Tag: politics

  • Gender discrimination and marginalisation in politics – 3

    A country that marginalizes half of her population has definitely shot itself in the foot and cannot run as fast as other healthy nations. This is particularly unfortunate for a backward country where all hands should be on deck. There is no scientific evidence to suggest that women are less cerebrally endowed than men are. This means denying women equal rights and opportunity denies our government the full pool from which it makes its recruitment. Without the right calibre of people manning the strategic centres of our life, there can be no development and without development there can hardly be political and economic stability. Therefore, we must borrow a leaf from such countries like the Scandinavia, Germany, France and Great Britain, where there is no longer a debate on woman’s role in the political and economic life of a country. Even the only superpower which likes to see itself as exceptional country may soon have a female head of state next January 2017.

    The question to ask is whether the marginalisation of women has been responsible for our apparent and seeming instability in Nigeria and consequent underdevelopment. The answer is NO. Our instability arises until recently from monopolization of power by the military and marginalisation of the entire civil society, which includes women. Our instability also arises from regional political imbalance, inequitable distribution of resources and national wealth, rampant corruption, youth unemployment, brigandage arising from joblessness, absence of rule of law, social disequilibrium, arrested political and economic development, confusion as to the system and mode of government, marriage of modern and ancient political system without a clear cut direction and evolution of a Nigeria system. While the problem of gender discrimination is a serious issue, it is not the most important factor making for instability and underdevelopment. It is nevertheless a serious issue and it must be tackled along with other issues. Associated with gender discrimination is the issue of sexual harassment, which is usually laughed off the court in Nigeria. But this is not a laughing matter. No country that wants to be taken seriously would condone the offence of sexual harassment, which is endemic in Nigeria. Because of the poverty of our people and the scarcity of jobs, female workers put up with indescribable humiliation in the hands of over-sexed men with unusually active libido. The abduction of underage women and converting them to Muslims or sex slaves is another vicious kind of sexual harassment.

    Now that we are in a democratic era, each of the two main political parties must begin to formulate policies especially directed at female and children issues. Politicians because they have had little chance at political leadership have not demonstrated forceful leadership in this regard. It is hoped that the current political dispensation would take more interest in women issues and women empowerment. It may be necessary to embark on affirmative action to allocate a certain parentage of seats to women in the various legislatures and cabinets. Political parties in their own interest must allow and encourage women to hold party political offices as well. Perhaps there is need for a constitutional device to force men to share power with women. The question of franchise has been legally and constitutionally settled. And there is no democracy anywhere in the world where people are forced to vote but in our own situation where quite a large number of our women-folk live in purdah, special and indigenous devices must be fashioned out to ensure the confidentiality of the franchise. Under no circumstance must it be permissible for men to dictate to their wives who to vote for. With modern communication, it ought to be possible for political parties looking for votes to reach the most distant recess of the purdah. There is a general knowledge that when a nation educates its women-folk, that nation is educating the entire society because of the fundamental and important role women play in child bearing and rearing and continuing and preserving human society.

    If our goal is to build a vibrant democratic society, then all people must be brought on board, and if we must move at a very rapid rate in order to catch up with the civilized world, then the question of women mobilization is just too important to be trifled with. Without stability there can be no development, with more than half of our population operating at the fringe of our political life, we cannot be said to be politically stable. Stability is not the same as the peace of the grave where society is terrorized into acquiescence or to silence. While women may not be in a position to terrorize society or to overthrow governments, their power lies in the influence, which they have over their male children and also their husbands. We must recognise this influence as power and we must deliberately educate this segment of our society who will always have this power. But above all, women power must not come vicariously through their sons and husbands, women must have access to power on their own merit. The only way to ensure this is by deliberately making our political environment women friendly. This we can do through affirmative action and through legislation. We must also proceed with deliberate speed in educating the female-child. Education has always been a liberating force as well as a training process and medium. With education most of the disabilities of women will overtime disappear. Economic empowerment will follow, and with this will come political participation. With women empowerment will come more voice and brain to confront other fundamental disabilities of our nation. Unity is strength; the more united a country is the better, unity goes beyond overcoming the primordial ties of ethnicity. Nowadays, gender unity is increasingly attracting the attention that it deserves. It may even be more fruitful and more intellectually rewarding if we move away from pre-occupation with ethnic and regional politics and really face the socio-economic issue for our times. What better people to look at the issues of begging, in the midst of plenty, starvation, unclean environment, inadequate health facilities, than women. Examples of countries like Russia, where more than 60% of the doctors are women or the United States, where most of the people who do social work are women, point to the tendency of women to be more suitable in building what President Bush called a “gentler kinder” and more humane society. Our women need to be challenged and our society must embrace the credo of “careers open to talents” and women certainly have talents.

  • Ogun PDP chieftain quits partisan politics

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State, Chief Niyi Adegbenro, has quit partisan politics and urged Nigerians to support President Muhammadu Buhari to “reshape Nigeria”.

    Adegbenro said Nigeria requires discipline to achieve anything meaningful today, adding that any government trying to bring about the necessary discipline and change, should be supported to succeed. He also doubted the chances of the highly factionalised PDP returning to power in Ogun State soon, saying the performance of the  All Progressives Congress(APC) and Governor Ibikunle Amosun represents a huge challenge.

    The former political adviser to Governor Gbenga Daniel during his second term, who adopted a “siddon look attitude” since his party lost out in 2011, made this known to reporters at the weekend in Abeokuta, the state capital.

    He said like former President Olusegun Obasanjo whose second coming has divine purpose and eventually saw Nigeria clear its crippling debt burden, Buhari’s second coming would redeem the country from the shackles of indiscipline and corruption.

