Tag: PMB

  • PMB, Alhassan and loyalty

    SIR: Loyalty according to the dictionary meaning is “a feeling or attitude of devoted attachment and affection”. According to Minna Antrim “love often wears a mask In order to test loyalty”. This is somewhat corroborated by Edwin Louis Cole in his philosophical quip “Confidentiality is a virtue of the loyal, as loyalty is the virtue of faithfulness”

    Mark Twain was more pragmatic in one of his intellectual prognosis – “Loyalty to the nation all the time, loyalty to the government when it deserves it”.

    Now Mark Twain’s wisecrack seems to approximate the frontiers of tectonic loyalty in a tripod; loyalty to the nation, loyalty to the government and loyalty to the leader who is the commander in chief as it applies to Nigeria.

    It would amount to a political suicide of a ruinous proportion for any president wishing to achieve any success in governance to exhibit nonchalance on issue of loyalty.

    The Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Aisha Alhassan showed a crass disdain for loyalty especially at a time the nation is passing through challenging times which demand that all cabinet members put their very best into deliverables cognate to their ministries and parastatals and not to be so insouciant as to publicly embrace political frolicsomeness.

    President Buhari should learn from the President of the United States who takes loyalty as an article of faith; needless to say that President Donald Trump’s obsession for loyalty has kept him afloat in the Oval Office for which he has demonstrated little leadership experience.

    Alhassan’s insubordination is not an isolated case under President Buhari’s watch. It remains a mystery till this moment what motivated the DSS to transmit an adverse report on the acting Chairman of EFCC to the National Assembly without presidential input. The same presidential docility that gave the DSS impetus seems to have been explored by the minister albeit with brazenness.

    The president must quickly put his house in order by allowing officials with questionable loyalty a timely exit, otherwise the little time remaining for his cabinet to impact the nation will end up in political horse-trading and tectonic failure.

     

    • Bukola Ajisola,

    bukymany@yahoo.com

  • PMB, Atiku and illusion of party

    PMB, Atiku and illusion of party

    Part of the cultural carnage bequeathed by prolonged military rule is rendering the contemporary soldier to be too much of a civilian while the political actor now appears militarized in thinking and behavior. Thus, the language of politics has become corroded by war terms and phrases.

    Those versed in military warfare are therefore most unlikely to have any difficulty in decoding as pincer movement the double whammy against the presidency last week from ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar and his political goddaughter. The motive is to disorient your quarry by launching attack from two flanks simultaneously.

    What then makes it particularly striking is that this adaption of military stratagem for a purely civil outcome was masterminded by a mere retired customs-man with an otherwise war-hardened infantry general at the receiving end.

    Minister Aisha Alhassan opened the offensive by saying that President Muhammadu Buhari would not have her support for second term having, according to her, sworn in 2015 to do just a tenure. The sucker punch was hardly fully absorbed when Atiku added what could only be classified a thunderous blow by declaring emphatically that PMB had also swindled him.

    Addressing guests at a book launch in Abuja that included no less a person than Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, the Waziri Adamawa lamented that Buhari dumped him soon after climbing into power on the back of folks like him.

    Specifically, Atiku listed what he had invested as cash and influence.

    Ever since, things have not been the same in Abuja with the Buhari people appearing to running helter skelter, tentatively resorting to abuse as defense strategy. Not surprising, the spineless party leadership under Chief Oyegun has gone into hiding in this hour of moral crisis.

    At the Buhari camp, some accused Mama Taraba of bad faith and greed by coveting the perks of the ministerial office even when her loyalty lies elsewhere. Well, they seemed to have forgotten to remind us of Alhassan’s old baggage at this treacherous moment. According to media reports in 2014, some of the ladies who had served under her on the refreshment committee for APC’s inaugural convention in Abuja claimed they were abandoned once Mama Taraba was handed the N32m vote.

    As for Atiku, they mocked him as perennial candidate still sulking over his loss at the presidential primaries of December 2014. The boldest among them, one Mohammed Lawal, not surprising one of those recently appointed into the “juicy” NNPC board, even came with a rather apocryphal theory that the former Vice President was a fifth columnist who took off abroad after the primaries, pointedly challenging him to name the amount he contributed to the APC presidential campaigns of 2015.

