Tag: new beginning

  • Colloquium rekindles hope for new beginning

    The 10th Bola Tinubu Colloquium evoked memories of the coalition that kicked out the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan. This year’s gathering of friends and associates of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu as well as other Nigerians from all walks of life, which took place under the theme, Investing in People, provides a foretaste of what to expect in the campaign for next year’s general elections. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI reports.

    THE 10th Bola Tinubu Colloquium was a parade of every big name in the All Progressives Congress (APC). At the event, which was held at the Convention Centre, Eko Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos, chieftains of the party, particularly elected and appointed officials, were joined by captains of industry, first class traditional rulers and members of the diplomatic corps, to mark the 66th birthday of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the man who was the rallying point of the coalition that executed the campaign for the last general elections. It is remarkable that Asiwaju was able to bring together almost all serving APC governors, lawmakers, a handful of ministers, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and President Muhammadu Buhari under one roof in Lagos.

    To all intents and purposes, last Thursday’s colloquium, which took place under the theme, Investing in People, was the first serious attempt to kick-start President Buhari’s re-election campaign. The Guest of Honour, Prof. Osinbajo, set the tone for the discussion when he took a swipe at the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which maintains that the Buhari administration has not achieved much in close to three years on the saddle.

    Osinbajo said even though members of the PDP are not comfortable with the subject that Nigerians must be reminded always of the mindless looting of the recent past, because the corruption of the previous five years was what destroyed the Nigerian economy.

    Osinbajo said: “Let me give you an example. In 2014, when oil was at between $100 and $114 a barrel, the actual releases for capital for three ministries – Power, Works and Housing – then they were three separate ministries — was in total N99 billion; while Transportation got N14 billion, and Agriculture got N15 billion. I’m talking about actual releases, not budgeted, what they actually got.

    “Let’s compare that with capital releases to the same ministries in 2017, when oil price was between $50 and $60 a barrel, N415 billion for Power, Works & Housing, N80 billion for Transportation; N65 billion for Agriculture; totaling N560 billion, in a time when we were earning at least 50 per cent less than we were earning in 2014.

    “What is the reason why this is possible? It is possible because if you do not steal the resources of the people, you can spend on the projects that concern the people; it is as simple as that. If you are not stealing the money, you will spend it on the right things, and this is what we have seen. When the President insisted that the Treasury Single Account (TSA) must be done, we suddenly discovered that we actually could see for ourselves how much money was available in the system, and so much money was available. We doubled the money from everywhere, and we found out that this money was available.

    “And when we say that this same government that spent N139 Billion only on all of Agric, Power, Works and Housing, Transport, etc; spent between January 2015 and the elections, the sum of a N100 billion in cash and $289 million, altogether about a N100 billion in cash, was released and spent, shared. This sum of money was in excess of the amount of money that was spent on Power, Works and Housing. And this is the point we are making, that there is no country in the world, and we must know this; there is no country in the world that would allow its resources to be plundered in the way our own resources were plundered and expect to be economically viable; it is not possible.”

    The Vice President said though the country is earning about 50 per cent less than what it was receiving five years ago, it is investing several times more, particularly in agriculture, infrastructure and in pro-poor social investment programmes, to create jobs and provide enough food for the people. “In our agriculture programme, I’m sure that many would already agree that this has been a tremendous success. Several millions of Nigerians have been employed in agriculture,” he added.

    After explaining what led to the institution of the colloquium as an annual event, the Vice President said the foundation for whatever progress that has been achieved in Lagos State today was laid through the intellectual discourse encouraged by the celebrant.

    President Buhari, who chaired the event, spoke immediately after Osinbajo stepped down from the podium. In his usual jocular manner, he said he was wrong-footed, being asked to speak after the brilliant performance put up by his deputy.

    Buhari described Tinubu as a “friend and a political partner” and called on all Nigerians to join him in celebrating a man “who is widely known as a political strategist”. He said: “I have come to see him as a man who cares about people and who is a fountain of ideas for economic development and improving the situation of the common man and woman. He is a true humanitarian and we appreciate his contributions to Nigeria’s and Africa’s progress.”

