Tag: Osinbajo

  • Fed Govt to address agitation, says Osinbajo

    Fed Govt to address agitation, says Osinbajo

    There is a ray of hope for agitators as the federal government assured Nigerians last night that it would immediately address their grievances.

    But it will be within the confines of the constitution, which the government swore to uphold.

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo engaged in a series of consultations between June 13 and 22 with leaders of thought, traditional rulers and political leaders in the North and the Southeast. He also met with governors.

    This followed the continuous agitation for secession by the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) in the East and the October 1 quit order given to Igbo resident in the North by a coalition of youth groups.

    A statement yesterday by Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity Laolu Akande on the highlights of the meetings, emphasised the affirmation of “the necessity of confronting all grievances and frustrations head-on, however uncomfortable that might seem now; instead of ignoring issues and allowing them to fester.”

    The acting president urged that such grievances be expressed with grace. He condemned hate speeches.

    The meeting “affirmed the need to draw a line between the freedom of expression guaranteed by the Constitution and the degeneration of such expression into hateful rhetoric, prejudice and hatred.

    “Under no circumstances will Government condone or tolerate hate speech in any way or form.”

    There was also the affirmation on “the need for all leaders and elders, regardless of political or ideological persuasion, to speak out more forcefully to counter divisive and hate speech and any form of warmongering”.

    The meetings were convened “to provide a platform for frank and open discussions between the concerned stakeholders and by extension the Nigerian public on issues relating to the unity, peace and security of country.”

    The Presidency said it would continue to actively engage with various segments of the population.

    Other common grounds established at the meetings according to the statement are:  • condemnnation of hateful and divisive rhetoric by the concerned groups of Northern and Southeastern youths; and

    • affirmation of the primacy of the Constitution, the ultimate basis for the unity of Nigeria. That Constitution guarantees freedom of residence and of movement for all Nigerians anywhere in the country, without fear of discrimination or prejudice.
    • The Acting President thanked all the leaders for their time and commitment to the unity, peace and progress of Nigeria. He also assured the people of the resolve of the Buhari administration to ensure their well-being and security at all times.

     

  • FG will address various grievances in Nigeria – Osinbajo

    FG will address various grievances in Nigeria – Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, on Tuesday assured Nigerians that the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration would address all grievances in the country.

    Osinbajo, according to a statement issued on Tuesday by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, stated this during his interaction with leaders from the North, Southeast and the media.

    The meeting took place between June 13 and June 22.

    The acting President also urged that such grievances be expressed with grace.

    The statement reads: “The meetings were convened to provide a platform for frank and open discussions between the concerned stakeholders and by extension the Nigerian public on issues relating to the unity, peace and security of country.

    “While these consultations were concluded last week, the presidency will continue to actively engage with different segments of the Nigerian population at different stages and format in the near future.

    “In response to the recent spate of agitations pitting some groups in the  North against others in the Southeast, the acting President commenced a series of engagements and consultations with political, religious, traditional and media leaders from across the country as follows:

     

    • Northern Leaders of Thought: Tuesday 13 June, 2017
    • Southeast Leaders of Thought: Wednesday 14 June, 2017
    • Southeast Traditional Rulers: Sunday 18 June, 2017
    • Northern Traditional Rulers: Tuesday 20 June, 2017
    • All State Governors: Wednesday 21 June, 2017
    • Media Publishers and Editors: Thursday 22 June, 2017

    “The meetings were convened to provide a platform for frank and open discussions between the concerned stakeholders and by extension the Nigerian public on issues relating to the unity, peace and security of country.

    “The meetings touched on various issues relating to the ethnic agitations that have manifested most recently in a call for secession by some groups of youth from the Southeast, and an ultimatum by Northern youths for south-easterners living in the North to leave the region by 1st October 2017.

    “The meetings established common ground on a number of issues, as follows:

    • Condemned all the hateful and divisive rhetoric by the concerned groups of Northern and Southeastern youths.
    • Affirmed the primacy of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the ultimate basis for the unity of Nigeria. That Constitution guarantees freedom of residence and of movement for all Nigerians anywhere in the country, without fear of discrimination or prejudice.
    • Affirmed the need to draw a line between the freedom of expression guaranteed by the Constitution and the degeneration of such expression into hateful rhetoric, prejudice and hatred. Under no circumstances will Government condone or tolerate hate speech in any way or form.
    • Affirmed the necessity of confronting all grievances and frustrations head-on, however uncomfortable that might seem now; instead of ignoring issues and allowing them to fester.
    • Affirmed the need for all leaders and elders, regardless of political or ideological persuasion, to speak out more forcefully to counter divisive and hate speech and any form of warmongering.”

