Tag: Olusegun Obasanjo

  • Ahmadu Ali urges ASUU to end strike

    Ahmadu Ali urges ASUU to end strike

    PDP ex-chair heads NUC board •Minister: Govt can’t fully fund tertiary education

    A former National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP), Senator Ahmadu Ali, yesterday in Abuja begged the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to return to the classroom “in the name of God”.

    The university system, he said, is the most critical variable in the development of the country’s education.

    Ali, a former Federal Commissioner for Education during the military government of Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, spoke at the inauguration of the governing boards and councils of Federal Ministry of Education’s corporations/institutions and the Committee on NEEDS Assessment for Polytechnics and Colleges of Education.

    The politician is the chairman of the Governing Council of the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    He decried the challenges facing the sector.

    Ali said: “I beg ASUU, in the name of God, to return to the classroom. This is coming at a time when our educational system is facing major challenges. We consider our appointment as very important. The importance is heightened by the fact that the university system, which the NUC is supervising, is the most critical variable in the development of our national education.

    “The quality of our education depends largely on maintaining a good quality in the university. We promise to do our best to contribute to a more robust system.”

    The Supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, who inaugurated the governing boards/councils, urged the members to ensure that the industrial actions experienced in the institutions are resolved.

    He said: “It is clear that the sustenance of the ongoing processes may continue to be problematic since the Federal Government lacks the capacity to fully and solely meet the funding needs of tertiary education. Consequently, effective fund mobilisation, through diverse sources and greater prudence and efficient utilisation of available funds, must be of utmost concern to you.

    “You have no excuses to give since you already have the institutional freedom and flexibility to respond to the challenges of limited public funding through proactive initiatives on endowments, sourcing research grants, the provision of consultancy services, as well as courting the involvement of the private sector in the development of the institutions.”

    The Chairman, House of Representatives’ Committee on Education Aminu Suleiman said the National Assembly was trying to resolve the ASUU crisis.

    He urged the boards and councils to put the interest of the country above personal interests.

    The lawmaker advised the members to aim at excellence, adding that giving excuses would lead to failure.

    Suleiman noted that the corporations had suffered because they did not have boards and councils.

    Osun State Deputy Governor Mrs. Grace Laoye-Tomori hailed the government for appointing those capable of running the governing boards and councils.

    She urged the members to work hard and avoid distractions from various quarters.

  • A deal or just another dummy?

    A deal or just another dummy?

    If Jonathan’s ‘national dialogue’ passes the muster of public perception, here might just be a few items on its agenda

    After Gen. Sani Abacha’s “National Constitutional Conference with full constituent powers” and former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s “National Political Reforms Conference”, President Goodluck Jonathan has set the ball rolling for yet another “national dialogue or conference”.

    For this new confab, the president has named a 13-member planning team, chaired by former Senator Femi Okurounmu, an Afenifere chieftain; with Prof. Ben Nwabueze, The Patriots chairman and long-term advocate of the Sovereign National Conference (SNC) as member. The other 11 members are Dr. Akilu Indabawa, Prof. George Obiozor, Senator Khairat Gwadabe, Senator Timothy Adudu, Col. Tony Nyiam (rtd), Prof. Funke Adebayo, Dr. Mairo Ahmed Amshi, Dr. Abubakar Sadiq, Alhaji Dauda Birma, Mallam Buhari Bello and Tony Uranta.

    This list is a mixed grill, with the jury still out on its appropriateness or otherwise, to midwife a credible national confab, by whatever name called. The land heaves with anxiety: is this a real deal at last to fix Nigeria and set it on irreversible development; or yet another dummy, by the ruling clique to buy time?

    No doubt: the national confab to restructure Nigeria is an idea whose time has come. Given the gradual meltdown of the country, captured in citizen massacres by Boko Haram, high crime and a general sense of anomie, critical segments of the country must start talking fast, if Nigeria were not to unravel in hideous violence.

