor education, revenge and international terrorism are among factors that have effect on Boko Haram. One single prescription cannot cure all these ailments that combine in Boko Haram. Should we pursue war against violence without in book Haram. Should we pursue war against violence and applying solutions to deal with all underlying factors root, stem and branches? Nigeria is bleeding and the hemorrhage must be stopped. I am convinced that you can initiate measures that will bring all hands on deck to deal effectively with this great menace.

    Mr. President, the most important qualification for your present position is your being a Nigeria. Whatever else you may be besides being a Nigerian is only secondary for this purpose. And is majority of Nigerians who voted had not cast their votes for you, you could not have been there. For you to allow yourself to be “possessed”, so to say, to the exclusion of most of the rest of Nigerians as an “Ijaw man’ is a mistake that should never have been allowed to happen. Yes, you have to be born in one part of Nigeria to be a Nigerian if not naturalized but the Nigerian President must be above ethnic factionalism. And those who prop you up as of, and for ‘Ijaw nation’ are not your friends genuinely, not friends of Nigeria nor friends of ‘Ijaw nation’, they tout about. To allow or tacitly encourage encourage people of “Ijaw nation’ to throw insults on other Nigerians from other parts of the country and threaten fire and brimstone to protect your interest as an Ijaw man is myopic and your not openly quieting them is even more unfortunate. You know that I have expressed my views and feelings to you on this issue in the past but I have come to realize that many others feel the way I have earlier ecxpressed to you. It is not the best way of making friendship among all sections of Niger. You don’t have shared and wholesome society without inclusive political, economic and social sustainable development and good governance. Also declaring that one section of the country voted for you as if you no voted from other sections can only be an unnecessary tall, to put it mildly. After all and at the end of the day, democracy is a game of number. Even, if you would not need people’s vote across the country again, your political Party will.

    Allegation of keeping over 1,000 people on political watch list rather than criminal or security watch list and training snappers and other armed personnel secretly and clandestinely acquiring weapons to match for political purposes like Abacha and training them where Abacha trained his won killers, if it is true, it cannot augur well for the initiator, the government and the people of Nigeria. Here again, there is the lesson of history to learn from for anybody who cares to learn from hsitroy. Mr. President would always remember that he was elected to maintain security for all Nigerians and protect them. And not one should prepare to kill or maim Nigerians for personal or political ambition or interest of anyone. The Yoruba adage says, “The man with those head coconut is broken may not live to savour the taste of the succulent.” Those who advise you to go hard on those who oppose you are your worst enemies. Democratic politics admits and is permissive of supporters and opponents. When the consequences come, those who have wrongly advised you will not be there to help carry the can. Egypt must teach some lesson.

    Presidential assistance for a murderer to evade justice and presidential delegation to welcome him home can only be in bad taste generally but particularly to the family of his victim. Assisting criminals to evade justice cannot be part of the job of the presidency. Or, as it is viewed is some quarters, is he being recruited to do for you what he had done for Abacha in part? Hopefully, he should have learned his lesson. Let us continue to watch.

    As Head of Government, the buck of the performance and non-performance stops on your table and let nobody tell you anything to the contrary. Most of our friends and development partners are worried and they see what we pretend to cover up. They are worried about issue of security internally and on our coastal waters including heavy oil theft, alias bunkering and piracy. They are worried about corruption and what we are doing on not doing about it. Corruption has reached the level on impunity. It is also necessary to be mindful that corruption and injustice are fertile breeding ground for terrorism and political instability. And if you are not ready to name, shame, prosecute and stoutly fight against corruption, whatever you do will be hollow. It will be a laughing matter. They are worried about how we play our role in our region and indeed in the world. In a way, I share some of their concerns because there are notable areas we can do more or do better than we are doing. Some of our development partners were politically frustrated to withdraw from Olokola LNG project, which happily was not yet the same with Brass. I initiated them both. They were viable and would have taken us close to Qatar as LNG into active implementation. The major international oil companies have withheld investment in projects in Nigeria. If they have not completely moved out, they are disinvesting. Nigeria which is the Saudi of African in oil and gas terms is being overtaken by Angola only because necessary decisions are not made timely and appropriately. Mr. President, let me again plead with you to be decisive on the oil and gas sector so that Nigeria may not lag behind. Oil with gas is being discovered all over Africa. New technology is producing oil from shale elsewhere. We should make hay while the sun shines. I hope we can still save OK and Brass LNG projects. Three things are imperative in the oil and gas sector – stop oil stealing, encourage investment especially by the IOC’s and improve the present poor management of the industry. On the economy generally, it suffices to say that we could be better than we are doing. The signs are there and the expectations are high. The most dangerous ticking bomb is youth unemployment particularly in the face of unbridled corruption and obscene ruler’s opulence.

    Let me repeat that as far as the issue corruption, security and oil stealing is concerned, it is only apt to say that when the guard becomes the thief, nothing is safe, secure and nor protected in the house. We must all remember that corruption, inequity and injustice breed poverty, unemployment, conflict, violence and wittingly or unwittingly create terrorists because the opulence of the governor can only lead to the leanness of the governed. But God never sleeps. He is watching, waiting and bidding His time to dispense justice.

