Tag: Olusegun Obasanjo

  • Obasanjo writes Buhari

    Obasanjo writes Buhari

    Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has asked President-Elect, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari to pay more attention to institutional reforms and be magnanimous in victory.

    He also urged him to start healing the wounds and bitterness across the land occasioned by the campaigns and those he called evil disciples.
    In a letter of congratulation dated March 31, 2015 addressed to the Gen. Buhari, Obasanjo reminded the President Elect that a lot of damage has been done to various institutions in the country which need urgent attention, pointing out that he must immediately assemble a crack team of Nigerians who will assist him in putting the country on the right part again.
    The letter reads: “I hasten to congratulate you on your success and victory in the Presidential election of March 28, 2015. Your success and victory after three previous unsuccessful attempts must be great object lessons for you and for all politicians particularly in Nigeria.
    “For me, the totality of the 2015 election holds many lessons for our democracy and democratization process which are both maturing. On this occasion, the system has been unnecessarily overheated before and particularly during the campaign when emphasis was more in trivialities and hate, divisive, in dignifying and disrespectful statements and comments rather than on pressing issues requiring attention.
    “I know that in victory, you will be magnanimous to start binding the wounds and bitterness occasioned by the campaign and the evil disciples.
    “With so much harm already done to many national institutions, in lauding the military which proudly nurtured you and me, you will have a lot to do on institution reform, education, healthcare, economy, infrastructure, power, youth employment, agribusiness, oil and gas, external affairs, cohesiveness of our nation and ridding our land of corruption. Your varied and wide experience will undoubtedly stand you in good stead.
    “I am also sure that there are men and women of goodwill, character and virtue across the board that you can mobilise to join hands with you in the reform, repairs and redirection that will be imperative to put Nigeria back on the fast lane of good governance, unity, cohesiveness, development and progress. Once again, I felicitate with you and wish you well” Obasanjo stated.
    In its own letter of congratulation, the Nigeria Labour Congress said the election has opened a new and important chapter in the socio-political development of the nation.
    President of the Congress, Dr. Ayuba Wabba said: “We at the Nigeria Labour Congress join millions of our compatriots in congratulating you on your victory in perhaps the most keenly contested presidential election in the history of our country.
    “We strongly believe that your election has undoubtedly opened a new and important chapter in the socio-political development of our nation as we have finally broken the jinx of transiting from one democratically elected civilian government controlled by a ruling party to one contributed by an opposition party.
    “Your victory is a lesson in perseverance and commitment, made possible by the patience, zeal, resolve, resilience and determination of Nigerians many of whom have undying belief in you.
    “We believe this special trust reposed in you is a sacred bond between you and the Nigerian people as well as a call to an uncommon duty at a special period in the history of our nation.
    “The times are challenging and will draw from you every grain of wisdom and courage, justice and equity, urgency and necessity.
    “We at the Nigeria Labour Congress, like other compatriots not only look up to you with great expectations, we look forward to working with and engaging your government.  We stand ready to work with you in defining as well as charting a new agenda for Nigeria. As we await your response, please accept the assurances of our highest esteem”.

  • Obasanjo visits Ebola-hit countries

    Obasanjo visits Ebola-hit countries

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has visited Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia in solidarity with the West African nations worse hit by the Ebola Virus Disease.

    Obasanjo arrived in Guinea Conakry on Thursday and was received by President Alpha Conde at the Presidential Palace.

    During a meeting with the Guinean President, Obasanjo said he was in Conakry to commiserate with the people over the losses suffered due to the Ebola outbreak and to congratulate the nation’s leadership for its efforts at containing the disease.

    He said: “True friendship is tested in times of trials. I am here because this is a trying time for my brother and the people of Guinea.

    “I commiserate with you and also congratulate you for the way and manner you have handled this crisis.”

    The former president reiterated his commitment to seeking international assistance for countries affected by the Ebola crisis.

    “Let me assure you that I am personally involved in mobilising support for the affected countries,” he said.

    “I have been working closely with the African Union (AU) chairperson to raise funds from the private sector in Africa to support efforts to eradicate Ebola,” Obasanjo added.

    The former president said although Guinea and the other affected countries had reasonably contained the disease, it was important for global partners to provide assistance to victims and find ways to ensure such outbreaks were avoided in the future.

    Conde said Chief Obasanjo’s visit came as no surprise to him, even though other global leaders were reluctant to visit the Ebola-hit countries.

  • Stop attacks on Obasanjo,  Ogun Obas tell President

    Stop attacks on Obasanjo, Ogun Obas tell President

    Traditional rulers in Ogun State have advised President Goodluck Jonathan to call his men to order in their use of intemperate language , if he wants to make a headway  in next month’s presidential  election.

    The Obas are particularly irked  by the persistent abuse of former President Olusegun Obasanjo by those claiming to speak for the president’s campaign team.

    The Obas spoke their mind on Friday at a brief meeting  with the president  after the commissioning of the Olorunsogo Power Project in the Ewekoro Local Government of the state.

    Obasanjo is a high chief of Owu,Abeokuta, the capital of the state.

    At the meeting with the President was the Olowu of Owu,Obasanjo’s quarter,Oba Sanya Dosunmu.

    Also present were the Alake of Egbaland and Chairman of the State Council of Traditional Rulers,Oba Oyedotun Gbadebo, the Akarigbo of Remo,Oba  Michael Sonariwo and former governor of the state,Otunba Gbenga Daniel.

    Sources close to the meeting said the Obas told Jonathan, who sought their support in the election, that his men were not helping his cause in anyway by their continued insult of Obasanjo.