    “The acting President expressed appreciation to all the leaders for their time and commitment to the unity, peace and progress of the Nigerian nation. He also assures the Nigerian people of the determination and resolve of the Buhari administration to ensure their well-being and security at all times.”

     

     

  • Osinbajo: no effort will be spared to keep Nigeria one

    Osinbajo: no effort will be spared to keep Nigeria one

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo yesterday said the President Muhammadu Buhari administration would do everything possible to sustain Nigeria’s unity.

    He made the remark while receiving the Muslim community in Abuja and environs, who paid him a Sallah homage to mark the 2017 Eid-el-Fitr at his official residence, Aguda House.

    Prof. Osinbajo received the delegation on behalf of President Buhari, who is in the United Kingdom for medical reasons.

    According to him, keeping Nigeria one will give room for more development and enhance the people’s welfare.

    He said: ”Your ethnicity doesn’t matter and that is why, for us, unity is so important that we must work together to make sure that our country is able to take care of the millions of people we govern.

    “God expects us to take care of the poor and those suffering, to ensure that we use government resources only in such a way that it will be for the good of the majority of our people.”

    Osinbajo recalled President Buhari’s sallah message to Nigerians, in which he said that the country must remain united.

    He enumerated the gains of unity to include love towards one another, integrity, global respect and diversity, among others.

    “Our unity is not negotiable. We should make sure that we remain united in order to enjoy the resources God has blessed Nigeria with. So many nations envy what we have as a nation,” he said.

    The Acting President also prayed for President Buhari’s quick recovery and return to Nigeria, stressing that the President has a lot to do for Nigeria.

    “We are praying everyday and we know that the Lord God Almighty who we serve will bring our President back in good health and that he will serve this nation with the same determination and the same spirit of oneness, the same spirit that he has always served this nation from when he was a young man. He will serve this nation and complete the period of his service in good health, in good shape and our country will be the better for it,” he said.

    Speaking earlier, the leader of the delegation and Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Mohammed Bello said paying sallah homage was customary as a mark of respect for the President.

    He thanked security agencies, religious and traditional rulers in the FCT for playing a great role in sustaining the peace in the capital city.

    He said the kind of harmonious relationship they have exhibited needs to be replicated in the thirty six states.

    There were goodwill messages from the Acting Imam of Abuja National Mosque, Mohammad Kabir Adamu and the Chairman of the Christian Association off Nigeria, FCT Chapter, Reverend Samson Jonah, who both prayed for the President’s quick recovery.

    The clerics praised the Acting President for guiding the country so well in Buhari’s absence.

    At the event was the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen, some legislators and members of the Federal Executive Council.

  • Osinbajo, others for 2017 insurance confab

    The insurance industry is set to hold its 2017 Conference from July 9 to 11 at the the Transcorp Hilton, Abuja.

    The Conference with the theme: “Nigerian open for Business”. will be declared open by the Acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo (SAN) while the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun will give the goodwill message with Commissioner for Insurance, National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), Alhaji Mohammed Kari as the Chief Host

    The Planning Committee Chairman  for this year’s conference, Shola Tinubu, made this known at a media briefing in Lagos, meant to apprise the public with activities preparatory to the conference.

    According to him, the conference is the third in the series since its conception by the Insurance Industry Consultative Council (IICC), which is the amalgamation of all the constituent arms of the insurance industry, including the Nigerian Insurers Association (NIA), Nigerian Council of Registered Insurance Brokers (NCRIB), Institute of Loss Adjusters of Nigeria, Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria (CIIN) and the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), which serves as the co-ordinating arm.

    He said the conference is one of the programmes of the IICC aimed at fostering intellectual and professional development of insurance practitioners and further creating a platform for networking and exchange of ideas between industry operators and critical stakeholders in the nation’s economy.

    He said: “The 2017 conference is being organised to further underscore the aim of the industry to continually upscale the knowledge of insurance operators and other professionals in the financial services sector as well as other stakeholders about contemporary dynamics in the economic development of the country and the globe generally. The conference would also highlight the catalytic roles, which the industry in achieving financial inclusion and by so doing, accelerating its contributions to Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    “It is instructive to state that the theme of this year’s conference is quite apt in view of the policy direction of the government towards the Ease of Doing Business Initiatives, being spearheaded by the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC) under the Chairmanship of the Acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, and the Minister of Industry Trade and Investment, Mr. Okechukwu Enelamah as the Vice Chairman. PEBEC’s ultimate thrust is to dismantle all inhibitions militating against doing business in Nigeria has been doing well in trying to make the country more attractive for foreign investment,” he said.