    Adegbenro said he has left partisan politics to the younger ones, expressing confidence that  the President’s frequent trips abroad, his economic policies among others, would surely yield quality dividends to Nigerians,

    The Septuagenarian urged Nigerians, particularly the impatient ones, to give the President time to put things right and not stampede him into running government of “business as usual” that brought about the nation’s ills and stunted growth.

  • Gender discrimination and marginalisation in politics-2

    This kind of choice should never have been allowed in the first instance if the state were aware and alive to its responsibilities. Education should be a right and not privilege. The resources to take care of the education of all of our children are there if properly managed and husbanded. In the best of times, female education should be at par with that of their male counterpart. In the public universities for example, the ratio is about 40:60 in favour of men. This is however the reverse in most private universities. This means that parity is within sight. If and when we have almost the same number of women and men vying for the same positions, inequality would not disappear because employers of labour would continue to view materially the loss of labour and corporate earning which leave, with or without pay, associated with child bearing entails. But these are issues, which are being tackled in more advanced economies where men too are being given paternity leave just like the maternity leave for the women.

    Discrimination in the job market will never be completely eliminated but it can at least be made illegal but since nobody has ever forced the issue, we still do not know what the opinions of our courts are. It is in the realm of politics that the situation is very serious. Women in Nigeria hardly show any interest in politics. They just want to be left alone to go on with their lives, and take care of their families. Educated women and the majority of their male counterparts actually view politics as a “dirty game”, which is largely played by lawyers and other self employed professionals. And because of the usual violence and thuggery associated with partisan politics, women and self-respecting men shy away from it. There is also the problem of finance. Politics in recent times have become a preserve of the plutocrats. One cannot be a successful politician in Nigeria unless one is well heeled or one has backers who are ready to finance one’s political career as an investment. In this way, one compromises one’s independence and the seed of corruption is sown. Women generally do not seem cut out for this kind of life.

    There is also the question of what an aspiring woman politician is to do with a husband who is apathetic or hostile to political participation. The general impression of a woman politician in the minds of Nigerians is that of somebody who is either out of control or out of her station. Nigerian male politicians prefer holding caucus meetings in the nights to the disadvantage of self-respecting women. We know of course that the families of women politicians all over the world have to forfeit their hold, expectations, demands and usual familial relationship with their wives or daughters. It is not easy in a rather conservative African society as ours for this to be done without somebody paying the price. That price is usually paid by women and their children, because the man is usually not inhibited in entering into new liaison with other “homely” and “wifely” partner. These cultural obstacles are immense and difficult to overcome them. We have a national aspiration to be in the league of important and civilized countries of the world. We must therefore march in tandem with the best. It is not a matter of religion anymore.

    We have had women serving at the highest levels of government everywhere except Africa. Golda Meier in Israel, the Bandaranaikes – mother and daughter in Sri Lanka, Indira Ghandi in India, Begum Hussaina Mujibur Rahman in Bangladesh, Tansu Ciller in Turkey, Magaret Thatcher in Great Britain, Magot Brundlandt in Norway, Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, Megawati Sukarnoputra in Indonesia, the biggest Islamic country in the world. Other female presidents or Prime Ministers include Edith Cresson (France), Yingluck Shinawatra (Thailand), President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (Argentina), Michelle Bachlet (Chile) and Dilma Vana Rouseff (Brazil). Religious and male chauvinists have and are being confounded everywhere. It is not a question of whether it will be salutary for women to participate and to take the commanding heights in governance; it is a question of equity, fairness and justice.

    One cannot identify a pattern, norm or paradigm in countries with women heads of government. But what is discernible is that women tend to be more authoritarian when they are heads of government than men perhaps because they have to assert themselves more than it is necessary for men to do. Mrs Margaret Thatcher used to say she was the ‘only man’ in her cabinet. The level of corruption is not less than when men are in power. From empirical data, there is hardly any difference in the way women or men behave in power. Perhaps the only trait one can isolate is that women in power seem to feel like men and to put other women at a distance. Whatever the shortcoming of women in power, the absence of the feminine touch wherever they are barred from participation is definitely a loss to the polity and society at large. Since the Beijing conference on women empowerment, the United Nations and the collective voice of the world have stood behind women self-realization in every facet of our human existence. It therefore behoves us to ensure that our women-folk have access to political power as their men counterparts. As a resource, man or woman is the ultimate factor in human development.

  • Political, ethnic, religious blood letting unacceptable – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday felicitated with Nigerians as they celebrate the birth and resurrection of Jesus Christ at Easter.

    According to him, the CHANGE agenda of his party, All Progressives Congress (APC) will come faster if Nigerians imbibe the virtues of Jesus Christ and place national interest above selfish, personal and group interests.

    The message was contained in a statement signed by President Buhari.

    He said: “I rejoice with you all, especially our Christian brothers and sisters, as we celebrate Easter. For Christians all over the world, this celebration is in commemoration of the supreme sacrifice which Jesus Christ made for the salvation of mankind.

    “The Gospels also tell us that during his earthly ministry, Jesus Christ repeatedly urged his disciples and followers to ‘love one another as I have loved you’.

    “As we celebrate Easter this year, I sincerely believe that it will serve our dear nation very well if we all imbibe this essential message of Jesus Christ and truly learn to love our countrymen and women as we love ourselves.,” he added.

    Nigeria, he said, will make faster progress towards achievement of the peaceful, united, strong, progressive and prosperous nation if Nigerians eschew all divisive, parochial, ethnic and religious sentiments and rivalries, and begin to live more harmoniously with each other like Jesus Christ.

    He added: “Our unfortunate notoriety in recent years as a country where the blood of men, women and children are wantonly and callously shed in frequent orgies of criminal, political, ethnic and religious violence has become very embarrassing and utterly unacceptable.