    They said Jonathan would be the ultimate  loser if he failed to rein them in

    Obasanjo and Jonathan are locked in a long running battle  with the former President accusing the incumbent of mismanaging the country.

    He believes the president  has not done much in the fight against corruption . He also accused him of depleting the nation’s foreign reservesthrough reckless spendings.

    Jonathan countered ,saying  that Obasanjo  was behaving like a motor park tout.

  • Poll Shift: Obasanjo warns Jonathan against delay tactics

    Poll Shift: Obasanjo warns Jonathan against delay tactics

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Saturday alleged that President Goodluck Jonathan is adopting the delay tactics of former Cote D Ivoire President, Laurent Gbagbo and warned of the likely dire consequences on Nigerians.

    The former President who spoke with journalists at his mansion on Presidential Hilltop Estate, Abeokuta, the Ogun state capital said President Jonathan was playing with the future of the country.

    Obasanjo noted that President Gbagbo kept shifting the election date in his country until he was sure of winning and when the elections came resulted in a run – off, he did not only refused to handover power upon losing, but also “unleashed chaos, confusion and crisis” on his people “until nemesis caught up with him.”

    He warned President Jonathan to be careful of those prodding him on, saying when the heat begins, he would be left “naked and isolated.”

    According to Obasanjo, Jonathan’s fear of what Buhari might do to him and others if he loses the polls because of Buhari’s tough disposition towards corruption and others vices informed the shift in election dates.[checklist][/checklist]

  • Elections shift: My fear for Jonathan, by Obasanjo

    Elections shift: My fear for Jonathan, by Obasanjo

    Ex-President endorses Buhari

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has spoken of his fears for Nigeria and President Goodluck Jonathan, following the postponement of the general elections.

    Obasanjo, who was in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, to present his 1,500-page autobiography My Watch, which has been banned in Nigeria pending libel hearings, was quoted by Financial Times  as saying that “the signs are not auspicious” in the wake of the six-week postponement of the polls.

    He added: “I don’t know whether a script is being played.”

    The presidential election was slated for next Saturday, but the Independent National Electoral Commission  (INEC) shifted it following the memoranda from security chiefs that they could not guarantee security for the elections because of their engagement against insurgency in the northeast.

    The delay should also enable Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) to be distributed to the millions of voters yet to receive them and who were at risk of being disenfranchised, according to INEC chair Prof. Attahiru Jega.

    Obasanjo said: “I sincerely hope that the president is not going for broke and saying ‘look dammit, it’s either I have it or nobody has it’. I hope that we will not have a…I hope we can avoid it.”

    Speaking on whether he would like to return to politics Obasanjo was quoted in the interview as saying: “I am an old man and I’m enjoying what I’m doing now… And then you forget I am a farmer; I have to manage my farm.”

    For the first time, Obasanjo openly supported All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate Gen Muhammadu Buhari.

    “The circumstances (Buhari) will be working under if he wins the electionare different from the one he worked under before (as a military Head of State) where he was both the executive and the legislature — he knows that.  He’s smart enough. He’s educated enough. He’s experienced enough. Why shouldn’t I support him?”

     

  • Obasanjo attends Jonathan’s daughter’s wedding

    Obasanjo attends Jonathan’s daughter’s wedding

    The church wedding of President Goodluck Jonathan’s foster daughter, Inebharapu Paul on Saturday  was contrary to expectations attended by former President Olusegun Obasanjo at the National Christian Centre, Abuja.

    The former president has been criticizing Jonathan’s administration in the past few months.

    Obasanjo, who arrived the venue with Dr. Andy Uba and some other aides before the commencement of the service, was ushered into the hall amidst standing ovation by his admirers.

    He took his seat at the VIP section while his introduction during the service attracted a loud applause from the congregation.

    President Jonathan also recognised Obasanjo’s presence while giving the vote of thanks at the church service.

    At the occasion, the President also urged the couple to embrace the virtue of endurance and learn to resolve their disagreements in their bedroom.

    Jonathan asked them not to bring their problems to him because he has more than enough issues to handle.

    Delivering his sermon, the Primate of the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, Most Revd. Nicholas Okoh, said that even although marriage as an institution was ordained by God, it had been having problems from the beginning with Adam and Eve.

    Harping on the need for forgiveness in relationships, he warned the couple against keeping diary of offences for each other.

    He urged them to allow the love of God to rule their home, instead of money.

    He also charged the couple to keep the vow they made before God so that they can attract the blessings therein to themselves.

    He said: “Money must not rule your marriage. Allow the love of God to rule your home. Let God have the final say, not money. Your marriage should be based on scriptures and not your certificates which are just gifts from God,”

    “We must obey and adopt the original marriage if we want to continue in the presence of God. There must be Adam and Eve, anything else is an aberration.

    “We encourage young people to reject that new introduction of young men marrying men or women marrying women.

    “Marriage was ordained for fellowship, friendship and companionship. You must be best of friends, companion and fellowship together,” he added

    Among those who attended the service are the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Emeka Ihedioha; Governor Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom) ; Governor Jonah Jang (Plateau); Governor Seriake Dickson (Bayelsa); Governor Liyel Imoke (Cross River; Governor Gabriel Suswam (Benue); former Governor Peter Odili; and Chief Edwin Clark.

    Some members of the National Assembly, ministers, top government officials, traditional rulers, captains of industry and members of the diplomatic corps also attended the service.

    Among the clergymen that graced the occasion are Pastor Enoch Adeboye; Bishop David Oyedepo, Archbishop Sam Amanga, and Pastor Paul Adefarasin.

