Tag: Nigerian news

  • Kudos, knocks as governors hit first 100 days in office

    Varying degrees of kudos, knocks and controversies are greeting the state governors, old and new, as they mark their first 100 days in office on Saturday after their inauguration on May 29.

    Of note is the unceasing public spat between Governor Emeka Ihedioha of Imo State and his predecessor, Senator Rochas Okorocha which took a twist last week after the governor called for the senator’s arrest of the senator.

    Ihedioha, a former deputy speaker of the House of Representatives, had been miffed by the assault of the Chairman of the Recovery of Government Properties in the state, Mr. Jasper Ndubuaku, by some youths while trying to invade a property of the former governor.

    The State government believes the youths were instigated by Okorocha.

    But the former governor declared that his successor would be inviting anarchy if anyone arrested him.

    The duo has been locked in a battle from day one when Ihedioha assumed office.

    The governor accused Okorocha of plundering the state and wanted the public assets allegedly stolen returned but the senator denied the allegations.

    He accused Ihedioha of vendetta.

    The state has been polarized along the pro-Okorocha and pro-Ihedioha lines. Youths, women and even traditional rulers have all joined in the political melee.

    The first action of the state government barely 24 hours after the governor was inaugurated, was the demolition of the Akachi Tower, built by the Okorocha’s administration as a tourist attraction centre.

    The action drew widespread condemnation from within and other side of the state and the government was forced to suspend further demolition of the structure and subsequently denied knowledge of the demolition.

    The state government also within its first three days constituted the Committee of Recovery of Stolen Government, which has running after Okorocha and his family.

    Another sore point for the state government is the destruction of some of the legacies of the former administration. On assumption, all landmarks and signage built by the previous administration were destroyed and replaced with new ones, street lights and iron crossbars used to beautify streets which dotted Owerri, the State capital were all removed amidst public outcry.

    Another action taken by the state government which attracted the ire of the people mostly were the sacking of elected Council Chairmen and Councillors, suspension of the salaries of workers recruited by the former governor at the twilight of his administration, as well as the revocation of all the land deals approved by the immediate past government.

    Although the state government is yet to commence full implementation of its programme and policies, as it claims to be clearing the mess of the previous administration but it has taken few steps that have been lauded by the people.

    Recently the state governor, flagged off N13 billion rural road project under RAMP, a World Bank assisted project, which has thrown the state into jubilation.

    Another high point of the incumbent government is the award of contracts for the construction of the critical roads across the state which is supposed to commence immediately after the rains.

    The state government has also received kudos for taken concerted steps to address environmental challenges in the state under its ‘Go Green, Stay Clean Initiative’.

    Under this initiative, the state government has commenced planting of trees and flowers and opening of blocked underground drainages and water channels.

    Okowa under pressure to meet voters’ expectations

    Some of the strident criticisms of Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State have come from his own supporters in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)

    One of them, Mr Godsday Orubebe, ex-minister of Niger-Delta Affairs, accused Okowa of marginalizing the Ijaw ethnic nationality in his government.

    He asked the governor to account for about N11.1 trillion which had accrued to the State’s coffers since his assumption of office in 2015.

    Okowa said  Orubebe’s outburst stemmed from his  refusal to appoint his nominee. He has also been faced with the protest of civil servants suspended from the Delta civil service in June 2015.

    The suspended civil servants gave the government a one month ultimatum

    The suspended worker’s vowed to shut down the state should Okowa fail to fulfill his promise of re-engaging them.

    Insecurity Enugu governor’s topmost priority

    The deteriorating security situation in Enugu State is top most in priority list of Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi after his swearing on May 29 for his second tenure.

    The situation has made the governor become so restless and to constantly be on the road, visiting either the victims or the families of such dastardly acts, to sympathize or condole with them.

    Although overwhelming, the governor remains undaunted and tackles it with all his gubernatorial paraphernalia.

    Despite the media hype of rise in crime in the state, a critical assessment of Enugu State still places it as the safest state in Nigeria.

    Ugwuanyi recently gave to the police not fewer than 70 Hilux  vehicles, Sienna SUVs and other brands  for decoy operations. He as well pays monthly allowances to the operatives, provides fuel and other logistics  requirements for the agencies to perform.

    Worthy of note is that the governor himself sometimes leads patrol raids on criminal hideouts and dark spots at Obiagu Road, Ogui and Asata, notable  homes for drug dealers and users as well as other criminals.

    The governor had also  packaged an anti-kidnapping bill, which he sent to the State House of Assembly for legislation. He followed it up by giving directive for the recruitment of 1,700 forest guards to begin to patrol the bushes and thick forests of the state, to fish out these criminals from their hideouts.

    He had equally given directive, and had personally supervised, the clearing of bushes, particularly along the Awgu axis of the Enugu-Port Harcourt Express Way, identified as rendezvous for the criminals, and where killings and kidnappings had taken place in recent weeks.