    “My administration is determined to achieve greater peace and security across our nation by ending the avoidable conflicts and crises that hinder our national progress.

    “I ask for greater support from all Nigerians in this regard. We must put a stop to politically motivated killings. Our communities must be made safe again for all inhabitants to live together in peace and harmony,” he said.

    He noted that the Nigerian armed forces, police and other security agencies are being progressively reformed, repositioned and empowered to win the war against terrorism and make mass killings, abductions and other criminal atrocities things of the past in Nigeria.

    He also urged all Nigerians to play their parts as patriotic citizens and do all that they can to ensure that Nigeria is made a safer, more peaceful and happier place for its people and others.

    Stressing that faith, belief and the fulfillment of expectations are also key themes of the Easter celebration, he urged Nigerians to continue to have faith in the future greatness of Nigeria and to believe that the CHANGE of his administration will come to fruition.

    “That CHANGE, which we all yearn for, will certainly occur more rapidly if we all place the love of our country above selfish personal and group interests.” He said

    The President promised that his administration will do everything possible to implement the recently passed 2016 Budget.

    “The National Assembly has just passed the 2016 budget. I assure all Nigerians that we will do our utmost best to ensure that the budget, the first since my election as President, is efficiently and successfully implemented towards achieving our objective of faster economic growth and development,” he said.

    He thanked Nigerians for their patience and understanding in the first ten months of his administration.

    “As we go forward, I assure you all that we are working very hard to overcome the challenges we encountered on assumption of office.”

  • Politics under Buhari not do-or-die, says Ojudu

    Politics under Buhari not do-or-die, says Ojudu

    Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters Senator Femi Ojudu has urged Nigerian to cooperate with President Muhammadu Buhari to reform the electoral process and make it more participatory.

    He said the era of do-or-die politics was over because the President is determined to change Nigerians’ perception about politics and entrench a new political order devoid of desperation.

    Ojudu spoke in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, yesterday during a Transformation Leadership Seminar organised for youths.

    The presidential aide accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of injecting brigandage into the nation’s polity since the advent of democracy.

    He assured that the Buhari administration would redirect the psyche of Nigerians and make them see election as a civil matter, rather than a war.

    Ojudu said: “Elections in Rivers, Akwa Ibom and other states in the Southsouth under former President Goodluck Jonathan were like wars. “The presidency was so much involved and that gave some PDP top shots and other interested parties the motivation to terrorise the opposition.

    “But President Buhari is not interested in who wins elections. He is only interested in the due process not being jettisoned.

    “His coming to the presidency is by popular mandate and Mr President is passionate about making our democracy a beacon to other fledging democracies in Africa. No more killing or maiming and whoever does that under whatever guise will face the wrath of the law.”

    A professor of History, Banji Akintoye, in his lecture entitled: “The Ekiti Character as a Development Asset  said Ekiti cannot afford to fail because it boasts of brains that can make things happen in the face of difficulty.

  • Gbenga Ogunniya takes a break from politics

    Gbenga Ogunniya takes a break from politics

    Gbenga Ogunniya cannot be forgotten, even in a hurry. He was indeed a powerful politician of repute to reckon with in the politics of Ondo State. He had as much influence in the government of the then late Dr. Olusegun Agagu, as he had the influential backing of the bloc of youths in the state. His name had been thrown up as one of the likely occupants of the Alagbaka seat of power as governor in the near future. Such was the awesome prospects he had in politics until recently when he suddenly left the scene without a trace.

    Having spent two successful terms in the Upper Chamber of the National Assembly, Senator Ogunniya’s third term hit the rocks when an electoral tribunal sacked him in 2008. His return bid also woefully failed in 2011. The Ondo-born politician, who contested on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), had his ambition cut short by the candidate of the Labour Party, Senator Ayo Akinyelure. Since then, Ogunniya has withdrawn into his cocoon. Reports say that the PDP chieftain may have dumped politics and retired to a private life in his Ondo palatial home. He has been very quiet lately, both in the social and political space.

  • Issues that ‘ll shape politics in 2016

    Issues that ‘ll shape politics in 2016

    Last year was a year of general elections, successful transition and power shift. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN looks at the issues and events that will shape Nigeria’s politics this year. 

    The year 2015 was one of the most politically active and sensitive year in Nigerian history. It was a year that was dominated by political activities. The general elections that took place within the year has been described as the most keenly-contested one in the Fourth Republic. Against the background of the prediction  that the country will disintegrate, many had thought that the disagreements over the election will put an end to the existence of Nigeria as a united entity. But, despite the fact that the opposition defeated the sitting government for the first time in Nigeria’s political history, the country still remains intact.

    Given the number of events lined up in the year, it also promises to be full of political activities. Some of the events are: the Bayelsa governorship supplementary poll scheduled for January 9; the pending cases of governorship election in Rivers, Akwa Ibom and Taraba states; the petition against the declaration of All Progessives Congress candidate as winner of Kogi governorship election; as well as the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Convention scheduled for March.

    All these events will make interesting headlines. In addition, the trial of suspects implicated in the $2.1 billion scandal in the purchase of arms and ammunitions for troops fighting terrorists in the Northeast and the suspended trial of Senate President Bukola Saraki by the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) are also very important issues that will dominate the politics this year.

     

    Bayelsa Supplementary poll

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has scheduled the Bayelsa State governorship supplementary poll for January 9. Voting in the Southern Ijaw was disrupted by violence on election day, prompting INEC to shift the exercise to the next day (December 6). But, the rescheduled poll did not hold as armed thugs prevented the electoral umpire from deploying officials and materials.

    Governor Seriake Dickson of the PDP is leading in six of the seven local government areas of the state declared by INEC. Dickson polled 105,748 votes, while his closest rival, a former governor of the state, Chief Timipre Sylva of the APC won in only one and had 72,594 votes. Votes from Southern Ijaw are expected to be the decider being the largest of the eight local government areas of the state.