  • Hello…. Good news, bad news

    Hello…. Good news, bad news

    It all began more than a decade ago. Today, the telecoms sector has contributed about $35 billion in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to the economy, bridged the digital divide and created jobs in the formal and informal sectors. Despite the gains, the revolution has its other sides, writes LUCAS AJANAKU.

    SOMETIME in 1983, after completing his ordinary level school certificate examination in June, Mr. Emmanuel Kehinde left Ibadan for Sokoto, Sokoto State. His intention was to stay with a brother, who was then serving in 7 Mechanised Brigade, Nigerian Army. The family had agreed that Emmanuel would stay with his brother long before he finished writing the examination but there was no agreement about the date of arrival at the Caliphate. Four days after writing the last paper, he boarded a night truck and off to  Sokoto he went. Despite riding in  a Mercedez 911 truck, the journey was smooth.

    He arrived at the city garage very early the following morning and from there, he boarded a bus to Ginginya Barracks. When he arrived at the Senior Non-Commissioned Officers (SNCOs) Quarters, he met the doors of the two-bedroom apartment locked. Neither was his brother’s neighbour anywhere near the apartment. The duo  had been drafted to carry out ‘special duty’ outside the state.

    Like a fish out of water, Emmanuel was left in the lurch; he had to plan his return trip to Ibadan. He sold his audio cassettes and a Sony tape player to raise fare as there was no way he could communicate with his brother. Two communication options were opened to him then: one was telegraph; while the other was land line. The former would not guarantee immediate response; the latter was an exclusive preserve of the rich and families of the military personnel, who were at the heml of affairs.  Were there a functional ubiquitous communications system, Emmanuel and his brother would have reached an agreement on when it will be most appropriate for the two to see each other.

    But more than three decades after, things have changed so diametrically. Gradual reduction in devices’ prices has driven access and penetration. Today, the mobile phone is no longer seen as a social status symbol but as a means of  voice communication, internet access and even business transactions.

    Abubakar Ali is an itinerant mendicant and native of Gombi, Adamawa State, one of the towns worst hit by the mindless blood-letting of the radical sect, Boko Haram. A visually-impaired man, who was usually assisted by a young man he simply identified  as Sadiq, Ali clutched his mobile phone jealously as he fixed his ear piece. Just a little after the ever-busy Iyana Ipaja Bridge, he sat down and engaged in a passionate conversation with one of his kinsmen in the town which is also the headquarters of Gombi Local Government Area of the state.

    Ali, who spoke through an interpreter, said: “I have been talking to my family members. I wanted to know how everybody was doing. I have spoken with Hadiza and Zainab my daughters. I was told Bello and his younger brother, Hakeem, have gone to the farm with the donkey. Because of the problem of these Boko Haram people, mobile phones cannot work in some parts of our community because the base stations have been destroyed.”

    For Idrissou, also visually-impaired, who regularly stayed on the stairs of the footbridge at CMS,   Lagos Island, life would have been worthless without the mobile phone. A beggar from one of the troubled parts of the north, Baba has his ear piece on always, listening to one radio station or the other when making and receiving calls.

    “Since I am blind, I get people to help me load recharge cards. They also assist me to download some Quarnic recitations which I listen to. They also help me to dial the numbers I wish to call. It has been a wonderful experience but government should help those of us living with disadvantage with mobile phones that would cater for our peculiar needs,” he said.

    The liberalisation of the telecoms sector by the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo was one of the best things to have happened to the country since independence in 1960.

    Communications Technology Minister, Dr Omobola said the industry currently contributes 9.58 per cent to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and also aiding the econmic growths of other parts of the country.

    e-business platforms such as Wakanow, Jumia, Paga, Konga, i-Sec,  and iRoko TV, to name a few, have come up and are doing so great, contributing to the growth of commerce, job creation. Users of these platforms ride on the crest of the availability of smartphones which are cheap and internet-enabled. Thus, all that is needed for them to stay within the comforts of their living rooms, with mobile broadband provided by the four Global System for Mobile communication (GSM) service providers-MTN, Globacom, Airtel and Etisalat and the only surviving but struggling player in the near-moribund Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) sub-sector, Visafone.

    Dr Johnson said: “The Nigerian Telecoms sector is one of the fastest growing sectors in the world and continues to attract significant (Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). An additional  $6 billion was added between 2011 and last year alone. Total mobile subscriptions increased to 134.5 million as at September 2014 from 95 million in 2011. Tele-density increased to 96 per cent in September 2014 from 68 per cent in 2011

    “The total mobile internet subscriptions increased to 73.8 million as at September 2014 from 45 million in 2011. Internet penetration increased to about 52 per cent in September 2014 from about 26.5 per cent in September 2011.”

    Executive Vice Chairman/CEO, Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Dr. Eugene Juwah said there has been a phenomenal growth in the telecoms sector, adding that it has done better than any other sectors in the country.

    He said: “In our country (Nigeria), for instance, we now have a total number of 134 million connected lines and a teledensity of 96 per cent with about 29,000 base stations for both GSM and CDMA service providers as at December 2013.”

     

    SIM card registration

     

    A SIM (Subscriber Identification Module) Card is the card issued by mobile phone operators which provides the individual user with the appropriate number recognised by that network. A subcriber inserts the card into his or her mobile phone to access the service provider’s network.

    Since the launch of the GSM services in 2001, SIM cards were offered to subscribers without the requirement to provide proper identification by the users.

