Tag: politicians

  • Stay away from politicians, GOC warns soldiers

    The out-going General Officer Commanding (GOC) the 82 Division of Nigerian Army, Enugu, Major General Adamu Abubakar, has warned officers and soldiers in the command to stay away from politicians. He stated that soldiers don’t have any business being in politics.

    Abubakar stated this while addressing officers and soldiers at the President Goodluck Jonathan’s Army Barracks, 14 Brigade Headquarters, Ohafia local government area of Abia State, during his farewell visit to the command.

    According to Abubakar, the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Tukur Y. Buratai frowns at seeing or hearing that soldiers who are supposed to be apolitical would leave their primary responsibilities and duties to get involved in politics, stressing that the same politicians that they dine and wine with would eventually leave and abandon them when they (soldiers) get into troubles.

    “I must also warn you. The chief of army staff has always been talking about our soldiers being apolitical. You have no business being in politics. You have no business getting involved.

    “The election period will soon be around. Some of these people will come around you and tell you all manner of stories.

    “I will advice you not to listen to them, not to be close to them, not to be their friends because when the chips are down, you will be left alone with your family.”

    Abubakar while commending the 14 Brigade officers for their professionalism in the line of duty, especially during the “Egwueke II” in the Southeast and Abia State in particular also commended the level of discipline among the officers and soldiers of the Brigade within the 20months of his stay as the GOC of 82 Division of the Nigerian Army.

    “I must say that I am very satisfied with the level of discipline of all the officers and soldiers of 14 Brigade. We never had any case of the Brigade Commander referring any soldier or officer to the GOC for any offence and within the twenty months, no soldier of this brigade was sent to court marshal.

    “That may be what is on the ground now, I want to encourage you to continue to keep it up. There is no army that survives without discipline and the discipline had to start with you, and then extend to your family and to the generality of the barrack.

    “I want you to continue in the level that you are doing and even improve on it if you can. But if you cannot improve on it, then don’t go down, but remain where you are.”

    The 82 Div. GOC who is now posted to the Nigerian Army Resource Center as a participant also used the opportunity of his last visit to the brigade to encourage the soldiers to embrace family planning and to ensure that they train and educate their children, noting that days were gone when children raised in the barracks are seeing as rascals. This is even as he also encouraged them to attend courses as at when due.

    In his response, the Commanding Officer, 14 Brigade Ohafia, Major-General Abdul K. Ibrahim thanked the 82 Div. GOC for making out time to visit and the advice he gave to the soldiers, adding that he (Ibrahim) has learnt a lot under the tutelage of the GOC while he worked under him.

    He promised that soldiers and officers of the 14 Brigade would continue to apply the lessons and teachings of the GOC in their Areas of Operation (AO) and promised to maintain the standard and give the same support to the incoming GOC.

    High point of the visit was the inspection and commissioning of projects in the Brigade, some of which were named after him.

     

  • Politicians and their language

    I KNEW it was going to play a major role when this whole thing started. It always does – either as a cudgel to pound the victim or as a tool for the victim to express his anguish after being mistreated. Besides, it may itself become the victim, bloodied, battered and bludgeoned.

    It is the weapon of muscle-flexing, of verbal assaults that fuel tension and of the shadow boxing and fleet footwork that precede a major battle. And what a role it has played in the current wave of defections, deflections and reflections that has enveloped the polity, relegating to the background the urgent and Herculean task of strengthening the economy.

    My apologies for this rather longish preamble. ‘‘Editorial Notebook” is not on a trip to nowhere, like many of our roads. Nor is it dwelling on some esoteric subject in order to escape the agonies of these interesting times. No. We are simply considering the role of language in the events of these past weeks. Language is, after all, the vehicle on which our thoughts travel. Imagery, proverbs, idioms, allegories and anecdotes are the oil that propel the engine.

    Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom started it all when he announced soberly that he had been given the “red card” by the All Progressives Congress (APC) in his state. Instead of leaving the pitch and heading for the dressing room, His Excellency stayed on the bench. He was persuaded not to abandon the team, but as events later showed he was far gone – to the point of no return – in the intrigues that led to the wave of defections, aforementioned. He quit the ruling APC for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Information Minister Lai Mohammed was later to latch onto the soccer imagery when he described Senate Minority Leader Godswill Akpabio’s imminent “defection” from the PDP to the APC as 1-1. A draw. He was referring to Senate President Bukola Saraki’s defection to the PDP.

    Many were curious the other day when a colleague announced excitedly that the Senate President was in “love”. “In love, with whom?” “Isn’t he married?” “How?” “Any proof?” “Who moved the motion; Dino?” “Under urgent matters of national importance or what?”

    Easy, please. I am glad to announce folks that the rumour is true ; the “ayes” have it; Saraki is in love – with Nigeria.

    Asked why his romance with the APC turned awry, Saraki told reporters: “The Federal Government appointed over 200 persons into juicy offices without allotting any to me or Dogara…If not for the love that I have for Nigeria, we would have scattered everything.”

    Trust his political opponents, who will never be objective with matters concerning him. Some have been asking how Saraki and the “we” he referred to “would have scattered everything”. Others are saying that with governance put in abeyance for politics – the supplementary budget, approval for foreign loans, request to fund INEC’s preparation for next year’s elections and more are just lying there unattended – is there anything left to be “scattered”?

    Besides, they are asking: What is a “juicy” position? “Juicy” as in orange juice, apple juice and mango juice?  Or something that spins so much money, as defined by the dictionary? Just imagine the power of this simple adjective “juicy”.

    Department of State Services (DSS) men suddenly appeared at the National Assembly on Tuesday, blocking the gates to the chambers. They and their instigators may have celebrated it as a show of force amid the political shenanigans going on in the land; a show of farce it turned out to be. Lawal Daura, who seemed untouchable, got the push for that foolish action. But, many are wondering: who is beating the drum to which Daura and his boys were dancing? Were they seized by some demonic powers to “scatter” our democracy?