    Hope dampens in Ogun without cabinet team

    Just 100 days in office, Governor Dapo Abiodun, the successful entrepreneur and oil magnate has continued to govern Ogun State without assembling his cabinet team or send the nominees to the Ogun State House of Assembly.

    The cabinet members are the executive officers of the government. They are to help formulate and drive the policy thrust of the government.

    At his inauguration on May 29 and shortly after, Governor Abiodun made many promises which include giving the state a focused and qualitative governance that would be  responsive, open and accountable to the people by pro – actively creating and promoting enabling environment for a public private sector partnership(PPP) required for rapid industrialisation and infrastructural developments.

    He also pledged to rehabilitate tens of roads across the state within the first 100 days.

    It is believed that the absence of cabinet members since May 29 could account for the drab and slow down of the pace of governance, and hampers  all efforts at pushing Governor’s agenda for the state through within target.

    Abiodun did declare that he would focus on development of agriculture and rural roads in order to increase the output of food and cash crops, create wealth for real farmers and ease the movement of farm produce to the markets within and outside the state while generating revenue but it is left to be seen how far this can come to reality in his first year with a commissioner not yet in place.

    Four days ago, the Governor inaugurated 17 – man steering Committee on Anchor Borrowers Scheme on Agriculture with Prof. Peter Adebola Okuneye as its Chairman, declaring that his administration’s quest for food security, food sufficiency and poverty alleviation could only be achieved through joint efforts in agriculture between state government and the people.

    Makinde making his mark already

    Governor Seyi Makinde was welcomed with a rousing support and massive goodwill when he was sworn in as the seventh civilian governor of Oyo State on May 29, 2019. He had won in 28 of the 33 local governments in the state in the March 9 election. In his first 100 days in office, the new governor has enjoyed largely good moments with some low moments.

    Before settling down, Makinde cancelled the N1,000 per term levy paid by public school pupils in the state. The decision, which was in fulfilment of his campaign promise, drew huge applause from many parents who had looked forward to his lofty ideas that he promised during campaign. However, the idea is still facing a challenge as it has led to the sacking of teachers and other support staff engaged by the schools and the Parent-Teacher Association (PTA).  But parents are still savouring the relief which the decision brought to them for now.

    Makinde also wormed himself into the hearts of the public by ordering a revisit of cases of civil servants sacked by the previous administration. He set up a committee to review the cases of affected persons with a firm promise to reabsorb them if they are found to have been wrongfully sacked. The committee has since been working hard to deliver on its mandate.

    If there is any area in which Makinde has excelled as governor, it is in the area of managing the coalition that produced his electoral victory. A lot of people had predicted failure for him in managing the gladiators in the coalition because all of them have public service experience unlike the governor. But Makinde has successfully managed the politicians to the level that every bloc in the alliance has been fairly rewarded. No discordant tune is coming from the coalition house as at now.

    The governor is currently a hero to civil servants for paying their salary on the 25th of every month. In line with his campaign promise, Makinde has successfully paid salaries on 25th of his first three months in office. Teachers, civil servants and retirees have encomiums for the governor on this feat. Prompt payment of salaries enables them plan on their income and meet financial obligations at the right time.

    Perhaps the action that has boosted Makinde’s fame most is his asset declaration which he made public. With his companies alone worth N48 billion and other highly priced properties and cash, Makinde caused a storm on Twitter and other social media when he made his asset declaration public. He was later adjudged the richest governor in Africa going by his declared assets. Based on the controversy his assets generated, the Director of the Code of Conduct Bureau in Oyo State, Mr Moses Atolagbe, had to make a public statement that the bureau was waiting for directive from the agency’s head office to verify Makinde’s claims.

    Umahi hits ground running with new legacy projects

    Ebonyi State Governor David Umahi after he was sworn in a second term hit the ground running immediately with his appointment of Principal Officers and Attorney General. This was quickly followed by the appointment of Special Assistants and some boards.

    Commissioners were subsequently appointed in July, screened by the State House of Assembly and sworn in.

    Even before the appointment of the Commissioners, government activities never slowed down even for a day as Umahi charged the Permanent Secretaries to ensure that work continued as usual on their different Ministries and Departments.

    Construction work on numerous roads and other projects both new and ongoing ones have never stopped. Some of the projects include the Ebonyi Glass Tunnel, said to be the first of its kind in the state, the Ebonyi Shopping mall, the Eguhuo bridge in Ishielu Local government, the Author Eze fly over named after the popular Anambra Business man which will go and down on record as the fastest fly over to be completed in the country. Work on the flyover began in November last year and have already been completed as car have already started plying the road.

    However, the State was hit by an outbreak of yellow fever in Izzi local government area. The outbreak reportedly claimed some lives in a remote village before it was detected.

