Tag: Osinbajo

  • Osinbajo to Nigerians: resist divisive tendencies over Southern Kaduna killings

    Osinbajo to Nigerians: resist divisive tendencies over Southern Kaduna killings

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has urged the citizenry to display true leadership virtues and resist the temptation to succumb to divisive tendencies.
    A source in the Presidency, who craved anonymity, quoted the Acting President as responding to the leadership of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), which accused him of keeping silent in the face of brutal killings of Christians in Southern Kaduna.
    The source said Osinbajo would always work in line with the rule of law and was committed to the best standards of governance that value the life of every Nigerian, regardless of religion or ethnicity.
    He noted that even though there were weaknesses in the nation’s criminal justice system that limited his action, the Acting President was still working within government to bring the reforms necessary, including the option of community policing, to effectively arrest the situation in Southern Kaduna and other places.
    The source said:  “The Acting President has always acted to defend the rule of law and course of Justice. He is firmly committed to the best standards of governance that primes and values the life of every Nigerian, regardless of religion or ethnicity. As far as he is concerned, all Nigerians are equal and loved by God and does not discriminate on the basis of religion.
    “Alongside the President, Prof. Osinbajo is unwavering in ensuring that anyone who violates the law should and must be made to face the full extent of the law.
    “He has spoken out publicly on the inherent weaknesses in the nation’s Criminal Justice System, and is working assiduously within government to bring the reforms necessary, including the option of community policing.
    “The current limitations of the criminal justice system, however, affect virtually every kind of crime, including the example of high profile murders of the past, many of which remain unsolved.
    “This administration will continue to defend and protect the lives of all Nigerian citizens. It’s the reason the President gave firms instructions to security agencies – military and police – to send reinforcements to Southern Kaduna to enforce the peace. The Southern Kaduna crisis has become a worrying recurrent decimal over the years.
    “We -all of us in government, political, religious leaders, traditional rulers and the Nigerian people, especially the elites- must work to find a lasting solution.”

  • Alleged recriminations: Speak up, CAN tells Osinbajo

    Alleged recriminations: Speak up, CAN tells Osinbajo

    THE Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) yesterday expressed displeasure at what it perceived as the silence of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo over alleged attacks on Christians in parts of the country. It cited the Southern Kaduna killings which it branded genocide ,and the botched attempt by security operatives to arrest the founder of Omega Fire Ministries, Johnson Suleman, in Akure on Tuesday.

    The association in a statement asked Osinbajo to “intervene in all the clampdown on the Church in Nigeria after all, he is in the office primarily to represent the interest of the Christians and his studied silence is no longer golden.” It vowed to resist “any attempt to turn the country into a refugee camp for Christians.”

    CAN deplored government’s failure to address cases of blasphemy killings in the north and mentioned repeated cases of released suspects, without further arrests by the security operatives. It said:“The Police have been releasing those who were arrested for the killing of our members in Kano and Kubwa (Abuja) while our leaders are being subjected to untold hardship for no just cause.

    “It is high time the overzealous security agencies knew that Nigeria remains a secular state and any attempt to turn the country into a refugee camp for Christians will not be acceptable and will be resisted with every lawful means.” On the aborted attempt to arrest Suleman,CAN said: “Apostle Suleman has become a refugee in Ekiti state as security operatives are said to be searching every nook and cranny of the state with a view to arresting him. “If there is an urgent need to interrogate Apostle Suleman on any issue, it would only have been proper to extend a formal or informal invitation to him from the SSS rather than Gestapo approach used in the attempt to arrest him.

    It should be noted that under Nigerian Laws, he is presumed innocent until a court of law proves otherwise. Or have they extended the proposed obnoxious law that forbids religious preaching without the permission of the state governor down south too? “Treating Ministers of God and our members as common criminals is unacceptable to the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN).

    Enough is enough.” CAN described the utterances of the pastor as a “mere expression of his fundamental right, which every Nigerian is entitled to,” adding:“The last time we checked, Sections 38-41 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) states clearly that every Nigerian is ‘entitled to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, including freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom (either alone or in community with others, and in public or in private) to manifest and propagate his religion or belief in worship, teaching, practice and observance.’ “The Constitution states unambiguously that ‘Every person shall be entitled to freedom of expression, including freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart ideas and information without interference’.