    Just before Ortom took the plunge, APC Chairman Adams Oshiomhole was damn sure that those touted to have been ready to jump ship were honourable men who would not “vomit in the morning and convert it to lunch in the afternoon”. Apparently, Comrade Oshiomhole forgot that even among politicians there are few whose accounts are not in the red in the bank of honour.

    Ortom threw in the sponge, elbowed out by muscular opponents. Also gone were 14 senators and 37 House members. Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal waved (final?) bye to the APC. Saraki bailed out. To Oshiomhole and many others, Saraki should have resigned as Senate president.

    Said the APC chair: “You should not collect a crown that belongs to a family and wear it on behalf of the family. If for your personal reasons you have gone to another family, it is just a matter of honour to leave the crown in the house that the crown belongs.”  Will Saraki surrender the crown?

    Oshiomhole said yesterday in Ikot Ekpene, Akwa Ibom State, at the “unusual” rally for defecting “unusual” Senator Godswill Akpabio: “When the PDP chairman was born, his parents named him Secondus; that is why he is always second.

    “When I was born, my parents named me Adams.”

    He then turned to the crowd and asked: “Who is the first man God created? They replied: “Adams”.

    “That is why I will always be the first and they will be second,” Oshiomhole said.

    Secondus was yet to reply last night. I trust he will.

    When former President Olusegun Obasanjo was told in 2014 that former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar was running for president, he simply opened his mouth  for a while and let loose with a loud guffaw. “I dey laugh o,” he said. The put-down was so loud it reverberated all through the political landscape.

    Last weekend, Obasanjo was told of Atiku’s ambition. He said: ‘How can I be on the same side with Atiku? To do what? If I support Atiku for anything, God will not forgive me. If I do not know, yes, but once I know, Atiku can never enjoy my support.”

    Obasanjo, a master of studied obfuscation, left unresolved many questions in that Abeokuta encounter. What does Obasanjo know about Atiku that we do not have the privilege of knowing? Why will he not tell us? Is there no redeeming feature about Atiku –in Obasanjo’s view? When did Obasanjo get this strange and secret knowledge about Atiku?”

    Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka gave a clue at the presentation of his book in Lagos. He told of how Obasanjo knelt down for Atiku to get the PDP’s ticket for a second term. Soyinka said he warned Atiku to get set for the reward of humbling Obasanjo. Needless to say, Obasanjo hounded Atiku all through his second term.

    In replying Obasanjo, an Atiku spokesman said: “It is a bit suspect what Obasanjo means, that God will not forgive him if he supports Atiku. I think that is really a personal relationship between him and his God, and it will be better for him to use his later years to tidy up relationship between himself and his God, instead of hanging his judgment with God on things that concern him and Atiku.”

    Did this explanation clear the air? I doubt it. What exactly is the matter between Obasanjo and Atiku, a matter that seems to have taken on some ethereal colouration, with God being called in? Or is it just a question of Obasanjo relying on his theological experience, having just bagged a doctorate in that field? I really do not know, but many are advising the former president to consult Psalm 23 and note the place of forgiveness in God’s agenda. Will he? Others are saying, without stating what precisely the problem is: “Let Baba cast the first stone.”

    Talking about biblical analogies, Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose (where in the world is he; still nursing a broken neck?) deployed this so much – and effectively. He boasted that he would defeat the APC in the July 14 election, as if he was the candidate. In an interview, he said: “I am Peter the rock, if I hit you, you are in trouble; if you hit me you will crumble.” In another, he said: “My name is Peter the rock. The man God promised he would build Ekiti and Nigeria on his shoulder.”

    The governor is actually seen by his supporters to have been imbued with some spiritual powers, hence he likens himself to the biblical Peter, the apostle on whom Jesus built the church.

    Now, it is said that Buhari found a quarry manager in Fayemi who deployed some dynamite to smash the rock into mere pebbles.

     

    Blockade of the National Assembly

    THE lesson of the Tuesday blockade of the National Assembly is clear – those in positions of authority must never abuse their powers. Former Department of State Services (DSS) boss Lawal Musa Daura got the push for that nauseating action, which embarrassed all lovers of democracy.

    Kudos to Acting President Yemi Osinbajo who fired Daura, who carried on as if Nigeria was his sitting room, overruling the President and deciding who to see him. He launched operations without taking orders from the Commander-in-Chief. If these are mere allegations, how do we take the blockade of the National Assembly that sparked a national outrage?

    There should be a probe of the blockade to find out whose song Daura and his boys were singing. Was he acting alone? Why did he not inform the Acting President?  Was there any sign of a breakdown of order that could overwhelm the police?

    The message is clear – security agents must never meddle in politics. Nobody, except the people whose interest he was serving, should shed tears for Daura.

    I won’t.

  • Fair weather politicians

    Nigerian politicians are typical schemers with enduring philosophy of self-preservation.  They are sustained and chaperoned by wily old foxes that have held the nation by fair and foul means; and when it serves them, including diabolical means.  The power cabal driving the Nigerian state is fetish and selfish; like the PDP like the APC.  This is the reason why they gravitate towards the levers of power for continuous relevance.  The mass defection and carpet-crossing in the National Assembly from APC to PDP was long in coming; hatched from birth.   It did not come like a bolt from the blues.  It was primed and calibrated from the inauguration of the government when the different tendencies that formed the coalition called APC schemed for the leadership of the National Assembly.

    The PDP and the APC have a common political ancestry from the old order of graft and patronage. Nigerian politicians operate like itinerant nomadic herdsmen, perpetually foraging for green grass to graze. The defection therefore is like the return of the proverbial Biblical prodigal son; it is home coming.  There is hardly anything to choose in terms of principle between those remaining and the ones that left the party; it is all about political equation of security of place in 2019.   Both ways, the masses are the losers because we are contending with buccaneers and political merchants.  We are dealing with a bunch of people who would not care a hoot to auction Nigeria and go shopping in Dubai with the proceeds. The Nigerian politician is extremely corrupt without any redeeming feature or morality.