    He thanked Osinbajo and other members for initiating the idea of the colloquium 10 years ago. He added: “Over the course of those 10 years, we have traveled far in one sense, yet have moved but a few steps in another. We as a people and a nation are in the midst of a grand endeavour. We seek to change the ways and means of our collective existence; we seek to construct a nation where leaders no longer rule by whim but govern according to law and for the betterment of the people.

    “We seek to replace corruption with correctness, insecurity with safety and poverty with prosperity. The road we tread is rough and hard in spots. The search for progress and reform has its rough patches. Many will fight you and connive to deter the march toward a better land. But that march is inevitable. There is no mortal hand that can keep us from our best destiny, unless that hand be our own.”

    Buhari said his government has tried to invest in people. He said forums such as the colloquium present ideas and spark important discussions that enliven the country’s national discourse and enrich its policy options.

    He said: “We seek to rebuild what has been wrongfully constructed and to plant a firm foundation for progress where nothing now exists.

    Our goal is to bring together every section of the nation and every Nigerian of every creed, every region and ethnic group in mutually beneficial, productive, social, economic and political relationships. To accomplish our historic mission we must invest in people.

    “Here, I can say that the expenditures made by this government constitute investment in and for the people. We depend on the people to govern. This government recognizes this, hence our investment in critical areas that touch the lives of people directly. Social investment programmes; the school feeding programme; and massive investments in agriculture, a sector that employs over 65 per cent of our people.

    “We strive to set Nigeria on an irreversible path of growth and development. This is the objective that guides our investments and expenditures as a government. We join hands to build a better country. We are resolute in our commitment to uplift our people and to make Nigeria a better place.”

    As the celebrant, Tinubu had the honour of speaking last. He mounted the podium amidst a thunderous ovation from his supporters in the hall, who launched it a song: “On your mandate we shall stand.”

    The former Lagos State governor was apparently excited. He jettisoned his prepared speech and spoke extempore. The APC National Leader advised Nigerians not to accept the recent apology tendered by the PDP for its mistakes while in power, describing it as a deceitful ploy to hoodwink Nigerians into voting for the opposition party in next year’s elections.

    He said: “For 16 years, they made fake promises, gave us fake figures and they tell us, ‘Don’t talk about it’. It is like, after catching a thief and he tells you, ‘Don’t look at me, go and steal your own’. We are soldering on. We have a good leader to rely on. We have hope.”

    He alluded to former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s letter advising Buhari not to contest in 2019, saying the motive for the letter is suspicious; bad belle, as he put it in pidgin parlance.

    An excited Tinubu was full of praises for the President, as well the Vice President and other dignitaries that graced the occasion. He said: “The ship of state was about to wreck, but President Buhari steered the ship back. The voyage is the voyage of hope. We are reinventing and re-directing Nigeria. It is not an easy voyage to embark on.”

    He said: “We came as APC leaders with a lot of hope. We were discussing. We believe in ourselves and Nigeria, that we can change Nigeria. And we are still going to do it. It came with challenges. Our logo is not honey or sugar, but broom; a united Nigeria against terrorism, corruption, insecurity and for the revival of the economy.”

     

  • Nigeria needs a new beginning – Garba

    Nigeria needs a new beginning – Garba

    Nigerian political leaders have been to told to start thinking of giving the country a new beginning as part of efforts to restructure the country and reposition it towards achieving its full potentials as an independent nation.

    Adamu Garba, a pro-democracy crusader and founder of IPI Solutions, while credit must be given to current and past leaders of the country for their efforts at sustaining the country socio-economically, it is important to start telling them to begin to think about quitting the stage now.

    According to him, “We are in a new year and it is important we start thinking of how to get it right as a people. It is my humble and sincere desire to tell our leaders, our fathers, all past and present occupiers of political offices in Nigeria, that we appreciate their immense contribution to the development of Nigeria since 1960. They have all done their bits. History will always remember their labour.”

    He appealed to leaders who have been around for long to quit the stage for younger ones to take over “for a new beginning by encouraging the young ones to come up with ideas and services that can move Nigeria forward. Of course, I am also urging my peers across the country to rise up and be counted as we chart a new way forward for our dear country.”

     

  • 2018 will be year of new beginning for Nigeria – Adeboye

    The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has assured Nigerians to keep their hope alive in God because 2018 will be a year of new and greater beginning.

    Adeboye made this known at the Let’s Go-a-fishing programme organised by the church yesterday at the Centre for Management Development (CMD) ground in Ikosi, Ketu, Lagos. The programme brought together thousands of Christian faithful.