    “Every person shall be entitled to assemble freely and associate with other persons, and in particular he may form or belong to any political party, trade union or any other association for the protection of his interests. “Every citizen of Nigeria is entitled to move freely throughout Nigeria and to reside in any part thereof, and no citizen of Nigeria shall be expelled from Nigeria or refused entry thereby or exit there …,” it said in the statement signed by the special assistant on media and communication to the CAN President, Bayo Oladeji. Suleman had denied suggestions by the security agency that he was inciting Christians against Muslims. He said his position is that Christians should not fold their arms when and if attempts are made by anyone to attack them in their churches.

  • Govt ‘ll support SMEs, says Osinbajo

    Govt ‘ll support SMEs, says Osinbajo

    Vice President Prof Yemi Osinbajo has reinstated the commitment of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s led administration to support the Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) in Abia and other states of the federation to grow the country’s economy.

    He stated this while flagging off the Nationwide Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise Clinics for Viable Enterprises (MSME) in Aba, the commercial hub of Abia State.

    The vice president who described the SMEs as the highest employers of labour and engine house of every great nation’s economy, said President Buhari has great interest in the growth of the SMEs and stressed that it is the intention of the administration to make the industry compete favourably and even surpass their counterparts at the global stage.

    He said the essence of visiting Aba, Kano, Nnewi, Onitsha and any other parts of the country is to interact with the people, identify their problems and as well finding a lasting way to tackle some of the challenges that are hindering them from performing optimally.

  • We’ll support local manufacturers – Osinbajo

    We’ll support local manufacturers – Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday said the Federal Government will do all within its powers to support Micro, Small, and Medium Scale Enterprises, (MSMEs) to thrive in the country.

    He stated this during a visit to Aba, Abia State, where he participated in the First MSMEs Clinics after the media launch in Abuja on Tuesday.

    The Office of the Special Adviser on Economic Matters in the Presidency devised the idea of a clinic to bridge the gap between medium and small scale businesses and government agencies such as Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) Bank of Industry (BOI), Federal Inland Revenue Services, (FIRS), Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) and others.

    The clinic is meant to bring together all those agencies in one spot and at appointed times to attend to the needs, questions and requests of people doing business.

    Such clinics would be held in two different cities every month towards educating the public about regulatory issues regarding MSMEs in Nigeria.

    In a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, Osinbajo said it is important to pay attention to MSMEs.

    He said: “We will spend time to ensure that we give those who produce locally all the support that we can give, and that is why we are doing these clinics.

    Noting that Aba traders, artisans, tailors, shoemakers and others are the bedrock of the nation’s economy, the acting President added: “You can’t do much for manufacturing without coming to Aba.”

     

     

  • Osinbajo not under pressure to resign – Presidency

    Osinbajo not under pressure to resign – Presidency

    The Presidency on Wednesday denied insinuation that Acting President Yemi Osinbajo was being pressured to resign.

    A statement issued by the Special Adviser to the President on Political Affairs, Femi Ojudu, said it was not true that Osinbajo was being held hostage by some governors who were said to have demanded his resignation from office.

    In the statement titled: “State of the Nation,” Ojudu said Osinbajo was on his desk in his office and performing his routine functions having earlier presided over a meeting of the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

    The presidential aide described the claim as ridiculous and urged the people to desist from carrying fake news.

    He said: “I have read many ridiculous stories saying the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, is being held hostage by some governors who are trying to compel him to resign.

    “I have equally received several calls regarding this. The story is simply not true. It is a fabrication. Don’t be a purveyor of fake news.

    “The Vice President is behind his desk carrying out his task. The Federal Executive Council presided over by him has just ended and he has been busy receiving visitors and holding meetings.”

     

     

  • Bad behaviour won’t go unpunished – Osinbajo

    Bad behaviour won’t go unpunished – Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Tuesday said there must be consequences for bad behaviour in the country.

    He added that the people will behave well once there a system in place that punishes bad behaviour and enforces the consequence for misconduct.

    Osinbajo spoke at the monthly meeting of the Presidential Enabling Business Council (PEBEC) at the State House, Abuja.

    He said Nigeria is at a point where it should improve all the factors that will create an enabling environment for businesses in the country.

    In a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, Osinbajo said: “We have to be committed to what we want to achieve. We must develop a system that punishes bad behaviour and reward good behavior.”

    He also recalled how between 1999-2007, in Lagos State, a reform of the judiciary ended the perception of corruption in that arm of government once the principle of enforcing consequences for bad behaviour was in place.