    The serious and strong allegation of non-remitting of about $7 billion from NNPC to Central bank occurring from export of some 300,000 barrels per day, amounting to $900 million a month, to be refined and with refined products of only $400 million returned and Atlantic Oil loading about 130,000 barrels sold by Shell and managed on behalf of NPDC with no sale proceeds paid into NPDC account is incredible. The allegation was buttressed by the letter of Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria to you on non-remittance to Central Bank. This allegation will not fly away by non-action, cover-up, denial or bribing possible investigators. Please deal with this allegation transparently and let the truth be known.

    The dramatis personae in this allegation and who they are working for will one day be public-knowledge. Those who know are watching if the National Assembly will not be accomplice in the heinous crime and naked grand corruption. May God grant you the grace for at least one effective corrective action against high corruption which seems to stink all around you in your government?

    The international community

    knows us as we are and maybe

    more than we claim to know ourselves. And a good friend will tell you the truth no matter how bitter. Denials and cover-up of what is obvious, true and factual can detract from honour, dignity and respect. Truth and transparency dignify and earn respect. And life without passion for something can only achieve little. I was taken aback when an African Development Bank Director informed that the water project for Port-Harcourt, originally initiated by the Federal Government to be financed by the bank, is being out in the cooler by the Federal Government since the Amaechi-Jonathan face-off. Amaechim, whether he likes it or not, will cease to be Governor over Rivers State which Port-Harcourt will continued to need improvement of their water supply. President Jonathan should rise above such pettiness and unpresidential act, if it is coming from hi,. But if not, and it is the action of overzealous officials reading the situation, he should give appropriate instruction for the project to be pursued. And if there other projects anywhere suffering the same coolness as a result of similar situation let national interest supercede personal or political feud and the machinations of satanic officials.

    Mr. President, let me plead with you for a few things that will stand you in good stead for the rest of your life. Don’t always consider critics on national issues as enemies. Some of them may be as patriotic and nationalistic as you and I who had been in government. Some of them have as much passion for Nigeria as we have. I saw that among Nigerians living abroad, hence, I initiated Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation, NIDO. You must also differentiate between malevolent, mischievous and object criticism. Analyses, criticisms and commentaries on government actions and policies are sinew of democracy. Please, Mr. President, be very wary of assistants, aides and collaborators who look for enemies for you. I have seen them with you and some were around me when I was in your position. I knew how not to allow them created enemies for me. If you allow them, everybody except them will be your enemy. They are more dangerous than identified adversaries.

    May God save leaders from sycophants. They know what you want to hear and they feed you with it essentially for their own selfish interest. As far as you and Nigeria are concerned, they are wreckers. Where were they when God used others to achieve God’s will in your life. They possess you now for their interest. No interest should be higher or more important than Nigerian interest o you. You have already made history and please do nothing to mar history, I supported you as I supported Yar’Adua. For me there is neither North-South divide nor Christian-Moslem divide but one Nigeria.

    Let me put it, that talks, loose and serious abound about possible abuse and misuse of the military and the legitimate security apparatus for unwholesome personal and political interest to the detriment of the honour , dignity, oath and professionalism of these honourable and patriotic forces. Let me urge the authorities not to embark on such destructive path for an important element of our national make-up. The roles of the military and the security of the nation. Again, let not history repeat itself here.

    I believe that with what Nigeria has gone through in the past, the worst should have already happened. It must be your responsibility as the captain of the ship to prevent the ship from going aground on from a shipwreck. For anybody close to you saying that if the worst happens, he or she would not be involved in an idle and loose talk. If we leave God to do His will and we don’t rely only on our own efforts, plans and wisdom, God will always do His best. And the power of money and belief in it is satanically tempting. As I go around Nigeria and the world, I always cme across Nigerians who are first-class citizens of the world and who are doing well where they are and who are passionate to do well for Nigeria. My hope for our country lies in these people. They abound and I hope that all of us will realize that they are the jewels of Nigeria wherever they may be and not those who arrogate to themselves eternal for ephemeral.

    Also to my embarrassment at times, I learned more about what is going on in the public and private sectors of Nigeria from our development partners, international institutions and those transacting business in Nigeria most times I was abroad. On returning home to verify the veracity of these stories. I found some of them not only to be true but more horrifying than they were presented abroad. Other countries look up to Nigeria for regional leadership. Failure on the part of Nigeria will create a schism that will be bad for the region.