    He noted that the planning committee will parade an array of highly resourceful speakers to do justice to the subject of discourse at the event. Chairman, Tony Elumelu Foundation, Mr. Tony Elumelu,  will discuss the theme  paper, while Finance  Minister, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, is expected to chair the session. A team of seasoned discussants, notably Dr. Joseph Nnanna; Deputy Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria; Alhaji Kyari Abba Bukar, former Chairman of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group and Mrs. Yewande Sadiku, Executive Secretary of Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission, among others will be discussants.

  • Osinbajo, Bakare wrong on Nigerian unity

    Osinbajo, Bakare wrong on Nigerian unity

    UNTIL the coalition of northern youth groups addressed the press and announced they were giving the Igbo living in the North a three-month ultimatum to quit the region, most Nigerians had become quite inured to the separatist agitations of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB). The federal government of course never showed any proficiency in handling the Southeast-led agitations in the many years the region had quaked with protests, yet the situation did not seem unamenable to rational approaches and even incompetent law enforcement tactics. But with the upping of the ante by the northern youth groups, and the seeming connivance of some northern leaders, the Southeast agitations have suddenly acquired fresh and disturbing significance.

    In the past two weeks or so, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has been conducting consultations with regional stakeholders both to douse the tension created by the rash of ultimatums emanating from different parts of the country and to serve notice that the government would not countenance any challenge to Nigerian unity. In the process, he has poll parroted the refrain every Nigerian president is conversant with, that Nigerian unity is non-negotiable. In one of his consultations, the acting president gave a succinct summary of his view on the agitations, during which two key points emerged.

    Said Prof Osinbajo: “All of us have however agreed that our nation must remain one. When we spoke (yesterday) with traditional rulers from the Southeast, despite the issues that were raised here and there, I think that there is clarity as to that one thing, that our country ought to remain, must remain a united country. Just as I said to them yesterday, a lot of blood has been shed on account of the unity of our country and our faithfulness even to the lives of those who have made the supreme sacrifice to this country demands that we do everything on our part to keep this country together. And in any event, the greatest nations in the world are those nations who have the size as well as the human resources in particular to make the best of that size, and I think our nation has that and the mere fact that we have such a large nation and so well-endowed, in terms of human resources. I think that we are in the best position not only to be truly great but to ensure that all of our people benefit from the greatness of our country.”

    The acting president obviously anchors his impression of Nigerian unity on his belief that Nigerians had resolved to stay together, and that the size of the country, obviously referring to its population and land expanse, confers on it a potential for greatness it needed to exploit. In Nigeria, unity has for long undoubtedly been taken as a fait accompli. But there was no time Nigerians freely chose, despite the presumptuous position of their constitution on unity, to stay together, nor did they at any time suggest that that unity would be best served by the country’s present structure. No one of course expects the acting president to give vent to his private conviction on the structure of the country, if he has one, or the unity of Nigeria, which he probably sees is his duty to embrace wholeheartedly. He is acting president, and as this column said last week when it wondered aloud when he would experience his epiphany, the structure of the Muhammadu Buhari presidency, not to say the manner the ailing president structured Aso Villa and the security apparatuses, constrains him to submit to unbearable placations.

    In any case, even if it is assumed that the 1914 arrangement bequeathed by the British colonialists to Nigerians was freely entered into, there is nothing to suggest that the arrangement is irrevocable or designed to last for all time, or that it could not be considerably restructured. Since Nigeria’s independence in 1960, some other countries cobbled together by geopolitics, military might, and ideological exigencies have either restructured or balkanised, some violently, some peacefully. There is absolutely nothing inevitable about Nigeria’s borders. Even Britain, Nigeria’s former colonial master, lives gingerly on the brink of breakup. The Warsaw Pact of eight countries, since its formation in 1955, has broken up, despite their awesome military machine. Yugoslavia, Sudan, Czechoslovakia have also irretrievably fractured. The European Union (EU) will continue to alternate between expansion and contraction, based on the mood of the times and other economic, political and social dynamics and considerations. Nigeria is constituted by great empires and kingdoms of the past. If its leaders are unable to find the right balance for these developed political systems to coexist, it will collapse under the weight of inefficiency, inequity and poor leadership. There is nothing inevitable or sacrosanct about its borders. It came into being only in 1914; it will disintegrate at some time in the future if its leaders fail to anticipate that future.