    Recall the Halliburton’s scandal, it was perpetrated by government officials at the highest level; the president at the time was even fingered but he denied. Nobody was ever punished! Recall the mind boggling loots attributed to a former minister of petroleum who voted with her legs and now live on self exile, and many more. Some other alleged looters are lucky to be protected by virtue of being prominent members of the ruling party.

    While Jonathan’s PDP was perceived as clueless, Buhari’s APC is self-righteous, opinionated, cocksure and defensive.  The choice left for us come 2019 is very limited because of dearth of credible and reliable alternative; after all, the PDP is already threatening to boycott the General Election of 2019.  Knowing the politicians as we do, they would not bat an eyelid to have a trade-off with the APC while they pull wool over the eyes of the masses.

    The APC may want to deny the impact of the defections lightly, but it would be at their peril because they very well know the import from experience because they are by-product of the same protest which like the PDP, they have also grossly mismanaged. The loquacious national chairman of the APC may go to town with megaphone that those who defected have no electoral value but he should also ask himself what more is left of the president in the face of the existential realities that confront us today. The president has been so insular that he has alienated a huge chunk of his support base because of his clannish world-view and sectarian disposition of his kitchen cabinet.

    They have chosen the strong arms tactic of employing force and intimidation to deal with otherwise civil matters which could have been better served by simple diplomacy and inclusiveness.  Under the watch of APC government, the security forces and police have become partisan and compromised more than ever before.  If nothing is done to arrest this trend, sooner than later we may find ourselves succumbing to individuals who would become so powerful as to hijack state powers to form their own militia and become warlords to challenge our corporate entity and sovereignty.

    Whatever good the defections may serve, it is also clear by the day that the integrity of the president alone can longer meet the expectation of the people who are hungry for a real change.  President Buhari has thrown his heart into the contest and urged anyone with courage to challenge him.  We know from experience that we do not have men of conviction and courage to challenge the incumbency even when it is obvious that he has become difficult to market.  The politicians play the zombie always and do not have the gut to challenge and speak to power.

    The defectors have also thrown their heart in the ring for a real duel and the stage is set.  It is a test of popularity of who has the following of the people.  Unfortunately, there is not going to be a level play ground for the contestants.  As usual, everything would be brought in; the contestants would struggle to out-rig one another. The game changers would be the electoral empire, INEC and the security forces.  Would they be neutral?

    We have remained where we are politically because of our own attitude more than having rogue politicians presiding over the ritual of sharing our national budget and gallivanting all over the place. We cannot eat our cakes and have it.  We have commercialized our PVC and the merchants would have to recoup their investment and profit later.  So if we hope for any developmental project in our constituencies when we have traded with our voters cards, it may as well be a huge joke.  Look at the governor the people voted for that refused to pay workers salary but when elections approach, he started paying bribe into account of workers to secure vote and tenure.  They ignore basic issues of governance and dwell on sectarian distractions that are divisive. Now they hold the short end of the stick, crying; maybe you would say, serves them right!

    For today, we appear faced with the tyranny of abuse of power.  The Nigerian Police has virtually become a Gestapo used by the state to harass and intimidate opposition and critics to submission.  Even though they struggle to arrest common criminals, they are quick to crush legitimate peaceful protests and even invade the National Assembly to arrest elected representatives without good cause.  The government is yet to find voice against the rampaging herdsmen terrorizing communities across the country and leaving trails of blood and destruction on its path.  Insurgency in the Northeast is proving to be like the hydra-headed snake which has refused to die.  Kidnapping, banditry and general insecurity now define the entire landscape of our country.  If you sleep and wake up, your car battery, cooking gas cylinder, generators and other valuables are gone; that is if the bandits do not wake you up to submit your car key  and ATM cards to them.

    Many more people are losing their jobs by the day and for those who are lucky to be employed, salaries are half or owed perpetually in areas. Children are out of school and daily survival has become our greatest needs now. For now, it is the way they come, the way they go, fair weather politicians.

     

    • Kebonkwu Esq writes from Abuja.
  • CSO seeks sanction for politicians involved in violence

    A CIVIL society organisation, Election Monitor, has called for sanctions for political office holders and other highly placed individuals that may be involved in electoral violence during the Ekiti governorship election.

    Its National Coordinator, Abiodun Ajijola, made the call at the public presentation of the 2018 Ekiti Governorship Election Observation and Research Guide, in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    He called security agencies to announce sanctions for security operatives involved in election malpractices during the election.

    Ajijola said sanctioning security personnel involved in malpractice would serve as deterrent to politicians and others who may want to be involved in such conduct.

    He said: “There should be effective sanctions for political office holders and other highly placed individuals involved in Electoral violence. At least handing them over to the police for prosecution.

    “There is a need for INEC to appeal to the Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to intervene by providing very clear consequences for security operatives who are partisan and work against the conduct of peaceful elections irrespective of political affiliations.

    “This is key because much of what has happened in the past where insecurity did not allow elections to be concluded is a show of force of different political actors who have influence over security in different ways.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Amassoma crisis: Leave us alone, monarch warns politicians, others

    A First-class traditional ruler in Bayelsa State and the Amananaowei of Amassoma, Graham Naingba, has said politicians are exploiting the crisis in the community to cause fresh tension ahead of 2019 general election.

    He warned politicians against igniting fresh crisis that could deepen the unfortunate crisis, which engulfed Amassoma, a host community to the Niger Delta University on Wilberforce Island.

    Naingba cautioned a popular Ijaw musician, Barrister Smooth, against producing any music on the crisis involving the NDU and Amassoma community.

    The monarch, in a statement issued in Abuja and signed by him, described the planned crisis as “condemnable and reprehensible.”

    He said any further crisis could negate efforts of the Bayelsa State government towards amicable resolution of the crisis.

    According to him, Governor Henry Seriake Dickson, had not only put measures in place to address emergent issues but was also effectively resolving the crisis.

    He said: “Characters with dubious intent with the backing of politicians focused on 2019 elections should desist from exploiting the crisis to cause further division in Amassoma community.