    According to him, an overwhelming 89 per cent of lawyers in Lagos said in a survey held in 1999 there was corruption in the state judiciary and yet no one was being sanctioned.

    He added: “So we decided to deal with the situation. In the first year we sacked 21 magistrates and three judges in the second year. By 2007 when we conducted the same survey, the result was zero per cent.

    “Nigerians, like any other will behave well, if we put in a system where people won’t get away with misconduct. We are the ones to do it.”

     

     

  • MSMEs critical to revamping economy – Osinbajo

    MSMEs critical to revamping economy – Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Tuesday said strengthening the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) littered around the country is critical to revamping the Nigerian economy.

    He spoke during the Media Launch of MSMEs Clinics at the Banquet Hall of the State House, Abuja.

    But the MSMEs in the country, he noted, are presently saddled with lots of problems.

    Osinbajo said: “‎Nigerians complain about how is practically difficult to get approval on practically everything when I toured the nation with the support of USAID. The whole idea was to support MSMEs and to find out what their problems were.

    “But almost every stand ‎I went to had complains about how it was so difficult to get approvals for practically anything. I was frankly taken back on that occasion because practically every point we went to had the same complaint. We also went to Kano on one of our social intervention programme and it was the same problem, same issues.

    “Some ‎small manufacturers even said they had to engage consultants to take them through approval processes and it still took over a year to get approval from some agencies.”

    According to him, the government is also committed to removing bureaucracy hindering ease of doing business in Nigeria.

    Osinbajo said it was very disturbing that some of the government agencies were yet to buy in to the major plan of economic recovery plan, which is aimed at ensuring easier ways doing business in Nigeria.

     

  • Osinbajo: From Davos with love

    Osinbajo: From Davos with love

    To the legion that has been unrelenting in their clamour for a coherent economic policy, the federal government, it appears, seems finally set to give them something to chew upon. A newly-developed Economic Recovery Growth Plan designed to take the country out of recession, says Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at a Business Interaction Group on Nigeria attended by foreign investors in Davos, Switzerland last week, is in the offing.
    While the details of the plan will have to wait till its launch date in February, of interest is that the Vice President, perhaps following in the tradition of his boss – President Muhammadu Buhari, seems to prefer a so-called high profile international forum to let Nigerians into its plans to address what is essentially a structural domestic economic challenge. Again, while I have no problem with the high-octane affair and the photo-op that Davos presented to our officials, it seems easy to discern an effort which, in playing up to the tradition of a leadership obsessed with Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and its hordes of portfolio investors, typically lapses into the usual cant at a time the world has learnt to see and treat us as a joke!
    So what is the problem with the Economic Recovery Growth Plan (EGRP)? First is the fact that the plan is coming 20 months late. Never mind the implicit admission of lack of a holistic working plan by the Buhari administration, its coming at this time would appear to have finally validated the claim of the administration’s critics that it lacked a blueprint to tackle the challenges facing the economy.
    Second is the content of the plan. Admittedly, we can only speculate at this stage. Nonetheless, it is interesting to hear Vice President Osinbajo speak of the administration’s modest efforts at redirecting the national budget in favour of capital spend. As against previous years when capital estimates hovered around 16 percent, the administration has quite admirably been able to push capital expenditure (capex) to 30 percent – if you call that an achievement in a country with unprecedented infrastructural gap. Imagine that under the 30-year roadmap infrastructure development plan – the Integrated Infrastructure Master Plan (NIIMP), it is said that Nigeria would require at least $2 trillion (N398.1 trillion) over the course of the next three decades. Again, the vice-president spoke of federal government’s plans to utilise the nation’s pension funds to finance infrastructure in the country, the Social Investment Programme under which N500bn has again been proposed for this year in addition to last year’s. These planned infrastructure spend, will no doubt, go a long way to reflate the economy and also in unlock the nation’s socio-economic potentials.
    But then, what we need now are bold and if you may – radical thinking out of the current morass. Not the old, worn ideas for an economy in trauma.
    In other words, while the above measures may prove helpful somewhat, they may just end up as placebos for the simple reason of the many plagues being inflicted on the economy by a cartel of disparate, unpatriotic actors whose business consists essentially in manipulating everything from its institutions to the national currency for their selfish reasons.
    Elsewhere, I have written about predatory behaviours of financial sector operatives. What else is there to say of the usurious class known to reap where they have not sown? What about their spectacular preference for questionable financial derivatives that are no more than Ponzi schemes and other unconscionable activities that render them as laws unto themselves?
    Today, I wish to take on their allies – the players in the forex market – for the obvious reason of being such a pain in the nation’s ass! Of course you know the story: the naira, our currency, is currently worth a little more than tissue paper! On Friday, a unit of the greenback reportedly sold for N490! That is supposed to be the market-determined rate being pushed by agents of foreign capitals in our midst!
    Of course, I understand that the scarcity of forex occasioned by the dip in global oil prices at a time of uncurbed demand would translate to the pressure on the naira. At a time everything – from fuel, consumables spares and raw materials – are imported, this would ordinarily seem inevitable. What we do know however is that the current run on the national currency is sustained by a cartel of rogue players in the official segment of the forex market in alliance with the shadowy players in the parallel market. The problem is that while their destructive activities on the economy have long been established, very little is being done by the federal government to take them on.
    I ask: what will it take to wrest the country from the firm grip of these manipulators? Is any thinking going on in this regard?
    Now to the perennially weeping club – the nation’s club of manufacturers. While I do not mean to be uncharitable, I have often wondered if truly the country has a manufacturing class to boast of. As it appears, what we have is a bunch of players permanently hung on forex. Never mind that some of the so-called established manufacturing companies have operated here for decades, the truth is that they do not earn, talk less of covering their forex needs from their operations. Imagine for instance, that to produce margarine, we are still being told that the companies would require forex to bring in palm oil from Malaysia! None, it appears, have found sense in backward integration nor shown willingness to explore its assumed benefits. Of course, so long as oil flowed, there will be enough forex to go round! Now, it seems the party is over!
    I once raised the issue of a petrochemical complex which I considered as central to a future industrial strategy. Again, has anyone in government yet figured its place in the industrial mix?
    Talk about our industrial policies needing a rethink. Would Osinbajo’s ERGP fix the lacuna?
    The greatest culprit of course is the prodigal federal government that spends 40 percent of its entire forex (something it cannot afford) to import fuel that it can refine locally. And now we are told by Vice President Osinbajo that we have to wait for Dangote to bail us out in 2019! For now, we can forget about pushing more aggressively for more refineries to come on board; fixing the ailing ones to augment the supply situation or even the much-hyped colocation of refineries. Who says better attention to those issues would not guarantee speedier recovery? Why are we so unblest?