    It does not matter what President Buhari or the acting president thinks. And it matters little whether anyone finds the agitations in the Southeast reprehensible or not, or whether the IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu, is dismissed as a lout or hailed as a saviour. It is abundantly clear that there was no closure to the civil war. It is also indisputable that the war ended in military victory for Nigeria and defeat for Biafra. Since then, nothing has been done to restructure the country and manage the fissures that tore the country apart in the first instance. Despite defeat, the idea of Biafra still exerts great nostalgic pull on many south-easterners. The acting president is therefore inaccurate to suggest, as the president himself did last year, that the civil war was akin to a consensus on unity. It was not. And until the government begins to realise that the idea of Biafra can only be tackled in the minds of its adherents, not through law enforcement, the mistakes of the past will be repeated. If Serbia could not keep Yugoslavia together, and Russia could not keep the Warsaw Pact countries between the hammer and the sickle, and Sudan could not restrain South Sudan, and Israel cannot pacify Palestinians, and Russia and the United States could not, at different times, manage Afghanistan and Iraq, why does anyone think that if the Igbo decide to go, they can be restrained by force as was done in 1967-70? Or that if they choose to go, it would not sound the death knell to the country?

    The fact is that the superficial Mr Kanu is simply not the leader the Igbo want, hence their ambivalence to the struggle, notwithstanding the near consensus about the disadvantaged place of the Igbo in the scheme of things. More importantly, for economic and geographical reasons, the Igbo are unsure whether the romanticised and tantalising idea of Biafra is as engaging as IPOB and MASSOB paint it. However, the danger is that the continuing mismanagement of the IPOB/MASSOB agitations by the government may very well tip the scales in a direction no one perhaps wants. A sensible approach, therefore, is to abandon the presumptuous talk of Nigerian unity not being open to negotiation. Nigerian unity must and needs to be negotiated. The Buhari presidency, by its almost total ostracism of the Igbo, makes the case for negotiation very urgent. Surely, it must have occurred to the acting president that when he and his team met with stakeholders on the controversial ultimatums, no Igbo officer was present among his security chiefs. So, how does the government take far-reaching security decisions in the absence of the Igbo? The government must resist the temptation to focus on the histrionics of Mr Kanu, his hate speech, or future agitations, including sit-at-home campaigns. These are simply reactions, sometimes foolish, to much deeper and underlying fractures. The government should keep its eyes on the ball, rather than set or look out for offside traps that can go horribly wrong.

    Last April, and again this June, Prof Osinbajo spoke of the big size of Nigeria as an asset for development and greatness. This is a historical fallacy. Some of the greatest empire builders have come from small nations. The size of a country is just one factor in empire building and greatness of a nation. The first prerequisite is for a leader to possess the vision for greatness, as in fact Genghis Khan, the 44-year-old Mongoloid leader, 35-year-old Napoleon Bonaparte, the Corsican, and Alexander the Great, the Greek, all showed. What is the use of a big nation when its leaders do not possess the vision for greatness? Nigeria fought two ECOMOG wars, but fought them with incredibly vacuous mind. They sacrificed blood and toil in Liberia and Sierra Leone, but allowed the British to calmly walk in take nearly all the glory. No country has been so bereft of the idea of greatness as Nigeria has been in its sacrifice to lead ECOWAS, defeat apartheid, free Zimbabwe, stanch the flow of blood in Sergeant Samuel Doe’s and Charles Taylor’s murderous wars. With no elevated and invigorating idea of the rule of law, and unable to devise a noble, efficient and practicable political and economic arrangement, Nigeria is unable to offer leadership to itself, not to talk of any other country.