    According to INEC’s updated register for the 2015 elections, the council has 120,827 registered voters. While the Bayelsans are bracing up for the January 9 supplementary  poll to determine the clear winner, analysts say  the power struggle between the two foremost parties (the APC and the PDP) would shift to the courts, irrespective of the outcome of the poll.

    Kogi controversy

    Although the governorship election was concluded and a winner has emerged in person of Alhaji Yahaya Bello of the APC, the matter has shifted to the tribunal. The death of the APC candidate for the polls, Prince Abubakar Audu, at a time he was coasting home to victory, almost triggered a constitutional crisis, because the 1999 Constitution did not envisage such a development.  However, the impasse was resolved when INEC asked the APC to nominate another candidate to take the place of Audu for the supplementary poll in the 91 polling units where elections were cancelled.

    The substitution of Audu, rather than serve as a relief to the APC, sparked off another round of crisis as the deputy governorship candidate, Hon. James Faleke backed out of the poll and asked the INEC to declare him winner on the ground that the supplementary election was needless because the number of eligible voters in the affected polling units stood at 25,000 which, according to him, will not make any difference in the overall result.

    INEC declared Bello winner after the supplementary poll. The APC garnered 6,885 votes in the supplementary poll to bring its total votes to 247,752, having polled 240,857 in the November 21 election. The PDP candidate, Governor Idris Wada scored 5,363 to make his total votes 204,877 votes. He had earlier polled 199,514 votes.

    Faleke has rejected INEC’s declaration of Bello as winner.  Already he has filed papers before the Election Petition Tribunal, to challenge Bello’s victory. He had earlier written his party that he would not be available for the swearing-in ceremony in January.

    Expectedly, Wada and his party, the PDP, have also dragged INEC before the tribunal, challenging the declaration of Bello as governor-elect. The party  argued that Audu’s votes died with him. It maintains that the death of Audu on November 22, while collation was in process, made it inevitable for INEC to declare Wada, winner of the poll. The party insists that the votes garnered by Audu were not transferable.

     

    Pending cases in Akwa Ibom, Rivers, Taraba

    The fallout of the 2015 general elections was the nullification of governorship elections results of Rivers, Akwa Ibom by the Election Petition Tribunal which was upheld by the Appeal Court. The Appellate court ordered INEC to conduct fresh elections within 90 days. Similarly, the governorship election petition tribunal had upturned that of Taraba and declared the candidate of the APC, Mrs Aisha Alhassan the duly elected governor of the state. The affected governors have appealed the judgments. All of the governors — Nyesom Wike (Rivers), Udom Emmanuel (Akwa Ibom) and Dairus Ishaku (Taraba) — belong to the PDP.

    The party has already lost Kogi State.The APC already has majority in the Senate and in the House of Representatives. Should the PDP lose the reruns, the APC may have two-thirds majority in the National Assembly. Thus, they can pass any legislation without opposition.

    In the opinion of a lawyer, Tunde Ogunlayi: “If the PDP loses the reruns, we are heading towards a one party state. This will not be the best for our democracy.” He said some of the failures of governance during the reign of the PDP can be traced to weak opposition, especially when the PDP had absolute majority in the National Assembly.

     

    Edo, Ondo governorships

    Following its perceived poor performance in Kogi and Bayelsa, the elections coming up in Edo and Ondo states would be another test cases for the new INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu. The commission is expected to improve on its performance, because the last two elections held under Yakubu’s leadership of Professor Mahmoud Yakubu were declared inconclusive.

    The governorship election in Edo and Ondo will be fiercely contested by the APC and the PDP. Edo is currently governed by the APC. The expectation is that Governor Adams Oshiomhole would want to be succeeded by an APC governor. Giving his performance in the last eight years and his popularity, analysts are of the opinion that the APC will have an edge in the March governorship poll. An indigene of Edo State, Mr Isaac Iredia, said: “We love Oshiomhole and the manifesto of his party, the APC. The governor is very popular, because he has transformed the state through massive infrastructural development, huge investment in education and job creation. I can assure you that the APC will continue to rule the state because of the wonderful performance of the out-going governor. The gale of defection from the PDP to the APC is an indication that the party will emerge victorious in March.”

    Iredia advised the APC leadership to conduct a transparent primary for all the aspirants. “Once the process is free, open and transparent, whoever emerges will be acceptable to other contestants,” he said.

    As for Ondo, the state is currently governed by the PDP. Governor Olusegun Mimiko will leave no stone unturned to ensure that he hands over to another PDP governor.

    But, woman activist, Mrs Tope Fakunle, said no amount of bribe would make people of Ondo State to be on the other side of the political divide with other states in the Southwest. She said: “The cradle of progressive politics in Nigeria is Yorubaland. People like the late Pa Adekunle Ajasin,  and Chief Akinfosile were pioneer members of the defunct Action Group (AG) led by the late Chie Obafemi Awolowo. In the Second Republic, the AG transformed into the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), which enjoyed massive support in the state.

    “Even in the current dispensation, the progressive party formed by the Yoruba leaders, Alliance for Democracy won in Ondo State in 1999. We want to use the forthcoming governorship poll to tell the people of Nigeria that Ondo belongs to the progressives. We want to  belong to the mainstream of Yoruba politics.”

     

    Dasukigate

    The revelation through the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) that $2.1 billion meant for the procurement of arms for the troops fighting Boko Haram insurgents is a plus for Buhari’s effort to fight corruption. The slush fund was presided over by the former National Security Adviser (NSA) Alhaji Sambo Dasuki.  Some suspects has been charged to court by the EFCC, after its investigation.