    The State Ministry of Health quickly moved in with support from the National Center for Disease Control (NCDC) to control the outbreak. Infected persons were immediately evacuated to the National Virology Centre built by the State Government in Governor Umahi’s first term were they were treated.

    Ayade completes 23 megawatts power plant

    Within the first 100 days of his second term,Governor  Ben Ayade of Cross River State completed a 23 megawatts power plant, which according to him means 24-hour electricity for residents of Calabar. Unveiling the project in Calabar, he had described it as a dream come true, saying it would provide power to residents at an affordable cost.

    Although many residents in the state are yet to see the electricity, it has still been commended as a good move. However, some people seem bothered that the details of the arraignment of switching from the national grid to a different source of power have not been properly explained.

    Also despite the financial status of the state, it has still been consistent with payment of salaries in his second term.

    Among some issues that have earned the governor some knocks, since beginning his second term, include his seeming unwillingness to conduct local government elections in the state.

    Another issue that has been a low point for the governor has been his intention build a cargo airport in his home local government area of Obudu, as various persons have risen against what they described as arbitrary land grab for the proposed project.

    Critics also feel that it was quite strange that he would want to embark on such a huge project that looks like a waste.

    Similarly, the governor’s move to acquire 9000 hectares of land across the state had pitched him against the people. The governor who has already set up a committee to go about the acquisition had, quite vaguely, said the said land was meant for agricultural purposes.

    Education topping Ganduje’s second term agenda

    Within the past 100 days, Ganduje has made tremendous waves in the education sector, declaring free and compulsory education for primary and secondary school pupils and students.

    He has, as well, succeeded in working out modalities to ensure that the Almajiri system of education is built into the conventional Western education learning curriculum, designed to take the Almajiris off the street as beggars and also give them sound and adequate education that can equal them to other school children in terms of access to quality and qualitative education.

    To further ensure that parents allow their children to enrol in school. Ganduje has sent a bill to the State House of Assembly, seeking for a law that will back up to arrest and prosecution of parents who refused to take their children to school. The bill also supports the arrest of school-age children roaming the streets begging or hawking during school hours.

    Ganduje directed the First Class Emirs across the state to take record of parents and guardians who refused to send their wards to school and forward their names to the State government for appropriate action.

    His efforts have attracted interest from the governments of Egypt and the United States of America which recently indicated interest to partner with Kano state government to make the project a huge success.

    Within the last 100 days, Ganduje has also been able to set up a Committee that will see to the establishment of one of the largest RUGA settlement in Africa. He said he took the step to contribute his quota in putting to rest the controversy generated by the Federal Government RUGA proposal across the country; make the Fulani herdsmen economically viable; boost Kano’s economic potentials; end the farmers/herders clash and as well modernize the cattle rearing and insemination business.

    Abians disagree over Ikpeazu’s 100 days

    Abians have expressed   worries over the inability of the Governor Okezie Ikpeazu led government to formally constitute his cabinet after 100 days in office.

    While a cross-section of Abians who spoke to our reporter in Umuahia and Aba said that nothing has been achieved by the incumbent administration in the state, others believed that the government of the day has fared beyond their expectation especially in the area of infrastructure.

    According to some of the respondents, the inability of the governor to constitute his cabinet shows that the government is not yet ready for serious business.

    A resident   Mr. Gilbert Ofor said: “This is his second term and the final lap of his 8years in office as the governor of the state and should not toil with it. This is not a time to compensate people for the roles that they played in his re-election for second term.

    “Ikpeazu should shop for the best hands; people who understand where his visions for the state. People that will help him leave his footprints in the sands of time.

    “Ikpeazu should understand how hard the Ngwa nation fought to get the opportunity to govern the state. It might not be that easy again as far as I am concerned. What are the areas that he hasn’t performed better? He should look at the areas that he has equally performed well and see how he can consolidate on the gains recorded.

    But for Ifeanyi Magnus, the Okezie Ikpeazu’s administration doesn’t have anything to show within the last 100 days.

    He said: “What are we celebrating? I am sure that if the government in the state will be fair enough to themselves and stop brandishing all the lies that they have been dishing out, it will serve them a good deal.

    The All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA, Abia State chapter in a statement by its Publicity Secretary Eeber Uzoukwa, lambasted Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu on the first 100 days of his second tenure, accusing his government of celebrating backwardness and failures of first tenure that include projects abandonment, non-payment of workers emoluments and pensions.

    According to Uzoukwa some of governor’s failures include “the abandoned Osisioma Fly-Over, a conduit pipe with which the governor and his surrogates have so far used to siphon about 5 Billion Naira from the treasury of Abia State, the destruction rather than construction of Obikabia-Umuobiakwa-Ururuka Road (the road leading to the governor’s house/village), the invisible Enyimba Economic City, the non-existent Abia Shoe Factory and the destroyed but abandoned Abiriba-Nkporo road.