    “The platform of music should not be exploited to inflict pain and agony on the community because the conflict is already being resolved by the various authorities.

    “It has come to the attention of the traditional institution and authorities of Amassoma that a popular musician, Chief Barrister Smooth, has released a musical record in the form of an inflammatory dirge on the recent crisis in our dear community, Amassoma.

    “While we are not opposed to genuine efforts geared towards peace, security and prosperity of our town, the people òf Amassoma are not in support of the activities of the particular musician with the backing of politicians, which are designed to inflame passions in the community.

    “Politicians should leave Amassoma alone. The tendency to exploit a crisis situation to aggravate conflict cannot be the best way to show concern and love. This is unknown to the culture of our people.

    “The Amassoma community finds this curious action as unpatriotic. Amassoma can do without these crocodile tears and detrimental sympathies. For the purpose of emphasis, we advise that nobody should compose a song to inflame tension and threaten public peace in our community.

    “The governor and the traditional authorities have not only put machinery in place to address the issue but are indeed resolving the crisis. Nobody should do anything that will inflame passion or acts that can lead to further unrest in our community.

    “To claim that you love Amassoma more than the indigenes is the loudest way to express hypocrisy. Politicians should leave Amassoma alone. The tendency to exploit a crisis to deepen conflict cannot be the best way to show concern. Amassoma is beyond any individual.”

     

  • How civil servants, politicians siphoned Bayelsa’s cash

    The rot in the Bayelsa State civil service has been described as unimaginable, mind-boggling, anti-development and disgusting. In fact, the state’s public sector is notorious for all kinds of criminal enrichments and sharp practices.

    The public sector has over the years served as a cash cow for a gang of financial rapists and vicious Buccaneers masquerading as permanent secretaries and directors, who worked hand in gloves with corrupt politicians. The system was so battered that it negated the age-long principles of neutrality and anonymity of the civil service.

    It threw up a politically-active worker. Indeed, civil servants especially permanent secretaries and directors jumped into the murky waters of politics. They were so powerful that they determined who got what, when and how. They were brokers, negotiators, lobbyists and king makers on the corridors of power. No politician survived the gang-up of the civil servants.

    Yes. Citizens lamented the unprofessional activities of most senior workers, who controlled the political system because they were stupendously rich. They owned mansions, fleet of exotic cars and hotels. They lived far beyond their salaries and as thin gods lorded it over the entire state. It was obvious that they were duping their state through various sharp practices.

    Stakeholders were helpless as Bayelsa groaned under the excesses of the civil servants especially the permanent secretaries and directors. Successive administrations were indicted for betraying the state by treating the perpetrators of financial crimes as the untouchables. Observers watched as revenues that accrued to the state were used to fund the insatiable financial appetite of corrupt workforce.

     

    Bayelsa public sector of fraud

    Like the wind that exposes the anus of a fowl, the incumbent Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has revealed the sources of dubious wealth of the civil servants. They operated a multi-billion naira fraud empire in the state’s public service.

    Dickson is not treating the matter with kid gloves like his predecessors. The governor has made the difference; succeeding where others failed. In the interest of the state’s progress and development, the governor embarked on a voyage to dismantle the fraudulent empire.

    The governor was jolted in 2012 when he took over the mantle of leadership and discovered that the monthly wage bill of civil servants was above N5bn. Despite its small population, Bayelsa was ranked among Kano and Lagos states, with higher population figures, on monthly wage bills. Also N1.7billion was expended monthly to pay the salaries of workers in the eight local government areas.

    While the governor paid the outrageous salaries in his first term, he initiated comprehensive multi-sectorial probes into the fraud empire. Various committees were inaugurated with a mandate to identify the problems with the public sector and to make recommendations. His Deputy, Rear Admiral John Jonah (retd.) supervised the committees.

     

    Casualties of Dickson’s public sector reforms 

    After surviving a gang-up and emerging victorious for his second term in office, Dickson settled down to implement reports of the various committees. It was the beginning of sanitizing the system and cleaning the payrolls. The reforms, which commenced in earnest, came with many revelations.

    The various reports indicted the system. The civil service was replete with cases of people benefitting from multiple employments. Some senior civil servants received multiple salaries with names of unknown and underage persons they smuggled into the payroll.

    Some persons worked as senior civil servants with fake, computer generated certificates. Some persons were benefitting from indefensible promotions against the civil service rules. The system was dominated by pension fraudsters, age falsifiers, ghost workers, beneficiaries of inherited employments among others.

    In fact, overaged personnel, primary schools kids, dead workers, and Diaspora workers were all drawing salaries from the state treasury. Bayelsa was bleeding as money meant for development disappeared into the huge pockets of civil servants.

    Preliminary reports threw up further bizarre discoveries. Over 8000 civil servants got their appointments by inheritance. Without going through the established due process for recruitments, the indicted workers were brought in by their friends, parents and relatives who left the system to replace them. This number contributed to the over-bloated wage bill bugging down the state.

    People were discovered to have sold appointments for N250,000 each. They also engaged in other employment racketeering especially at the local government level. Thousands of redundant administrative officers were drawing salaries. Most of them never reported to work. They only got credit alerts through their various bank accounts at the end of the month.

    For instance, the report uncovered 500 administrative officers in  Sagbama Local Government Area òf the state and a total of 5000 non-academic staff at the Niger Delta University (NDU) and the other state-owned five tertiary institutions in the state.

    The report further revealed that 500 workers of the Bayelsa Transport Company (BTC) were receiving salaries for doing nothing. The team of investigators discovered that there were no vehicles in the BTC, yet the workers were drawing salaries.

    Even the government-owned media houses were not spared. For instance, it was discovered that over 300 employees were drawing salaries in Radio Bayelsa alone while private radio stations in the state operated effectively with 10 to 15 employees.

    The report also disclosed that people were devising fraudulent means to escape retirement from the state. Old, feeble and tired workers, who were supposed to have left the system continued to make themselves younger by renewing their ages. In fact, the entire system was messed up.