    Every great nation that produced a great leader has had a definite idea of what it wanted to do with itself and others. Size matters little. After all, Adolf Hitler recognised this in propounding his racist idea of Lebensraum. And though small Israel has not shown appetite for empires, it possesses one of the most powerful armies in the world, thrice defeating combined Arab forces — to a lesser extent in 1948, and to a greater extent in 1967 and 1973. It continues to display incredible chutzpah that belies its size, bombing nuclear reactors in Syria (Operation Orchard, 2008) and Iraq (Operation Opera, 1981), and would have attempted that of Iran had the US not restrained it. Israel has had a difficult history, and they always intend to give that history, a part of which continues to inflict searing pain on their minds, all it takes. On a distant tomorrow, an empire builder with a vision will not be dissuaded by his country’s size from taking on the world. Hitler was not dissuaded by Napoleon’s failure in the 1812 Moscow campaign, and Augustus Caesar yearned for conquests after reflecting on Alexander the Great’s conquests. The truth is that Nigeria has not done anything with its size, and indeed cannot, as this column will argue next week, given the lack of discipline and intellectual poverty of its leaders. There is nothing to suggest that a balkanised Nigeria can in fact not do much better in the world with its constituent parts.

    If Prof Osinbajo misdirected himself with his statements about Nigerian unity being non-negotiable and his suggestion that bigness is smart and potentially leads to greatness, Tunde Bakare, presiding pastor of the Latter Rain Assembly church, was even more mistaken when he suggested, as part of the unity discourse, that the election of Emmanuel Macron in France was perhaps indicative of a global paradigm shift in leadership. He is absolutely wrong. Nothing has shifted anywhere, not paradigm, not societal, not political. Nothing is shifting. Vision, intelligence, character, charisma — all ingredients of great leadership — are not the preserve of any age group. Though he was reluctant to admit it, the pastor knows that President Buhari’s anachronisms have nothing to do with his age or his illness-induced lethargy. The unvarnished fact is that President Buhari lacks depth and expansive vision. His election was predicated on the supposition that he would surround himself with very bright and charismatic Nigerians from all walks. Sadly, even doing that apparently requires not only depth, but also a substantial element of vision. Indeed, the president simply ignored everything else and surrounded himself with parochial kith and kin who have no inspiring concept of Nigeria.

    Had Pastor Bakare read world history fairly well, he would have recognise that there was no historical epoch that did not have young and old leaders contemporaneously. When he assumed leadership, Alexander the Great was only 20 years old, and at the age of 30 had conquered the known world, dying some three years later at 33. Many of the leaders of his time were in their 40s. The highly revered Ottoman emperor, Suleiman the Magnificent, was a little older when he assumed leadership at 26. By contrast, Winston Churchill was 66 when he became Prime Minister of Britain, growing to become one of the world’s most renowned leaders. Charles de Gaulle, who saw himself in the mould of Saint Joan of Arc and Napoleon, perhaps even as their reincarnation, did not become elected president of France until the age of 68. Like Mr Churchill, his influence in world history cannot be diminished.

    The age of a leader and size of a country play little or nothing in building a great nation or empire. What matters are the ideas of the leaders, their visions, and a combination of other factors, some of them quite mystical and even elemental. Acting President Osinbajo may be forgiven for mouthing the same jaded and impractical ideas of past rulers and presidents, including the man he is acting for. Were it to be his presidency, Nigerians would know how to tackle him. However, even though he is ruling in acting capacity, he must sensibly and boldly attempt to tackle the nonsense going on in the country. The northern youths who gave the Igbo an ultimatum ought to have been picked up immediately. They are not ghosts.

    The security agencies under President Buhari have behaved irresponsibly parochial. Even if he cannot change the structure of anything fundamentally, Prof Osinbajo should put his foot down and do what is right within the framework of President Buhari’s difficult and antiquated structure. And contrary to what the acting president thinks, the agitations in the Southeast cannot be placated with justice alone, justice that nevertheless addresses the ostracism of the Igbo, particularly in the security architecture of the country. Biafra is a nostalgic concept consisting of cultural and political elements, and if care is not taken, may soon include religious elements. It should be tackled in the realm of politics and the mind, sensibly and structurally, without the hideous abuse and bitterness that many in the North and surprisingly elsewhere have been tempted to exude. There was no closure to Biafra. Let the government find one. Perhaps if there had been an honest appraisal of the war and the factors that engendered it — for after all, the same issues and problems also affect the North-central and Southwest — no one would be agitating for separation. Nigeria should be tired of this whirligig.

  • Govt privatises 142 firms, says Osinbajo

    Govt privatises 142 firms, says Osinbajo

    The National Council on Privatisation (NCP) has since inception successfully concluded the privatisation and reform of over 142 public enterprises, the Acting President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, has said.

    Osinbajo, who spoke at the inauguration of the Fifth Council of the National Council on Privatisation (NCP),  said the event is a critical step in the process of putting in place part of the institutional framework necessary for the actualisation of the socio-economic agenda of the administration.