    Sambo, former governor of Sokoto state Attahiru Baffarawa, former  Minister of State for Finance, Ambassador Basiru Yuguda, former Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Aminu Baba Kusa and ex-Director of Finance in the office of the NSA, Shuaibu Salisu are some of the suspects facing trial.

    All eyes are now on the judiciary in ensuring quick dispensation of justice. It is hoped that the case will not suffer similar fate like those before it. Cases involving big men have always dragged for long as a result incessant adjournments, injunctions to frustrate speedy trials and cases struck out on technical grounds. The prosecutors should assemble their facts and push for accelerated hearing.

     

    PDP National Convention

    The National Convention of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) scheduled for March 19, 2016 will determine the future of the party. A new national chairman of the party and the National Working Committee (NWC) will emerge.

    Since the resignation of the party’s former chairman, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu and the assumption of Prince Uche Secondus as acting chairman all has not been well with the party leadership. The party’s North-east members led by former political adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan, Professor Ahmed Gulak sought an order of the court for Secondus to vacate the office on the grounds that the position was zoned to the North-east. The court has ruled that Secondus should vacate the office immediately because he was occupying the office illegally.

    Given the court ruling, is it legal for the Secondus-led NWC to organise the convention? Will the outcome of the convention be acceptable to all memers of the party? Already, there are signs of divisions within the party. A group is planning to realign with some political groups to form a new party.

     

    Saraki’s CCT trial

    The fate of the Senate President Dr Bukola Saraki over his arraignment before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) will be decided in the New Year. He is standing trial for false declaration of assets. The trial was suspended by the Supreme Court pending the determination of his appeal.

    The five-man panel of justices of the apex court led by Justice John Fabiyi  ordered the Justice Danladi Umar-led tribunal to suspend further hearing in the matter. Justice Fabiyi held that the stay of proceeding was  to enable the apex court hear and determine the substantive appeal brought by Saraki.

  • Events that shaped Nigeria’s politics in 2015

    Events that shaped Nigeria’s politics in 2015

    The most significant event of the out-going year was the election of Muhammadu Buhari, who defeated incumbent Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. The year witnessed a flurry of political activities from the beginning to the end. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI highlights the major political events of the year.

    THE year 2015 has been significant politically for Nigeria. Being an election year, political activities dominated the year. Owing to the merger that produced the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2013, it was clearly foreseen that the 2015 general elections was going to be a keenly-contested one. Indeed, there were no dull moments throughout the period; since the election was scheduled to take place in early in the first quarter of the year, there was a flurry of political activities from the beginning of the year to the end.

    The purported prediction by the United States that the country will breakup in 2015 added to the tension surrounding the election. Tension soaked the entire country in the buildup of activities prior to the contest.

    The month of January provided a foreboding of what would later happen during the general elections when Enugu State-based Rev. Father Ejike Mbaka of the Adoration Ministry fame prophesied to the chagrin of the authorities then that former President Goodluck Jonathan was likely to lose his re-election bid.

    Mbaka had said: “Jonathan has ruled for six years. We need change; NEPA is not working because of corruption; the privatisation of public companies has not yielded any fruit because of corruption; Nigerians are sick and tired of wasting innocent lives without government doing enough to stop the destruction.”

    In the same month, President Muhammadu Buhari’s qualification to contest the election became an issue in the media, following the declaration by the Nigerian Army that it was not in possession of the West African School Certificate (WASC) with which the then presidential candidate of the APC enrolled into the Nigerian Military Training College in 1962.

    The Director of Army Public Relations (DAPR) Brig-Gen. Olajide Laleye stressed at a press briefing in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) that the Army had to make the clarification following barrage of requests from individuals and corporate organisations seeking to know the true position of Buhari’s credentials.

    On February 7, the then Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega, shocked the nation when he announced a postponement of the general elections earlier scheduled for February 14 and 29 by six weeks; with the Presidential and National Assembly elections to take place March 28, while the governorship and State Assemblies election was shifted to April 11. Jega, who announced the postponement at a press conference, said the delay until March 28 was necessary because of a lack of troops available to protect voters.

    The postponement was however greeted with protest from the then opposition party, the APC. The party accused the military of forcing the electoral commission into the delay to help the sitting president’s campaign. APC chairman John Odigie-Oyegun said the “highly provocative” move was a “major setback for Nigerian democracy”.

    The much-awaited March 28 presidential election came and Nigerians trooped out to cast their ballots and the rest is history. When the results were announced, former military ruler and the APC flag bearer in the election became the first opposition candidate to win a presidential election, by beating the then incumbent President Jonathan by more than 2.5 million votes. The APC got 15,424,921 votes and the PDP received 12,853,162 votes.

    In a show of sportsmanship, Jonathan telephoned his rival to concede defeat. “I promised the country free and fair elections. I have kept my word,” Jonathan said in a statement. He did not even wait till the end of the exercise before he congratulated Buhari. A spokesman for APC praised Jonathan, saying: “He will remain a hero for this move. The tension will go down dramatically.”

    Subsequently, Buhari’s supporters took to the streets, to celebrate, by dancing and singing in APC strongholds, including the northern cities of Kano and Kaduna. According to observers, the March 28 presidential election was the most keenly-contested one so far in the Fourth Republic.

    Buhari’s victory produced a bandwagon effect on the April 11 governorship and State Assemblies elections; with the APC winning a landslide over PDP. The APC won 19 of the 28 states where governorship election were held, thereby relegating the once-powerful PDP to a regional party. The PDP failed to get a national spread of votes, doing well only in the Southeast and the oil-rich Southsouth states. Most states in the North went to the APC, along with the commercial hub of Lagos in the Southwest. Elections were not held in seven states.

