Tag: Peterside

  • NIMASA ready to increase GDP, says Peterside

    Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) Director-GeneralDr. Dakuku Petersidehas said the agency was positioned to contribute substantially to the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Peterside told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that if the potentials of the sector were optimised, they would lead to the growth of the economy.

    “We are looking at the entire gamut of mix that is necessary to unleash our potential in the industry.

    “All I can say is that going forward, maritime is positioned to contribute substantially to our GDP and by extension the growth of our economy,’’ he said.

    Peterside said many countries had optimised advantages of their maritime sub-sector to grow their GDP and it had yielded results and urged Nigeria to replicate same.

    “If you look at the economy of the Philippians, seafarers contribute more than 11 per cent to their GDP.

    “If you look at Bangladesh, it is called the graveyard of ships, in terms of ship breaking, ship recycling; that small sector in the maritime industry contributes substantially to their economy.

    ”Now, if you  look at India, again seafarers contribute substantially to the economy of India. If you look at Korea, ship building contributes to the economy of Korea.

    ”‘If you look at China, the officer cadre that boards vessel or that ply vessels, or that mounts vessels everywhere in the world, most of them are Chinese.

    ”If you look at Singapore, by simply being a trans-shipment hub, it is the mainstay of the economy of Singapore.

    “So, if you look at all these countries, they have optimised advantage of one sub-sector or the other in the maritime sector. Why can’t we replicate same in Nigeria?”

  • Peterside : Wike’s actions embarrasing to Rivers

    Peterside : Wike’s actions embarrasing to Rivers

    One of the leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, believes that Governor Nyesom Wike’s actions are embarrassing the people.
    Peterside spoke yesterday while commenting on last Friday’s dismissal by police authorities of six policemen attached to Wike for professional misconduct during the December 10 last year’s legislative rerun.
    The APC governorship candidate, noted that the actions of the Rivers governor, especially for insisting that the dismissed policemen were innocent and abusing the Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, were giving the state a bad name and rubbishing the achievements of its founding fathers.
    He expressed deep reservations over the unbecoming attitude of Wike, who he insisted had serially compromised security in Rivers state and had allegedly been involved in many electoral malpractices.
    The APC chieftain said: “What manner of a man is Wike? His desperation to become governor at all costs, led to loss of many lives and destruction of property. Since becoming governor, it has been bad news all the way. Many people, including security personnel, have been murdered in different parts of the state. Now, policemen have been dismissed from service, all because of the inordinate ambition of one man.
    “How can the governor of a state force his way into INEC’s collation centre and under heavy intimidation, harassment and threat to life,
    force the returning officer to declare a winner, when the results of Emohua and Etche LGAs had not been collated?
    “Wike clearly had no business storming the collation centre with policemen and his thugs. He took his immunity to a ridiculous level, thus endangering the lives of people and career of the security personnel.
    “Here is a governor who cries at every given opportunity, yet he is the one compromising every known government institution to serve his selfish ambition.”

  • Day friends, associates  celebrated Peterside, Asita

    Day friends, associates celebrated Peterside, Asita

    It is rare to find a governorship candidate and his running mate sharing the same birthday, but that is the situation in Rivers State.

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State during the 2015 election, Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside, and his running mate, Mr. Honourable Okorie Asita, a lawyer, were born on December 31.

    Last December 31 was a memorable day for Peterside and Asita, as they clocked 46 and 50, having been born in 1970 and 1966.

    Peterside is an alumnus of the Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), Port Harcourt and the University of Port Harcourt, popularly called Unique UNIPORT, where he bagged Doctorate in Organisational Behaviour, while his doctoral dissertation was in Corporate Political Strategy.

    The Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) also attended Georgia State University, Atlanta and Harvard-Kennedy School, University of Harvard.

    While at the RSUST, Port Harcourt, where he studied Medical Laboratory Sciences, specialising in Haematology and Blood Transfusion, Peterside was elected National President of the National Union of Rivers State Students (NURSS) in January 1992. His Master’s in Management was also at RSUST, after a Post-Graduate Diploma (PGD).

    Peterside and Asita were at the House of Representatives at the same time (2011-2015). The NIMASA boss hails from Opobo, the headquarters of Opobo/Nkoro Local Government Area of Rivers state, the kingdom of the famous King Jaja, while Asita is an indigene of Okarki in Ahoada West LGA of the state.

    The governorship candidate of the APC in Rivers in the 2015 election, while speaking at the elaborate birthday bash organised by his friends, which took place at the highbrow and newly-inaugurated Lasien Pavilion Royale, an event centre on Forces Avenue, old Government Reservation Area (GRA), near Government House, Port Harcourt, said Asita played a key role in his election as National President of NURSS, while they were both at RSUST.

    Peterside said: “The good Lord has been faithful to us. He has been kind to us. We do not deserve His mercy and honour. We thank the Almighty God and we vow to serve Him all the days of our lives.

    “I am here to share with you that God rewards a life of sincerity, honesty, humility and trust. My brother Asita and I are products of God’s mercy and faithfulness.

    “Honesty, humility, fear of the Lord, trusting God will definitely be rewarded now and eternally. That is why we have absolutely no fear about what the future holds for us. The good Lord will always make a way, where there seems to be no way.”