    Other self-acclaimed “Buharists” like Governors El-Rufai of Kaduna, Ganduje of Kano and Amosu of Ogun and Bello of Kogi have taken it upon themselves to declare interest in 2019 on Buhari’s behalf.

    Put together, the tribe of Buharists are free to continue to live in denial. Though they may be unwilling to admit it, Atiku already scored the preliminary strategic point: framing the 2019 debate within APC and baiting Buhari to declare his stand.

    But beyond the brickbats between the Buhari people and Atiku camp are the weightier issues. Hard-hitting as they may sound, let it be said that varied responses by Buhari’s agents so far hardly address perhaps the core question inadvertently raised by the Atiku/Alhassan challenge: how much of a party has been made of the disparate forces that coalesced into APC in 2014?

    The truth is APC has failed abysmally to live up to the historic promise of 2015. In the past 28 months, the nation has had to watch with incredulity, if not shock, as what was thought to be the broadest opposition coalition in Nigeria’s history rapidly withered into a ghost assembly where weary denizens communicate via the dark augury of “body language”. Weakened by shame, they have had to suffer in silence.

    However, when the Buharists rush to make a stake on 2019, they naively assume that the spatial circumstances presented by Jonathan’s fumbling and wobbling and the golden national coalition of contrarians that made the Buhari victory possible in 2015 remain intact. Only those luxuriating in fool’s paradise reason like that. Were Buhari’s charm enough, his presidency would have materialized much earlier.

    If nothing at all, issues will certainly be made of PMB’s health should his present low-energy tactics continue to serve him in the months ahead and he chooses to present himself for a second term. The other possibility – most likely – is for him to hang in there, maximize incumbency powers to a point he could dragoon the party to adopt his stooge as flag-bearer in 2019..

    Either way, it certainly will not be a walk-over as his zealous supporters appear to think. The bad – well, maybe good – news is that 2015 has shattered the myth of the invincibility of presidential incumbency in electoral contest in Nigeria. If APC was a beneficiary two years ago, who says it cannot yet become a casualty in two years’ time?

    For now, it will be an abuse of language to term what remains of APC a political party. At best, it is a caricature of one. While common antipathy against Goodluck Jonathan helped rally the disparate tendencies against PDP in 2015, as events have since proved, a political union only endures when not only the values are shared, but the victory spoils as well.

    Whereas only a tiny cell within Buhari’s CPC has fattened on the spoils of electoral victory of 2015, others toiled as hard, if not more, to deliver APC’s victory of 2015. In private, most chieftains of ACN, ANPP, a faction of APGA and the “nPDP” say worst things than Atiku has said of Buhari.

    By opting to enshrine provincialism instead of cosmopolitanism as governance model ever since, the ruling faction in APC has only ended up inflicting a paralysis of sorts not just on itself, but also the nation at large. The arrogance of power will not pre-dispose the new potentate to seek, much less accept better ideas. Scholar and Catholic cleric, Bishop Mathew Kukah, classified this rare condition as the paralysis arising from the inability of the central nervous system to take advantage of the full complement of otherwise functional veins in the anatomy. Taken to the realm of physics, it will be called the curse of perpetual low battery.

    It manifests in the inability to articulate a coherent economic vision and advancing infantile excuses for the cocktail of epic failings and unforced errors. It manifests in impulsively mumbling nonsense when dignified silence would have sufficed.

    At the party level, it manifests in the inability of the ruling party to either hold even routine national meetings, host national convention after three long years or constitute something as elementary as the Board of Trustees.

    Indeed, the Buhari we saw before the historic March 28, 2015 presidential elections was a pan-Nigerian patriarch who charmed voters in the South-West with Yoruba’s gobir cap, wowed Niger Delta in sequined jumper and sashayed Igboland in the iconic red cap. In another snapshot, he affected corporate gravitas in dapper dinner suit and bow tie.

    But we never saw any of those costumes again after he won the election. The old Daura tortoise hastily retreated into his accustomed Zanna crown.

    Worse, ever since, no official effort is even made to reassure those whose hearts are burdened by the bitter feelings of being swindled. We see that in the continued lopsidedness in federal appointments in favour of either his beloved cell within APC or a section of the country.

    As Bini folks say, people are earnestly watching to see how the Buharists hope to roast the rabbit in the fire in the times ahead without getting its tail burnt as well.