     

    Systemic losses and Dickson’s big stick

    Dickson told bewildered public that the economy of the state was bleeding dangerously and heading for the precipice particularly during the recession. He lamented that a gang of payroll fraudsters was duping the state N1bn monthly amounting to N12bn every year.

     

    To save the state and free money for development, the governor first wielded the bug stick. He ordered the panel coordinated by his deputy to withhold salaries of 4,204 suspected payroll fraudsters. The salaries of the affected persons were deposited in an Unpaid Salaries Account opened by the state government for that purpose.

    Those affected by the first move towards sanitizing the system were 1,329 local government employees, 2184 workers from the Primary School Education System and 707 from the pension payroll.

    In obedience to the principles of natural justice, the government constituted a judicial commission of inquiry headed by Justice Doris Adokeme to hear complaints of the affected persons to prevent the punishment of innocent workers.

     

    Redeployments and Gains of the Reforms 

    Besides weeding off fraudulent practices in the system, the reform has brought a new orientation to the state’s workforce. There is a paradigm shift from redundancy to efficiency and from mediocrity to professionalism. Employees are now aware that they must work to earn their pay.

    Dickson lamented that 1,090 workers with teaching qualification were redundant at the various local government councils despite the urgent need for teachers in the state. Instead of sacking them, the governor said the affected persons would be sent to the classrooms where their services are needed.

    Similar redeployment also hit the state-owned media outfits, the Bayelsa Broadcasting Corporation and the Bayelsa Newspaper Corporation, the publisher of New Waves tabloid. About 222 workers in the media outfits were to be redeployed following a directive from the Head of Service.

    The affected workers 86 from the New Waves newspaper and 136 from the Radio Bayelsa. A letter addressed to the General Manager, Bayelsa Newspaper Corporation from the office of the Head of Service described the development as “redeployment of excess staff”.

    The letter dated April 6 and signed by the Head of Service, Rev. Thomas Zidafamor, noted that the ongoing reform was to ensure a more efficient and effective workforce.

    Zidafamor said: “The governor set up a committee to formulating an overall policy in staffing and funding of these parastatals in the state. Based on the recommendations of the committee, the governor has directed that all excess staff be redeployed away with effect from April 2018.

    “Consequently, 86 staff in your nominal roll and payroll have been identified for redeployment. You are directed to notify the affected staff of the decision and deposit their monthly salaries in the state Unpaid Salaries Account in the office of the Accountant-General commencing with April 28 salary”.

    The Head of Service advised the affected workers to present themselves to the committee on Screening of Staff to verify their areas of professional competence for the deployment exercise.

     

    The Governing Council and Management of NDU has also keyed into the exercise. About 1700 workers of the university had been penciled down for redeployment, retirement and outright dismissal. The university used to spend over N500m monthly to pay its workers, constituting 70 per cent non-academic staff and 30 per cent academic staff. But it is now surviving on about N350m monthly subvention from the state government.

    The reforms are yielding financial dividends to the state. It has brought down the monthly wage bill of the state hitherto in excess of N5bn to about N3.9bn. The wage bill of the local government areas was also reduced from N1.6bn to N1.1bn.

    Recently all the caretaker committee chairpersons of the eight local government areas counted their blessings. It their presentations, it was discovered that Southern Ijaw wage bill reduced from N201million to N131million; Ogbia fromN207million to N165; Nembe from N127million to N99million and Brass from N119 to N101million.

    Others are, Ekeremor from N192million to N177million; Kolokuma/Opokuma from N109million to N77million; Sagbama from N171million to N130million and Yenagoa from N194million to N147million. The reforms have also reduced the monthly salaries of teachers in the councils from N1.320bn to N1.027bn.

     

    Justifications for Reforms 

    The government has continued to adduce reasons for the ongoing public sector reforms in the state. Dickson insisted that the rot must be cleaned to ensure a professional and efficient civil service in the state. He said cleaning the system would enable government to lift embargo on employment and absorb new graduates.

    Dickson further vowed to hand over a highly professionalized, disciplined and motivated public service sector to his successor. He told residents that the ongoing reform was not witch-hunt but designed to rid the service of all forms of irregularities and sharp practices.

    He said: ‘‘The mindset that you can keep your name on the payroll without coming to work is negative and we have to draw the red line now because we want to leave behind a reformed, repositioned, motivated and efficient workforce that can stand the test of time”.

    Dickson also directed the committee handling the verification of the state workers to release the salaries of identified genuine workers who were affected by the suspension order. He lamented the rots in the sector and likened the state’s payroll to the voter register where he said all kinds of names could be found.

    While saying that genuine workers affected by the exercise would be re-absorbed and redeployed to other areas, he insisted that persons who had no reason to be in the service must go.

    “We want to leave behind a reformed, repositioned, motivated and efficient workforce.  Whatever is good for this state, we are going to get it done.

    ”Those who would be affected are citizens, we have to look at genuine issues. We are working to ameliorate the hardships and create other avenues for survival.

    “Many states are sacking workers. The central focus is not to sack. It is repositioning.

    In this reforms, those with teaching qualification, working in the parastatals, who can teach, the state needs all of them.

    “We have ways of absorbing people on the condition that they must be existing workers, they must be committed workers. If you are a worker in Abuja, Lagos Port Harcourt, this state has fed you enough for the past 20 year. Enough is enough”.

    Dickson further said his desire was to leave behind an effective, productive and efficient public sector for his successor. The state’s Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, has been doing a yeoman’s job in propagating the essence and benefits of the reforms.

    Iworiso-Markson averred that as painful as the government’s action was, it was done to avoid a collapse of the state’s public service. He said that the government embarked on a painstaking process of implementing the reforms with a focus on the welfare and wellbeing of persons, who might be affected by the exercise.

    He explained that the government was resolute in the redeployment component of the reforms saying the move was to remove the clogs in the wheels of the state’s progress. According to him, it was the decision of the government to screen, train and redeploy workers with specialization in education to schools since the state was in need of teachers.

    He said that contrary to the erroneous impression created in some quarters, salaries of the affected persons were being paid into the Unpaid Salaries Account to be released after the redeployment.