    The NIMASA boss was appointed as Commissioner for Works by the then Rivers Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, now the Minister of Transportation.

    From being a commissioner, he was in 2011 elected to represent Andoni-Opobo/Nkoro constituency in the House of Representatives, where he became the Chairman of the House Committee on Petroleum (Downstream).

    Peterside also said: “After the Almighty God, God chose Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi as an instrument to take me from one point to another. It will be uncharitable not to acknowledge the roles he (Amaechi) has played in my life.

    “There is nobody who gets something, without God providing a platform or an instrument. I am grateful to Rt. Hon. Amaechi and his family. I also wish to thank the leadership of the APC in Rivers State. I have enjoyed tremendous support from the APC.”

    While the ex-Rivers commissioner for works was chairing the House of Representatives’ Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), the lawmaker representing Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, Senator Magnus Ngei Abe, was also chairing the same committee in the Senate, which made them to be much closer, besides being Rivers indigenes.

    When Peterside aspired in 2015 to be Rivers governor, Abe, who hails from Bera-Ogoni in Gokana LGA of Rivers state, was also a strong contender/aspirant on the platform of APC. The former eventually got the party’s ticket, while leaders of APC prevailed on the latter to return to the Senate, where he presently is.

    The director-general of NIMASA said: “Senator Abe has always been my friend. Sometime in 1991/1992, Chief Rufus Ada-George (the then Rivers governor) put us together in a committee to celebrate the silver jubilee anniversary of the creation of Rivers State.

    “When I was getting married in 1999/2000, in my home, the person that first arrived was Senator Magnus Abe. I used to live at No. 29, Immaculate Street, Borikiri, Port Harcourt. Senator Abe literally supervised my dressing, until we got to church.

    “Senator Abe said to me he was not going to stay throughout the wedding and that he would leave at some point. We have always had a close relationship. He has been to me, a brother, a friend and a trusted ally. Nothing will change it.”

    Peterside also publicly acknowledged the roles played by his running mate, whom he described as his reliable and trustworthy brother, friend and confidant.

    He said: “In 1991, I wanted to be the President of the Students’ Union at the RSUST, Port Harcourt, Asita played a key role and I emerged the President, by God’s grace.

     

    “Asita who played the key role at RSUST, went to the background. In 2015, when the members and leaders of the Rivers State APC chose me as the party’s governorship candidate, they also chose Asita to work with me as running mate.

    “We made attempt (in 2015), but God said He did not want me to be governor at that point in time and we said God, we surrender to your will and that God’s will is the best for us.

    “To the best of our ability, we (he and Asita) will continue to live a life of sincerity and selflessness. We will always put the interest of the generality first, before our own personal interest, whenever we have the opportunity. We will always put God first in all our activities and we will put the people next. Gratitude is a way of life for me. I appreciate all of you.”

    Asita, earlier in his opening remarks, stated that in spite of being four years older than Peterside, they remained very close friends, describing the governorship candidate as very honest, transparent, hardworking, a man of integrity and honour.

    Abe, born on May 24, 1965, while proposing the toast, described Peterside and Asita as his God-fearing and reliable friends, while referring to the director-general of NIMASA as an accomplished Nigerian, who had recorded tremendous achievements at 46, while displaying brilliance and intellect.

    The ex-Secretary to the Rivers State Government in Amaechi’s administration (Abe) also noted that the unique and easy-going Asita had no worries, making him to look like a 30-year-old man at 50.

    There were many men of God/clerics at the carnival-like thanksgiving, with the sermon handled by Rev. Essa Ogorry, who said there was the need for people to always put their trust only in God Almighty, while various groups of beautifully-dressed choristers added colour to the birthday bash.

    In his vote of thanks, the Chairman of the birthday committee, Bisi Nwankwo, an engineer, declared that besides God, the success of the thanksgiving should be attributed to a former member of the House of Representatives, who represented Akuku-Toru/Asari-Toru constituency of Rivers state between 2011 and 2015, Dr. Dawari Ibietela George.

    Peterside was first appointed Special Assistant to the then Rivers Governor, Dr. Peter Odili, on Students and Youths’ Affairs in August 1999, from where he was invited to serve as Chairman, Opobo-Nkoro Local Government Council in December 2002.

    He was later appointed as Senior Special Assistant on Works to the then governor, after his tenure as the chairman of Opobo/Nkoro council, while in 2005, he went further to pursue another passion of leadership grooming, through the founding of a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), the Development and Leadership Institute (DLI).

    While Peterside was championing the transformation of DLI from a local NGO to an international non-profit organisation, Amaechi invited him to serve as commissioner of works.

    The Amaopusenibo of Opobo Kingdom (Peterside), at various times, turned down no fewer than fourteen chieftaincy titles, many honourary doctoral degrees and awards, while rather believing in the people as a reason for service.

    The NIMASA boss is married to Elima, a lawyer, and they are blessed with three children: Soba, Belema and Miebi.

    The Rivers Chairman of the APC, Chief Davies Ibiamu Ikanya, while speaking on the birthday, said: “Those who have followed Dr. Peterside’s trajectory as a leader from his school days, until he was appointed Senior Special Assistant to Rivers Governor on Youths and Students Affairs at the beginning of this republic, know that he obviously has a rendezvous with history and he has shown invaluable and inestimable capacity to deliver beyond target.