     

     

     

    Don Williams: The contradiction of talent

    The global community was perhaps too fixated all of last week on Hurricane Irma pounding the Caribbean down to Florida to have taken notice of the exit last Friday of country music icon, Don William. Coming when his native Texas was still lying disfigured after no less catastrophic Hurricane Harvey, it is obviously doubly tragic indeed, even though the “Gentle Giant” lived up to 78.

    In a way, poetry could be read to the circumstances of his passing after “a brief illness”. Maybe, the unsuspecting “Good Ole Boy….” was forced to be “Standing Knee Deep In A River”, only for approaching Hurricane Irma to make him “Listen To The Radio”. Alas, he cried, “Lord Have Mercy on A Country Boy”. Realizing he could not wait “Till The River Run Dry”, he became aware that “Some Broken Hearts Never Mend”…

    With a deep baritone voice that enchanted and lulled, DW surely lured the rest of the world into the rich groove of country music native to white America, offering the curious a peep into the cowboy tradition.

    The millennials in Nigeria are unlikely to recognize or remember DW in his full artistic regalia. But not anyone with an ear for the world music cultures of the 70s and 80s. I grew up hypnotized not just by the sheer honey of his rendition but also the themes of contentment, romance, forbearance and simplicity that permeated his huge oeuvre consisting of 35 studio albums in a career spanning almost a half century.

    But like most creative geniuses, the Gentle Giant was not without a dark part, a grave contradiction. How ironic that the man whose songs preached love had his own heart soiled by racism. Without apology, he would declare that his music was not for negroes and would refuse to play in the ball-room if any black was present.

    Certainly, “Goodbye Isn’t Really Good At All”.

  • Still on PMB’s speech

    Sir: Reactions continue to trail President Muhammadu Buhari’s speech to Nigerians after his prolonged stay at the United Kingdom due to health problems. However, majority of social media commentators have failed to take cognizance of the fact that President Muhammadu Buhari is not Nigeria’s problem.

    The fact remains some individuals have held this country to ransom for a very long time, benefiting from it spoilt system and contributing largely towards its underdevelopment for selfish gains. Only a competent leader like Buhari with a strong personality and good intention can help deal with such people. The Nigerian situation is beyond paper analysis, The rot in the system is so deep we need a strong personality like PMB else the weak ones though with good intentions will be coerced to compromise and follow the ugly trend which justifies why many Nigerian activists, professionals, experts suddenly become mute on critical issues as soon as they are elected into public offices.

    Nigerian’s voted en masse for PMB because we believed in his capability and capacity to deliver as such we should pray for the president so that his health condition will not continue to be an impediment to him being able to execute his plans towards making Nigeria a better country.

    It is evident that PMB’s recent speech focused on the most important agitations for now. I applaud his stand on the unity of Nigeria as being non negotiable which happens to be the most critical discourse in the nation today. The safety of lives and welfare of the citizen is the government’s top priority and human beings rationally consider the safety of life’s and properties first before considering other needs.

    Nigerians should look beyond the lines and stop condemning the President’s speech as it cannot be withdrawn. Always remember that a better Nigeria begins with you.

     

    • Juba Adeola

    Adexdndrillj2@gmail.com

  • Needless secrecy over PMB’s health

    SIR: Despite being tagged as the most honest Nigerian with an unmatched integrity and incorruptibility, if President Muhammadu Buhari finds it difficult to be open and sincere to Nigerians who massively turned out to elect him into office by making public his state of health and challenge, then Nigeria is in a deeper mess than we all thought.

    It’s unfortunate that despite having in place the freedom of information law which allows and empowered every Nigerian to demand access to information, the populace have been continually kept in the dark of the health condition of their President.

    While in office as British Prime Ministers, Harold Wilson had colon cancer, Tony Blair was diagnosed with a heart disease, supra-ventricular trachycardia; Gordon Brown was diagnosed with an eye disease and even the current Prime Minister, Theressa May has recently been diagnosed of diabetes. Not only were the British told and rightly carried along about the ailments of their leaders, but the whole world was in the know.

    Former Presidents of the United States of America; John F.Kennedy had autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome while in office; Franklin Roosevelt had polio and Ronald Reagan was diagnosed of Alzheimer’s disease. None of these was kept a secret from American citizens and the whole world. Similarly, when former French President Fracoise Mitterrand was diagnosed of prostate cancer, he came out publicly to tell the world.