    In a statement yesterday by the Head,  Public Communications, BPE, Chukwuma Nwoko, Osinbajo said the inauguration is a demonstration of the administration’s commitment to public sector reform and the central role of the NCP in this process.

    He said even though the public sector has been at the centre stage in the provision of critical infrastructure and services cutting across the whole spectrum of the nation’s life since independence, “the emerging importance and centrality of the private sector to the actualisation of the economic agenda of the administration cannot be downplayed.”

    He said apart from playing a dominant role of generating employment opportunities, the intervention of the private sector enhances the process of industrialisation, delivers critical infrastructure and services the country, pointing out that the role can only be played when government’s duty of regulating and creating an enabling environment is undertaken.

    In his words:  “This will in turn offer the private sector the required comfort and assurance to make investments and expect a reasonable return  thereon,” pledging the administration’s commitment to giving all the required support to the NCP in carrying out its statutory responsibilities.

    He said the expectation of government is that the NCP will come up with creative out-of-the box solutions for addressing the numerous challenges facing the privatisation and commercialisation programme such as the non-performance by some privatised enterprises and post-privatisation challenges facing some of the privatised enterprises.

    As he put it: “Government also expects the NCP to make measurable progress in respect of the outstanding transactions affecting some of the areas critical to the economic recovery of the nation. You must make deliberate and conscious efforts to learn from past experiences and guard against avoidable mistakes of the past.”

    Osinbajo said over the years, the NCP had concluded significant transactions and carried out economic reform activities in key sectors of the economy, such as telecommunications, pension management, ports, power, etc.   “A mega reform process in the power sector is ongoing with ambitious expectations. Although there are numerous challenges trailing the process, the NCP is expected to critically analyse these challenges and come up with sustainable solutions as part of government commitment to make power available at accelerated rates and to wide sections of the populace,” he said.

    In his remarks, the Director-General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Mr. Alex A. Okoh, said a trend has emerged where certain institutions engage in activities which are tending to compromise and conflict with the statutory functions of the Bureau.

    “We believe that regulatory agencies and commissions should manage regulatory compliance and not get involved in process as transactions managers or operators as this will clearly create confusion and possible conflict. The BPE operates as transaction managers and we shall submit our processes to the supervision of the relevant regulatory agency responsible for the particular transaction track we pursue to execute our mandate of enterprise reformation, including the SEC and the ICRC.”

  • Osinbajo orders tight security in Taraba over attacks

    Osinbajo orders tight security in Taraba over attacks

    Acting President YemiOsinbajo yesterday ordered troops reinforcement in some Taraba communities following attacks.

    He condoled with the victims of the violent attacks in a number of communities in the Northeast, where deaths were reported.

    He condemned the acts of violence and assured that perpetrators of the attacks would be brought to book.

    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, LaoluAkande, said the Acting President had held an emergency meeting with top security officials and Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku.

    He ordered the deployment of an extra military battalion, police and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps to the areas affected.

    The Acting President also approved the provision of relief materials to be delivered to the affected communities in Toffi, Mayo Daga, Mayo Sina, Tamiya, Kwara-Kwara, Tungan Lugere, Timjire, Nguroje and other villages in the hinterlands of Mambilla Plateau.

    “The Federal Government has also put in motion long time solutions including mediation between opposing groups in the communal conflict,”  it stated.

  • Osinbajo at UNIZIK for law teachers’ conference

    Osinbajo at UNIZIK for law teachers’ conference

    It was all excitement at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka, Anambra State, last Monday, when the Acting President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, stopped by at the school to attend the 50th conference of the Nigeria Association of Law Teachers (NALT) with the theme: Law, security and national development.

    Declaring the conference open, Prof Osinbajo faulted the inability of states to create an inclusive society under existing constitutional arrangements to guarantee the security of lives and liberties of the people. He noted that lack of trust in justice administration fueled the persistent agitations from different parts of the country.

    He said: “First, on the matter of inclusion and inequalities, there is little doubt that the lack of provision of the basics of life to the largest number of our people remains the greatest source of tension in the polity.

    “People at the grassroots struggle daily for basic amenities, such as healthcare. The absence of social justice and lack of education and jobs give opportunities to young people to be recruited into any sort of army, whether for kidnapping, terrorism, violence or anti-social agitation.

    “It is the failure of states to deliver on these essentials of life and livelihood that compels our people to run to their tribal and religious camps to seek succour by way of agitation for basic rights and services.”