    “Peterside has become legendary for showing limitless benevolence to the downtrodden, associates, colleagues and practical display of immense love and compassion to everyone that has crossed his path in life, especially with many persons on his ongoing overseas scholarship programme, which he started many years ago.”

    Ikanya also stated that Peterside’s 46 birthday was a perfect opportunity for him to sense the feeling of being alive in the depths of his heart and promise himself to continue to do greater things and aim even higher.

    While speaking with reporters after the thanksgiving, the NIMASA boss noted that Wike had a Herculean task to prove that the two leaked rigging audio tapes were not his voice.

    Peterside said: “It is a big embarrassment to our state that a governor or anybody who occupies the office of governor can be associated with the two leaked audio tapes.”

    While commenting on the passage of the Rivers State’s 2017 Budget under 48 hours, before Friday’s inauguration of the six APC lawmakers, the NIMASA boss noted that it was ridiculous and shocking.

    “We all know that Wike has taken loans in excess of N130 billion. Is there any provision in the budget to service the loans? No such provision.”

    Peterside also expressed displeasure on the spate of insecurity in Rivers, with kidnappers, cultists, armed robbers, sea pirates and assassins, among others, letting loose, leading to loss of lives and property.

     

     

     

  • Peterside: era of impunity has ended in Rivers

    Peterside: era of impunity has ended in Rivers

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State in last year’s general election, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has said impunity by the Nyesom Wike-led administration in the state has ended.

    Peterside, the Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), spoke at the weekend during a thanksgiving/grand reception in honour of a former Chairman of Asari-Toru Local Government Area, Ojukaye Flag-Amachree, at Buguma, the local government’s headquarters.

    Flag-Amachree, a chieftain of the APC, was on November 24 granted bail by the Court of Appeal sitting in Port Harcourt for alleged murder charge by the Rivers State Government.

    The politician was released from the Port Harcourt Prisons on November 25, after almost eight months in captivity (from April 20) in what most people described as politically motivated.

    Peterside, a former member of the House of Representatives, likened what was happening in Rivers State to the period of King Nebuchadnezzar in the Bible, where children of God were constantly subjected to various forms of indignity, until God showed His mightiness.

    The APC chieftain berated Wike, who he said was behaving like an emperor with conquered people.

    He said: “Today, individuals are boasting that they can pick anybody, put them in detention. They are boasting that by their power, they became leaders. They are boasting that by their power, they conquered everybody and that by their power, they will shut everybody’s mouth in Rivers State.

    “The people of Asari-Toru Local Government Area, go and tell them that the Almighty God, who said to King Nebuchadnezzar that the end had come, has said to them that their end has come.

    “The end of impunity in this land has come. The era of arresting an innocent man, put him in detention and go about boasting that they kept Ojukaye behind bars is gone. The era when they said Ojukaye would not see the light of the day, that Ojukaye would not witness the next election and Ojukaye would not vote for APC in the next election, has ended.

    “It shows that they have no power. The power is with Almighty God. And because we are the people of God, because we know that God will always triumph over Satan, light will always triumph over darkness, this is the time to vote with boldness and courage. This is because we are the children of the Almighty God. They can talk, they can threaten. We know that their power will come to nothing.”

    He added: “On December 10, as we go to cast our votes, let us know that we have the Holy Spirit behind us. We have the people of Asari-Toru Local Government Area behind us. We know we have the people of Rivers State behind us. God is giving us one more opportunity to liberate ourselves. Cast your votes for the liberation of our people. Vote for the candidates of the APC.

    “The era of threatening electoral officials, the people of Rivers State and the people Asari-Toru Local Government Area is gone. We will not rig any election and we shall win. The fact that Ojukaye was released is a sign that they have lost the election.”

    Flag-Amachree thanked APC leaders, residents of Asari-Toru Local Government Area and party members who honoured him.

    The politician assured that he remained a committed member of the APC, despite the alleged threats from Wike and his allies.

  • How to re-invent  Nigeria, by Peterside

    How to re-invent Nigeria, by Peterside

    In a lecture titled: “Connected vision: Building blocks for a new Nigeria” presented at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) Dr. DAKUKU ADOL PETERSIDE traces Nigeria’s journey since independence. He suggests among others, systematic reform and periodic renewal through appropriate democratic transformation as part of measures to correct the defect in the original vision.

    I would like to relate to the topic of this lecture through a series of questions. I have chosen this path because we are all students questing after greater knowledge. And the right knowledge can only come about if we ask questions- the
    right ones.