    Knowing what happens around you most of which you know of and condone or deny, this letter will provoke cacophony from hired and unhired attackers but I will maintain my serenity because by this letter, I have done my duty to you as I have always done to your government, to the Party, PDP< and to our country, Nigeria, If I stuck out my neck and God uses me and others as instrument to work hard for you to reach where you are today in what I considered the best political interest of Nigeria, tagging me as your enemy or the enemy of your administration by you, your kin or your aides can only be regarded as ridiculous to extreme. If I set any danger to your life, I will point it out to you or ward it off as I have done in the past. But I will not support what I believe is not in the best interest of Nigeria, no matter who is putting it forward or who is behind it. Mr President, I have passed the stage of being flattered, intimidated, threatened, frightened, induced or bought. I am never afraid to agree or disagree but it will always be on principles, and if on politics, in the close proximity of and sharing facilities with an asylum in Yola, there is nothing worse for anyone alive and well. And that was for a military dictator to perpetuate himself in power. Death is the end of all human beings and may it come when God wills it to come. The harassment of my relations and friends and innuendo that are coming from the Government security apparatus on whether they belong to new PDP or supporters of defected Governors and which are possibly authorized or are the work of overzealous aides and those reading your lips to act in your interest will be counter-productive. It is abuse of security apparatus. Such abuse took place last in the time of Abacha. Lies and untruths about be emanating from presidency is too absurd to contemplate. Saying that I recommended a wanted criminal by UK and USA authorities to you or your aides to supplant legitimately elected PDP leader in South-West is not only unwise and crude but also disingenuous. Nobody in his or her right senses will believe such a story and surely nobody in Ogun State or Soutwest zone will believe such nonsense. It is a clear indication of how unscrupulous and unethical the presidency can go to pursue you personal and political interest. Nothing else matters. What a pity! Nothing at this stage of my life would prevent me from standing for whatever I consider to be in the best interest of Nigeria – all Nigeria, Africa and the world in that order. I believe strongly that a united and strong PDP at all costs is in the best interest of Nigeria. In these respects, if our interests and views coincide, together we will march. Putting a certified unashamed criminal wanted abroad to face justice and who has greatly contributed to corruption within the judiciary on a high profile of politics as you and your aides have done with the man you enthrone as PDP Zonal leader in the Southwest is the height of disservice to this country politically and height of insult to the people of southwest in general and members of PDP in that zone in particular. For me, my politics goes with principles and morality and I will not be a party to highly profiling criminals in politics, not to say one would be my zonal leader. It destroys what politics not to say one would be zonal leader. It destroys what PDP stands for from its inception. By the government not acting positively and promptly in the case of Kashamu wanted in the US for drug trafficking and money laundering crimes, it is only confirming the persistent reports of complicity or involvement of high-level political figures in drug trafficking and condonation of the crime for political benefit. Whichever way, it is vey dangerous development for Nigeria. Sooner than later, drug barons will be in control of large real estates, banks and other seemingly legitimate businesses; in elections, they will buy candidates, parties and eventually buy power or be in power themselves. It may be instructive if I quote fairly extensively from Lansana Gberie’s recent paper titled: State Officials and Their Involvement in Drug Trafficking in West Africa’.

    The controversial and puzzling case of Buruji Kashamu, a powereful figure in the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), suggests that a successful and wealthy politicians’ association with drug trafficking is hardly disabling, Kashamu wsindicted by a grand jury in the Northern District of Illinois in 1998 for conspiracy to import an distribute heroin to the United States. The indictment named him under his own name as well as two supposes aliases; his co-accused were tried and convicted. Later that year, he was found living comfortably in England, and on receipt of an extradition request from the US, the UK authorities arrest Kashamu. After a very protracted proceeding lasting until 2003, however, an English Judge refused to extradite Kashamu on grounds of uncertainty about his true identity. Kashamu triumphantly returned to Nigeria and soon after became a key political figure. He is now believed to be very close to President Goodluck Jonathan, because of his ability to mobilize votes in key States in Western Nigeria. The US government reviewed Kashamu’s case, with the famous Judge Richard Posner presiding. Posner concluded that while Kashamu’s identity remain murky, there is little doubt that the figure now exercising authority in Nigeria’s PDP is the same Kashamu the ‘Alaji’ who was indicted for conspiracy to smuggle illicit drugs into the United States. Despite this, the Nigerian government has persistently ignored calls by civil society groups to investigate Kashamu and extradite him to the US. On July 2, 2013, the Federal Court in Lagos determined that Kashamu should be extradited to the US. Kashamu immediately appealed against this decision, yet in November 2013, a new Panel of Judges constituted by the President of the Court of Appeal unanimously held that his appeal lacked merit, and Kashamu should be extradited. His extradition to the United States will certainly set an important precedent …unless, of course, he uses his political skills and contacts to continue avoiding it…”

    God is never a supporter of evil and will surely save PDP and Nigeria from the hands of destroyers. If everything fails and the party cannot be retrieved from the hands of criminals and commercial jobbers and discredited touts, men and women of honour, principles, morality and integrity must step aside to rethink.