    However, sometime in early 2008, security agencies approached the NCC to assist in resolving crimes perpetrated with the use of phones. Prior to the SIM registration, it was difficult to unmask criminal elements with the number of the phones that they used.

    Consequently, the NCC held a consultative forum involving various telecoms operators, consumer groups, security agencies, telecoms associations, dealers, the Nigerian Identity Management Commission, National Population Commission (NIMC), National Census Commission, the media and a host of other stakeholders.

    The participants agreed to the appropriateness and importance to have the record of register all phone users in the country. Another committee was subsequently set up to appraise the details of the implementation of the registration and submit its recommendations to the NCC.

    Upon reviewing the recommendations of the committee, the NCC Board approved the registration of all phone subscribers in the country.

    The registration began in Abuja on March 28, 2011, when Dr. Juwah launched the registration.

    On completion of the validation, harmonisation and scrubbing of the records of all registered SIM cards, operators were mandated to disconnect all unregistered SIM cards from their networks.

    Director, Public Affairs at the NCC, Tony Ojobo, said the registration helped in no small measure to unmask those behind commercial kidnappings, a time-honoured predilection of youths in the Southsouth and Southeastern parts  of the country. Though largely cricised for its imperfections, analysts say it was a good thing for a country that never had any data base at all.

     

    Mobile Number Portability  (MNP)

     

    With the registration of all the active SIM cards, the regulator declared the coast cleared for the introduction of other schemes that will consolidate on the gains of the  revolution. Two of these were the Mobile Number Portability (MNP) scheme and Mobile Money.

    Juwah informed that the NCC had selected a consortium of three companies – Interconnect, Saab Grintek and Telcordia – to manage the implementation of MNP. The consortium, according to him, has  responsibility to set up and implement the MNP Clearing House and administer MNP in the country.

    MNP allows a subscriber to abandon his/her inefficient service provider and still retain his/her old number. According to Juwah, MNP has been identified as one service that could further deepen competiveness in the telecommunications market, adding that with the growing reliance and dependency on mobile communications for everyday socio-economic interactions, it became imperative to give the customer more freedom to choose.

    He said: “The vision of the Commission is not only to provide access to telecommunication services to Nigerians at affordable cost but to also to continue to provide the required stimulus and appropriate environment for the introduction of innovative services that will impact on quality telecoms service delivery.

    “Our mobile subscriber numbers have become our identity and in most cases, we are required to provide our mobile (telephone) numbers while filling out forms in opening bank accounts, making hotel and airline bookings.

    “With the launch of MNP, consumers of telecommunications services will no longer need to acquire new numbers in order to move from one network to the other. They will simply take along their existing numbers to any network of their choice. The power and freedom of choice will henceforth, rest with the consumer. If a consumer is dissatisfied with the quality of services being provided by a service provider, she/he can simply port out of that network to any network of his/her choice without losing his/her subscriber number.”

    According to Juwah, with the launch of MNP, there will be no need for customers to engage in the usually painful exercise of trying to commit phone numbers to memory, neither will they need to frequently change complimentary cards, billboards, letter-heads and other corporate documents.

    He added that MNP will revolutionise the way calls are currently being routed since the National Destination Codes (NDC), that is, the network prefix such as 0802, 0803, 0805, 0809 usually identified with operators no longer play the role of unique identifier. He added that the NCC adopted the ‘All Call Query (ACQ)’ option for routing calls and SMS in line with international best practices, preparatory to the implementation of MNP.

    Though the scheme has not recorded any huge success, owing largely to lack of awareness, the NCC insisted that the idea is not about the total number of people porting from one service provider to the other but the fact that the freedom is there for subscribers. According to the regulator, the mere fact that operators know MNP scheme is in place, their attitude to upgrading their equipment and general customer care would change.

     

    Mobile Money

     

    Under the Connect Nigerians, Digital payments and Financial Inclusion Initiative of the Federal Government, it was discovered that more people have  access to mobile phones than to bank accounts with 75 per cent of adults living in urban areas and 39 per cent living in rural areas.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has licensed 18 Mobile Money Operators since the scheme began about four years ago.

    Approximately, one million subscribers have taken advantage of the scheme while there are about 67,000 registered agents across the country.

    Over 11 million transactions worth over $600 million have been conducted using the platform. Uptake has been slow but analysts say improved infrastructure, fine-tuning of legislation and increasing confidence in product by consumers will stimulate acceleration.

    “Mobile money is mostly used to buy airtime; it, however, has the potential to draw more patrons into formal financial services,” the minister said.

    However, the dearth of insurance, agents and lowlevel of awareness have been identified as  major challenges hindering the success of the scheme

    Executive Director, Digital Africa, Dr. Armstrung Takang, who spoke with The Nation in Lagos, said the project, which was designed to complement the cashless policy of the CBN has failed to grow because the agents, from whom money would be collected are not there while the people do not have confidence that when they lose their money online, there will be anybody to hold responsible.

    The issue of who is liable for loss of money in the course of using mobile money platform has always been avoided by the CBN and operators  of the 18  licensed firms.

    Takang said the absence of an insurance firm to bear the risk of victims using the platform was a great dis-incentive, adding that the existence of the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Company (NDIC) encouraged people to use the banks because they know that in the event of a failure, they will not lose their entire deposits.

    He said: “There is need to have insurance to guarantee confidence so that I can say to you that if you use your phone to transfer money and there is a problem and you lose money, I guarantee that you will not lose that money.  It is like when we have NDIC in banking. You and I will go and open an account. If that bank goes down, I know I can go to NDIC and I will get my money. If you lose money online, what happens? It is still a grey area.”