    While the election was largely peaceful, experts were of the opinion that the participation of Nigerians in the election in terms of turnout was low when placed side-by-side the number of voters who trooped out en masse to cast their ballots in the presidential election. The situation in Lagos State was made peculiar by the Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu’s threat on the Igbo community that they should vote his preferred candidate, Akinwumi Ambode, or get drowned in the lagoon.

    The month of May witnessed the change of guard in the nation’s leadership as former President Jonathan handed over to his successor, President Buhari on May 29. The high-point of the event was Buhari’s declaration that he “belongs to everybody and belongs to nobody.”

    The following month (June), the 8th National Assembly was inaugurated in an event that witnessed lots of intrigues, particularly at the Senate. Members of the ruling APC had, earlier in the day, gone for a purported meeting with President Buhari, of which they returned only to discover that the majority PDP lawmakers that were on seat then had elected one of their own, Chief Ike Ekweremadu as the Deputy Senate President, while helping Senator Bukola Saraki to become the Senate President against the wish of his party leaders.

    In the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara from the Northeast got elected as Speaker in contravention of the resolve of the APC hierarchy to install Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila from the Southwest as Speaker. The party leadership could also not have its way in who becomes Dogara’s deputy as Hon. Yusuf Lasun from the Southwest clinched the position.

    In July, a major breakthrough was recorded in Nigeria’s fight against Boko Haram insurgents as the Nigerian Air Force on the 29th announced that its patrol and surveillance activities have blocked routes through which petroleum products and other materials are supplied to the extremist sect. It disclosed that over 4,000 drums and jerry cans of petroleum products and other smuggled items meant for the terrorists were intercepted.

    The following month, the Centre for Crisis Communication (CCC) announced that some of the Boko Haram terrorists have started making contacts with the Centre to help initiate a dialogue process with the Federal Government on their behalf. Executive Secretary of the CCC, Air Commodore Yusuf Anas (rtd), said: “The efforts by some members of the group to get across to the Centre and the discussions we have had, have been encouraging. We have taken measures also to ascertain the genuineness or otherwise of these persons. We believe they are ready for genuine dialogue.”

    In the early days of the arms procurement scandal for the nation’s military shortly after Directorate of State Security (DSS) operatives raided his homes in Sokoto and Abuja in August, former National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) released images of the weaponry procured by the Jonathan administration in which he served. He listed the acquisitions to include Alpha jets, Armoured Personnel Carriers (APCs), Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles, advanced artillery pieces, assorted arms and ammunitions, highly sophisticated surveillance drones, T72 main battle tank, stressing that the administration carried out modification of F7 supersonic jet fighters.

    Courtesy of a British Broadcasting Service (BBC) Hausa Service interview, President Buhari explained to Nigerians in the month of September why he carried out appointments many claim are “lopsided” and are tilted to favour the President’s northern part of the country. He pointed out in the interview that the Constitution allowed him full control over the choice of his closest officials, explaining: “If I select people whom I know quite well in my political party, whom we came all the way right from the APP, CPC and APC, and have remained together in good or bad situation, the people I have confidence in and I can trust them with any post, will that amount to anything wrong?”

    In fulfillment of his pledge that he would appoint ministers in the month of September, the President on the last day of the month submitted a list of his ministerial nominees to the Senate President, Bukola Saraki after the Upper Chamber adjourned for the day.

    The list had the long-time associates of the President, politicians, as well as technocrats with no known political affiliations. The nomination of the immediate past governor of Rivers State, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, was vehemently opposed by Senators from his state such that the Senate’s public petitions committee was tasked to investigate the petitions written against his nomination and that of others. On the day, the Senate was to confirm the screening of Amaechi and 17 others, members of the PDP in the upper chamber staged a walk-out after they unsuccessfully tried to convince their APC counterparts to heed the recommendations of the public petitions committee by not confirming Amaechi as minister.

    But, Nigerians had to wait till November for the inauguration of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and the assignment of portfolios to the new ministers. The month also witnessed the sad news of the demise of the APC governorship candidate in Kogi State, Prince Abubakar Audu. He died the same day the November 21 governorship election was declared inconclusive by INEC. The Returning Officer, Prof. Emmanuel Kucha declared the election inconclusive because the margin of votes with which Audu defeated his closest rival, Governor Idris Wada, was less than the 49, 953 number of cancelled votes. Though INEC has concluded the Kogi governorship election, the complications arising from the incident are yet to be resolved.

    The month of December witnessed another inconclusive election; this time in Bayelsa State. It was declared inconclusive following the eruption of violence in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area, which is believed to be a swing local government.

    During the year, a number of prominent citizens including royal fathers and politicians lost their lives. Some of the deceased passed away suddenly and unexpectedly, while others went quietly. Other prominent Nigerians who lost their lives in 2015, aside from Prince Audu, are: Emir of Gusau, Alhaji Muhammad Kabir Danbaba (March 5); the Special Adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan on Research, Documentation and Strategy, Oronto Douglas (April 19); the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade (July 28); former Ambassador to the United States of America Adebowale Adefuye (August 27); . the Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse II (September 5); and the wife of the late nationalist, Hannah Idowu Dideolu Awolowo (September 19). The list also includes: former Bayelsa State governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha (October 10); the Emir of Borgu, Senator Haliru Dantoro Kitoro III (October 10); and athe Tor Tiv, Alfred Akawe Torkula (November 23).

  • 2015 in RETROSPECT: ARTISTES  IN POLITICS

    2015 in RETROSPECT: ARTISTES IN POLITICS

    A lot has been said about the relationship between the arts and politics but when a number of entertainers decide to throw their resources into seeking political offices, the motive is called to question. As veteran actress, Clarion Chukwurah posited, those artistes who sought political offices did so just for financial gains.