    Let me also appeal to and urge defected, dissatisfied, disgruntled and in any way displeased PDP Governors, legislators, party officials and party members to respond positively if the President seriously takes the initiative to find mutually agreeable solution to the current problems for which he alone has the key and the initiative. I have heard it said particularly within the presidency circle that the disaffected Governors and members of PDP are my children. I begin to wonder if, from top to bottom, any PDP member in elective office today is not directly or indirectly a beneficiary and, so to say, my political child. Anyone who may claim otherwise will be like a river that has forgotten its source. But like a good father, all I seek is peaceful and amicable solution that will re-unite the family for victory and progress of the family and the nation and nothing else.

    In a democracy, leaders are elected to lighten the burden of the people, give them freedom, choice and equity and ensure good governance and not to deceive them, burden them, oppress them, render them hopeless and helpless. Nothing should be done to undermine the tenets, and values of democratic principles and practice. Tyranny in all its manifestation may be appealing to a leader in trying times of political feud or disagreement. Democracy must, however, prevail and be held as sacrosanct. Today, you are the President of Nigeria, I acknowledge you and respect you as such.

    The act of an individual has a way of rubbing off on the generality. May it never be the wish of majority of Nigerians that Goodluck Jonathan, by his acts of omission or commission, would be the first and the last Nigerian President ever to come from Ijaw tribe. The idea and the possibility must give all of us food for thought. That was never what I worked for and that would never be what I will work for. But legacy is made of such or the opposite.

    My last piece of advice, Mr. President, is that you should learn the lesson of history and please do not take Nigeria and Nigerians for granted. Move away from culture of denials, cover-ups and proxies and deal honestly, sincerely and transparently with Nigerians to regain their trust and confidence. Nigerians are no fools, they can see, they can hear, they can talk among themselves, they can think, they can compare and they can act in the interest of their country and in their own self-interest. They keenly watch all actions and deeds that are associated with you if they cannot believe your words. I know you have the power to save PDP and the country. I beg you to have the courage and the will with patriotism to use the power for the good of the country. Please uphold some form of national core values. I will appeal to all Nigerians particularly all members of PDP to respect and dignify the Office of the President. We must all know that individuals will come and go but the Office will remain.

    Once again, time is of the essence. Investors are already retreating from Nigeria, adopting ‘wait and see attitude’ and knowing what we are deficient of, it will take time to reverse the trend and we may miss some golden opportunities.

    Finally, your later-day conversion into National Conference is fraught with danger of disunity, confusion and chaos if not well handled. I believe in debate and dialogue but it must be purposeful, directed and managed well without ulterior motives. The ovation has not died out yet and there is always life after a decent descent.

    Accept, Dear Mr. President, the assurances of my highest consideration.

    Your Sincerely

    OLUSEGUN OBASANJO

    PS

    I crave your indulgence to share the contents of this letter, in the first instance, with General Ibrahim Babangida and General Abdulsalami Abubakar, who, on a number of occasions in recent times, have shared with me their agonizing thoughts, concerns and expressions on most of the issues I have raised in this letter concerning the situation and future of our country. I also crave your indulgence to share the contents with General Yakubu Danjuma and Dr. Alex Ekwueme, whose concerns for and commitments to the good of Nigeria have been known to be strong. The limit of sharing of the contents may be extended as time goes on.

    Olusegun Obasanjo

  • Two things God didn’t  give Mr. President

    Two things God didn’t give Mr. President

    President Goodluck Jonathan did not hide his feelings on Sunday last week when he jokingly confessed that there were two things God did not give him.

    The two things, he said, were singing and dancing.

    Praises and dancing, no doubt, are two of the several ways human beings can show appreciation to God and move Him to do more.

    The occasion for Mr. President to shake his body presented itself during the Pre-centenary National Praise and Thanksgiving Service held at the Banquet Hall of the State House with songs and praises rendered by gospel artists Hope Davis, Frank Edward, Judy Jacob, Kurt Carr and Nigeria’s Mass Choir.

    The President, no doubt, was in his best spirits before and during the praise service as he was radiant and very happy with the outcome of the Super Eagles’ first-leg World Cup qualifier match against the Antelopes of Ethiopia in Addis Ababa.

    The match, for which the commencement of the praise and worship service was delayed for about two hours ended 2–1 in favour of Nigeria.

    Because God has backed him up in the steering of the ship of state and specifically answering his prayer concerning the Super Eagles’ match that afternoon, many Nigerians who had gathered for the praise and thanksgiving service expected to see President Jonathan dance like King David did severally before the Lord in the Holy Bible.

    They might have been disappointed because, rather than showing much outward appreciation, the President must have done more inward appreciation to God as he was elated throughout the praise and thanksgiving service.

    Making a remark just before the curtain was drawn on the Praise and Thanksgiving Service, President Jonathan said: “If you don’t hear my voice, you will think I am not happy. This event is quite remarkable for me.

    “When he was introducing the programme, he did mention that all of us will dance. Even though I normally say I don’t know how to dance, dancing and singing have not been part of me. Those are two things that God did not give me. But you reminded me that I danced during the Presidential Campaign. Ordinarily, I would have given you that baboon dance.”

    Knowing that ‘Goodluck’ has followed him in his political career over the years, President Jonathan can still be endowed with the gifts of singing and dancing if he really desires it from the Lord.