    But given the penchant of Nigeria’s ruling elite for brinkmanship, is the government sincere? For one, the Jonathan Presidency has demonstrated it is not exactly averse to rank opportunism, not unlike his presidential predecessors; not to talk of the president’s sudden, almost Pauline-like conversion to the idea. For another, citizens involved in previous attempts at national talks did not do enough to resist the manipulation of the sitting government.

    This 13-member panel therefore has the bounden duty to fashion fair, transparent and equitable recommendations on the confab brass tacks: agenda, structure, modalities, time-frame, legal fundaments, and implementation of decisions, among others. It is only when the proposed conference has passed the muster of public scrutiny and earned positive perception that any conference agenda can be meaningful.

    Be that as it may, it must be held that the fundaments of the Nigerian crisis are economic. Because resources are mismanaged, many times skewed along ethnic lines, the result is political tension, ethnic distrust if not outright mutual hatred, a prostrate economy, mass poverty bordering on penury, and the resultant mass hopelessness, alienation and structured underdevelopment.

    Fresh thinking is needed to solve this basic problem. First, there should be a radical leap from revenue allocation to revenue contribution. Indeed, the core of the present crisis is everyone looking up to the over-bloated centre for “revenue allocation”, when they could easily, given an alternative paradigm, drive their own wealth and spend it as their peoples’ needs dictate.

    But the principle of revenue contribution calls to mind the viability or otherwise of the current 36 states. Should the states remain as they are, or should they be grouped into larger blocs, at least for the purpose of contributing an agreed percentage of their wealth to a federal purse, to fund common services? That would clearly tilt toward the regionalist approach, which current governments in the South-West, and to a less extent, South-South, are already working towards.

    Regions, as direct federating units with the Federal Government, are not just premised on bigger territories; with bigger markets for intra-regional and inter-regional trades, with the rest of the country. They come recommended because they have combined natural resources, which they can leverage for local and foreign capital and investments that would create jobs, drive development and foster prosperity. Before all these can happen, however, the confab would have to abolish the federal monopoly in mining. That way, these buried resources can be free for the regions or states to exploit.

    However the legal hurdles are tackled, a post-confab Nigeria must be structured on productive federalism, where every part of the country is put to work, in contrast to the present largely idle and parasitic entity, where the Federal Government looms large, even when it is distant and mostly dysfunctional.

    It is from this firm root that the concept of fiscal federalism would make sense. Though right now it is perfunctorily applied to sharing (as in valued-added tax, VAT for instance), it should be applied to creating wealth, where the most hardworking part of the country keeps most of the result of its sweat. Such positive reinforcement would, other things being equal, drive healthy regional competition nationwide.

    Still, though the economy is core, politics holds the key on how best the economy is structured. So, it is imperative the confab panel recommend political restructuring as central to a future Nigeria. Right now, the six geo-political zones are not constitutional. But they have already become conventions on which national balance is structured. The confab may therefore want to formalise these six political zones, as the basis of possible future regions.

    Of no less importance is confab representation: ethnic nationalities, professionals, demographic and gender groupings, special interests, for example, security and the armed forces, etc. Whether by election or nomination, the recommendations into the eventual constituent assembly must be such that both advocates and opponents must feel they operate on level-playing grounds. To make this possible, the panel should consult as widely as possible to build confidence and convince everyone that such an assembly is best to re-jig the country and preserve its unity.

    It is also imperative that the confab federalises security by creating state police for obvious reasons.It should not have “no-go” areas; nor its recommendations suffer vetting by the sitting government. However, its decision should be subject only to regional and national referendum, as necessary. The panel could also suggest external mediation, under the steady hands of the United Nations, to build confidence and assure all.

    For once, this is not time to play games. The more both the political authorities and the confab panel realise this, the better for everyone at this critical juncture.

  • ‘Obasanjo’s accusations against Atiku not true’

    “Obasanjo’s statements are not true”

    Media Adviser to Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Garba Shehu has faulted  corruption charges  by former President Olusegun Obasanjo in an EFCC magazine “Zero Tolerance” that  the former Vice President risked jail if he travels  to the United States.