    Another problem is the lack of awareness. “There is no awareness that your phone can become a banking hall, your wallet and the money that is transmitted through credit on your phone is as good as the money that you get through the traditional banking halls. This is still lacking among majority of Nigerians,” he said.

    Even if the two obstacles are addressed, the absence of mobile money agents will be another contraints. Mobile money agents are the last on the value chain. It is from them that people will collect the cards sent through the mobile phone.

    “Another major aspect is that of having agents to collect cash when the cash is needed. The agents are supposed to be ubiquitous but they are not there,” he said.

    He called for the enactment of the enabling laws and provision of requisite security platforms in terms of technology to ensure that these transactions are safe enough to inspire confidence in those saddled with the responsibility to manage the scheme.

    The CEO, Etisalat, Mathiew Wilsher, said all the stakeholders, including the CBN, NCC and operators must come together and instutionalise an efficient framework for the success of the scheme.

     

    have always believed that the CBN, NCC, telecommunication operators and banks need to build efficient mobile money structure that will guarantee the project’s success. Mobile money remains a convenient, secure and affordable way to send money to friends and family.

    “As at today, mobile money remains a huge business opportunity for stakeholders, but there is the need to get the fundamentals right. It is only when the fundamentals, like knowing whether a bank-led or telco-led model is best for the country, that the level of success expected would be achieved. At Etisalat, we are committed to the mobile money project. We see a lot of business potential in this field. But, like I said, regulators and other stakeholders need to get the fundamentals right,” he told The Nation.

     

    Impact in agric, education, health sectors.

     

    The importance of the revolution has been tremendous in the agric sector. It has ended the long years of rackeering in the fertiliser  distribution scheme. Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr Akinwumi Adesina said the importance of the cell phones to farmers cannot be overemphasised.

    He said: “It is actually the cell phone that has provided us with the tool to directly access each farmer thereby denying corrupt middlemen from making fortune from their sweat. Some people think that our farmers are uneducated and cannot use cell phones. The evidence does not support that. Under the Growth Enhancement Support (GES) scheme, we made it possible for farmers to transact business in their own local languages using their cell phones.

    “We intend to use the GES scheme to distribute these phones. To be entitled to a phone, every farmer must be registered on the e-wallet platform. Paper vouchers will be issued to farmers who do not have phones. The government will provide a subsidy to the farmer through the voucher to buy the phone. The farmer takes the voucher to the local mobile phone operator and pays the balance which is the difference between the value of the voucher and the cost of the phone.

    “Once a farmer buys a phone and a SIM card, his new phone number will be updated on the e-wallet database and he will be able to receive his e-wallet voucher which will entitle him to purchase fertilizer and seeds at subsidised rates. Phones will be sold directly to farmers by local mobile phone service providers.”

    According to him, the total number of transactions done by phone with respect to the GES scheme stood at 4.9 million, relying on available data, based on farmers’ use of cellphones to access fertilizers and seeds last year.

    Adesina explained that out of the 4.9 million transactions, 1.2 million were in English, 620,000 were in Pidgin (English), 2.2 million were in Hausa, 854,000 were in Yoruba while 344 were in Igbo languages.

    According to him, in the first year of the GES scheme, 1.2 million farmers received their subsidised fertilizers and seeds through their cell phones, saying that the number is expected to grow to 1.5 million farmers by the end of the dry season.

    He gave the percentage of beneficiaries from the distribution of fertilizers and seeds through mobile phones, at 25 per cent from the Northwest, 12 per cent (Southeast) 13 per cent in the Southsouth, 10 per cent in the Southwest, 18 per cent in the Northcentral and 22 per cent in the Northeast.

    Adesina, however, said that 71 per cent of farmers sampled are yet  to enjoy cell phone facility because many of the farmers in rural areas are poor and are excluded from the benefits of the on-going mobile phone revolution.

    According to him, the use of mobile phones to distribute fertilisers and seeds to farmers has recorded tremendous success in countries such as Kenya and Malawi.

    Its impact on the education sector is supposed to be revolutionary. With mobile phones that are internet-enabled, online access to resource materials on virtually every subject matter becomes easy. Similarly, there is now access to e-book which could be read online while student could do quite a number of things on their mobile devices, especially in the tablets age.

    In the health sector, the mobile operators have launched one mobile health insurance policy or the other. A sector analyst says it is too early  to start feeling the impact of some of the health initiatives. But health tips sent through the mobile phone has been of tremendous success  in the Abiye health initiative that has put and to pregnancy from turning to a death penalty.

    Each ranger or health facility is equipped with means of vehicular movement and evacuation of patients ranging from customised motorcycles to tricycle and 4-wheeled ambulances. Speedboat ambulances were earmarked for the riverine areas. To facilitate communication, individual mobile phones on a toll free caller-user group platform were provided for the pregnant women and their care-givers.

     

    The bad, the ugly

     

    President, Nigeria Internet Group (NIG), Bayo Banjo, said there are some bad sides to the widespread adoption of Information Communications Technology (ICT). According to him, “one of them is this job called Yahoo-Yahoo, a lot of our young people and even older people are involved in this but of course, in any new innovation, there are always the bad sides.”

     

    Steady decline in students’ performance

     

    There has been steady decline in the standard of education with the country recording 70 per cent failure rate in the result of this year’s West African School Certificate Examination (WASCE).

    Head, National Office of West African Examinations Council (WAEC), Mr. Charles Eguridu said a total of 1,705,976 candidates registered for the examination, but only 1,692,435 candidates, consisting of 929,075 male and 763,360 female candidates eventually wrote the examination.