    According to him, the nation’s economy had in the outgoing year gone through some turbulent times.

    Adeboye declared that 2018 will be a year of blessing, greater productivity, better results and the much anticipated change that we desire as a country.

    He said that God is a God of increasing progress and betterment, saying he was very optimistic that things will get better and a new dawn of breakthrough and prosperity will emerge in Nigeria.

    Adeboye, who spoke through the Pastor in Charge of Lagos Province 12 RCCG, Pastor Ola Adejubee, encouraged Nigerians to cooperate with government as it implements plans and progammes for the betterment of the people.

    He said that Nigerians are ready to make the necessary sacrifice for the nation to progress but they must be convinced and clear about government programmes that are geared towards ameliorating their sufferings and woes.

    He charged the downtrodden and those in pain to trust God who through Jesus Christ died to offer hope to the hopeless, joy to the sorrowful and healing and deliverance to the oppressed.

  • For a new year and a new beginning

    For a new year and a new beginning

    Happy new year to our compatriots. But whether it is a happy new dawn is another matter. There are certain years you just wish to forget, that you are in a hurry to banish forever to the abyss of unpardonable betrayal; years that you just wish to bury in the debris of human trauma. These are years when human misery and suffering take a new dimension; when the national spirit takes a terrible bashing and you begin to wonder when last in history so many people have had to sacrifice their life just for a country to survive.
    2016 was such a year. Never in history has the economy taken such a dramatic nose-dive, like a plane in adverse weather but without a hands-on pilot. Never has the collective suffering and misery of Nigerians been more pronounced. Not in recent history have we witnessed such a declining loss of face in the union and the nation.
    It was the year centrifugal forces fastened on the jugular of the nation. Boko Haram declined only to give way to equally vicious sectarian groups. And all this in a country whose demographic balance of power is rapidly shifting in favour of youth; a very young country indeed. Are we not preparing ourselves for an explosive confrontation in the nearest future?
    In retrospect 2016 was the year of what is destined to be known as the Ibrahim Magu syndrome, when the state snared itself in a sting operation, when predators fighting over the carcass of a prey found themselves dragged to the murky bed of a muddied river. At the end of the day, the fight to rid the nation of corruption became tactically stalemated and ethically compromised.
    In a sense, then, 2016 was the year of the locusts. But we must learn the correct lesson in a land where all kinds of predators abound. The problem was not the locusts. Locusts have always existed and will always exist. The problem is how to fight locusts in a scientific and holistic manner. In The Year of the Locust, the brave and heroic protagonist, against wiser counsel and judgement and without being fortified, chose to go out alone to fight an invasion of locusts. The next day his eaten out and hollowed out frame was discovered just outside the village.
    In keeping with its tradition, this column will suspend all intellectual hostilities this morning to felicitate and commiserate with our long-suffering compatriots in these hard times. Only a political sadist will seek to pile further hardships by engaging in unnecessary recriminations and wrangling about what has gone wrong. It is not easy to govern a fractious and temperamentally brittle multi-ethnic nation wracked by religious, regional, cultural and economic polarities. Perhaps we needed to get to this point just to discover that.
    But at all times, democratic governance requires honesty of purpose, uncluttered visionary imagination and integrity of execution in order to deal with the problems of a nation as it encounters new and unforeseen challenges in the relentless march of history. This is the problem confronting the government of General Mohammadu Buhari at this particular and perilous point in Nigeria’s history. The government needs a more hands-on approach if it is to make a dent in Nigeria’s multifarious problems. This government has suffered grievously from a languid and laidback ponderousness in confronting the manifest problems facing the country.
    Given the dire situation of the country, it is quite understandable if some individuals, groups and sections want out of the iron cage of contraries. But this is not the way to go. Nigeria’s problems are collectively created and must be collectively solved. There is nothing out there and in our collective failings as a people that atomistic states and atomised nationhood created out of the current diseased amalgam will prove to be paradise on earth.
    But having said that, it also not a helpful way forward to begin to heckle and hound those who feel traumatized by the injuries of colonial and post-colonial Nigeria. It can be legitimately argued that some of these injuries are often imposed by the collective hubris of trying to impose a sectional or ethnic solution to the Nigerian problem. But they can also arise out of ethnic scapegoating when nationalities with mutually unintelligible cultures are boxed together by colonial fate in a steel fortress where they claw at each other to death.
    Hopefully, and if General Buhari is not to set himself up for political failure the second time around, the fog of messianic delusions and effete one-upmanship will clear and he will begin to do the needy. By the end of the year, it will be clear whether the Daura born general is the man Nigeria needs and requires at this particular juncture or whether it is a damp squib all over again.