    A time for national
    self-interrogation

    Another reason is that there is an implicit interrogation element in the topic. We live in a country that is currently undergoing and doing a great deal of self-examination in nearly all spheres of our national life. We are forced by the prevailing economic and political challenges to undertake this rigorous exercise in self-examination and interrogation. As it were, it is question time in Nigeria, in which both the leaders and the led are asking: How did we get here and how did things got so bad?
    As students and citizens, we are today busy interrogating our destiny as a nation. We are asking many questions about our history, orientation, institutions and corporate organisations. We wonder why true greatness has remained elusive to our nation. We are at a loss why the common things that citizens of other nations take for granted continue to elude us. In this knowledge community, I am sure the questions  acquire greater urgency and stridency as the period of youth and studentship is that of great expectations. It is a period of great dreams and bubbling energy.
    Further, being citizens of Africa’s biggest economy, the country with the highest population of black people and abundant natural resources, we have a right to expect a good life after schooling. But this has developed into entitlement culture that people have got used to, expecting certain privileges as rights. Since things do not work that way, they seem to be in quandary as to why the basic things expected from the society are not gotten and why the ones they are used to are fast disappearing.
    For those of us present here, the objects of collective national self-interrogation will include: Why are job opportunities diminishing in a country where there are so much work to be done? Why have the elements of national greatness – economic growth, quality education, progress in science and technology, reliable infrastructure to support economic growth, basic security of life and property, religious harmony and an efficient system of government – seemed to elude us as a nation after more than half a century of formal independence.  In trying to reflect on these, many of our thinkers have argued that we only got political independence and never worked for economic independence.
    As a player in the political space and corporate world, I am very troubled by the fact that many of our institutions and corporate organisations hardly survive beyond a few dispensations. If you recall, a number of our government-owned companies were so badly run that the option of privatisation and government divestment  became inevitable. Even our private sector organisations are not insulated from the culture of instability and lack of sustainability. This is understandable, given the nexus between the public and private sectors. Government, through its organs and policies, provide the environment in which the corporate organisations either thrive or perish. When policy instability prevails in the public space, it will be extremely hard for corporate organisations to survive, let alone thrive.
    It is pertinent to state at this juncture that this process of self-interrogation did not start today. It has always been a feature of our national life to question the basic vision and orientation of our nation. In my view, this urge for a better or “alternative” Nigeria is a healthy sign. When people are dissatisfied with their current reality, it is a healthy indicator that people are willing to search for a better reality.  In recent times, however, the  self interrogation  may have assumed a new urgency because of our desperate economic circumstances.
    It is true that Nigeria is in recession, in the first quarter of this year, the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as given by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) was minus 0.36 per cent, that of the second quarter was given as minus 2.06 per cent, with our country ranked 169 out of 189 in the 2016 World Bank “Ease of doing business” ranking index. Nigeria is placed 136 out of 165 ranked in Transparency International Corruption perception index 2015 (transparency.org).
    Notwithstanding the negative statistics, the fact remains that the search for a greater Nigeria has always been a feature of our public discourse: from the inception of military rule in 1966, at the end of the Nigerian Civil War in 1970, through the military rule that terminated in 1999 to mention but these few. Why has the search not yielded the desired result?

    My approach

    To answer the question as well as proffer practicable solution to this seemingly complex problem, first I would like to establish the nexus between sound visioning and sustainability in both political and corporate domains. At the political and historical level, my task is to indicate, in the words of Chinua Achebe ‘where the rain began to beat us’ or where our original  national vision became defected. I will then proceed to indicate the basic general elements in the founding and sustenance of great nations in world history.
    This will enable us to assess our progress against the essential factors and elements that have fashioned and distinguished great nations. In the process, it will be inevitable to cast side glances at how well or badly Nigeria has fared among its “age grade of nations,” nations indeed have age grades. No nation can avoid comparing itself against the achievements of those it considers its age mates and even rivals. The implications of these national development factors for corporate survival and sustainability in individual nations will become  self-evident then.