    Out of the 1,692,435 that wrote the examination, a total of 529,425 candidates, representing 31.28 per cent, obtained credit passes in five subjects and above, including English Language and Mathematics.

    He said the 2014 May/June result when compared to that of the last two year’s, showed a marginal decline in the performance of candidates.

    According to him, in the May/June 2012 WASCE, 38.81 per cent of the candidates that sat for the examinations obtained five credit passes and above including English Language and Mathematics. In 2013, the percentage declined to 36.57 per cent, as against the 31.28 per cent recorded currently.

    Details of the current results as presented by Eguridu, revealed that 791,227 candidates, representing 46.75 per cent, obtained six credits and above while 982,472 candidates representing 58.05 per cent, obtained five credits and above.

    Also 1,148,262 candidates, representing 67.84 per cent, obtained credits and above in four subjects; 1,293,389 candidates, representing 76.42 per cent, obtained credits and above in three subjects; while 1,426,926 candidates, representing 84.31 per cent obtained credits and above in two subjects.

    A total number of 161 blind candidates, he added, registered for the examination, out of which 150 participated. From this figure, 21 candidates, representing 14 per cent obtained credits in five subjects, including English Language. Visually-impaired candidates, Eguridu noted, do not write Mathematics and science practical’s in the WASCE.

    He further disclosed that 1,605,613 candidates, representing 94.87 per cent had their results fully released, while 86,822 candidates, representing 5.13 per cent have a few of their subjects still being processed due to some errors, traced mainly to laxity on the part of the candidates and the schools, in the course of registration or writing the examination.

    He blamed parents for the dismal performance of students in the examination. He alleged that parents  have abdicated their role model functions to the pursuit of money.

    He said: “With this presentation, most Nigerians would quickly place the blame at the doorstep of schools and government. But they will not be quick enough to compare what quality used to be in those days when parents were part of their wards learning. Contemporary parents no longer show commitment to the learning outcomes of their children. Parents are now too busy to monitor and guide their children towards hard work as well as complement teachers’ efforts.

    “Everyone seems to have forgotten that those who excel in life are those who do what others are unable to do, going the extra mile with their studies to achieve success. There has been a steady decline in the last two years, though records show that the decline is marginal, but with the slight decline, we cannot say the students have not done well. Nigerian students performed comparatively well, when compared to other students in other WAEC countries, particularly in Mathematics.”

    But the Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Tai  Solarin University of Education, Prof Joseph Olusanya, identified the widespread use of mobile devices as a major factor responsible for the declining fortunes of the education sector.

    He said: “Most of them are busy chatting on phone and playing with computers and laptops. Students nowadays depend on “orijo” which makes reading culture to be on a low side. They are fond of cutting corners,” he said.

    A school tutor at Prudent Comprehensive College, Mr Olawale agrees no less with the deputy vice chancellor.

    He said: “Parents are to blame because they equip their children with tools which they fail to monitor their usage. Experience has shown that while lectures are going on, student bury their heads on the desks browsing the internet, chatting on Facebook and posting goofy pictures on Instagram. It is now common to see students spend valuable time pinging on their Blackberry phones. The situation has been made worse now that the BBM application could easily be downloaded from Google Play store free of charge.”

     

    Armed robbery, kidnap-for-ransom

     

    While the NCC said SIM registration has reduced crime rate in the country, stakeholders insist it has not as some unscrupulous elements within the system still sell pre-registered SIM cards to criminals who use and dump them after perpetrating crimes, leaving no trace behind.

    Banjo said: “When mobile phones came, I remember I had to caution people who said, oh things will be fantastic, you can call the police, you can call this, you can call that but the reverse is the case. “Now the armed robber can use the phone to warn his people carrying out an operation that police are around. A criminally-minded bank official can call someone and say XYZ has just withdrawn N4 million cash, meet him at such and such places. So in any innovation, there is always the good and the bad side.”

     

    BTS and health challenges

     

    As ICT pervade all aspects of modern living there are increases in radio frequency radiation emitted by more and more Base Transmission Stations (BTS), especially those installations erected in residential areas.

    Although the World Health Organisation (WHO) studies are yet to find any clear risk or health hazards associated with electromagnetic fields based on current findings, there are indeed fears that BTS erected in residential areas poses health risks to those living close to them.

    Indeed, there have been a couple of cases where some people were diagnosed and cause of their illness traced to emission from radio frequency emissions. There are about 29,000 BTS across the country but between 70,00 and 80,000 are required to enthrone seamless telecoms service delivery. Increasingly, fears about the likely harmful effects of BTS are making people to be wary of offering their compounds as sites for BTS, regardless of the financial inducements.

  • My grouse about Obasanjo, by Alabi-Isama

    My grouse about Obasanjo, by Alabi-Isama

    Civil war hero Brig-Gen. Godwin Alabi-Isama reflects on the book written by former President Olusegun Obasanjo, ‘My Watch’, and contends that the former leader reeled out a tissue of lies.

    I ’m gravely pained to be trading words with General Olusegun Obasanjo once again on the history of Nigeria-Biafra War. He is an elder and a former ruler who, ordinarily, should be treated with utmost respect. But, how can one genuinely respect an old man who tells lies like a badly raised child? Obasanjo has obviously not recovered from the shock inflicted on him by my book, The Tragedy of Victory, in which I exposed the tissues of lies in his civil war memoir, My Command. It is said that a lie may travel for a thousand miles, but it takes just one step of truth to catch up with it.