    The Acting President said efforts must be made to tackle poverty at the grassroots, noting that hunger does not recognise tribe or religion.

    He said: “There is no doubt in my mind that poverty has the same character in Bodinga Local Government Area in Sokoto State as in Ayanmelum Local Government Area here in Anambra State. Poverty affecting an Igbo man is not more dignified than the one affecting a Hausa-Fulani man.

    “So, the question for us is how to resolve these issues. First is to place responsibility where it rightly belongs. It is the business of all tiers of government– executive, legislature and judiciary to provide the enabling environment for the quality of life that people expect.”

    Prof Osinbajo said the Federal Government was working to ensure that poverty was reduced in all communities. He noted that the 2017 budget had a provision of N500 billion for social investment and N100 billion for social housing, targeting low-income families. He said the government’s N-Power scheme provided thousands of direct jobs to young graduates.

    Chief Justice of the Federation, Justice Walter Onnoghen, said the role of laws in solving the nation’s challenges could not be underestimated, noting that security of the nation depends on people’s faith in the law.

    Onnoghen, who chaired the occasion, was represented by Justice Amina Augie, a Justice of the Supreme Court. He said it was necessary for the existing laws to be efficient with the right attitude to their implementation.

    In his goodwill message, Governor Willie Obiano said his administration had transformed the state through good governance, observing that the state won the right to host the event because of its improved security.

    Chairman of Society for Analytical Economics, Prof Godwin Owoh, advocated the need to link the law with the nation’s dynamics of growth in order to sustain the economy and foster development.

    The Vice-Chancellor, Prof Joseph Ahaneku, said the event was in line with the school’s tradition of proffering academic solutions to the nation’s challenges.

    In his address, NALT President and Dean, Faculty of Law, Prof Godwin Okeke, said the conference had become a platform for training and development of law teachers in the country.

  • Osinbajo: ethnic confrontation is not a game

    Osinbajo: ethnic confrontation is not a game

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo yesterday implored North’s traditional rulers to advise youths fanning the embers of discord to stop because ethnic confrontation is not a game.

    He told the monarchs at a meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, that it was their duty to guide the youths.

    “Let us continue to counsel the misguided elements among our youths, who think that ethnic confrontation is a game and that words can be thrown around carelessly without repercussion”, he said.

    The meeting was in continuation of his consultations with leaders from the North and Southeast over their youths’ inciting comments.

    The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) on May 30 observed a sit-at-home I the East; this prompted the Arewa Youths to ask Igbo in the North to leave by October 1.

    The Acting President said the monarchs “have a great role to play in the matter”, adding:

    “As royal fathers and leaders, your place and your role in our society and nation is significant. You are the custodians of our cultures and traditions, and living embodiments of our rich heritage. You are, by virtue of your vast knowledge, wisdom and experience, both a vital link with our past, and an important guarantee for the success of our future. This is why your role in national affairs is critical.

    “The reason for these series of meetings is well known to all of us: it became necessary in the wake of a spate of divisive statements, in recent months and weeks, pitching the Southeast against the North. We are all aware of the so-called ‘ultimatum’ issued by a group of Northern youths, asking that all Igbos living in the North vacate the region. Before then, there was the clamour,  and it’s still ongoing, by some Southeastern youths, operating as IPOB and affiliated groups, demanding secession from Nigeria at all costs and by any means.

    “In all our previous engagements with Northern and Southeastern leaders, we all came to the consensus that Nigeria is stronger and better together, and that these hate-filled and divisive rhetoric and agitations are unjustifiable, unacceptable and often times illegal. And I would like to reiterate that today.”

    Stressing that Nigeria has seen enough violence and bloodshed during its history, Osinbajo said Nigeria paid the price for its unity with the lives of soldiers and civilians killed in the civil war (1967-1970).

    Recalling President Muhammadu Buhari’s  commitment to Nigeria from his experience in the military, he said the President fought side by side with Nigerians of every tribe and faith.

    The Acting President said: “He (Buhari) said we protected each other, put our lives on the line for each other, we were brothers even in the face of death. This is the type of nation we must maintain. As royal fathers and leaders, I think you will agree with me that we all have a role to play in countering the voices of divisiveness, and the elements who seek to take us down a bloody path.”

    The government, he said, was not deaf to the legitimate concerns and frustrations in some parts of the country.