    El-Rufai hits the ground running

    Governor Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai of Kaduna State wasted no time in pursing his second term agenda.

    That is however not to say that, the journey has been smooth, but the challenges seem surmountable.

    Exactly 44 days after returning to office, El-Rufai constituted his cabinet and warned the commissioners that any of them that fails to perform would be fired.

    El-Rufai also commenced the implementation of his administration’s plan to rejuvenate and strengthen the public service, through recruitment, to inject competent, young people to drive the public service.

    The recruitment according to him, seeks to advance the goals of the public service reform and revitalisation programme, which include injecting younger and more competent persons into the public service.

    “One of the most important reforms we started in the first-term is the Public Service Reform and Revitalisation Project. One of its major objectives is to strengthen the public service by injecting into its ranks our younger, well-educated, IT-compliant and competent personnel. This goal will be actualised, by the grace of God.

    “We shall be recruiting more teachers, health workers, administrative officers and other professionals into the public service. Vacant positions in the public service will continue to be advertised. Public service jobs will be available, but only on merit, not ethnicity, religion or as a result of cronyism.” He said.

    Aside recruitment, Governor El-Rufai has equally flagged-off Urban Renewal Project, which has construction of new roads and upgrading existing ones as its core idea. The project which was kicked off with the ground breaking and signing of contract for the construction of a N3.9bn Kaduna Galaxy Mall, has 14 components including roads, mass transit, housing, improved land use, street lights, parks and recreational centres, markets, neighbourhood centres and waste management.

  • Slay Festival returns September 28

    Digital media company, She Leads Africa, has announced that popular innovation and culture event, Slay Festival, will be returning to Lagos, Nigeria, come September 28, 2019.

    The event, which is an avenue to train women in new skills, build network and help them connect with their favourite brands in a fun and relaxed atmosphere, will come up at the Lekki Special Events Centre, Lekki, Lagos.

    Since inception in 2017, the event has helped impact over 4000 women.

    This year’s event will feature inspirational speakers, engaging brand activations, career and business mentorship, speed networking and shopping from exciting young entrepreneurs.

    Read Also: Women seek end to moral decadence

    Participants will be availed of unique and interactive experiences that cut across business career, technology, arts, beauty, fashion, food wellness, community and music from experienced professionals like Osas Ighodaro, Bukky Karibi-Whyte, Tosin Olaseinde and Steve Babaeko.

    The Redesigned Stage powered by Google Nigeria will also help participants enjoy sessions on thriving in the Nigerian workforce, investment and leadership.

    It will also feature a Masterclass in the hottest topics in lifestyle and career.

    This year’s event will also feature global beauty brand, Maybelline, as Official Beauty Partner, as they showcase their newest trend setting products and host one of the masterclasses with celebrity makeup artist, Anita Adetoye.

  • LASG will support ICAN to ensure accountability, transparency, says Sanwo-Olu

    Lagos State governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has pledged to continue to collaborate with the Nigeria Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, ICAN, to ensure accountability and transparency in the state’s financial dealings.

    Sanwo-Olu, who was represented by his deputy, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat, made the pledge when the governing council and members of ICAN led by its vice president, Dame Mrs. Onome Joy Adewuyi, paid a courtesy visit to the governor at Alausa at the weekend.

    Sanwo-Olu told the delegation that the state government aligns with the accountability index and “it is also very important for citizens out there to know what we are doing.

    “That is the only way they can align with the government. We want people to pay more taxes and if they see what we are doing and it is transparent, the possibility is there that they will pay their taxes voluntarily.” He added that “this type of index will help us to explain and it is done by ICAN.”

    Read Also: Sanwo-olu assures private investors of enabling environment

    He also assured ICAN that the government takes capacity building of its staff seriously and that is why its workforce, particularly accountants and auditors, will fully participate in the forth-coming 49th ICAN conference slated for September.

    Speaking earlier, Mrs. Adewuyi, who represented the president of ICAN, Mazi Nnamdi Okwuandigbo, while praying for strength and wisdom for the governor to take the state to a greater height, commended Sanwo-Olu for his THEMES programme for the state.

    According to Okwuandigbo, “the THEMES agenda convincingly captures the critical sectors that any forward looking administration should commit itself to.”

    He added that the governor’s executive order to curb flooding, tackle traffic gridlock and issues of waste management barely 24 hours after assumption of office goes a long way to demonstrate his commitment to achieving results. “We pray that at the end of the day we will all witness a greater Lagos,” he prayed.

    He solicited support of the state government in the forthcoming 49th conference of ICAN while also offering to collaborate with the state government in organising in-house training for accountants and other allied functionaries of the state.