    The secrecy that has surrounded the health and medical vacation of the president is unnecessary, unfortunate and to say the least, embarrassing. Change should not only be about fighting corruption but total deviation from the way and manner things were done in the past. Leadership and common sense have not been applied so far as regards carrying Nigerians along about the health of the President.

    It’s true that President Buhari validly handed over power to his deputy to act on his behalf so that governance can continue in his absence; the fact that our tax is being used to foot his medical bills and other expenses gives us the right to ask questions and demand answers on what’s going on with our president. Nigerians has the right ro know.

     

    • Hussain Obaro,

    Lokoja, Kogi State.

  • Agitations over PMB’s medical leave

    Sir: The medical leave of President Muhammadu Buhari in the United Kingdom has continued to elicit reactions from within and outside the country.  While several efforts have been made by the federal government to justify his absence, many critics are of the opinion that the inability of the President to personally direct the affairs of the nation has been a great problem and setback for Nigeria. At the forefront of recent agitations are the group, ‘Concerned Nigerians’ led by the former Director, Social Media, People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Deji  Adeyanju and the ‘Our Mumu Don Do’ movement led by popular musician, Charles Oputa (Charly Boy).

    The protests have led to confrontation with law enforcement agents while some persons have allegedly been injured in the process.  As this was going on, another pro-Buhari group, the ‘Coalition for Good Governance and Change Initiative’, has emerged in support of the President.

    Under the democratic setting, the law allows for freedom of association, assembly and expression. Therefore, the action of the agitators is within their rights. On the other hand, the continued absence of the President from the country does not amount to violation of any legislation. For the umpteenth time, it is pertinent to remind the protesters that the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) already provided for such a development under Section 145, through which power devolves to the Vice President as the Acting President, in his absence. Already, these provisions have duly been complied with. By virtue of Section 145, it can be clearly be said that the needful had been done in ensuring that no lacuna was created in governance on the account of the President’s absence from office, as all duties of the President are now being fully and duly performed by the acting President. Relevant performance indicators seem to suggest that since assumption in office of the acting President, the Professor of Law appears to have done very well without giving Nigerians any tangible reasons – unlike what the agitators are claiming – for concern in steering the affairs of the nation.

    Rather than prolonging unnecessary protests against President Buhari, to either ‘resume or resign’, the managers of the President’s information should ensure that Nigerians are briefed on a regular basis on his true health conditions, bearing in mind that no human being is insulated from falling sick. They should avoid making utterances that suggest that the President is a private person, who should not be asked questions. Rather, by virtue of his position as President, he has assumed the status of a public person and has ceased to be referred to as a private person. They should not be seen and perceived as taking the people for a ride by keeping vital information from the public domain.

    The government should not fail to accord the agitators their due respect, liberty and honour while the protest lasts. While wishing the President a safe return back to the country as soon as possible, openness and timely disclosure of information should not be taken for granted at this crucial time, to avoid a situation whereby the agitations would spread beyond control. This task of laying the cards before the public should be pursued with vigour such that the basis for the ‘resume or resign’ campaign would no longer exist and fizzle out.

     

    • Adewale Kupoluyi,

    Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta.

  • PMB:  The scramble for visiting rights

    PMB: The scramble for visiting rights

    Policy-makers everywhere, and especially in Nigeria, must find it deeply frustrating that there is in the population a hard core of citizens that will keep on believing whatever it chooses to believe, despite indissoluble evidence to the contrary.

    How do you reach anything resembling a consensus in such a polity – the consensus without which it is impossible to build enduring common purpose?

    Back when there was media consonance, the task was challenging enough. In the age of media fragmentation, when anyone who has access to a computer and can work an electronic mouse can publish by word, sound or image his or her fancies and fantasies and prejudices and abiding hatreds to thousands of undiscriminating Internet users dispersed across the world, that task becomes well-nigh impossible.

    To this day, more than 30 percent of Americans still believe that the late dictator Saddam Hussein had a stockpile of “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq.  No such weapons existed; none were ever found.  Yet the existence of such weapons was the advertised reason for an invasion in which hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians were killed and the most advanced country in the Arab world destroyed.