    “Every part of Nigeria has its own grievances. But these have to be expressed graciously and managed with mutuality rather than with scorn and disdain. I would like to assure you all that we are here to listen and to answer, and, very importantly, to reassure everyone that we are committed to the unity of Nigeria, and that upon the foundation of that unity we can together build a prosperous and great country.

    “We must never take our diversity for granted; the fullness of our strength actually lies in that diversity. And we must wield that diversity, not as a divisive tool, but instead as a binding agent.

    “As we round off these consultations tomorrow with a meeting with governors, it is clear to me that we are all resolved to by words, conduct and action, promote the unity of our dear nation,” he said

    Osinabjo said the apparatus of government would deployed to ensure that no one threatens Nigeria’s territorial integrity nor the life of any Nigerian in any part of the country.

    The government, he said, was to provide an environment for a prosperous nation, where all, regardless of ethnicity or religion, can pursue their legitimate aspirations peacefully and securely.

    The Etsu Nupe, Dr. Yahaya Abubakar, told reporters after the meeting that there was need for the traditional institution to ensure peace in the country.

    “The unity of this nation must be upheld,” he said, blaming the strained relationship between the two regions to the elders’ failure to educate the youths on Nigeria’s history, especially the civil war.

    “We discovered that most of the people who are talking now are below 50 years old and some of them were not born when the civil war was fought,” he said.

    The meeting the monarch said, discussed the remote and immediate causes of the brewing crisis and its remedies.

    Abubakar said the remote causes could be traced to the culture of impunity and dangerous statements made in certain places by the youths.

    “There is need for us to put our heads together and also ensure that this culture of impunity is addressed,” he said.

    At the meeting are Sultan Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar III of Sokoto;  Emir Muhammadu Sanusi II of Kano;  Etsu Nupe  Dr Yahaya Abubakar; Emir Ibrahim Sulu Gambari of Ilorin; Emir Mustapha Agwai II of Lafia; Shehu of Bama Kyari Umar El-Kanemi, representing Shehu of Borno and Gbong Gwon Jos Jacob Buba Jang.

    Others are Emir Abubakar Shehu Abubakar of Gombe; Attah Igala Ndakwo Ameh Oboni II; Emir Muhammadu Ibn Abali of Fika; Emir Attahiru Ahmed Muhammed of Zamfara, the Tor Tive, Prof. James Ayatse; Emir Adamu Buba Baba Yinusa  of Abaji. Emir Muhammed Isah Muhammed  of Jama; Emir Lawal Hassan of Gumi; coordinator of the Northern Traditional Rulers Council, Sakaruyi of Karo Dr. Emmanuel Kyauta, and representative of the Emir of Katsina, Prof. Sani Lugard, the Waziri Katsina.

    Chief of Staff to the President, Abba Kyari, Minister of Science and Technology, Ogbonaya Onu, Minister of Interior, Abdulrahman Danbazzau, National Security Adviser, Babagana Munguno, and Speaker of the House of Representatives,Yakubu Dogara.

  • FG plans renewable energy for rural communities

    FG plans renewable energy for rural communities

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Tuesday said Federal Government would provide renewable source of power to at least one million households in rural communities not connected to the national grid.

    He gave the assurance during the Nigerian Renewable Energy Roundatable organized by the Ministry of Science and Technology in conjunction with the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Recalling how a rural Wuna village in Gwagwalada local government area of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), which was unconnected to the national grid, got power through renewable energy initiative by the Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPHC), the acting President said the government through the Rural Electrification Agency is developing an energy database that would show community locations and energy demand profiles, which in turn would save Solar Home System / Solar Mini grid providers time and money.

    The success story of Wuna Village, where the inhabitants now have running water, with each home having four points of lights, and many women processing their millets with solar powered light, he said, would soon be replicated in over one million rural settlements across the country.

    He said: “We are doing 20,000  more homes in this first phase of this exercise and a Pay-as-you-go system to 20,000 households to provide access to lighting and electric power for small devices. The plan is to expand the Solar Home System program to one million households, creating a few more million jobs.

    “The Federal government through the Rural Electrification Agency is developing an energy database that would show community locations and energy demand profiles, which in turn saves Solar Home System / Solar Mini grid providers time and money because we have already identified the communities beforehand.

    “We are also championing the use of mobile money for solar home system payments.

    “The Wuna home solar project is an example of how we can creatively and aggressively provide power to our people by this pragmatic approach to our energy mix.

    “We are convinced that renewable energy probably offers us the most sustainable means of increasing energy access to those who have no electricity and have no immediate hope of being connected to the national grid.”