    Making the entertainment scene more interesting this year were a number of entertainers who sought to be elected into various positions. Though they turned out in their numbers, only a few made it through the primaries held in December last year. Entertainment guru, Dayo Adeneye aka D1, for instance, lost the APC House of Assembly ticket for Odogbolu area of Ogun State. Kenny Saint Best also lost her bid. Others who lost the primaries in their states were Kate Henshaw and Abolore Akande aka 9ice.

    Of the lot, only two prominent entertainers prevailed through the primaries; Nollywood actress, Funke Adesiyan and actor and filmmaker, Desmond Elliot.

    Adesiyan, won the All Progressive Congress, APC, ticket to vie for a seat in the Oyo State House of Assembly. She however lost the election which was said to be keenly contested.

    Nollywood actor and filmmaker, Desmond Elliot on the other hand emerged successful in his first shot in politics. He contested for and duly won the election as a lawmaker on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC).

     

     

    M-Net shelves BBA 2015

    ORGANISERS announced that the popular M-Net reality TV show, Big Brother Africa (BBA), has been put on hold, even though the regional Big Brother shows, including Big Brother Angola and Big Brother Mzansi still held.

    Though no concrete reason was given for the development, it is rumoured that M-Net had to cancel the highly critiqued TV show for want of sponsors.

    According to its management, though the move to regionalise the show allows producers to re-evaluate its direction, Big Brother continues to captivate audiences in each market in which it is produced.

    “M-Net wish to thank Big Brother Africa fans for their continuous support and assure them that in the future further announcements will be made,” a statement from the body reads.

    Last year, the annual show was almost marred when what was described as a devastating fire engulfed the Big Brother house.

    The 2014 competition, dubbed Hotshots, saw Tanzania’s Idris emerging winner after 63 gruelling days in the house. Coming closely behind him was Nigeria’s Tayo who came a few points short of clinching the prize.

    Glo X-Factor replaced with Dance With Peter

    THE maiden edition of X Factor, one of Nigeria’s singing reality TV show, which saw sensational rapper Obianuju Catherine Udeh, popularly known as DJ Switch, crowned Africa’s first X Factor winner in 2013, this year witnessed a change.

    The reality show was replaced with one of the telecom’s ambassador pet project tagged ‘Dance With Peter’; a dancing competition organised in collaboration with Africa’s dance star, Peter Okoye of the P-Square fame of the duo singers P-Square.

    While the winner of the show wins a brand new Toyota RAV 4 sports utility vehicle, N3million cash prize and the rare opportunity of featuring in P-Square’s next music video. The first and second runners-up will receive a Honda Civic car with N2million and a Kia Rio car with N1million respectively.

    GUS 2015: Brand gives back to consumers

    UNLIKE the previous years; reality TV show, Gulder Ultimate Search which has had several editions since 2004, the show took a different direction this year, with the company putting up for grab 11 brand new Hyundai Elantra cars; as a way of giving back to their consumers.

    The Gulder promo kick-started the 2015 edition of the Gulder National Consumer Promotion, with the display of one of world’s biggest poster in Enugu;  which beats the previous largest poster in the world which measured 4,793.65 square meters and was achieved by Global United Media Company Pvt Ltd (India) in Kochi, India, on 27 June 2015.

    The promo had a journalist, Mr. Chuka Nnabuife who works with National Light newspaper, Anambra State, emerge the winner of one of the Hyundai Elantra car.

    The company also this year unveiled three new ambassadors: Yemi Blaq, Ebuka Obi-Uchendu and Ill Rhymz.

    K-Peace crowned Nigerian Idol Season 5 winner

    THE fifth edition of the Nigeria Music contest sponsored by Etisalat Nigeria ended with Kunle Ogunrombi, known as K-Peace, emerging winner.

    K-Peace smiled home with a brand new SUV car, cash prize of N7.5 million and a recording deal with Universal Music Company.

    K-Peace follows the likes 26-year-old Oneyka “Yeka Onka” Gilbert Elizabeth Onwuka from Ohafia who was announced the first Nigerian Idol in 2011.

    Other Nigerian Idol winners are Mercy Chinwo, Moses Obi Adigwe, and Evelle.

     

     

    THIS year, Nigerian artistes made their mark on the award platform. Some of the top platforms include the All Africa Music Awards (AFRIMA), Music of Black Origin (MOBO) and the MTV Africa Music Awards (MAMAs) with other awards being Too Exclusive Awards, Top Naija Awards.

    And Nigerian artistes got their fair share. At the 2015 AFRIMA

    At the 2015 MAMAs, Yemi Alade (Africa’s Best Female Act), P-Square (Best Group), Patoranking (Best New Act) and D’Banj (MAMA Evolution Award) represented Nigeria.

  • Government, religion and politics

    In  an interview on Channels TV  this week a Nigerian Islamic cleric brilliantly distinguished between secularism  and secularity and sided with the latter  to establish his   acceptability  in the interest  of a multi – religious society. On  the same plain the beleaguered  but  leading US  Republican Presidential candidate Donald  Trump told a  campaign  audience that his Muslim ban to the US  call  was  not a religious  matter but a security issue. Meanwhile in Nigeria Shiite Muslims almost killed the army chief in Zaria on his way to an official engagement just as Iran and  Iraq  issued a peremptory  warning  to  Nigeria on the welfare of the Nigerian leader of the Shiite Islamic sect and  Iran  summoned  our envoy in Teheran,  the capital of Iran, for an explanation   on the  Zaria  incident.