     “The former President is wrong. It is widely known that Atiku didn’t enter government broke. He declared his assets at the commencement of his Vice Presidency and did so at the end of his term as required by the constitution, which is a sacred document to Atiku,” Garba Shehu said in a statement issued in Abuja on Wednesday.

     According to him, “Atiku, who is currently returning from China after leading a private economic trade mission at the invitation of the Chinese government, travels often and has a well-documented record of building industries and putting thousands of Nigerians to work. And this record, quite frankly, has been thoroughly investigated.”

     While reiterating that Atiku has no case against him by any arm of the law in any country in the world, including the United States, Shehu observed that “President Obasanjo’s repeated ‘jokes’ about Turaki not being able to go to America have become cliché, tiresome and not true.”

     The Media Adviser recalled that in 2006, former President Obasanjo sent his National Security Adviser (NSA) to stop Atiku from travelling to the US, saying that the Vice President risked arrest on arrival.  He said that Turaki spurned that advice, left Nigeria to land at the Andrews Air Force Base, the official airport of the US government, to receive the best reception ever on a visit to America.

    “So, we are used to those taunts,” he said.

    He noted that when the former Vice President left office shortly before late Musa Yar’Adua was inaugurated as President, Atiku spent three month in the US, adding that if they (US authorities) wanted him for anything, they would have met him.

    “It is time to start dealing in facts. Specifically, the fact that Atiku’s visa to visit the United States has been recently renewed.

    “Another fact is Atiku is one of the most investigated politicians in Nigerian history. And every investigation, whether politically motivated here at home or by the FBI abroad, has yielded the same result every time: not guilty.

     

    “If Atiku is guilty of anything, it is crushing persistent attempts at re-writing our constitution.

     

    “Atiku has chosen the path of optimism and hope. Moving forward, he will continue working to fuel Nigeria’s economy through investment and job creation, while also passionately and persistently defending our young democracy,” Shehu said.

  • Jonathan, Obasanjo in closed-door meeting

    Jonathan, Obasanjo in closed-door meeting

    *Meeting after worshiping at Aso Villa Chapel

    President Goodluck Jonathan and former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Sunday worshiped  at the Aso Villa Chapel Abuja

    After the church service, they  met behind closed door at the State House.

    They were believed to have discussed issues bordering on the country and the Peoples Democratic Party.

    A faction of the party broke out at the 2013 Special PDP National Convention held at the Eagles Square on Saturday.

    At the Church service, the two leaders were joined by the visiting President of Benin Republic, Boni Yayi.

    They visited the children’s church from where the three of them and the Chief of Staff to the President, Mike Oghiadomhe, went into the President’s residence for lunch.

    There has been increasing speculation of crack in the relationship between Jonathan and Obasanjo in recent months.

    Just like several past government functions, former President Obasanjo was conspicuously absent at the PDP Special National Convention held on Saturday.

  • ‘My encounters  with eight African Presidents, others’

    ‘My encounters with eight African Presidents, others’

    Zuriel Oduwole, 10, who lives in California in the United States last week made history as the youngest person to be interviewed by Forbes. Miss Oduwole, who was an invited guest to the African Union 50th anniversary, has interviewed leading African personalities, including eight  African Presidents, Africa’s richest person Aliko Dangote and tennis super stars – Venus  and  Serena Williams. In this online interview with Lekan Otufodunrin, Zuriel gives an insight on her incredible feat and her Rebrand Africa project to make a case for the girl-child in the continent.

    What is the origin of your interest in media and communication, especially personality interviews?

    The origin of me creating documentaries started with a school project. When I was nine, I entered a school competition called, “National History Day.” And I was the youngest student to enter the competition. In that competition, I had to create a presentation, an exhibit, a performance, or a documentary.