  • Sanwo-olu assures private investors of enabling environment

    The Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Sanwo-Olu, has restated his commitment towards providing an enabling environment through the provision of friendly policies and putting in place appropriate regulatory framework that will attract the needed investment in the real sector.

    Sanwo-Olu made this known at the African Real Estate Conference and Awards, with the theme “Bridging Investment Gaps in Africa’s Real Estate Markets for Sustainable Growth” at Landmark Conference, Victoria Island, Lagos, organised by PropertyPro.ng.

    He said that shelters remains one the very important needs of man and a critical factor that determines quality of living.

    Read Also: Sanwo-Olu promises to support education

    He noted that in all major cities of the world, especially those with challenges of rising population, provision of affordable shelter and bridging the deficits in the housing sector is both a social and economic issue.

    He stressed that bridging the hounding deficit as we have it today is not a responsibility for government to shoulder alone. The investment required is huge and can only be provided by the private sector.

    Sanwo-Olu said that “we are willing to partner with the private sector to meet the housing needs of our growing population which is in excess of 22 million people. Our focus is the development of sustainable urban settlement with adequate infrastructure for decent living.”

    He further said that the challenges become more pronounced with growing urbanisation as a result of migration of people from rural areas seeking economic opportunities.

    “A number of steps have been taken in the past to develop appropriate and sustainable solutions in partnership with the private sector. What is clear, however, is considering the increasing needs of affordable and decent shelter, the desired objectives are yet to be met.”

  • Unknown assailants hack commercial motorcyclist to death in Ekiti

    A middle-aged man, Mr. Sunday Olorunleke, was on Saturday reportedly stabbed to death by unidentified assailants.

    The Nation gathered that the deceased who was identified as a commercial motorcyclist, popularly called Okada rider, was allegedly killed in his residence located in Aba area, a suburb of Ado Ekiti.

    A source who craved anonymity revealed that the man and father of two was alone in the house when the incident happened.

    The source added that his wife and children were said to have travelled out of Ado Ekiti since Wednesday and returned yesterday morning to meet the corpse of the man in a pool of blood inside his room.

    Read Also: Residents render homeless as rainstorm destroys Ekiti communities

    A source, who confirmed the killing, said the incident was suspected to have happened between Friday night and yesterday, adding that the deceased was sighted in the neighbourhood on Thursday morning.

    “The wife of the deceased put a call across to the some of the neighbours on Thursday when she could not reach her husband on phone and they informed her that they saw him that very day.

    “We were shocked after the wife arrived this (yesterday) morning and met the door closed and sought the assistance of people to break the door where she found her husband corpse on the floor lying in a pool of his own blood.”

    Speaking with newsmen via telephone, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) in Ekiti State, Caleb Ikechukwu, confirmed the killing.

    He revealed investigation had commenced in a bid to arrest the perpetrators, calling on the people to go about their normal lawful activities.

    The police spokesman advised residents of the state to monitor strange faces and movements within their neighbourhood and report to the police for immediate action.

  • Abiodun: Depression, an offshoot of unsound mind 

    Governor Dapo Abiodun of Ogun State has attributed the spate of depression, which is the instigator of the increasing suicide cases in the society, to “unsound mind” and advised that people should undergo regular physical fitness to ensure optimal mental functioning.

    The governor spoke on Saturday at the inauguration and swearing-in ceremony of the new executive members of Abeokuta Sports Club.

    The ceremony also witnessed the investiture of Abiodun as the grand patron of the club.

    Speaking shortly after his investiture, he reiterated his administration’s commitment towards ensuring an enabling environment for businesses to thrive.

    Read Also: We’ll keep facilitating partnership for joint ventures, says Abiodun

    He also disclosed that his administration was poised to turn around the economy of the state for the better, which, according to him, would contribute to the development of individual prosperity of the people of the state.

    The governor noted that he was not unaware of the contributions of individuals and organisations such as Abeokuta Sports Club to the development of the state, saying his administration would not disappoint the people of the state in entrenching good governance.

    Abiodun underscored the importance of recreation as one of the basis for good health.”But, we also appreciate the fact that people cannot be prosperous without having wholesome health.

    And, healthy living is not just about medication and diets. Recreation is a vital part of healthy living.

    “We will continue to support all genuine enterprises by individuals and or organisations, like Abeokuta Sports Club, that provide legitimate and viable means of recreation to our people.”

    The governor appreciated members of the club for the support they gave him during his campaign and solicited for more support for his administration.

    The president of the club, Deacon Atilade Bolarinwa, in his address, pledged that the club would continue to contribute to sports development in the state through organising and sponsoring of various sports competitions for both young and the old.

  • Borno deplores military’s counterinsurgency tactics

    Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States have borne the brunt of the Boko Haram insurgency. But Borno is the epicentre of the revolt. During the Goodluck Jonathan presidency, they state’s elite complained that the military was tackling the revolt incompetently and insensitively. At the time, the insurgents were numbered approximately 5,000, and the military made heavy weather of defeating them. Dr Jonathan, however, gave short shrift to the murmuring Borno elite, a response that met with derision among top northern politicians and elders.