    To show more outward appreciation in praises and dancing to the Almighty God for His goodness, Mr. President could also squeeze out time from his tight schedule for about 10 minutes’ practice per day.

    In no time, he will do those things perfectly and better than most Nigerian choristers.

  • Mr. President must hear this

    I recently visited Toronto. On Our way from the airport, I engaged my host in a discussion about the country in general. These are some of the insights:

    First was the deliberate plan of the Canadian government to discourage excessive wealth acquisition. How is it done? I probed. Due to the transparency in the system, all monies earned are traceable. Therefore, the more money you make, the more the tax you pay. This made a lot of sense to me. Wealth can easily be spread and too much affluence will not reside with few as we have in Nigeria.

    As each day progressed, I learnt new things. I discovered that their housing system was well structured; my host enlightened me on their mortgage system. One deposits about 30% of the house value with interest rate of not more than 5% with credit receivable after 5 years. What that means is that you could sell the house after 5 years and use the credit to buy a bigger house if one desires. To my chagrin, I discovered that cars are leased to buyers at interest free loan payable within 78 months.

     I also learnt that people pay heavy tax but enjoy the value in the provisions of good road, free health care and education. Government pays for all students. There is legislation for students to attend schools within a geographical axis they reside. My host told me that, the choice of their children’s school informed where they live.

    On my way back to Nigeria, the problem started from the airport as the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) officials could not set bars for passengers to queue on a straight line. With the air conditioners not working, chaos started. Anyway, we grumbled our way through immigration and waited again endlessly for our baggage to roll out of the conveyor belt. The custom men too harassed what is left of the tolerance in some of us.

    By the time I got to Lagos Ibadan expressway, the road I left bad a few weeks ago had gone worse due to rain and usage. I thought the contract for this road was awarded? I asked myself. Couldn’t the contractor patch the bad portions and reduce traffic on this road? On entering my area, the roads were almost impassable. On getting home, there was no light, we had to start the generator to first pump water and enjoy electricity by polluting the environment. I was seriously depressed and felt like selling all I have acquired and relocate.

    As I was reflecting on my predicament, my friend who accompanied me from the airport said  ” Agagu is dead.” Without much thought, two things about him flashed through my memory. What will Nigerians and people of Ondo State remember him for when he was minister for power and steel and governor?

    Life truly is vanity. Agagu is gone but our President is still alive and can make the necessary change. This 2015 distraction is too much. It looks like a deliberate ploy for him to fail.  Obasanjo gave us GSM, Mr. President should give us light.

    Remember, all you have is today. Tomorrow is in God’s hand.

    Kupoluyi works in Lagos and live in Ogun State

  • And Mr. President rang the 2015 bell

    And Mr. President rang the 2015 bell

    It has been an open secret for so long. And unless we want to elevate pretence to an art with teeth deeply buriedin the tongue,

    we must agree that there is nothing new in the declaration in New Yorkby President Goodluck Jonathan that he might be running for the Presidency in 2015. Everyone had long concludedthat he was going to run. We had always known that his aides would

    soon run out of the web of tendentious lies they had regularly spunto justify his ‘disinterest’ in talking about his future. Those conversant with the key role deceit plays in our politics had projected that apresidential declaration of intent to contest the 2015 election was just a matter of time.It is, therefore, not surprising that Mr. Jonathan merely confirmed what we had known all along. The only surprise is the illogical, not so patriotic decision to announce it on foreign soil. Indeed, how many American Presidents ever announced such electoral ambition after visiting the Nigerian Stock Exchange? Sometimes, GEJ does not even pretend or try enough to make us feel proud. He chose to announce his grand entry into the race in New York City, United States of America, where he had gone for the United Nations General Assembly. It is also quite interesting that the declaration of a willingness to throw his hat in the ring came somefew hours before Jonathan was giventhe honour to ring the closing bellat the prestigious New York Stock Exchange, (NYSE). As far as his supporters are concerned, it is not,by any shade of imagination, a mean fit for Jonathan to go down in history as Nigeria’s first leader to ring the closing bell at the NYSE.

    The uninitiated is likely to ask: what’s the fuss about ringing a stock exchange bell? A lot, I dare say. The symbolism should not belost to those who know how to read the temperature of the politicalcalculus in this clime. It doesn’t matter how insignificant that gesture is to the Americans, we do know here that it is a veritableavenue for scoring cheap political points. In a country where governors now list the successful celebration of their birthdays, construction of lavatories and building of Olympic-sized swimmingpools as “monumental achievements,” it is not impossible that the NYSE’sclosing-bell-ringing event may find its way into the President’s campaign posters. You can only perish that thought at your own peril.

    With this in mind, do you still wonder why the anti and pro-Jonathan camps have taken the battle online? While some feel there is nothing specialabout the event, his staunch supporters argue that he should becommended and congratulated for a successful outing at the NYSE. Now don’t be surprised if some political jobbers decide to take it to thenext level by churning out millions of naira for the publication ofadvertorials, congratulating the President for making Nigeria proud atthe 68th Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations in New York, United States. That’s how low we have sunk. But then, I digress.