    He added that to give a human face to the implementation of the reforms, the government made an arrangement to make financial provision for persons found not qualified to be in the system.

    Iworiso-Markson said that the plan was for the government to expose such people to training in the area of agricultural and entrepreneurial skills to enable them venture into private businesses.

    He said: “The exercise itself is still ongoing and the entire public service is aware. You must note that the names of the people listed for redeployment are those submitted as redundant workers by the general managers and supervisors.

    “So Government is saying that this is not sustainable. The onus is on government to bring them in, check their qualifications and redeploy them to appropriate agencies. Anybody with B. ED for instance, would go to the teachers training institute, trained and redeployed. Government would use these people to teach”.

    Also the Deputy Governor, Rear Admiral John Jonah (rtd), took a swipe on the opposers of the reforms describing them as unpatriotic individuals and groups.

    “The government wants anyone who cares to listen that it has a responsibility to clean up a system that has been bastardized by some greedy individuals who over the years have taken advantage of the loopholes in the public service to perpetrate all forms of fraud.

    “We have a responsibility to reform the system within the limits of human imperfection. Like every other process we know this is not perfect but we are working to ensure a fair deal for everyone”, he said.

    Jonah insisted thatý the restoration government was working hard to leave behind a robust public service by setting a standard for the next government to leverage on upon resumption.

    He said: “We want those opposed to the reforms to know that it is not a witch-hunt but an inevitable exercise to save the public service from near collapse. The government is not selective in the renewed fight against payroll thieves and robbers.

    “The right civil service procedures wilýl be followed to disengage those who have either compromised the system in one way or the other or have allowed themselves to be beneficiaries of illegality.

    “Contrary to insinuations in some quarters, we are not sacking anybody but those who have been confirmed to have falsified their age, certificates or have promoted themselves arbitrarily will have to go. These are cases that cannot be overlooked.

    “However we are mindful of the effect of the action we are taking. So what we are doing is give those affected some form of soft landing by given them three months’ notice or 1 month notice of payment in lieu of their disengagement.

    “To show our sincerity in the reforms, we are following the normal procedure as laid out in the civil service rule. As a responsible government we have made it possible for those who due to administrative and humans are caught in the web to seek redress before the judicial commission of inquiry headed by a competent judge”.

    Even state’s organised labour declared its support for the ongoing public sector reforms. The workers under the auspices of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) said when completed the reforms would reposition the public service for better productivity.

    In a joint address, the state Chairman, NLC, John Ndiomu, said labour believed in building strong institutions to sustain the policies of government for future generations.

    He said: “We are of the view that the reforms are intended to respites on the public service sector for better productivity. Congress therefore calls on the government to ensure that the reforms are in line with the public service rules.

    “While we agree that there are challenges in the civil service, the reforms should be handled with utmost care. For instance, workers that are wrongly placed at their points of engagement should not be terminated, but the grade levels of such staff should be corrected and properly placed”.

    He also appealed to the government to ensure that the ongoing reforms would not lead to the sacking of any genuine worker in the service.

    “It is hoped that not too long from now the government will conclude all verification exercises as well as the civil service reforms to enable workers settle down to do their duties without fear”, he said.

    Describing the reforms as good for the state, Chairman of the Governing Council and Management of NDU, Prof. Steve Azaiki expressed the council’s readiness to implement the government’s policy of sanitizing the public service.

    He noted that a practice where the university solely depended on the state government to fund its over-bloated workforce was unsustainable. He commended Dickson for his bold steps and absolved the governor of any blames in the current shake-up that affected 1,700 workers in the university.

    He said: “It was the leadership of the university that listed the affected staff following the outcome of a discreet verification to make for more efficiency, better service delivery as well as create space for the employment of young qualified people, particularly Bayelsans.

    “The amount of money that government has been giving to NDU is not sustainable. Suppose oil price falls or there are issues of governance or politics, anything can happen and then the university will collapse. So, we need to look inwards and see how we can come up with a sustainable figure”.

     

    Resistance and protest 

    As expected, the ongoing implementation of the reforms has generated resistance and protest in some quarters. Recently a group of aged women took to the streets of Amassoma, Southern Ijaw, Bayelsa State to protest their removal from the payroll of NDU.

    The women, who were in their late 60s and early 70s, blocked the road leading the university in their area demanding their names to be returned to the payroll. The aggrieved women obstructed traffic and even carried a mock coffin as they lay on the road refusing to give way to vehicular movement.

    The women were casualties of the reforms and were reportedly removed for drawing salaries despite reaching their retirement age. But Iworiso-Markson, observed that the protesters were mainly aged people, who could not understand that civil service has age limitation.

    He said the detractors of the government were funding the protest instead of explaining to the mothers that the government was doing the right thing. The commissioner said the protesters would rather thank the governor if they understood that the public reforms were meant to secure the future and provide opportunities for their jobless children.

    The commissioner said the protesters were among the over-bloated non-academic staff weighing down the university adding that the school had a ratio of 70 percent non-academic staff to 30 per cent academic staff.

    He said the affected women were not going to work but were drawing salaries at the end of the month. He said to ameliorate the effects of removing the retired persons from the payroll, the government decided to pay them three-month salaries in lieu of their disengagements.

    He said: “The protest is being supported and sponsored by the enemies of the state. Instead of explaining to the women that they had gone beyond the age of retirement and should leave the system as required by the law, these enemies made it look as if the government was set to punish the women.

    “But we are engaging them and we know that very soon the women will come to realise that there is age limitation in the civil service. They will soon know that at a certain age a civil servant is expected to leave the system to create spaces for fresh graduates.

    “These graduates are the sons and daughters of these women. They roam the streets without jobs because the system has been weighed down by illegalities.

    “But the governor has decided to do the right thing. He has done what others could not do by ensuring a vibrant, productive and efficient public sector. The governor needs commendation. He needs to be encouraged to complete the reform because at the end these protesters will be the ultimate beneficiaries.”