    More than four years down the line, and with Boko Haram fighters degraded to approximately two thousand, the battle has still not been won despite the semantic gymnastics of the government; and Borno elite are still grumbling. President Muhammadu Buhari, who had once complained under the Dr Jonathan presidency that the then government was tackling the revolt incompetently, is now president, and has been in office for more than four years. Last week, a group of Borno residents loudly complained that Boko Haram had not been defeated, and worse, that the military’s tactics was incompetent and abominable.

    As expected, the residents got short shrift. Their governor, Babagana Zulum, had earlier also deplored the military’s tactics, describing it as ineffective. Both the governor and the grumbling residents have made suggestions that appear sensible. The military may want to give them a hearing. Sometime ago, the government had announced that Boko Haram was degraded as a fighting force, which was probably true; had been technically defeated, which left room for diverse interpretations; and had been defeated with not an inch of Nigerian territory under the control of the insurgents, which was an exaggeration. Now, residents of the state have given the country an alternative account of the state of the war, insisting that the president was being misinformed and the public hoodwinked. It is difficult to fault them.

    If the government can be persuaded to eschew language misapplication, it should forthrightly address the apprehensions of the people of Borno. Boko Haram was inspired by irresponsible north-eastern elite, misjudged and mismanaged by the government, and may now, according to some Borno residents, be exploited by the military. The military cannot persuade Nigerians that they were unable to defeat a rag-tag guerrilla force of about five thousand men, not to talk of convince anyone that today some remnant two thousand insurgents can effectively procure a stalemate against them.

    Borno is bleeding, and with them the country too. It is a cruel tactics to hope to outlast Boko Haram. What if they refuse to be exhausted? What if they are enjoying the macabre game? The cost to the country in human toll and financial resources is gargantuan and unbearable. It is time to end this insurgency in the hope that the country can deploy financial and ideological resources to combat the other ‘insurgencies’ overtaking the country. It is also time the Nigerian military tried to regain some of their prestige lost in the war, stanch the flow of blood among their troops, and restore the country to some normality. Surely the Buhari presidency is capable of rethinking the insurgency.

  • A predictable cabinet

    It took more than a month to reappoint President Muhammadu Buhari’s kitchen cabinet, though they continued to function in their offices after the election; nearly three months to put the general cabinet in place, with all the ministers-designate screened without the Senate knowing their portfolios; and about three months to reappoint his other aides, with hardly any change. Apart from the ministers, most of the aides and kitchen cabinet staff had their appointments backdated to May 29, partly because they never ceased to function. So, why the delay? It is one of the mysteries that will continue to dog the Buhari presidency. Most other governments in the world, not to talk of democracies, take far shorter time to make all these appointments. In his first term, the president spent much longer time putting a cabinet together, even at a point questioning their relevance, but the country sighed and bore the consequences of his unfathomable approach to governance with imperfect equanimity.

    Once the president finally but more quickly got round to making his second term appointments, particularly constituting his cabinet, opinions became sharply divided on what ideas and preferences drove and still drives him. Is his mind as snarled as his appointments? Or is he just boyishly spontaneous and unhurried about everything, regardless of the gravity and urgency of that everything? Does he at all have any conception of Nigeria, and if so, in his mind, is it a conception of a unified whole or a parochial, fragmented and eclectically assembled entity? No answer fits all. The country must, therefore, continue to cavort among many answers and puzzles. On some occasions, the president seems capable of rousing passion for certain national causes; and on some other occasions, he seems also perfectly capable of promoting so much discord that it is difficult to tell who he is, when he is himself, and when he is not himself.

    Historians, and perhaps too posterity, will face an arduous task of passing a fair judgement on the Buhari presidency, particularly making sense of his motives, examining his bona fides, and assessing his vaunted claims as a patriot, nationalist and governmental ethicist. To those who intensely dislike his style and policies — he is not really a politician, and can’t be accused of playing politics — that judgement is crystal clear. But to others who are more patient and introspective, they will have to wait until the next two or more years to pass a judgement. Whether for or against, assessors must establish their methodology and follow it scrupulously and consistently. To, therefore, say a few things about his cabinet and his laborious method of assembling his ministers and kitchen cabinet is not to entirely dismiss his government or damn him. It is, however, necessary periodically to examine his style, policies and appointments, nearly all of which have been baffling, agitating and controversial. In the end, it will probably be found that while he has impacted the country in some significant ways, he has paid little attention to both the long run and the need to lay a solid foundation for democracy.