    To this end, and in order to help the government recover the initiative in this season of charity and goodwill, this column will isolate three urgent areas of recuperative possibilities requiring the urgent attention of the government and in no particular order. Not even the most adamant admirer of President Buhari will fail to notice that towards the end of the outgone year, the government had succumbed to a somnambulist paralysis and the unsteady assurance of a sleepwalker.
    The mess surrounding the nomination, submission of the non-career ambassadorial list and the subsequent hazy withdrawal shows a manifest lack of seriousness and integrity of purpose at the highest level of decision making, particularly with foreign governments listening in and forming their own judgement about the state of the nation.
    The list itself is shoddy and clearly an abuse of authority and trust at the highest level of governance. If job must be found for the boys and the girls—many of who are not even known as party members or sympathisers—there must surely be other ways of doing this rather than inflicting incompetent hustlers on foreign authorities and our missions abroad.
    Up till this moment, baring the odd political journeymen and shifty-eyed but well-connected nonentity, Nigeria has excelled in its mission abroad and we would do well at this point not to compromise one of our few surviving institutions on the altar of politicking and agenda-driven partisanship.
    The fact that as we speak, and contrary to assurances given by the Foreign Minister, the refurbished list has not been resubmitted, speaks to a failure at the highest level of party consultations. Is there still a party we can call the APC at the moment or a congregation of squabbling politicians in which the old CPC is trying to remould the party according to its old and unelectable political morbidities? The next few months will tell whether the fraught alliance can hold and ever be trusted again by Nigerians particularly in the South West of the nation.
    The second point to note is that with the political defenestration of the ruthless and punitively proactive Ibrahim Magu, a central flaw has been exposed in the whole process of fighting corruption. The forensically talented Magu may have his faults of social misjudgement and political indiscretion but this is surely a messy and blatantly unwise way to get rid of him with two leading sensitive agencies of the government working at cross purposes. In the interest of justice, fair play and national perception, the least the government can do if it is not re-presenting Magu is also to quietly ease out the top echelon of the DSS who have brought such public opprobrium on the government.
    The problem of the EFCC and the whole business of fighting corruption have nothing to do with Magu, but the very conceptual framework of the organization and its institutional bulwark. The EFCC is a laudable creation by General Obasanjo. But in order to fight corruption effectively, it needs a more powerfully holistic, integrative and intellectual framework at the cutting edge of global intelligence.
    Ibrahim Magu may lack the intellectual sophistication and emotional detachment of the truly proficient anti-crime Tsar at the summit of the profession. But you cannot plant cassava and expect to harvest yam. This is what you get when you throw in an ordinary, dedicated and conscientious cop to fight a hydra-headed monster like corruption in Nigeria without the much needed philosophy of crime and punishment and the discriminating theoretical tools of the trade. The international community has since moved on from this prehistoric arrest and bail phenomenon reminiscent of apprehending Stone Age pilferers of community offerings. At the end of the day, nothing will happen. No lesson will be learnt because none has been taught.
    Since we like to ape and imitate the west particularly America, it may be useful to note that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI and please note the stylishly bland and understated name) is manned at its topmost echelons by politically sophisticated and intellectually distinguished operatives who may not even be professionally trained cops but who are mentally equipped to deal with crime and corruption at their most devious and deviant.
    So powerful and institutionally insulated is the FBI that it can withstand hints and even direct pressures from the presidency. It was said that after repeatedly failing in his bid to oust Edgar Hoover, President Lyndon Baines Johnson finally gave up with the parting shot: “It is better to have a son of a bitch inside pissing out than to have him outside pissing in.” The remote and relentlessly prowling Hoover was reputed to have had a number on everyone including secretly taping President Kennedy having a wild romp with Marilyn Munroe inside the White House.
    Finally and to round off this advisory, President Buhari needs to do something about the public perception of what is known as his kitchen cabinet who are currently seen as being polarizing and divisive, negatively motivated and obsessed by the idea of regional and ethnic supremacy. They have caused the general much disaffection.
    To be sure, there is nothing wrong in keeping a kitchen cabinet. Most rulers need people who share emotional, political, cultural and possibly spiritual latitude with them. But this should not be done at the expense of the wider cosmopolitan outlook and political outreach needed to govern a multi-ethnic nation of diverse worldviews as Nigeria. Here is wishing President Buhari and the nation a much better year.