    Those waiting on Jonathan to make his intentions on 2015 known in ‘black and white’ will have to wait in perpetuity. What is important is that he has, in his usual fashion, chosen to make his stance on the matter public in the US. That’s a minor problem considering the fact that we have been told that the President can decide to rule and issue policy directives from any part of the world. Or was it not alleged that Jonathan told Nigerians in the diaspora and diplomats in Ankara, Turkey in February 2011 that he was not going to run in 2015? How about the statement he made in an African country to the effect that he would only serve single four-year tenure in office? Now that he has decided to change the rhythm in New York, why should anyone fret? We really do notneed the help of a clairvoyant to interpret his body language or thedepth of his words. Clearly, there is no point asking his official spokesman, Dr. Reuben Abati, if it was right to read meanings to hisassertion that the Constitution provides for “maximum of eight yearsfor anyone who wants to become a president or a governor.” Any right thinking Nigerian should be able to decode this without the help of a shrink!

    Besides, Jonathan’s kinsman and ex-militant, MujahidAsari-Dokubo, has toldanyone who cares to listen that a Jonathan 2015 ambition is “foregoneconclusion,” adding with his usual boisterous arrogance that those calling on the President to have a rethink,especially members of the AbubakarBaraje-led faction of the Peoples Democratic Party are”political miscreants that should be chased out of the PDP and dealtwith decisively.” Forget his huffing and puffing, even this ethnic irredentist has tempered his language to pave the way for Jonathan’s grandentry into the presidential race. The other day, the nation woke up toread the statements credited to the Niger Delta warlord, struggling, words after words, to itemise all that he had done to show love to peoplesof different geo-political zones, including how he currently placedover 100 northerners on his scholarship scheme. I knew then that the rapprochement has begun and the campaign gear has been put on auto drive. Or is it not the same Asari-Dokubo that threatened a spiral ofviolence should Jonathan be made to abandon his seat withoutcompleting eight years? Is it not the same person that has vowed to return to the creeks to unleash terror on those piping out the naturalresources of his Ijaw brother? So, what has changed that he nowsuddenly remembers his undying love for all shades of people irrespective of their political or cultural leanings?

    Nothing has really changed other than the fact that those beating the ethnic drum coming to the realisation of the futility of their rant.The complexities of the contraption called Nigeria make it absolutelyimpossible for any zone to go it alone. If that were to be possible, I bet the tempo of the abuse would have increased. We know why it hasdimmed and why it will continue to dim. Now that Jonathan has soundedthe alarm bell of his intent to contest the presidency in 2015, we expect to see a barrage of those uncommon transformations that he haswrought on this country. We would be told about his selfless heroismin fighting terror to a standstill such that Borno State is now freeof the menace.I am sure an explanation will be invented for Shekau’smagical ‘resurrection.’ All that we see now are mere remnants of a deflated terror gang. We should expect a sermon on the glittering new roadsthat now dot our landscapes from Lagos to Maiduguri; the history thatwas made with travellers making a rail transport from Kaduna to Lagos;the transformation of the aviation sector in line with international standards; the unprecedented funding of the education sector withequally high standards obtainable anywhere in the world; the provisionof the best healthcare system that makes it impossible for the high and mighty to waste billions of dollars on medical tourism; creationof employment for millions of Nigerians and a host of otherachievements too numerous to mention due to space constraint.

    In fairness to Jonathan, he has always made one simple demand: he pleads to be judged solely on performance. Yes, we do know that, in spite ofgranting amnesty to former warlords in the Niger Delta, bunkering andcrude theft persists with billions of dollars lost daily. Budget implementation may be appealingly low but we cannot completely blame him for that. Corruption may be growing in leaps and bounds but hehas, rightfully so, blamed us for encouraging the corrosively corruptamong us to steal more. He has tasked us on the need to report those living in houses they are not supposed to live, driving cars they are not supposed to drive or wearing suits that are meant for princes andprincesses. Over ten million children may be out of school but he oncereminded us that he did not create the problem. Graduate unemployment may be soaring but we’ve been told, times without number, thatmillions have been employed too. Don’t ask me where they are. All we know is that government can’t lie about these things! Insecurity, killings and criminalsactivities may be choking the populace, but why should we blame aPresident who has urged us to tarry a while and all that would be a story of the past. Our roads may not have been weaned of its ‘deathtrap’ moniker, but we all know that it takes time to correct the manyyears of neglect of these roads by past administrations. The rail transport from Kaduna to Lagos may have taken 36 hours but we all knowthat slow and steady wins the race. In any case, why should we be in ahurry to install fast trains when we know the state of power supply here? Has he not promised uninterrupted electricity supply by 2014? So, why not wait?