    President Buhari is in fact one of Nigeria’s greatest apostles of the short run. He is instinctive and spontaneous, regardless of whether his instinctiveness and spontaneity are harnessed for the right causes or not. More curiously, once his mind is made up, it is usually unbendable. Hence his service chiefs have stood the test of time, not necessarily of efficiency. This may also explain why his first term cabinet suffered little or no change, notwithstanding the buffeting by critics, or what the country felt. His second term cabinet which was inaugurated some 11 days ago now seems set to become another test of the essential Buhari, a clue to his controversial simplicity, lack of adventurousness, and lack of attention to detail. Many critics have perused his cabinet list and remarked his inattentiveness to both the big and the little things that matter. Does he recognise the signals his cabinet list has triggered? It is hard to say.

    But when President Buhari remarked to an audience that by appointing two ministers each from Kano and Kaduna States he had paid his debts to the two states for voting massively for him in the last presidential poll, he gives the frightening impression that he neither understands the deeper meaning of democracy nor appreciates the weighty significance of the presidency, indeed his presidency on which rests the fate of a country harried by doubts, low self-esteem, confusion and insecurity. By drawing elemental correlations between votes and appointments in the face of a national security emergency typified by what is clearly a failing economy and a failing state, the president seems unable to rise to the higher ideals of leadership and statecraft. Here indeed are opportunities for a leader to rise to the occasion, someone to redefine who Nigeria should be and what it should represent in the world; someone to inspire hope and self-belief; someone to take the country’s contentious ethnic swords and fashion them into a wholesome and gigantic ploughshare; someone who, at the end of his presidency, would leave Nigeria changed for the better for all time.

    One important signal the cabinet list emits is that it gives a glimpse of the values and principles that drive President Buhari as a person and leader. He has on the surface rewarded states which voted massively for him, but in reality the cabinet appointments showed a skewness that is at once limiting and indulgent, including the superfluous Humanitarian and Disaster Management ministry. Rather than serve as a reward indicator, the list exudes the ardour of insularity and dogmatism. It further indicates that there will really be no philosophical, ideological and even practical foundations to sustain and prod the cabinet into loftiness. The president obviously sees the list as nothing more than a testament to his inchoate understanding of nationhood. But by loading his native Northwest with nine senior ministerial appointees and justifying that unusual generosity on the grounds of electoral harvest, and by imbuing some key ministries with an ethnic hue and backbone, the president appears to have finally made up his mind just what conclusions he wants Nigerians to draw about his presidency.

    As many critics have volunteered, President Buhari’s second term cabinet is not exceptional for anything. In soul and identity, it is indistinguishable from his first cabinet. In ideology, it remains virtually conservative, and in composition only to a little extent eclectic. The president has neither changed nor shown any significant indication that the country he has been privileged to lead thrice deserves a total and revolutionary makeover. Consequently, he didn’t seem capable of producing a cabinet that would commit itself to that putative revolutionary assignment. There are of course a few exceptions — of ministers with an eye on history, who know full well that despite the uninspiring nature of the government they serve, much is expected of them. But they are too few to inspire a major change in direction and depth. Given the way they were assembled, not to say the needless delay in putting together the president’s aides and kitchen staff, it is all but clear that something deep and central, perhaps an inner steely core that should be the fulcrum of this government and presidency, is missing.

    There is no one to look up to in the team assembled by the president to help him deliver on his promises, someone who can inspire hope for Nigeria’s great leap forward into the future — no one in the cabinet, and none among his close and kitchen cabinet staff. To mould a great country starts with getting the philosophical underpinnings right. But no such lofty ideas are in sight, and there won’t be any in the next four years. Nigeria is, therefore, in danger of continuing to function on suspended animation, as it struggles to implement a bastardised form of federalism and presidentialism. The economy is acutely hamstrung by wrong formulae and principles, and the political environment has become deeply carcinogenic and illiberal to the point of endangering democracy altogether. Rule of law has been dismembered, with only token gestures waved casually in the market place, while basic and fundamental rights are dangerously abridged.

    Even in the best of environments, the new cabinet will struggle to deliver a lasting impact. Now shackled by the insistence of the president that they route their affairs through the Chief of Staff (CoS) and the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), it is hard to envision the mobility and flexibility the country’s dire situation calls for in order to help resolve existential challenges. The president and his spokesmen cite presidentialism as the reason to impose the kind of order and decorum needed by his government to function smoothly. They are right. But not only is the president generally aloof and distant, the office of the CoS through which the ministers must navigate their Panama canal has also not demonstrated the promptness and efficiency required to both lubricate and aerate the system. Even if a president decides to be sectional, he still has an obligation to make the system work. But this system could not function to full capacity in the past four years because the president did little to reduce the chokehold militating against its smooth operation.