    Let  me state clearly that there is nothing sacred or sacrosant  about  today’s topic and the incidents I have highlighted. I intend  therefore   to be quite frank about them as they touch on the very important issues of liberty and security which really  are  the twin bedrock  of any democracy,  including our own Nigeria .Liberty is about human rights and dignity but it is not limitless and any student of political science is taught at the beginning in the University  that – your rights end where my nose begins. Similarly democracy  thrives in a peaceful and stable environment of security of life and property and that was what compelled Mao to state historically and categorically that a revolution is not a tea party and that real  power flows  from the barrel of a gun. Democracy  therefore  is about choice of leadership  and guidance from the ritual  of elections with  the guarantee  that inherent   in that choice is the capability  and ability  to  maintain law  and order  as  well  as  the safety  of the life and property  of the electorate. It  is difficult not to remember Rousseau’s  social  contract  and its  Hobbes’ law of  might  is  right where  there is a breakdown of law and order as  in an anarchy and the social contract  breaks down.  It  follows  therefore that a government must enforce its rule to keep law and order at all times or else expect the distrust of its citizenry leading to the disavowal of  the social contract  and the descent into anarchy and the  emergence of Hobbes law  in  society. Today’s  topic and  its treatment intend  an insight into   how   the global society is sinking into anarchy and   why  it seems,  nobody is bothered about that.

    Let us go  back to the Nigerian Muslim Cleric on Channels TV whose  name I could not recall but  who stole  my heart with his candor and wisdom.  He  said he did not accept secularism because it denied religion its place whereas secularity acknowledged religion and  its  practice . I  think   the best  example   of that is Turkey  whose  founder  Kemal  Ataturk  insisted at  the outset   that  Turkey   must  be secular  even though it  remained   a Muslim  state  and  the army  guaranteed  its secularity   from  the 1920s,  until   the present  Erdogan regime  where an Islamic Party  has won four  consecutive elections  and   booted aside the military guarantee  of   Turkey’s  secularity in that nation’s  formidable  democratic  march,   with the  goal of  EU   membership   as  its major driving force.

    When asked about the knotty question of the difference between Shia Islam  and  the majority  Sunni  Islam,  he attempted an answer then asked to be allowed  to keep the difference as a personal matter.  When  told that Islam is a religion  of peace, he  ignored that homily but   then went on to say that in spite of any or all differences,  human beings  should endeavor  to keep  the peace at all  times  and in all places. Which  really  is the crux  of the matter today  and  that leads us to the Donald  Trump categorization of his Muslim  ban call as a security  matter rather than a religious issue.

    Sadly enough the recent  killing of 14  innocent   people in San  Bernardino California was the largest killing of US citizens on American home  soil after 9/11.  It  came after US President Barak  Obama  assured US citizens  of their safety in a special  address before they went on their Thanksgiving holidays.  Obviously  the terrorists in California were  trying to dent the assurance   of security the US president was giving to US citizens on their home soil and they tragically  succeeded and that is Donald Trump’s trump  card in saying that the issue is one of security rather than religion. More  so  as   the terrorist plot  now  unveiled  included a master mind now charged for a failed earlier plot which  was not totally Muslim in conception and execution. It was all American involving the viewing of Muslim sermons, videos and  lessons on bomb  making in private homes and  observers  have noticed that it threw a huge question mark on American valuation  of their liberty  and  security at  the same time.  So  what Donald  Trump  said was not utter  nonsense but a recall to a rethink about how Americans practice  their various religions without jeopardizing  the security and liberty  of fellow Americans which  really was  also  what the Shiite  Muslim attack on our army chief  in  Zaria  was  all about.

    Let  me start on the  Zaria  Shiite  ambush  of the Army  Chief envoy by recalling what  I wrote  some time that the army must protect its leadership after Boko  Haram attacked the same army chief’s village, killed people, sorted women from damsels  and  made away with the maidens. Boko  Haram was attempting what the terrorists did with the Obama assurance of security to  Americans at  Thanksgiving    time  by staging a successful terrorist act about the time of the security guarantee. Boko  Haram has attempted twice to decapitate our army by killing its head. The army and  the Nigerian nation  must never allow that to happen in the interest  of the sovereignty of  Nigeria and the social  contract between the Nigerian electorate and its duly elected and new government.  That  is what the Shiite Muslims in Nigeria must  be made to understand if they are not to be seen as trying to finish the gory work  begun by the Boko  Haram in attempting twice  now to behead  our army by killing its boss and scoring a major psychological war against our nation and its people.

    Nigerian Shiite  Muslims must  be told clearly that Nigeria is not  a Muslim state  but a secular one. It is a democracy  and  not a Theocracy  like Iran nor a  failed state like Iraq  whose  democracy is  American made  and  guaranteed, and was created   just after 9/11 in 2001. These two nations have nothing to teach Nigeria about democracy, rule  of law,  and law and order- so their  warnings to Nigeria on the Zaria ambush of our army chief convoy  was quite impertinent and meant to bring our democracy down to their own abysmal levels and that we should never allow.

    Undoubtedly  the Nigerian Shiite  Muslims are a minority amongst Nigerian Muslims so one wonders why they should think it is their lot to bring the Nigerian nation to its knees by killing its army chief when the nation is preoccupied with stopping the insurgency of Boko Haram. I am even astonished at the army’s response in talking of the rules of engagements   when it was not fighting a war or facing Boko  Haram as usual but a mob out to kill its leader in broad  daylight. The army  must  not be cowed into losing its power of deterrence against the enemies  of the Nigerian  state both within and without.  It  must  not be deterred from using superior  violence against those who threaten its  capability to defend the Nigerian  state by orchestrating demonstrations in London simultaneously as Shiite  Muslims waylay our army chief  and distribute pictures  on religious  rights at the same time. It  is the duty of the Nigerian  army to defend the Nigerian people against all enemies of the state within and without. It  is as simple as that. Once again long live the Federal  Republic  of  Nigeria.