    Going by the Internet traffic, you would think that President Muhammadu Buhari’s formal education ended in primary school.  The more generous commentators allow that he might have attended secondary school  but certainly did not qualify for the West African School Certificate.  To them, he remains the “Certificate-less  One.”  The West African School Certificate (Division II) that bears his name is to them a forgery protected by the Federal Might.

    And so, it is no surprise that all kinds of stories have been circulating about the state of his health.  The more benign has it that he can no longer talk or eat, and has to be fed intravenously.  The more sensational has it that he is in a vegetative state, tethered to a life-support machine.

    In mediaeval times, and even as recently as the time of Dr Kamuzu Banda in Malawi, it was a capital crime  to compass the death of the king or the chief of state.  But we live in a democracy, where some have argued that freedom of thought and speech, including the freedom to compass and canvass the death of chief of state, is constitutionally protected.

    To be sure, the moral law within us forbids such conduct, and so does the hallowed tradition of our people. To the hard men and women engrossed in this game, however, it is realpolitik pure and simple.

    And so, even after a delegation of the Federal Government and the ruling APC Governors visited the President where he is convalescing in the UK and returned with reports that he was hearty even if not hale, the dark rumours and dark wishes persisted.  The picture that came with the story of the visit did little to resolve the matter; it had been taken a while back, in Nigeria, at a different occasion, they said.

    Plus, why was there no video? And if there was nothing to hide, if the authorities were actuated by transparency, why were members of the political opposition not included in the delegation.

    And so, in the spirit of democratic transparency, a delegation of the political opposition went to the UK,   saw the president and on its return corroborated the report of the earlier delegation.

    But this recourse, I gather, has elicited only murmurs in local government circles, the third tier that caters to the grassroots.  The first delegation and the second were drawn from the first and second tiers.  It is emphatically the turn of the third tier, spokespersons for local government chairmen have been saying.

    Not so fast, says the Judicial Branch.  The delegations aforementioned were drawn from the Executive and Legislative branches.  What of the Judicial Branch, which is co-equal with the other branches, and has at least as much stake in the president’s health and well-being.

    Surely, the president would welcome a comprehensive brief on the state of the rule of law and the fight against corruption, both of which are very dear to his heart.  And which Branch is best placed to do the briefing?

    “First things first,” the police high command weighs in.  Law and order come before everything else, and those charged with maintaining law and order cannot be expected to defer to any other group when it comes to presenting a true and accurate picture of the state of the nation and the attendant challenges to the president.

    To which the Joint Chiefs of Staff, barely suppressing a snicker, rejoin:  “The police? This democracy thing has gone too far. Who do they think they are?”

    Were it left entirely to them, the Joint Chiefs would have gone to visit the President immediately on the return of the Vice President.  Esprit de corps demands it.  After all, he is their Commander-in-Chief.  He needs to know how the war against a resurgent Boko Haram is being waged, with what results and constraints. The military in turn will draw fresh inspiration from the meeting and profit from his personal experience in the area of strategy and tactics.

    The two delegations that had gone see the President had no strategic purpose, the Joint Chiefs maintain.  The jamboree has to end.  It is now their turn to meet their C-in-C, they insist.   The point is not negotiable.

    “Foul,” the Committee of Vice Chancellors of the 42 federal universities is crying out.  The President is their Visitor, and they need to bring him up to date on the state of the universities in particular and higher education in general. Discussions will explore but will not be confined to such perennial issues as funding, cultism, proliferation of first-class degrees especially in private universities, and implementation of protocols long agreed.

    Our monarchs, royal majesties in their own rights, have been told that it would strain the capacity of British diplomacy and Buckingham Palace to have so many of them descend all at once on those sceptred isles, and have graciously agreed to stay in their domains for the time being.

    But civil society groups, cultural associations, professional and occupational groups, and student bodies are pressing the authorities to arrange for them to meet with the president at the earliest opportunity.

    While the debate rages as to who has the most compelling case for visiting the president,  First Lady Aisha Buhari is reported to have expressed concern about the effect of further visits on his  health and prospects for full and complete recovery

    Personally, I understand her anxiety, since those “jackals and hyenas” still lurking in the corridors of power — operatives whose goodwill cannot always be taken for granted — play a large part in determining who gets to see President Buhari.