    Defect in the original vision

    It has since been established that an overriding vision is key to the success of nations and corporations.  Vision determines progress. Rightly regarded, a vision is by its very nature larger than the dreams and aspirations of any one player or even the aggregate vision of a set of players in a nation or corporation. It ought to define the big picture, the guiding principle of the nation or organisation in the long stretch of its history. Vision is not physical sight, for many who have sight do not have vision and some who have vision do not have sight.
    For instance, quadrenially, the Americans go to the polls to choose a new president. In the run-up to the elections, the campaign of each contestant is weighed constantly and balanced informally by the degree to which it approximates the broad  principles and ideals of freedom, justice, equality and opportunity, enunciated earlier by the founding fathers.  Therefore, to many Nigerians, the recent triumph of Mr. Donald Trump was shocking as “voting” in Nigeria was for their interest, whereas the Americans voted for what they think best serves their overriding interests, especially, expansion of opportunity for, and security of the American people.
    In the case of Nigeria, the original defect in our founding vision is historical. As you are all aware, Nigeria came about as an amalgamation of different protectorates by the British in 1914. That process was for the administrative convenience of a colonial project that was first and foremost a trading concern. Subsequently, a political veneer was spread over it through a series of negotiations among factions of the emergent educated national elite clamouring for independence. What the British ceded in 1960 was therefore a complex outcome of negotiated settlements among Nigerian elite, representing first and foremost their respective regional and ethnic interests. There was no “pan-Nigerian interest” or “pan-Nigerian agenda”. There was no “connected vision”
    The founding vision of Nigeria at independence was essentially  one of a multi-ethnic nation first and foremost. But this founding vision was devoid of far-reaching  integrative  economic, political, social and moral elements for the future of such a diverse polity. There seemed to be a belief then that  independence from colonial rule was the urgent paramount issue. The refinement of a national ideal and vision would follow along the way. This never happened as the aggressive pursuit of regional interests, quickly followed after independence. At best, each of the original three (and later four) regions, pursued its fairly independent ideals, targets, goals and aspirations. This accounts for the different levels of development that were witnessed among the regions before the military interventions and the civil war of 1966-70.
    This original haziness in what constitute the overriding national vision has constantly plagued our national development in nearly every sphere.
    My key observation here and operating thesis therefore is that a nation can only endure if it is founded on an integrated and comprehensive vision (connected vision). Nigeria unfortunately missed that opportunity at inception. This original ‘sin’ has multiplied and  contributed to the ever so frequent quest for a new nation founded on a new vision.
    Nations unfortunately are not like buildings. No matter how beautiful and magnificent a building is, it is possible and easy to evacuate, demolish and replace it with a completely new and more magnificent one, to serve a totally different purpose. But, it is not so with nations. The critical difference is nations contain people who cannot be emptied out to make way for a new nation. The closest of demolition of national foundations to build something new is with peaceful or violent revolutions. After the collapse of Soviet Union and the demolition of the Berlin Wall, we are all witnesses to what has become of nations re-invented under ideological revolutions. We do not want to go in that direction if we are to find viable answers to the questions that are today nagging most Nigerians.
    Therefore, nations can ill-afford the luxury of self-demolition and re-invention. Instead, nations renew themselves through a process of systematic reform and periodic renewal through appropriate democratic transformations.
    On the matter of corrective vision, corporations are luckier than nations. A corporation can change its board and management, re-brand itself, redefine its vision and map for itself a new mission. It can even be acquired or acquire other corporations for healthier growth. There is the probability of success that with better management, from the ashes of the old corporation, something new and more profitable will emerge. This is the spirit and guiding principle behind the reform and repositioning we are championing in NIMASA. Close to 10 years of NIMASA’s existence in its current structure, we are in the process of refreshing our vision and mission, we have a new board and a visionary management, it offers the rare opportunity to re- invent that regulatory agency and reposition it as the most efficient, effective and responsive regulatory agency in Africa, advancing Nigeria’s maritime goals.

    Factors in national
    greatness

    However, it is pertinent at this juncture to point out an obvious fact. The success of nations in the race for development is not solely accounted for by the soundness of their founding vision, just like the success of corporations are not determined by its vision and mission statement alone. There is an interplay of critical factors that separates successful nations from those that continued to struggle on the development ladder. In the race for the top of the development index, age and longevity do not necessarily confer superior development. While some old nations like Greece and Egypt have continued to struggle with the key indices of development, relatively new nation states like South Korea, Singapore and Botswana have emerged as highly successful economically and even politically.
    Let us now identify some of the key factors that enable nations transform their founding vision into roaring success. They include:

    •Quality of governance

    Some form of participatory government and inclusive political institutions is the commonest requirement for national development. At the bottom of this assertion is the understanding that a nation cannot leave out any segment of its populace in the decisions that govern their very lives. Divergent cultures and histories have made it expedient to accept ‘appropriate’ democracy as a term to denote the adoption by individual nations’ forms of participatory governance that is appropriate to their circumstance in order to carry their people along the path of national development.
    While western countries have insisted on liberal multi-party democracy as the best form of government, other major economies like China and Russia have adopted quasi authocratic form of democracy to enlist popular participation in national affairs and development.  There are also countries where great developmental strides have been made within the context of monarchical governments with traditional ways of engineering legitimacy and popular participation.
    Whatever the form of government, there is no disagreement as to what constitutes good governance.  The principles of accountability, transparency, observance of the rule of law and basic freedoms remain fundamental to any definition of good governance. But the ultimate determinant of good governance is the extent to which such government meets the basic needs of the greatest majority of its people.
    In recent years, a new overriding challenge has taken the center stage in the assessment of governments  all over the world. It is the challenge of global inequality. With the triumph of the West and the open market economic format, countries have woken up to find themselves overwhelmed by glaring inequality among their citizens.  In the United States (U.S.), the gap between the top two per cent of the population who own literally everything and the rest of the population has become glaring and very embarrassing. Addressing inequality has emerged as one of the top challenges of governments all over the world. Governments are now challenged to adopt smarter policies to reduce inequality through adjustments in the structure of opportunities and the provision of wider access to the basic necessities of life.

    •Anti-corruption

    The quest for more accountable governance all over the world has led the international community to recognise illicit financial flows through corruption as a major obstacle to the attainment of good governance. It is also one factor that has increased inequality within individual national societies. Corruption is extractive and exploitative by nature. Corruption does not create the incentives needed for people to give their best, innovate and be resourceful.
    The more successful countries have instituted very tough anti-corruption measures to detect and punish corrupt practices through appropriate legislation and the judiciary. In this regard, it is not surprising that some of the fastest growing countries like Singapore, Rwanda and Botswana, also happen to have the toughest anti-corruption regimes in the world.
    This is one area where there is a growing national consensus in Nigeria that the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari has displayed unusual courage. There are divergent views as to the effectiveness of current measures but many agree that it required a lot of courage to make a start. It is hoped that the Nigerian public will appreciate the significance of this effort in the overall improvement of the quality of governance in the country.