    So I chose to do a documentary, because I thought using media would be a better way to show something positive about Africa. If I did a performance or a presentation or an exhibit, no one, besides the judges, were allowed to come into the room while I was presenting it.

    But with a documentary, whoever wanted to come in and watch it could. So if I did a documentary, more people would be able to see Africa in the way I see it.

    And that documentary could lead on to positive and greater things for Africa. I like to show the rest of the world the positive things about Africa, through my documentaries. One of my documentaries won an award in the largest county in the United States. My documentary has also chronicled the impact of the OAU on Africa. Do you know I write my own scripts, I produce my own documentaries, I shoot my own scenes, I do my own voice over, I edit my own documentaries, and I co –direct my documentaries. I am an African Child – a Nigerian Girl Child.

    How much of your Nigerian and African heritage has impacted on your life?

    Oh I would say a lot. Since I want to show the world the positive side of Africa, my African heritage has helped me a lot. I know where my roots are from on the African continent because my dad’s family and my mum’s family are from two different parts of Africa, and I lived in Africa in both regions for periods of time.

    I have not always lived in California. So, when I watch the news, I always see bad things being said about Africa, like the wars and famine going on. And I don’t like seeing those things being said about my home country, even though it happens. It is how they say it that is unfair.

    If I was American, I would still want to help Africa. But because I am African, I feel the need more to help Africa than I if I was just American. It is like helping your own people.

    There are some problems, like the power going off. But do you know that there are times the power goes off in the United States as well. The only difference is they fix it very quickly, or bring it back very quickly. So, we all need to help.

    I read in the papers that General Electric is now in Nigeria doing the power. That is very good, because the children need to study at night for school.

    Why are you passionate about your Dream up, Speak up and Stand up for African renaissance campaign?

    I think my programme, Dream up, Speak up, and Stand up will help the new African era, by helping the girl- child. It is the best way I can help. Other people do things as well like have foundations, or do charities and raise money, but for me, my best way is to work very hard, and be an example. So that means when I say Dream up, they can see I am living the dream and so can they, when I say Speak up, they can see me speaking to World leaders, and when I say Stand up, they can see me standing up for the African Girl child. Also, I am hoping that the parents of girls in Africa will see me as an example, and see that their girls have a lot of potential in life, and can achieve great things in life. Even though they might have very little as some of them do, they can still push harder to get their girls to school, or find more ways to get them educated.

    When I launched the project in Nigeria in March this year, it was very good to have the support of the Lagos Business Schools communication’s department, the US Consulate in Lagos, Protea Ikeja Hotel and Federal Palace Hotel too. They supported the project. So now, I am going to other regions of Africa to launch the project next.

    What is your impression of the African leaders and others you have interviewed and what advice do you have for them?

    First I have to say the whole experience was really cool. They were all very kind and very warm and friendly to me. I think some of them were surprised by my questions, because only one of the Presidents I have met asked me to send the questions before I arrived for the interviews.

    The other seven did not. For example, President Ellen Johnson of Liberia by the time when I asked her the third question said to me you are a tough interviewer, and everyone laughed.

    Also, when I asked President Jonathan how much Goodluck his name has brought to Nigeria, he laughed as well, and then answered. President Fonseca of Cape Verde said he was one a University Professor and has seen many questions, but none like mine, and he invited me to come to his country to inspire the girls.

    President Joyce Banda of Malawi was also surprised by my question. She said when she was my age, she never dreamt of doing things like I was doing, but that she is inspired that I have the boldness to go and interview heads of states.

    Some Presidents hugged me after the interviews, some called me their daughter, some kissed me on the head; they were all very kind. And when I saw some again at the AU last May, they were excited to see me again, like President Kikwete of Tanzania. He spent some time talking to me and kept his entourage waiting. I saw people asking who that girl is. It was a special time for me.

    President Kufuor was also happy to see me again at the AU because I had interviewed him last year in Kumasi, and he remembered me very well. He then introduced me to his friend, President Obasanjo, and then we took pictures together. I don’t have any advice for them because they are older, but I like everyone to know that educating and fighting for the education of the Africa Girl Child, is an investment in Africa. I hope you think so too.