  • Osinbajo, others for Lagos justice summit

    Osinbajo, others for Lagos justice summit

    Vice President Prof Yemi Osinbajo; former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President Wole Olanipekun and foremost Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) Aare Afe Babalola are among dignitaries expected at a two-day summit on administration of justice organised by the Lagos State government.
    The summit with the theme “Contemporary Trends: Catalysts for Justice Sector Reform in Lagos State” will take place on January 30 and 31at Eko Convention Centre, Eko Hotels & Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos.
    Also expected at the summit are rights lawyer Femi Falana (SAN); former Lagos State Attorney-General and Deputy Chief of Staff to the President Ade Ipaye; Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji of the International Criminal Court and former Executive Secretary of the Lagos State Security Trust Fund (LSSTF) Fola Arthur- Worrey.
    Osinbajo is the keynote speaker and Governor Akinwunmi Ambode the special guest of honour.

  • Nigeria for stronger, robust AU – Osinbajo

    Nigeria for stronger, robust AU – Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Monday said Nigeria will continue to work together with other African countries to ensure that the African Union (AU) becomes a stronger and more robust organization for the benefit of the continent and its people.

    Osinbajo, who is acting President, spoke while receiving a Special Envoy from President Ismail Omar Guelleh of Djibouti, Ali Farah Assoweh, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    In a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, Osinbajo said: “It is important for Africa to always put the best foot forward and we will continue to work together with the President of Djibouti to make AU stronger and more robust.”

    Osinbajo maintained that Nigeria and Djibouti enjoy very good diplomatic relationship over the years.

    He also expressed appreciation to the President of Djibouti for the country’s support to Nigeria in various international platforms.

    He said the Federal Government would consider Djibouti’s candidate for AU seat, observing that the position is one that has to be occupied by the right person.

    The statement revealed that President Muhammadu Buhari and Osinbajo spoke on phone on Sunday night, reviewing local and other developments including the situation in Gambia, where Nigerian troops are playing a leading role in resolving the crisis that followed that country’s presidential election.