    In all this, those bent on stopping Jonathan in 2015 should beprepared to floor him on his abysmal failures. They should not beunder any illusion that he would be persuaded to drop an ambition thathe is constitutionally empowered to pursue. He has told them in clear language that he knows his rights and would insist on those rights. Hesaid he is fixing Nigeria to the best of his knowledge. Just that,sometimes, the best is simply not enough to reignite the kind of electoral rout

    that propelled him into office in 2011. And so, instead of appealing to his sense of judgment or succumbing to the doomsday prediction of afragmented Nigeria should Jonathan contest in 2015, it is more ennobling to get him off the seat by swaying the voters to do it with the power in the thumb. It may be a tough one, but that is the waydemocracy goes. Now that Jonathan has thrown his hat in the ring, itis left for the populace to decide whether or not to queue behind a man with an abysmal record of failing to walk his talk and sitting on his hands while the rot deepens!

  • Mr President know-nothing of Nigeria

    Mr President know-nothing of Nigeria

    ‘Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me twenty times and I keep believing you, call me a Nigerian’-Rotimi

    “You need foolproof ways to lead your people to achieve outstanding results, especially in challenging times’ -Brian Tracy, in HOW THE BEST LEADERS LEAD. Breaking this down further, the celebrated author lists the following as the minimum desiderata for success in any organisation: setting and achieving goals, fostering innovation, problem-solving and decision-making, setting priorities, setting high standards and leading by example; inspiring and motivating others and, finally, performing and achieving results.

    Were President Jonathan’s spokespersons remotely aware of these ingredients for achieving success in any given leadership position they would not be ever so eager to declaim his knowledge of things happening in a country where he is the undisputed numero uno. Had they known how clueless they make the President look with their jejune disclaimers on behalf of the president, they should have become fully aware what damage they do to his image as Nigerians now regularly ask what exactly their president knows. No wonder cluelessness has become about the most used word in describing the Jonathan presidency just as he had, in fact, been likened to the snake.

    We need not delay ourselves enumerating the countless instances supposedly highly educated presidential spokespersons have titillated Nigerians with stories to the effect that the president heard of events like you or I, or even via newspapers, that you begin to wonder if what we have at the helm of affairs in the country is not actually a sleeping president. Unfortunately for them, they deceive only themselves as Nigerians know only too well that the president is either the sole beneficiary or has the most to gain from these events they attempt to shield him from by resorting to their spurious spins.

    They succeed in deceiving nobody else because Nigerians are already acutely aware that their president is not exactly on top of too many things even if he claims to the contrary. When, for instance, he claims to be on top of the citizens’ security concerns and that his government is on top of the situation, a statement Nigerians now know by heart, it is obvious what the people believe. When his government promises improved electricity at some target date that now gets routinely changed, Nigerians know they had better go acquire new generators. It can only be most uncharitable then, if from these extant circumstances, the president’s own men would still continue to cast him in the mold of a know-nothing president who is, like forever, ignorant of events which ordinary Nigerians, without the luxury of an access to intelligence reports, know only too well. For the sake of our president’s image, local and international, I think Nigerians must advise these obstreperous media aides to desist from their obsequiousness.

    The latest of these disclaimers concerns how innocent Mr President is about the goings-on in Rivers State, especially the attempt by five pro- Wike, and, ipso facto, President Jonathan-leaning legislators, to forcefully, and illegally, take over the House of Assembly even though two thirds of the 32-member House is required to successfully impeach the Speaker. Of course, since we are talking here of the PDP, this should be no news as it has become commonplace since the impunity-driven days of former President Obasanjo to forcefully remove even state governors as happened in Bayelsa, Plateau and Oyo states.

    But how uncanny can history get? On the very day that Senator (Dr) Chris Nwabueze Ngige, OON, was being joined by millions of Anambrarians to celebrate the 10th anniversary of what is now popularly known as the Anambra Liberation Day, July 10, 2003, PDP legislators, thugs etal, vainly attempted a repeat performance in Rivers State albeit, starting this time around, from the House of Assembly. Ten years earlier, similar knaves and all manner of mendicants, led by a detachment of heavily armed police mobile force stormed the Government House, Awka, disarmed security operatives and made their way to the office of the then governor whose phones they promptly seized before locking him up in the toilet. The rest is history.

    But in Port Harcourt on Tuesday, 9 July, 2013, Nigerians saw, via the UTube and on sundry television networks, at least one policeman beating up a legislator. And that was in the course of the five anti-Amaechi members and their accompanying thugs had turned the chambers into a theatre of war. It took the hurried appearance of the state governor to save the day. Meanwhile, pro and anti-Amaechi protesters have hit the streets of Port Harcourt.

    A complete dumb in Nigeria today knows that nothing will interest President Jonathan more than seeing the back of Governor Rotimi Amaechi and the evidence for that is all over the place. It had started with the whispering allegation that the governor was preparing to pair up with a northern governor to contest the 2015 presidential election; the same election for which everything is already being done by the PDP to present none other than the sitting president. For the Jonathan group, Amaechi’s alleged audacity deserves nothing but a fatwa, and at every point, Amaechi is daily made to feel the presidential heat especially as he is in no position to as much as discuss state security matters with the state Police Commissioner who, to all intent and purposes, answers only to his Abuja minders.