    I’m alive to stand up to him on the lies he has told on the war because I was a major participant in it.  I kept records.  With facts and figures at my finger tips, I have debunked Obasanjo’s lies in part three of my book, consisting of  165 pages, 69 pictures,  strategies and tactics, maps and documents.  This was the same Obasanjo who published a fake Federal Government gazette that I was found guilty by the Army when I was never tried.  I have proved that Obasanjo was an incompetent commander. I have proved that he was a wily and cunning fellow, and an incredible opportunist, who reaped where he did not sow. I have proved that he was an ingrate and a hypocrite. More importantly, I have proved that he was a coward, who ran away from the war front to go and look for phantom ammunition.  Rather than respond to my claims the way a gallant officer should, he has now responded like a motor-park tout, impugning my person and questioning my ethnic lineage. I never said I was from Ibadan. I only schooled there.

    General Obasanjo, this  bolekaja style is so demeaning.  You live in a glass house. So, stop throwing stones. We, who have facts, pictures and documents, meticulously kept over the years, can tell the whole world one or two things about you.

    Have a look at this attached picture at your wedding to your first wife, Remi. When the photographer wanted to take the picture of the bride and groom and their parents, you said a few things about your parents, which I still remember.  It was only Remi’s mother that took the picture with us. Please, don’t mess with the memory of my dear parents. You know my mother, an Ilorin woman, and you also saw her at the war front. She told me who my father was and she spoke his language, and took me to his home town when he died. I went to primary school in Owu.  So, I know your family very well.  You should be honest enough to tell the world the story of the man who was your father.  I told you and wrote in my book that any person who does not appreciate the efforts of women has had no good mother. Please, don’t go beyond military tactics and strategies when dealing with me.

    You say in volume three of your book My Watch that I could be in bed with a woman while radioing my commander that I was in pursuit of rebels. Hundreds of thousands of those who have read my book The Tragedy of Victory—a six hundred and seventy-page book, 39 military strategies and tactics, maps and documents – will call you a liar. I am so surprised and even embarrassed that a man of your status is still trading in gutter rumours. An elder with a filthy mind, a leader who lacks wisdom of age, does not deserve any respect.

    I’m the same Godwin  Alabi-Isama that commanded the troops that liberated today’s Cross River State in thirty days of battle from Calabar to Obubra with no single casualty.  This is the same Alabi-Isama that advanced 480 kilometres in 30 days from Calabar to Port Harcourt, liberating today’s Akwa Ibom, Rivers and Bayelsa States with 35,000 men and women with 15000 on logistics, building roads and pontoons, with 8 men and 2 officers as my casualties. Obasanjo ordered the attack of Ohoba, a mere 24 miles from Owerri, in one hour of battle, more than 1000 Nigerian soldiers were dead.

    Obasanjo claims that when I once played squash with him, I cheated. This incredible liar has forgotten that there were witnesses to that game. Those witnesses are still alive, and they remember what really happened.  I played squash with him once in my life. He could not make a point because I was not one of his sycophants who would allow him to win a game just to massage his huge ego.  Look, General Obasanjo, there was no way you could have beaten me in any game. You do not have the physique and agility to do that. Apart from being a popular sports man and soccer captain in Ibadan Boys High School,  I was Sports Officer in the Nigerian Army, playing games from soccer to tennis, athletics etc. You never played any games at school let alone in the Army. If you had been diligent at your physical exercises as we were taught to be, your protruding tummy would not have become a butt of joke to many officers and men of the Army.

    General Obasanjo may try, but he cannot deny the evidence of the civil war tragic history. While he got over a thousand soldiers killed at Ohoba, myself,  Alani Akinrinade,  and the brilliant and hardworking Pincer Team of Ola Oni, Iluyomade, Isemede, S.S. Tomoye, Salawu, Okwarobo, Sunny Tuoyo, etc.  did a better job at the Third Marine Commando.  I have stated how it was done in ‘The Tragedy of Victory’, by writing to set the Civil War records straight.  Obasanjo says I only wanted to make money, that was why I wrote my book, after all, I was broke. I thank Obasanjo for unwittingly giving credit that I did not steal money in the Army.   I believe that this country, Nigeria ought to know by now all the crooks parading themselves as saints.  Now, I know why Obasanjo was surprised at my financial successes abroad, and then sent his wife, Stella, of blessed memory, to  me. She was my guest in Houston Texas for a week. We have video and pictures of the visit with witnesses like Jack Gonsoulin, Rod Anthony, and Tom Britton.

    I challenge Obasanjo to a debate on military tactics and strategies on the Nigerian Civil War. He wrote about his team. Who were they? George Innih went the wrong way to Arochukwu when Akinrinade needed reinforcement for the final battle to capture Uli Ihiala airport.

    Akinrinade told him that he would shoot George Innih anytime he showed up. Where was Obasanjo’s  fake Apollo Battalion that operated behind enemy lines, when he could not capture Ohoba?  When Akinrinade called him that Biafra troops had surrendered to him and the Pincer team, Obasanjo, who was coming from a party, got lost looking for them, as he did not know where to go and did not know the way to Amichi.

    I am not qualified to comment on Obasanjo’s  political achievements, if any, for this country. The people and posterity will do that. There is no President in this country that he has not condemned.  Haba!  He always thinks that he has the preserve of knowledge on how to rule this country. Did the country move forward when he was Head of State or President? He destroyed the heart of the national security. We can see the result today. He destroyed education in many ways. We see the result today.  He destroyed a lot of other things.  As for how he has treated his family shabbily, his wife and children have openly made their comments. Those comments are in public domain today and forever, even though Obasanjo cleverly brushes them aside in his current book.