  • Aregbesola: let’s pray for new beginning

    Aregbesola: let’s pray for new beginning

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola yesterday said the Easter season offers Nigerians, especially Christians, a good opportunity to pray for the take-off of a new beginning that would usher in prosperity in all facets of national life.

    He urged Osun people to embrace love, peace and make the necessary sacrifice towards the country’s development.

    Aregbesola, in an Easter message by his Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, urged Nigerians to use the occasion to pray for President-elect Muhammadu Buhari, to bring positive change to the nation.

    He noted that what the country needed at this time were intercessory prayers to God to continuously stabilise it.

    Aregbesola enjoined Christians and people of other faiths to supplicate to assist the in-coming administration on the critical areas of the country’s needs such as insecurity, hunger, unemployment, decayed infrastructure and corruption, which had all held the nation down.

    He added: “Nigerians are tired of mere promises. They want concrete actions. They want to see in practical terms that government is committed to fighting insecurity and restoring the country to its past glory. This is what the APC government is committed to and so, Nigerians should pray successes in these areas.

    “The season, therefore, offers us all the opportunity to pray for a proper take-off of that new beginning for our country to regain her lost glory.

    “Events of the past few years, particularly the spate of insecurity in the land, leave much to be desired. I want to call on Christians and every Nigerian to pray for leaders of the nation, because Easter celebration should be used to renew love for one another.”

  • Time for a new beginning

    SIR: The letter from ex-President Obasanjo to President Goodluck Jonathan should not be read along party, political or ethnic lines. Those with spiritual insight will readily see from the tone and contents that the message comes from above to all Nigerians. And what is the message? It is that corruption has reached the level of impunity. That God is never a supporter of evil and will surely save Nigeria from the hands of destroyers.

    Even though he may not realize it, the first person indicted in the letter is Obasanjo himself. He has acknowledged that every PDP member in elective office today is his political child, not that of Jonathan. Can the father of a bandit seriously claim to be free from reproach?

    But perhaps of greater concern is the fact that this is also a warning to Nigerians to mend their ways. Who turned politics into the only lucrative industry in Nigeria, was it Jonathan? Who taught Nigerians the dark side of the doctrines of Niccolo Machiavelli? Was it Jonathan? Who took Nigerians to the OIC, was it Jonathan?

    Corruption, like cancer, has to grow with time until it destroys its victim. Corruption has trailed us from the first republic until now. The soldiers that came to arrest it became engulfed themselves. Within the last few years we have seen people who cried against corruption becoming more corrupt than those they criticized when given the opportunity to set things right. This is not a Jonathan affair. It is the mindset of the Nigerian people that needs to be changed. We live under false pretence, an ideology where money is the supreme god worshipped even by pastors. We need Structural Mental Adjustment (SMA), not a hypocritical slogan of rebranding Nigeria – whatever that means.

    Nigeria has come a long way. We have witnessed a costly civil war, just like America. In addition, we have gone through various phases of military government from the most benevolent to the most brutal. I personally did not believe that during my life time, I would witness civilian government, though we now have this ‘corrupt’ brand of democracy, I am certain, with God on our side, we shall get to the Promise Land.

    Britain and America went through the present phase we now find ourselves. Not many people remember the eminent philosopher – Francis Bacon – who was Lord Chancellor of England. He was convicted of bribery and corruption. All that we need now is to wake up as a nation and declare that enough is enough with corruption.

     

    Every Nigerian should use this end of year message to reflect on the dangerous Path we find ourselves. This is the time for us to resolve, to have a new beginning. When Nigerians talk about wealth or resources they are looking at naira and dollars or oil and sundry matters. However, the real wealth is character. If you do not possess good character, your ill-gotten wealth means nothing to developed souls.

    • Barrister Peter Afangideh,

    Calabar.