    Abuja first showed its hands when a case against the PDP Chairman in Rivers State was filed, not in Port Harcourt, where the congress in dispute held, but at an Abuja High Court. It was there in Abuja -where else – a judgment was delivered removing the Amaechi-leaning chairman for a man, we are told, who did not even contest the election. The new chairman quickly showed his hands, dissolving the party’s state executive , a point that was neither canvassed nor granted by the court. He soon came up with a series of diktats he expected governor Amaechi to live or die by; the type even their swashbuckling National Chairman, Alhaji Tukur, have not had the temerity to replicate in his Abuja imperium.

    If the Presidency could not be accused of procuring that change in the River’s State chapter of the party, certainly not so the election to the Chairmanship of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum which, in spite of governor Amaechi’s drubbing of his opponent, governor Jang of Plateau State, the president still clings to the totally ridiculous position that the man who scored 16 votes is his NGF Chairman over the one with 19 votes. A more invidious situation will be extremely difficult to find. And if any further evidence of presidential collusion, indeed instigation, was needed, President Jonathan’s hosting of governor Jang at the Villa as the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum more than provided that.

    The Jang defeat so rattled and unsettled the presidency that our ‘unknowing presidency’ promptly saw to it that Amaechi was suspended from the party by alleging some other spurious reasons. All manner of PDP elders from the state have since visited the Villa to rave and rant at Amaechi and for once, former governor Peter Odili resurrected. Since a court literally declared he was no longer on terra firma, stopping the EFCC from prosecuting him till the second coming of Christ, mum has been the word from the otherwise charismatic politician who, but for Obasanjo’s convoluted and serpentine politics, might today have been much more visible in our political history and who you would therefore have expected to be talking peace. However, knowing how desperate the president is about the Amaechi project, he has chosen to become an equal opportunity protagonist on the side of the president. A battle against a single individual does not get more pitiful.

    It has equally been suggested that the First Lady’s four-day sojourn in Port Harcourt during which everything, governance inclusive, was reported to have shut down, was to attend the wedding of the man now claiming to be the speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly. It doesn’t get more scary.

    It will be extremely grotesque, however, if the president’s wife was in Port Harcourt in furtherance of this macabre plot. But the height of presidential collusion in the crisis would come later during the week when on Friday, 5 July, 2013, the trio of President Jonathan, Dr Odili and Nyesom Wike asked Amaechi to quit the PDP. It can now be safely assumed that because he did not quit as quickly as they wanted, thugs were sent after the House of Assembly where he obviously has his strongest supporters in order to teach him a lesson.

    May God forgive those presidential spokespersons who are keen on taking Nigerians on a merry go round of lies, claiming Mr President knows nothing when the truth really, is that our president is the all-knowing hand behind most, if not all, of our travails as a nation.

  • Mr. President, military pensioners are starving

    SIR: Only an individual burning with patriotic fervour would readily lay down his life for fellow countrymen and indeed fatherland.

    But the irony, however, is that in Nigeria, patriots, who have devoted the better part of their lives in defence of their country have either died unsung, and for the lucky few still alive, pine under the yoke of poverty simply because they just can’t afford the basic necessities of life, no thanks to an uncaring but spineless system!

    The foregoing anecdote, if you may, becomes apposite in describing the plights of Nigerian military pensioners, who for over three years, are still waiting to get the much promised enhanced allowances by the Federal Government.

    In 2010, President Goodluck Jonathan had approved the upward review of salaries of federal civil servants including pensioners. In fact, while flagging off the payment of outstanding arrears, the president had directed the Minister of Defence to ensure that military pensioners be included in any future review.

    Expectedly, federal public servants including serving military personnel have been receiving this new remuneration since July 1, 2010. The sad thing however, is that majority of us, including retired Army, Navy and Air force personnel, who have paid their dues for the country, have been left in the lurch.

    To say the least, we are seriously agonizing over the non-payment of our accumulated pension arrears three years after it was approved for payment by the Federal Government. But we are however at a quandary as to why the Federal Government is behaving like the proverbial ostrich and pretending as if everything is on the mend, when trouble is indeed brewing.

    At different interface and discussion sessions with fellow service men under the aegis of Retired Army, Navy and Air Force Officers Association of Nigeria (RANAO), we are usually regaled with sad tales of our men who have fallen on evil days and can’t find peace at home as they grapple with one intractable problem or the other in their daily lives.

    As we ponder over the problem of unpaid arrears, here are some posers for the authority to peruse carefully. Does the Federal Government want us to take up arms against the state as some aggrieved individuals are wont to do before they will accede to our request? Are we being plain silly for asking for our rights and seeking for what to my mind, are our dues? Is it a crime to have served our fatherland at the time we did?

    As a government which prides itself as an apostle of the rule of law, the time to act is now to prevent any untoward happening.

    • Major Yusuf Abdulkadri (rtd.)

    Lagos