    What is your reaction to being touted as the next Larry King?

    I am just doing my best. Larry King has accomplished many great things in his life. He, like me, has also interviewed many people like sports persons, leaders of countries, leaders in business and we all do it for many reasons. He has done many great things at his age, and that is Larry King.

    I have also tried to accomplish some things but because I want to show what the Girl Child can do, if they are educated, and encouraged. Just imagine all 5, or 8, or 10 or 12 year olds especially in Africa being given an opportunity to go to school and have real dreams.

    It means Africa would be a more developed and have more qualified leaders 10 years from now or 15 years from now. Because it means we would be 20 years old or 25 years old or 30 years old then.

    How supportive are your parents in your campaign?

    My mum and dad have been very, very supportive from the beginning. They are always supportive of me and my young siblings. It doesn’t matter if its Basketball, Music class, Soccer, or Cheerleading, they are always supportive and drive us to all our classes and events.

    Sometimes, I think it is a lot especially when me and one of my parents have to travel overseas for my interviews with Presidents because they have to make sacrifices like ask us to chose between something we wanted to do or me and my parent for the travel.

    I had to learn the meaning of opportunity cost when I was eight years old. Dad said it means choosing between two things and which one has the more value than the other, or which one would have the more potential in the future.

     

     

     

  • Obasanjo to head AU observer mission for Zimbabwe elections – Zuma

    Obasanjo to head AU observer mission for Zimbabwe elections – Zuma

    Former president Olusegun Obasanjo has been accepted by the government of Zimbabwe to be the AU Observer Mission Chairman for the July 31, presidential election.

    Dr Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, the chairperson of AU Commission, in a statement on Friday said that Obasanjo is expected in Zimbabwe on Saturday to lead the team of international observers.

    Dlamini-Zuma made this known in a statement after paying a courtesy call on President Robert Mugabe at the State House in Harare on Thursday to announce the AU team’s presence in the country ahead of elections.

    She said that Mugabe welcomed the scheduled arrival of Obasanjo.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that with the acceptance by Mugabe it clears doubts over Obasanjo’s visit to Zimbabwe as head of AU Observer Mission.

    It will be recalled that the Pan African Forum and the Zimbabwe ruling party, Zanu-PF had rejected the former Nigerian leader as head of the AU observer mission, claiming he will be biased towards the main opposition party, Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).

    Dlamini-Zuma in an interview on Thursday before meeting with Mugabe said that Obasanjo can only visit Zimbabwe if allow by the government of the country.

    Mugabe, who has been governing the country since independence, will contest the presidential polls with the Prime Minister and MDC candidate, Morgan Tsvangirai.

     

  • Why I visited Obasanjo- Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan has confirmed meeting with former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Saturday in his residence in Owu, Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    He told newsmen that although  he was in Abeokuta  to pay condolence visit to his  Special Adviser, Reuben Abati whose mother was buried on Friday, he could not have come to the Ogun State capital where the former president resides, and not pay him a visit.

    Coming to Abeokuta and not visiting Obasanjo, he said, would have make some people speculate that there was a problem between them.

    He said: “It is true we saw President Obasanjo in his house because we came here to Abeokuta to commiserate with Abati who buried his mother yesterday. And knowing that Abati’s house is at the backyard of Obasanjo’s house, it will not be good if we come and not visit him.”

    “Even the man himself will not be happy if we don’t visit him. I am like a son to Obasanjo,” he added.

    Dressed in a black flowing agbada and a Yoruba cap to match, President Jonathan arrived Obasanjo’s residence  around 12 noon in the company of Senator Grace Folashade Bent.

    Even as details of the closed door meeting was unknown, it is believed that the discussions centred on  2015 election, the crisis in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and the controversy surrounding the planned conduct of PDP’s mini National Convention.