    •Institutions with integrity

    Outgoing U.S. President Barack Obama once declared in Ghana that Africa does not need more strong men but strong institutions. At the back of that assertion is the realisation that in most African countries, the institutions of state remain relatively weak while leaders often violate them and rule according to their whims. This is true in some African countries such as Zimbabwe as it is true in South American countires like Colombia and Asian countries like North Korea amongst others. Yet, it is common knowledge that advanced democracies of the world rely on the integrity of their institutions to preserve order and ensure the survival of the state and society.
    If our judiciary does not have integrity, then all we can expect from the courts would be judgments retailed for cash instead of justice dispensed according to law. If our military institutions do not have inbuilt service integrity, we will continue to have political generals while avoidable insurgency rages and diminishes our national sovereignty. The same argument can be made in respect of our major national institutions to highlight their current shortcomings as a way of extrapolating on our negative development indices.
    In general when leaders tamper with the integrity of the institutions of state, they render those institutions weak and subject to constant manipulation by successive administrations. This complicates the problem of governance and policy instability.

    •Sound economic policy

    The economic policies of any nation, in order to endure, must take into consideration its peculiar realities of geography, natural and human resources. Such policy must be a general framework which is however sufficiently flexible to survive the periodic shocks and bumps in an ever changing global economic environment. Ordinarily, Nigeria’s originating economic policy framework should have from the mid-1960s included the element of diversification from oil by retaining the initial pride of place which agriculture enjoyed in our immediate post-colonial period. Even in the context of the so called oil boom, the process of diversification into other lucrative areas like tourism, solid minerals and human capital development should have begun actively from 1970. These did not happen, hence the consequences we are experiencing today.
    On the contrary, countries like the Gulf Arab states saw their oil wealth as a source of capital for the development of alternative economies hence they embarked on aggressive infrastructure development, tourism development and promotion and savings for difficult times. Countries like United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Qatar are among the most resilient economies in both the Middle-East and the world.

    •Education

    Every nation’s greatest asset base and resource pool remains its people. The development of the capacities and capabilities of people is perhaps the greatest investment any nation can make. Education is the time-tested mechanism for galvanising the latent power of a nation to transform its environment and development its economy. Every educated citizen is an engine of development because he/she is a creator, an inventor, a thinker, a technician, an engineer or just an enlightened citizen fully aware of their rights in an orderly society governed by the rule of law.
    Lee Kwan Yew, the visionary leader of independent Singapore, placed human capacity development as his number one priority to grow the new nation. His defining economic policy is arguably uncomprising standards for a universally accessible, top flight public education system-astutely identifying human capital as Singapore’s key competitve advantage, supplemented with rigorous application of meritocracy.
    Natural resource-based economies like ours remain vulnerable because we calculate our national survival in barrels of oil and cubic meters of gas. On the contrary, human resource-based economies like those of the advanced economies depend more on the power of the human mind to create an alternative economy that is largely independent of the vagaries in the international prices of natural resources and extractive produce. Japan and Germany for instance do not produce a barrel of oil but they rank among the top five leading economies of the world. They depend instead on the ingenuity of the trained human mind in science and technology to dominate a sizeable portion of the world market in finished products especially, machines and IT products, which every economy needs to thrive.

    •Natural resources

    You will notice that I have deliberately placed the importance of natural resources last among the factors required for national development.  The point is that this is one factor that can easily be dispensed with. The greater majority of successful nation states do not have mineral resources. They may have agricultural resources but this requires the application of labour and capital to amount to anything. Singapore, which got independence in 1965, was an Island without any natural resources to call its own. But today, it is an economic wonder.
    In most cases, countries that rely on extractive industries for their economies to survive have suffered from what has come to be called the resource curse. The over dependence on royalties and rents from extractive industries has been recognised as the cause of rampant corruption, lazy and unproductive bureaucracies, emphasis on imports for consumption, lavish sending on luxuries by the elite of politically exposed persons and slow development of manufacturing and creative industries.
    There are few exceptions to this law of negativity. In Africa, Botswana, for instance,  has defied the resource curse through an original vision that saw diamonds first as a natural source of capital for national development.  Botswana’s founding fathers were themselves very frugal individuals who never mistook national wealth for their personal empires. That tradition has largely endured, making Botswana a shining example of economic growth and good governance in Africa.
    After 50 years of independence, Botswana is today a rich nation by African standards and it is globally regarded as middle-income  country.  For the first 35 years of its national history, it had the fastest GDP growth rate in the entire world (sometimes in excess of 14 per cent per annum). Its per capita income has jumped from $50 to $7,000, putting it at the top of middle-class countries. Botswana has literacy rate of over 87 per cent. The country ranks number two among countries in Africa that provide for the social needs of its citizens and is at the top of countries with the lowest corruption scores in Africa. The country has never suffered either a recession or hyperinflation since independence.
    We can contrast this with the record of nearby Angola, which has the same diamonds and oil. Angola has one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world and an extreme poverty rate of over 50 per cent.