    I implore Obasanjo to stop lying before he dies.

     

  • Obasanjo’s  provocative  sophistries

    Obasanjo’s provocative sophistries

    FORMER President Olusegun Obasanjo has many things going for him. He is controversial, but has managed to make his controversiality productive and rewarding. He is not gifted in many things, but out of his little endowment, he has cleverly forged a reputation for huge accomplishments, becoming a cult political figure to be consulted, venerated and feared. He has little interest in telling the truth, but even the lies he told, often with irresistible panache, have come across as reassuringly cathartic for their capacity to wound our common enemies. He does not amount to much with us, at least not in our estimation, but his statements, vituperation, and sanctimoniousness, paradoxically carry weight. He exasperates us, but we endure him, and even find him amusing. No man has ever lived so fulsomely in the public glare preaching half-truths.

    It was, therefore, not surprising that on Tuesday, the insouciant former president indulged himself again to the maximum, barely a few weeks after thoroughly carpeting President Goodluck Jonathan for incompetence. This time it was at the public presentation of his book, My Watch, a narcissistic sequel to his many other books, chiefly My Command. A Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain in Ogun State, Buruji Kashamu, had two Fridays ago secured an ex parte injunction barring Chief Obasanjo from publishing his new book, saying it would permanently injure his reputation and pre-empt the outcome of a N20bn libel suit he had instituted against the former president. The case was to be heard again on Wednesday. But a day before the hearing, My Watch was presented.

    During the well-attended and well-publicised presentation, Chief Obasanjo imperiously engaged in theatrics. He could not be bound by Justice Valentine Ashi’s ex parte injunction because he had since finished the book Mr Buruji was complaining about, and his publishers had since published it. It was a legal fog the former president was happy to seize to deride everyone, starting from the bemused judge. If the Nigerian judiciary was normal, argued Chief Obasanjo sarcastically, the judge would be sanctioned. He was not struck by the irony of constituting himself into an appellate court in a case in which he is the defendant. Nor was he discomfited by the fact that as an ex-president, he had by his resort to self-help and unstatesmanlike utterances once again scorned and humiliated the judiciary of the country he recently presided over.

    The book itself, a trilogy on his life and public service, is according to him meant to settle many of the controversies that swaddled his time in office. He reiterated to his audience that he actually never courted third term, the infamous tenure extension he was accused of seeking, but that there was an attempt by some governors and politicians to foist it on him. He only knew about the conspiracy, he said tersely, but never actively promoted it. He could have fooled us. If he did not conceive the plot, what did he do to halt it?

    The worst speciousness he engaged in last Tuesday was his defence of his political meddlesomeness — the foisting of the Umaru Yar’Adua/Goodluck Jonathan presidency on Nigeria. “I don’t regret bringing in Yar’Adua and Jonathan,” he said defiantly. “If they don’t do well, those coming from behind (whatever that means) should learn from me and do better.” What insufferable arrogance.

    Sneak reviews indicate that My Watch is a compilation of expletives, vituperations and judgemental inanities. We wait patiently to read the multi-volume autobiography, even if it breaks our backs. For sure it will only reinforce our view of Chief Obasanjo. He is too old to change, follows no one, does not have a following, and is too preoccupied with himself and his own narrow interests to care what the country feels or needs.

  • Obasanjo guilty of contempt over autobiography – Court

    Obasanjo guilty of contempt over autobiography – Court

    A High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in Wuse Zone 2, Abuja, on Wednesday held that former President Olusegun Obasanjo was in contempt of court for flouting orders restraining him from among others, publishing his autobiography – “My Watch.”

    Justice Valentine Ashi, in a ruling gave Obasanjo 21 days (from the day of service of the court’s orders on him) to explain cause why he should not be punished for contempt for going ahead to publish the book despite the ex-parte interim order made by the court on December 5 and a pending libel suit involving him (Obasanjo).

    The judge restrained him from further publishing, printing or offering for sale, the book, which content touches on the subject matter before the court.

    Justice Ashi had on December 5 granted ex-parte interim orders, restraining Obasanjo from proceeding with plans to publish the book or have it published for him, and fixed December 10 as the return date.

    Despite the court’s interim orders, Obasanjo reportedly made public presentation of the book on Tuesday in Lagos, arguing that the book had been published before the court was misled into making the orders.

    The judge took arguments from lawyer to the plaintiff/applicant, Alex Iziyon (SAN) and defendant/respondent’s lawyer, Realwon Okpanach on the plaintiff’s motion for interlocutory injunctions, the defendant’s counter affidavit and motion for order to vacate the earlier granted interim orders.

    Ruling, Justice Ashi held that it was wrong for Obasanjo to have proceeded to publish the book despite the fact that a libel suit, which subject matter formed part of the content of the book, was still pending before the court and that the orders he made on December 5 was still pending.

    He further held that it was immaterial that the book was published before the interim orders were made.

    He said Obasanjo ought not to have publish the book because he was aware of the part-heard libel suit relating to the letter he wrote to President Goodluck Jonathan, accusing a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Buruji Kashamu, of being a fugitive wanted in the United States.

    “The fact that the book was published in November is irrelevant. As long as the substantive suit is not yet determined, no party is entitled to publish or comment on material facts that are yet to be decided on by the court.

    “I hold the defendant, not only in contempt of the court, but to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt and ordered to undo what he has wrongly done,” the judge said.