    Meanwhile, speaking on deep background, meaning that I can use the information only in outline but must under no circumstance attribute it to an identifiable source, well-placed insiders tell me that the most insistent and most demanding request for clearance to visit President Buhari has come jointly and severally from Ekiti Governor Ayo Fayose and Femi Fani-Kayode, most recently spokesperson for former President Goodluck Jonathan’s groundbreaking re-election campaign.

    They say they want to see Buhari with their own eyes, talk to him with their own mouths and touch him with their own fingers.

    They plan to take along at their own expense, a panel of experts from the World Health Organisation to establish with scientific finality what they have known and have been saying all along, namely, that the creature purporting to be President Muhammadu Buhari is a transparent clone.

    Given Fayose’s and Fani-Kayode’s iron-clad reputation for probity and veracity, to say nothing of rationality, who will be foolish enough to bet against them?

  • PMB’s audio message and national language question

    SIR: Since the release of President Muhammadu Buhari’s audio message in which he addressed Nigerians in Hausa, there have been angry reactions from every nook and cranny of the society. Understandably, the people were provoked with the address in Hausa language.

    In a nation where ethnic sentiments and bigotries have beclouded intellectual judgment, it is no surprise that his message was more likely to generate controversies and provoke reactions. These angry reactions and condemnations should as a matter of exigency, necessitate a call to revisit the national language question.

    One of the problems we are having as a nation is the lack of true identity. Otherwise, the message should not have generated controversies. Indeed, the wild criticism of the audio message in his mother tongue is an evidence of a nation that lacks true identity. Ethnic colouration had been added to his message even though the President may have made it out of innocence and good intentions to Nigerians.

    This wild condemnation brings forth these questions:  Is English language the true identity of Nigeria as a nation? What then is the pride of our nation if we elevate English which is our second language above indigenous languages in the country?

    We should know that Nigeria is not the only heterogeneous country in the world and therefore must not hide under the guise of linguistic diversity to promote English language at the expense of indigenous languages. Presently, English language is acting in the capacity of our national language because, for ethno-sentimental reasons, we have failed to reach a compromise to select indigenous languages as our national language(s).

    Switzerland today is one of the most developed countries in the world, yet they have four official languages. They made three of their four national languages official languages. Nigeria should follow in that step by making Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo official languages in Nigeria alongside English language.

     

    • Temitope Ogundeji,

    Akure, Ondo State.

  • Sani to El-Rufai: Forget your presidential ambition

    Sani to El-Rufai: Forget your presidential ambition

    The Senator representing Kaduna Central, Senator Shehu Sani, Wednesday asked Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai to forget his touted presidential ambition in his own interest.

    He said that El-Rufai knew that he was grandstanding as he has nothing to offer Nigerians.

    Sani in a statement by his Adviser on Politics and Ideology, Suleiman Ahmed, accused Kaduna State governor of corruption and nepotism in the governance of the state.

    He said, “I call on El- Rufai to suspend his Presidential or ‘Vice Presidential’ ambitions and concentrate in proper governance of the state.

    “The Kaduna State governor who in his memo accused PMB of running a failed Government, has failed also woefully.

    “He thinks PMB failed but he never invited PMB to even commission a completed toilet in his state.

    “Under El-Rufai Kaduna has become a hub of Kidnappers and a sanctuary for herdsmen.

    “The very Governor who once condemned the National Assembly for lack of transparency has proven to be worse.

    “El-Rufai wants to be seen as an apostle of Buhari’s change but he is actually the Judas of change.

    “It’s hypocritical to promise Nigerians change and end up only ‘putting change in our pockets’.

    “There is nothing progressive about many people who claim to be Buharists; they are reactionaries and career opportunists who can fit into any Government in power.

    “Kaduna State is run like a personal family and friend’s estate without any meaningful physical achievement other than sponsored media propaganda.

    “El-Rufai has no money to pay traditional rulers he recently sacked but has money to dispense as contracts to family, friends and political cronies.

    “El-Rufai has enough money to pay herdsmen but no money to pay district heads. Kaduna is today littered with abandoned drainages to the point that the rainy season has turned Kaduna into a ‘coastal state with creeks.

    “He is auctioning over two thousand Government houses he inherited but he is yet to build a hut.”