    Conclusion

    As we continue with the national quest for answers to the great the questions of our time, I urge that we do a self-assessment of where we stand as nation. The factors that have been identified are put forward as a guide for this assessment.  The solutions we endlessly seek would seem right at our doorsteps. But there is a great amount of political will to do what is necessary. As the present administration in the country battles to correct the ills of the past, it is hope that the political leadership of the country will muster the will to address the deficits in our national development  strategy to date.

  • Ojukaye’s release is triumph of good over evil, say APC, Peterside

    Ojukaye’s release is triumph of good over evil, say APC, Peterside

    THE Rivers State All Progressives Congress (APC) and its governorship candidate, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, have said yesterday’s Court of Appeal verdict admitting party chieftain Ojukaye Flag-Amachree to bail, is the triumph of good over evil.

    Rivers APC, through its Publicity Secretary, Chris Finebone, dedicated the bail to one of Flag-Amachree’s courageous lawyers, Ken Atsuwete, who was killed in Port Harcourt, the state capital, on August 29 and buried last Saturday at Koko, his hometown in Warri North Local Government of Delta State.

    APC noted that the bail confirmed that the triumph of evil over good was only temporary.

    Flag-Amachree has been in detention at the Port Harcourt Prisons for almost one year for an alleged killing in Buguma, headquarters of Asari-Toru Local Government, during last year’s general election.

    The party said: “For members of the APC in Rivers State and beyond, today (yesterday) reaffirms our belief in what the late sage, Haile Selassie, said: ‘Throughout history, it has been the inaction of those who could have acted; the indifference of those who should have known better; the silence of the voice of justice when it mattered most; that has made it possible for evil to triumph.’

    “Today (yesterday), the voice of justice did not only come loud, but sounded strongly and widely enough to be heard in far and near places, saying Flag-Amachree has a right to freedom. Indeed, the voice of justice sounded it loud that the handiwork of evil men contrived in the darkest parts of their secret coven has no power over the righteous.

    “The APC hails this decision by the Appeal Court in Port Harcourt and prays that this should signpost the beginning of the return of justice to the downtrodden and the common man.

    “We salute the indefatigable and undying spirit of Flag-Amachree, despite the relentless schemes of the enemy to break him physically and spiritually. We also greet the unshakable solidarity of APC members in Rivers State for standing and speaking out for the freedom for Flag-Amachree.

    “Indeed, the APC returns all the glory and adoration to the Almighty God, the defender of the innocent and weak.”

    In an online statement yesterday, Peterside, who is the director-general of the Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), through his media team, described Flag-Amachree’s freedom as the end of wickedness in Rivers State.

    The statement said: “This is a great day for Rivers people. This is a pointer to the end of recklessness, arbitrariness, impunity and wickedness.

    “The Appeal Court has reaffirmed our belief in the Judiciary. No matter how long a lie has travelled, it takes one day for truth to catch up with

  • Ship owners urge Amaechi, Peterside to make cabotage fund public

    Ship owners urge Amaechi, Peterside to make cabotage fund public

    BY how much has the N60 billion Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF) kept with the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) grown?

    This is the poser indigenous ship- owners and others who attended the World Maritime Day, organised by the Ministry of Transportation, want the Minister of Transport (MoT), Mr Rotimi Amaechi, and NIMASA Director-General  Dr Dakuku Peterside, to answer.

    The CVFF was created by the Coastal and Inland Shipping (Cabotage) Act 2003 to promote indigenous ship acquisition.

    Section 42 Part VIII of the Act empowers NIMASA to collect and administer the fund, under the minister’s guidance after approval by the National Assembly.

    The ship owners and stakeholders  alleged that part of the N60 billon fund had been spent without any   development in the industry.

    Besides the MoT, nobody knows the amount NIMASA has collected  since its inception.

    The fund, they said, was established 12 years ago to boost local content.

    Counsel to a shipping firm, Mr Dipo Alaka, said the call became necessary, following the arraignment of former Director-General NIMASA Patrick Akpobolokemi, by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Alake claimed that the CVFF has grown to millions of dollars without any shipping firm benefiting from it.

    Most contributors, he said, did not know the actual amount in NIMASA’s care, adding that it was time the minister and the agency declared the amount since it is just a collector of the fund.

    Alaka said his clients were sad that they did not benefit from the fund.

    A maritime bank, he said, would be more appropriate to handle the CVFF, adding that NIMASA should not keep the fund anymore.

    “The only way the APC-led Federal Government can support the maritime sector is funding.But since the first National Maritime Authority (NMA) Act was created up till NIMASA, all the money that have been allocated for the CVFF, not a dime has been released, showing that there is a problem with the agency saddled with the management of the fund.

    “Unconfirmed sources within the agency told my clients that a huge part of the money was tinkered with by a former DG during the last presidential election. If the allegation is true, that as wrong because the money does not belong to NIMASA. The objective was to use it to develop ther local shipping industry which, Amaechi said, he wants to promote.”

    He wondered how many shipowners can  say the NMA or NIMASA supported them to buy a ship.

  • Operators owe NIMASA $420.5m, says Peterside

    Operators owe NIMASA $420.5m, says Peterside

    The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), is being owed about $420.5 million, by some maritime operators, the Director-General, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has said.