    The Chairman of the PDP Governors’ Forum (PDPGF) and Akwa Ibom State Governor, Godswill Akpabio had been reported to have made moves to reconcile them especially to facilitate the yet to be announced second term ambition of the President.

    Speaking with newsmen at the Abati’s residence President Jonathan said that he would have attended the Abati’s Church Service after commissioning the Police housing estate on Friday but had to fly out to Togo to meet President of Côte d’Ivoire, Allasane Quattara, and his Togolese counterpart over some looming political crisis.

    Jonathan condoled the family as he noted Abati was a member of his family and advised the family to take solace in the fact that their mother lived to a ripe old age beyond the biblical three score and ten.

    Speaking during the visit, Abati said that the family was no longer expecting the President since he was represented by his Chief of Staff, Chief Mike Ogiadomhe, at the church service.

    Abati  said  he was happy with the life his mother lived as not many mothers would die and their burial attract the presence of the nation’s president.

  • Presidential anarchy

    Presidential anarchy

    Can the president of the Federal Republic levy war against a state and get away with it? From the conduct of President Goodluck Jonathan’s henchmen and women in the Rivers contrived crisis, that appears the case.

    It is nothing short of criminalising the presidency. But how much of this impunity can the civil order bear before something terrible gives?

    The especial tragedy of the Jonathan Presidency is, with reckless regularity, it repeats history as farce.

    But neither the first Nigerian president to boast a PhD, nor his hyper-educated aides, seems fazed by this roller-coaster cascade into infamy. Such is their total gobble of the sweet poison of naked power – powers they don’t even have, had they not chosen to criminalise the presidency, if they ever bothered to read between the lines of the 1999 Constitution, warts and all!

    Take the latest trigger in the contrived crisis: the Rivers House of Assembly mayhem of July 9. Now, between the Goodluck Jonathan and Rotimi Amaechi battling camps, there is enough villainy to gift a multitude, with some left-over.

    How can an immaculate, fiery and all-conquering mace-battler, with the moral ardour of some bathetic Christ clearing his father’s house of worship of a den of thieves, morph into a sanctimonious victim, nestling in a hospital bed; and peeping at millions of sympathisers, from the vantage point of the lead photo, on the front page of a national newspaper?

    But before you condemn that battler, meet his victim: an apparent constitutional criminal, one of the G-5 renegades who, backed by some subversive federal power, felt they could impeach the Rivers Assembly Speaker and, like some tragic-comic pantomime with voice-over, were already on the subversive ritual, seconding motions, suspending imaginary legislators, voting, getting “elected” and giving “acceptance speeches”!

    Must Nigerians be assaulted by such power lunacy?

    To apologists or self-proclaimed purists, who insist “constitutional criminal” is jumping the legal gun, since no one has been tried and found guilty, this riposte: if the courts had serially voided such legislative banditry in Oyo, Plateau and Anambra states, during the Obasanjo-era presidential anarchy, can it be less culpable now because Jonathan-era legislative lunatics are repeating the farce?

    And here really lies the crux: if Obasanjo could grandstand that Nuhu Ribadu was undermining the Constitution to get rid of allegedly thieving politicians, what noble cause can the current rascals attach to their own subversive activism?

    Those who nail Governor Amaechi for “invading” the Rivers legislature to clear the mess miss the point. Yes, a governor should be a gentleman. But with a president that tweaks rules for illicit gains, that could be fatal.

    If you doubt, ask Rashidi Ladoja, the bitter-sweet former governor of Oyo State. He shunned President Obasanjo’s diktat that he surrender his gubernatorial authority to Lamidi Adedibu, Obasanjo’s beloved Ibadan garrison commander, only to holler in the cold for no less than 10 months, victim of an illegal impeachment.

    To those who still want to play the ostrich, pushing “law” without factoring in the lawless temper of its operators, the odyssey of Justice Isa Ayo Salami, under this same Jonathan Presidency, is instructive. Salami did his duty by law. But to the lawless in government, that was near-capital crime, for which the no-nonsense president of the Court of Appeal is paying.