    Senator Sani insisted that the allegation of “systemic nepotism, opacity and complete absence of transparency” in the governance of Kaduna State is factual and the reality of the situation in the state.

    He said that journalists in Kaduna State are under siege, blackmailed, arrested, pocketed or threatened with arrest.

    Governor El-Rufai, he said, “is a man with a mouth for criticism but without a stomach for criticism.”

     

  • Osinbajo panel, rare chance for PMB

    Osinbajo panel, rare chance for PMB

    SIR: The panel being headed by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to investigate the involvement of Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Babachir Lawal in the “grass-cutting” contract scam and the alleged hibernation of $43.4m in a private Ikoyi residence by NIA boss Ambassador Ayo Oke with a claim to  covert operational exigencies has a single potential to either canonise the present administration’s posture on integrity or completely discredit it.

    The vice president’s job is a recondite one for the fact that he is heading a panel being assailed by a disproportionate tripod in the sense that two members of the panel have insidious interest that may influence not only terms of reference but the tenor of recommendation.

    The Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) Abubakar Malami in his earlier investigation of the SGF largely evaded the substance of the Senate’s indictment and predicated his report on sundry technicalities seen by the general public as a ploy to exonerate the AGF.

    The National Security Adviser, Babagana Monguno  on the other hand is mentioned as the only senior official of the PMB administration with a detailed knowledge of the hidden forex yet he allegedly made no disclosure to the President.

    For the panel to be above board therefore, the integrity of the vice president is the only clincher and must tower above all primordial interests domiciled in the panel.

    The panel must also extract cogent reason from the NSA why covert the operation was shielded from the president and such volume of cash allowed to lie in a private residence.

    The vice president is not a man susceptible to political or primordial interest and he has a duty to use this panel as a navigational tool in the anti-corruption denouement.

     

    • Bukola Ajisola,

    Lagos.

  • PMB please forgive them for they know not what they do

    Whenever I hear a news item how the President will be jetting out next day on a trip to the UK, it translates in my mind that my mentor Femi Adesina is traveling to the UK, and so I immediately made a call to Femi and told him some titles I wanted him to buy me.

    Oh, I am in Nigeria, in Lagos, and didn’t travel with PMB.

    Oh, I replied noting that a medical checkup was also on the bill for PMB’s trip.

    Emm, is everything all right with Mr. President?  He’s fine?   Oh yes, SURE, SURE he’s fine, he’s ok, it’s a routine medical thing.

    Ok Ok and thanks, have wonderful day, I rang off.

    But like the media assistant to the Ogun Governor Yemi Soyombo describes, even before PMB’s plane landed in London, the social media was awash, with the news he was dead.  My experience was Have you Heard (AMEBO).  The president is really sick/dead.  They don’t want to say it yet (who are the  They!!) Just EVERYONE was assailed with these rumours – I went to visit a sick person and on her SICK BED she asked anxiously about the news of the death of the president.

    Into another week and the death – wishers got more and more active, inundating us with their grim version of things in spite of categorical denials from the President’s media team:  The President Is Not Dead they emphasized.  Very dead, death-wishers kept saying. So  I called Femi Adesina again.

    Sorry, how is PMB now, is he alright?

    Sure yes yes, fine, he’s fine.

    Oh I really thank God because emmm (I didn’t complete the death tale!).  Oh, don’t mind them he said – he understood at once!

    Thank you, thank you, you have made my day, thanks, I rang off.

    Rumours could fly to space for all I cared, I was ‘doubly sure’ by the double assurance, and I coasted along on my Planet Joy.  Until the mischief – makers” (PMB called them!) decide to up their game.

    Having waited long and PMB wasn’t forthcoming, almost as if to buttress their point, on  February 1st  the social media EXPLODED with: PMB is dead, even all the African presidents held a minutes silence that morning on his behalf.  Is that so, I laughed- and appeared mad to everyone else.

    But you see, Femi Adesina is a Christian.  Not one Apostle – bracketed – Doctor, but a child of God: he had said No and I believed No.  I NEVER CALLED HIM AGAIN.

    5 days later, the president called for a leave extension and the next week even released his photographs.

    Mad Drama, Mad Drama yes, but now Femi has gotten a call from London, a call that like me, he never once asked to be connected to PMB to respect his vacation time out – once he was ASSURED the man was fine, Femi was fine with that.