    Many critics see the shape of the cabinet as signalling the first shots for the 2023 elections. This is perhaps exaggerated. The cabinet is in fact more a reflection of the dichotomic worldview of both the president and his aides than an indication of political coherence, a worldview that is only theoretically committed to Nigerian unity but practically and distinctly unfavourable to progress. Though the Buhari presidency has acted as if it was empowered by a sectional consensus to proceed the way he has done, given the high incidence of insecurity in the country, however, and the increasingly bold challenge offered by many non-state actors’ to law and order, initial calculations and permutations will be proved to be grossly overrated, and every trace of sectionalism and provincialism will be put to dire test in the coming years.

    A few weeks ago, the president remarked that he would not groom any successor. His ascent to power had little to do with his person or accomplishments. His successor will profit little from his controversial record in office or his commitment to any person. His judgements have not been unimpeachable; it would be out of character to now trust his judgement of a successor. Luckily, his cabinet shows no indication whatsoever of any impending grooming. If anything, the cabinet is the clearest reflection of a president whose obsession is to burnish his own image, sate his passion for leadership, and achieve full personal restoration that puts the lie to the opinion of him propagated by the coup of 1985.

  • Malaika mourns late Ayinde Barrister

    Fuji maestro, Sulaimon Alao Adekunle popularly known as Malaika has mourned Fuji creator, Alhaji Sikiru Ayinde Barrister, who died by protracted illness in 2010.

    The pioneer of Fuji, Barrister, passed away on December 16 at age 62 at the St. Mary’s Hospital, London.

    Malaika recently took to his Instagram handle to shared a video of the Fuji icon  to eulogize and pray for late Fuji musician.

    “I remember you today as always Alhaji Dr. Sikiru Ayinde Adeyinka Agbaje BALOGUN MFR. May Almighty Allah continue to make the choicest part of aljanat your place. Your prayers for and on me is still being answered many years after. Thank you MR FUJI.”

    Barrister passed away on December 16, 2010 at aged 62, after the illness.

  • Bobrisky flees as police scuttle planned birthday

    Instagram famed crossdresser Idris Okuneye alias Bobrisky on Saturday escaped to evade arrest following the deployment of policemen to scuttle his planned birthday celebrations.

    Bobrisky who turned 28 on Saturday had planned a birthday bash at the Pearls Gardens in Lekki Phase 1 on Saturday and another slated for Paradise Boat Club, Victoria Island on Sunday.

    But Police Commissioner Zubairu Muazu ordered the deployment of water-tight security to ensure the party did not hold and also arrest Bobrisky, other cross dressers found.

    The Nation gathered that five alleged members of Bobrisky’s club were arrested for breach of public peace and indecency and were currently in police custody.

    According to the police, the government was not ready to allow continuous breach of existing laws, noting that allowing public display of actions that could corrupt young people was inimical to national consciousness.

    Read Also: Runsewe to youths: Bobrisky not a cultural ambassador

    A signal from the Lagos Police Command to Elemoro, Epe, Alausa and Victoria Island noted that the “popular celebrity and male barbie” was to celebrate his birthday at 10am at the Pearls Gardens in Lekki Phase 1 and thereafter host a party at Club DNA, 76 Adetokumbo Ademola Street, opposite Eko Hotel and Suite, Victoria Island by 10pm on Sunday.

    It said a beach party was also scheduled for 10am on Sunday at Paradise Boat Club, plot 8, Walter Carrington Crescent, Victoria Island, directing the deployment of patrol vehicles and over 100 personnel to the venues to prevent any immoral act from taking place.

    “Considering the pedigree of the celebrant, the event may likely cause breach of public peace and it is expected that no immoral display should be allowed.

    “To augment security at each of the venues, ACPOL Area ‘A’ Lion Building/SUPOL Victoria Island is to mobilize 50 men from own Area Command/Division to provide security at Club DNA, 76 Adetokumbo Ademola Street, opposite Eko Hotel and Suite, Victoria Island and Paradise Boat Club, plot 8, Walter Carrington Crescent, Victoria Island on August 31 and September 1 respectively.

    “To be assisted by DPO Victoria Island, ACPOL Area ‘J’ Elemoro/SUPOL Maroko is to mobilize 50 men from own Area Command/Division to provide water-tight security at Club DNA, No 76 Adetokumbo Ademola Street, opposite Eko Hotel and Suite, Victoria Island and Paradise Boat Club, plot 8, Walter Carrington Crescent, Victoria Island.”

    “Note, Area commanders/DPOs are to personally lead the men to the locations and ensure no immoral act should take place while the locations should be shut down if necessary. Ensure strict compliance please,” the signal read in part.

    Confirming the arrest to The Nation, Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) Mohammed Ali said Bobrisky was engaging in acts that were offensive to the generality of the populace, adding that some of his actions violated the Criminal and other laws of the land.

    He warned that breach of public decency was an offence punishable under Nigeria’s law, warning that the command would not allow it’s jurisdiction to be used by anyone to propagate homosexuality.