    Yes, the Judiciary saved Ladoja; and voided the allied legislative rascality in Plateau and Anambra states. But with the Salami experience, it is doubtful if that judiciary had not melted into Heraclitus’s state of flux, no thanks to a hostile Jonathan Presidency.

    Amaechi certainly was not pretty, “storming” the legislature to nip in the bud the putative coup against his office. But he did the needful to preserve his position in an emerging presidential anarchy. For all you know, if the coup against him had succeeded, he would now be shrieking, Ladoja-like, from the wilderness, while his traducers would be mouthing “due process”! No society thrives under such cynical manipulation.

    But it is instructive how this Jonathan-era rascality empties into the Obasanjo-era mother river, even if Jonathan’s bumbling, to use Malthus-speak of basic economics, is “geometrical” while Obasanjo’s “original sins” now appear “arithmetical”.

    Talking about “original sin”, the dramatis personae of the current crisis appear to have cleanly forgotten the first outrage of 10 July 2003 (the Rivers outrage followed almost 10 years after, 9 July 2013!), when some Abuja-backed criminals tried to unseat controversial Governor Chris Ngige. It was the classic malevolent godfather’s challenge, before the plague of illicit impeachments based on “simple minorities”, which the latest Rivers jokers essayed with devastating consequences.

    What happened to the ring leaders back then: AIG Raphael Ige, the apparent Abuja viceroy in the crime, Tafa Balogun, then sitting IG, and even Obasanjo himself, the sitting president who, throughout the crisis, pushed the theory of plausible deniability?

    AIG Ige, the apparent fall guy, suffered abrupt retirement (even if his retirement time was close) and later, sudden death. Mr. Balogun suffered eventual humiliation, though his role, beyond being the Police IG was unclear; and his comeuppance was not directly linked to the Ngige saga. Even Obasanjo has continued to suffer progressive devaluation, to the point of irrelevance, since his presidential glory days.

    Do all these speak to Mbu Joseph Mbu, the commissioner of Police deep in the Rivers crisis, given his inappropriate conduct and reckless utterances? There are always spiritual consequences for political rascality that hurt the silent and innocent majority.

    Festus Eriye, editor of The Nation on Sunday, in his penetrating piece of July 14, described President Jonathan as Pontius Pilate, in a piece he headlined “Pontius Pilate strikes again”. That was a brilliant metaphor because before Jonathan, there was Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Nigeria’s first and only Prime Minister, and Pontius Pilate I of Nigeria’s troubled political horizon.

    Sir Abubakar launched political insurrection at the Western Region, with his suspect proclamation of state of emergency, after a contrived crisis in the Western House of Assembly, just to cripple Obafemi Awolowo.

    Jonathan, Pontius Pilate II, is doing the same, in what would have been the old Eastern Region, although this time, against a party mate; but with no less partisan bile, despite his aides’ comical denial. Jonathan court historians should check their history books and tell their principal how the Balewa gambit ended.

    Which brings us to the Jonathan denial ensemble: two “doctors”, Reuben Abati, Doyin Okupe and a Gulak, who obviously thinks everybody’s thinking faculty is, as his own, locked in Jonathan’s gulag!

    Ahmed Gulak, sounding every inch a power brat, told Prof. Wole Soyinka to be “responsible” (a counsel his principal ironically needs more than anyone!), because of Soyinka’s stance on the contrived Rivers crisis.

    Well, Gulak should check his history books. When Balewa was being led astray or even Obasanjo, Jonathan’s political creator, was leading himself astray, Soyinka was there, an ever consistent voice of reason, which nevertheless is the proverbial harsh hunter’s whistle, to the hearing of a doomed dog.

    Those who engage in double-speak, let them. But true friends of Goodluck Jonathan must tell him to withdraw from his Rivers misadventure.

    It is a wide and merry way that leads to infamy.