    Peterside who made this known during an engagement with the House of Representatives Committee on Maritime Safety, Education and Administration in Abuja yesterday, also refuted claims that the Agency was owed monies in excess of $10 billion. He said it was not correct given that the freight element of shipping trade in the last four years was not up to $10billion.

    The Head, Corporate Communications of NIMASA,  Lami Tumaka quoted  Peterside as saying that the entire freight element of shipping trade in Nigeria in the last four years is less than $10billion.

    In response to a petition received by the Committee purporting that the Agency had engaged a consultant to assist in recovering its money without following due process, the D-G told the Committee that due process was followed in selecting the Consultant as the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) had also issued a Certificate of No Objection for the purpose.

    Dr Peterside who noted that the Agency has been making efforts to recover these monies with little success also said this necessitated the management, utilising international best practices, to employ the services of a consultant to assist in recovering the funds.

    NIMASA had engaged the services of Messrs Snecou Financial Services Company Limited to assist in recovering debts owed NIMASA which are put at $420.5million with the aim of channeling the funds into developing critical infrastructure as well as knowledgeable manpower for the maritime industry.

    He said the debt in question covered the four year period upto 2014.

  • Mr ‘Perpetual Injunction’ vs Peterside

    Mr ‘Perpetual Injunction’ vs Peterside

    These are indeed interesting times. On Tuesday, a Rivers State High Court was to hear a suit instituted former Governor Peter Odili against Dr Dakuku Peterside for alleged libel.

    Odili is contending that Peterside’s news conference after the Supreme Court’s judgment declaring Nyesom Wike as duly elected governor of Rivers State injured his reputation. He wants N6b as damages from a man I consider his son in a lot of sense.

    What is more shocking is that Dr Odili can sue anybody. This is a man who has perpetual injunction against arrest or prosecution. For someone who does not want to be quizzed, arrested or tried for alleged past corrupt acts, it certainly does not sync that he has run to the court to seek redress.

    His action coming at a time judges are under the searchlight for collecting bribe to give frivolous injunctions and judgment also makes these times interesting.

    The perpetual injunction, which followed a suit by the then Rivers State Commissioner for Justice and Attorney-General, was given on March 23, 2007 by Justice Ibrahim Nyaure Buba, three months before Odili’s tenure expired. The order included a declaration that the EFCC investigations were “invalid, unlawful, unconstitutional, null and void”.  The injunction also restrained the EFCC and the other defendants from publicising the report of its investigations; and taking any further action in relation to the alleged economic and financial crimes of Dr Odili.

    The suit was instituted to challenge the powers of the EFCC to probe the affairs of the state and because “the activities of the EFCC were prejudicial to the smooth running of the government of Rivers State”.

    A UK-based Nigerian, Osita Mba, in a petition to the National Judicial Commission (NJC) in 2009, faulted the circumstance under which the injunction was given. His words: ” Perpetual injunction is usually granted after a trial on the merits, when the plaintiff has established the existence of his legal right and the defendant’s duty plus the fact that the defendant has breached or is about to breach the said right. In exceptional cases, and with the defendant’s consent, the hearing of the motion can be treated as the trial of the action in which case a perpetual injunction will lie as long as the rights and duties of the parties are finally determined by the court.”

    I am one of those who believe Odili’s ‘immunity’ outside power, which was conferred on him by that controversial injunction, is not good for a just society. It needs to be investigated. I doubt if there is any sound basis in law for such. The injunction should be revoked and the law should take its course.

    For now, I rest my case.

  • Peterside suggests careful planning for good maritime security

    Peterside suggests careful planning for good maritime security

    The Director-General, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr Dakuku Peterside, has said that good security in the maritime industry requires careful planning and strict implementation.

    Peterside stated this at the closing ceremony of a five-day training programme tagged “Train the Trainers’’, facilitated by the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) and NIMASA on ISPS Code Compliance in Lagos.

    He said that the agency was committed to improving the fortunes of Nigeria by creating an enabling environment for a business-friendly and secured environment for stakeholders in the industry.

    The director-general said that the training was predicated on the premise that a fact -finding team was in Nigeria earlier in the year to conduct a Needs Assessment where a number of gaps were identified.

    According to Peterside, this necessitated the training, with a view to addressing some of the gaps identified.

    “I guess that in the course of this exercise, we have learnt that good security requires planning and stringent implementation.

    “I know that in the course of this training, the seed of co-operation and collaboration between NIMASA as Designated Authority (DA) for ISPS Code Implementation in Nigeria, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) Nigerian Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) and the Federal Ministry of Transportation has been planted.

    “My expectation and desire of the leadership of these Agencies is that it will grow and blossom in a tripartite series of planned training programmes.

    “This is expected to culminate with the lead auditors training, which will place you the drivers of the system at the cutting edge of professionalism in ISPS code implementation,’’ the director-general said.

    He thanked the Minister of Transportation, Mr Rotimi Amaechi, for his support and enduring commitment to the imperatives of NIMASA’s DA status and indeed all matters pertaining to the maritime industry in Nigeria.

    Peterside urged participants to bring to bear the knowledge acquired during the five-day training programme, adding that this would enhance security at the nation’s ports.