    And as I regularly pray for his speedy return with a whistle clean bill of health knowing all is well that will end well; I urge him to also forgive his transducers.  They were only over-reacting: the fact is that OBJ SPOOKED this nation.

    When ex-President Obasanjo summoned then Governor Umaru Yar’Adua his late friend’s younger brother to Aso Rock Villa, he sent one of the then 2 presidential jets to Katsina to bring Umaru with dispatch.

    OBJ made him a proposition Umaru could not resist.

    Umoru, I’m going to make you president – would you want to be president?

    OBJ had already known that Umaru wouldn’t turn it down.

    Annoyingly, what he also knew but which was carefully concealed from Nigerians was that Umaru was gravely ill. So very ill was he that after managing his health condition for years (called Chung Strauss Syndrome), he actually disappeared altogether for six consecutive months and was even presumed dead in Katsina during his tenure as Governor. It turned out his long absence made very little difference because his presence in the first place was always off and on throughout, with varying lengths of layoffs!  OBJ had declared state of emergency in other parts of the north, but left Katsina the whole time.

    During that encounter OBJ had asked Umaru only one other question.

    Are you well, sure you strong enough to take up the job?  Umaru said Yes.

    My question: why the question in the first place?  Out of over 170 million able-bodied people, OBJ intentionally foisted the feeblest of men, one with an incurable disease on us, to entrench Paddy – Paddy government (Fela’s expression).

    Well, many can remember that after Umaru slumped the second time while campaigning, OBJ made his now famous though totally bogus phone call of Umoru, Are You Dead?  (You phone someone and he picks – can a dead man answer?!)

    Umaru who had been rushed abroad for treatment, returned with the decision to completely drop the charade of campaigning – clearly to keep his life. I guess he decided to simply commit himself to the rigging machine (of OBJ again) for his election “victory”.

    Touching, he did have the grace to admit to same, openly.

    I saw him for the first time in 2008 in Uyo where   I and some others had been contracted to supply protocol services, as well as MC work, as required.

    By virtue of my protocol pass, I got right up to the helipad landing spot when President Yar Adua arrived – and had the greatest shock of my life.  Barely 8 months in office, Umaru looked to me like a WALKING CORPSE – only the second person I had seen in such state in my whole life, then! Just one prayer left my lips:  Dear God, don’t let the President die here and now, in Akwa Ibom.  Thank you God.

    Too ill to even last some commissioning and event proceedings, by mid-afternoon he was back in Abuja “by arrangement” and V.P Jonathan jetted in and completed the event.

    From then on, he was in and out of Saudi for hajj whether there was hajj or not.  His frequent medical trips abroad naturally began to creep the people. 

    By the end of the following year Yar’Adua left for another ‘hajj’ in Saudi, without transferring power as required, creating the greatest constitutional crisis our democracy has even witnessed. In addition his refusal rendered the VP redundant – that time Dame Patience had said “No be only newspaper them want make my husband dey read here?”  Unlike Yar’Adua PMB is the first President to comply with the provisions of Section 145 of the 1999 Constitution as amended on the Acting President.

    Well, three months later Yar’Adua was literally smuggled into the country awaiting death – Top Secret I understand he was a mere vegetable.  A couple of months later, he was announced dead.  That was after another half a year of secrecy, lies, deceit and misinformation as well as s complete VACUUM in the Presidency.

    NIGERIA WAS SPOOKED.  Terrified and Completely Lost.

    So you see by the time PMB left on vacation and added the rider – a medical checkup, the scepter of Umaru – Umaru reared its head again and this time it was made out to be real!

    Now many people have justified the death rumour on the basis of the President age. But I make bold to say that whether PMB was 74 or he was 47 it wouldn’t have mattered, people had already been spooked by the Umaru-Saga, one that had made the whole country suffer.  OBJ did this nation a willful disservice.

    I believe there is a simple way out though.  Its called Full Disclosure.  Remember the time PMB jetted out for some medical attention on his ear?  No one got spooked cos everyone knew the deal.

    If he is running some tests now – Nigerians will willingly be calmed if they are made to know FOR WHAT.  Oh yes.

    And so for now, it is – Shame to bad people Hossana (that’s Daddy Showkey).  God bless.