    The governor also insisted that blackmailers would not arm-twist him and his government to abandon the ongoing public sector reforms in the state. He said the reforms were borne out of his love for the state and his desire to clean the mess in the civil service.

    “Blackmail cannot stop me”, he said but noted that the government would look into all genuine complains and address legitimate grievances arising from the reform.

    “I won’t accept further fraud against this state”, he declared blaming opposition to the reforms on persons, who institutionalised the fraudulent system and made it look like their rights.

    “We must work together to reposition it. We cannot be known as a state with ineffective civil service because what has happened in this state cannot happen in other states”, he said.

     

  • Guard your utterances, Sultan cautions politicians

    The Sultan of Sokoto Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, has cautioned politicians to guard their utterances in the interest of peace. He said politicians should stop abusing each other.

    Speaking at the Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI) Pre-Ramadan meeting in Kaduna yesterday, the Sultan called on leaders and the led to respect each other saying, “We are the only once that can bring an end to the challenges confronting us as a nation.”

    He said instances where political leaders go about abusing themselves publicly and being heard and seen on different media platforms nationally and internationally is not good for the country

    While expressing dismay over the rising cases of drug abuse and the intake of Codeine by people especially women and young girls in the Northern part of the country, the Sultan called on parents to monitor their wards to stop the scourge saying, “It has no positive impact on their lives.”

    He said, “We should assess what the government has done for the Muslim Ummah since their election and use it as a yard stick to determine who we will vote for in the elections because if we do not make the assessment, we might just end up voting for the wrong people and we would have to wait for another four or even eight years to elect new leaders.”

    He called on Islamic scholars to educate and enlighten Muslims during their sermons in their various mosques to using their votes to elect credible leaders that will prioritize issues challenging Muslims in the country.

    He frowned at the wanton killings of innocent lives going on in the country and called on security agencies to take proactive steps in tackling the menace.

     

  • Celebrities, politicians, others gather as Isaac Izoya weds

    It was a top society wedding for Germany-based music and film promoter, Isaac Izoya who, on Friday April 27th and Saturday, April 28th, 2018 got married to his heartthrob, Princess Precious Uhunmwangho in the ancient city of Benin, the Edo State capital.

    The groom, popularly called Cultural Ambassador in Europe, is the creator of the annual Nollywood Film Festival, Germany, ESAN Akugbe People’s Union, and Ehizoya Golden Entertainment Award for which many Nollywood filmmakers and Nigerian creatives in the Diaspora are honoured yearly.

    It was therefore not surprising the number of people from all walks of life that converged on Benin for the two-day event – a traditional marriage at the bride’s father’s home on Task Force Street, Off Upper St. Savior Road, and a lavish reception at the Rialto Hotel and Resorts.

    Celebrities at the events include Opa Williams, Lancelot Imasuen, Cossy Orjiakor, Queen Blessing Ebigieson, Louiza Williams and Charles Inojie who was Master of Ceremonies at the events.

    Notable Nigerians in Diaspora at the event include Mr. and Mrs. Uzzi came from Kassel, Germany; Austine Ediale from Helsinki, Finland; Chief Mike Ituah from Germany; Joe Aihende from Zurich, Switzerland; Hon. Michael Ogbomo Ernest, from Essen, Germany and Boss Mikel from Malaysia among others.

    Performers at the events include De Turner Stars of Benin, a.k.a Ogbomon 1 and the popular Osazeme Theatre Troupe of Nigeria, directed by Lady Sikira Aruma Olaye. Also, The Voice Nigeria Season 2 contestant, Sophia, an afro pop artiste from Anambra State thrilled the audience at the wedding reception, just as comic artist, Edo Pikin cracked the guests up with his hilarious jokes.

    Also in attendance was Prof. Yinka Omoregbe, Hon. Commissioner For Justice, Edo State; Mr. Marshal and wife Hon. Omorede Osifo Marshal; Chief Mavis & Chief Mrs. Ogbomo, Chief & Lady Mike Ituah, the Edohe of Opoji; Festus Eremosele, Chairman, G-World Entertainment, Austin Ediale, and Uwa Oviahon Imadiyi, Head at Virgin Productions.

    The groom who has been at the forefront of promoting Nigeria’s and Africa’s rich culture in Europe is also a movie producer who was said to have met Pecious at a family friend’s party in Frankfurt a couple of years back.

  • Politicians are not to blame

    It was Workers’ Day last Tuesday. As keen observer,  I paid close attention to events organized by various groups as well as speeches made. I checked activities of labour Unions, labour- related non profits and semi-religious bodies across Africa or where the day was marked. My conclusion was that the politicians are not to be blamed for our national woes. Many of these events never lack great speeches only that attendees never do anything with them.

    Politicians become rulers or leaders of a nation with the co- operation of the people or the entire citizenry, especially where democracy thrives. It is on record many countries claim they are practising democracy today. Its shades may be slightly different because we have different  actors on the stage. A major secret people do not know or  many ignore is that politicians are the most insecure breed around. They do not have the capacity to face formidable groups which stand in the way of achieving their goals. The moment they notice any, they use camouflage threat or a divide and rule to make sure such groups do not  do any damage.

    The politicians work hard to upset the system in their own favour. Party affiliations count less, especially the ones In Africa, a common factor is greed. When there is Issue of money or personal interests,  they come together within a closed door to resolve the sharing formula. They are very clever at using the media to create distraction for the populace while they perpetuate their acts.

    For many politicians in Africa, they stylishly destroy the educational system as well as pervert the course of justice. More importantly they made the institutions so weak. This gives them opportunity to manipulate the system at will.

    In all these, the gaol of the politicians  is to ensure many of the citizens become so weary  and aloof. They want them to get to the plateau where they do not believe they still have power to change anything. They cleverly push the citizens to a state of learned helplessness which breeds hopelessness. This they have achieved in Nigeria. Through these processes, the politicians, especially the Nigerian breed, created a middle class which had become aloof and very unconcerned as well as apathetic to governance issues. This new breed of middle class has become government in their own space.

    This middle class provides basic amenities for themselves. Since they usually ‘pray’ for breakthrough to achieve this status, they hardly care what happens to others whose fortune could not help them.

    Now that they have ‘Jeeps’ for the bad roads, moved from “I better pass my neighbour’ to a bigger generator, many of them become bitter and angry citizens. When they go to their various ‘hangouts’, they criticise the government’s  inability to deliver or they may go to social  media to vent their angers. Many of them know what is wrong in the system. They enjoy going to meetings where great speeches and truths will be told like ‘The Platform’. They desire and cherish hearing speeches of how things can be better, these they knew before, but only seeking validation for their inherent anger.

    Immediately they leave such gatherings, they close their writing pads without a decision to do anything with the speech. They return year in year out to such events. Meanwhile they keep their distance from politics and policies process. These environments to them are dirty and since they are so clean, such place is not their call and neither will they take interest in supporting a seemingly poor candidate   with the right qualities.

    This middle class neither organize nor mobilize to champion a cause for change.They do not invest in the change they desire. One illusion they have  is  they  keep wishing miracle will happen and good governance will be delivered on a platter of gold. They never get involved.  They live in gated houses and are too refined to interact with the peasants.

    The politicians know all these facts. So they use this open knowledge to the fullest.They go for the downtrodden and the peasants who can be bought with a small bag of rice. Poverty had dealt with many of their targets.  These peasants do not see any future, their focus is only in the now. How to immediately solve their hunger problem even if it means selling the future.

    These peasants see their voters’ card as a mean of survival. They are willing to go  through all the trouble to get them. Meanwhile the middle class is too refined to go through such struggle. In some cases, the middle class through learned helplessness had come to a point votes do not count. The downtrodden never believe such fallacy.

    A major failure in our country, which had positioned politicians as the major factor to be blamed for our national woes, is ‘followership failure’. If there has been leadership failure, which we have all acknowledged,  why is followership failure disease allowed to ravage our economy and national development for so long?

    What is the essence of our anger on the social media and time invested in attending these great meetings we love to attend every year only to leave such meetings without a decision?  If we cannot resolve followership failure, we have no right to blame the politicians who are in their elements. Where are our formidable groups?  Where are our organized and viable ‘think tanks’ established with genuine purpose to serve the people and not a ploy to get attention from government for ‘settlements’?  Where are the pressure groups established to fight basic causes which can lead to noticeable development?

    Yinka Olaito writes from Lagos

  • How 55 politicians, others stole N1.354tr between 2006 – 2013, by SERAP

    A report by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has revealed how 55 politicians, high-level public officials and leaders allegedly stole N1, 354 trillion between 2006 and 2013 from the nation’s treasury.

    This was contained in a report, titled: “Letting the big fish swim: How those accused of high-level corruption are getting away with their crimes and profiting from Nigeria’s legacy of Impunity”, presented on Wednesday to the media in Lagos.

    It was coordinated by a Senior Lecturer of Law, Litigation and Professional Ethics at the Nigerian Law School, Abuja Campus, Dr. Esa Onoja.

    The event, supported by Trust Africa, was chaired by the Deputy Director, Macarthur Foundation, Oladayo Olaide.

    It was attended by activist lawyer Femi Falana (SAN); Special Assistant to the President on Anti-corruption and Coordinator of the Open Partnership Government Mrs. Juliet Ibekaku; a former member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Mr. Babatunde Ogala; representative of Trust Africa Mr. Chinedu Nwagu; Mr. Joy Esezebor of Ford Foundation; Department for International Development (DFID), Southwest Regional Coordinator David Ukagwu and a lecturer in the Faculty of Law, University of Lagos Mr. Wahab Shittu.

    Others include: former Lagos NBA Chairman Mr. Martin Ogunleye; Miss Jennifer Ogbechi representing Mrs. Mariam Uwais; Mr. Collins Okeke, representing Dr. Olisa Agbakoba; members of the media, civil society groups and representatives of anti-corruption agencies.

    Giving an insight into the report, Onoja noted that the amount embezzled, misappropriated or stolen by public officials and leaders in the private sector between 2013 and 2017 has galloped beyond the contemplation of average Nigerians.

    He claimed that evidence abound that judges, judicial officers, lawyers and military officers are participants in the pillage of national wealth.

    According to him, “while the main anti-corruption agencies secured more than 1,500 non-high profile convictions between 2000 – 2017, they could only muster 10 high profile convictions between the periods”.

    He added: “In the investigation, prosecution and trial of high profile corruption cases in Nigeria, justice is imprisoned by snares contrived by actors in the legal community in aid of looters.”

    The report listed high profile cases of corruption prosecuted by anti-corruption agencies between 2000 and 2017 as “numbering 177 out of which 167 are pending.

    Total convictions are just 10, of which only three convictions were obtained after full trial and seven convictions were based on plea bargaining.

    Yet one of the three convictions based on full trial was discharged by the Supreme Court and three of the seven convicted were granted presidential pardon.

    Onoja noted that most corruption cases against high profile defendants witnessed delays tactics by defendants to truncate fair trial.

    Falana, in a remark at the presentation, disagreed with some contributors who blamed the judiciary for the delay in meting out justice to corrupt politicians and other persons.

    “Nigerians should stop rubbishing all judges and lawyers. No doubt, there are a few corrupt judges and lawyers. Just a few. But majority of members of the legal profession are not corrupt. Our duty as concerned citizens is to identify and isolate the bad judges and lawyers”, he said.

    According to him, “I can say without any fear of contradiction that the judiciary has developed an inbuilt mechanism to remove bad judges. Between 1999 and 2017, not less than 100 judges have been sanctioned. No other institution in Nigeria can boast of that record.  SERAP deserves commendation for elevating the debate about corruption beyond the adoption of Fela Anikulapo-kuti’s record entitled: ‘Authority Stealing’ unlike the two parties singing ‘you be thief, I no be thief’.

    Falana, however, added that “with the abolition of stay of proceedings, politically exposed persons and their lawyers are no longer permitted to frustrate their prosecution.”