Tag: posers

  • Posers as Fed Govt flags off speed train

    Are there pending issues with the Lagos-Ibadan speed train? Many Nigerians would readily say yes. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE writes.

    When the Federal Government had a test run of the speed train from Iju, Lagos to Abeokuta the penultimate week, it was with a promise to offer free commuter service to Nigerians for three months.

    Fielding questions from reporters after the  test run, Transportation Minister Rotimi Amaechi, who performed the function, accompanied by Ogun State Governor  Senator Ibikunle Amosun and the Alake of Egbaland, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, promised Nigerians a free ride for three months.

    But checks as at last Saturday showed that nobody has benefited from the free ride on the corridor, and no Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) official is willing to offer explanations on why nothing has happened on the much publicised line since February 6, when the test run held.

    Where are the trains?

    A tourist, ‘Lanwa Adeyemo, who wanted to spend some time at the Olumo Rock in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, could not hide his disappointment last week, after three fruitless shuttles to Iju. He had to proceed to Abeokuta by road with a colleague.

    “Where is the free train? When will the shuttle leave Iju? And how can we board it?” he asked.

    Adeyemo is not alone. Many Nigerians who had looked forward to boarding and enjoying a free ride in the air-conditioned  first class coaches, which are expected to run the Lagos-Abeokuta corridor, were disappointed.

    To them, it is frustrating that the train was yet to begin the promised shuttle. “When they knew they were not ready for service why then did they promise?”one of them reasoned.

    On the contrary, the NRC Lagos District Manager, Mr Jerry Oche,  who is in-charge of the new operation , said the Lagos-Abeokuta line is working.

    “The Lagos-Abeokuta line is working, but just couldn’t run on  Friday. It would resume on Tuesday,” Oche assured.

    Although the District manager could not provide much information on  how many passengers had boarded the train since the test run, he was optimistic that more people would patronise  it as they become aware of its operations.

    According to Oche, the line, when fully operational, would be oversubscribed, given Lagos proximity to Ogun State.

    Although the test run was a little above an hour between Lagos and Abeokuta, when the speed locomotive finally arrives the 54-kilometre ride would  be made within 45 minutes .

    Oba Gbadebo expressed joy that with the stoppages at all the stations, travelers would be able to make Abeokuta, from Lagos or return within 45 minutes when the service begins fully.

    To the monarch, whose great grand- father rode on the narrow gauge when it was test run in 1906, witnessing the take-off of the speed train is epoch-making.

    The prognosis had pointed at the possibility that many travelers would opt for the train because it is cheaper and safer.

    Amaechi  said he has directed that two more coaches be diverted from Itakpe-Warri line, which they presently shuttle, to Lagos-Abeokuta and ultimately Ibadan, when it is finally delivered.

    “We anticipated that more people would like to patronise the trains on the Lagos-Abeokuta-Ibadan line and I have directed that two coaches be brought from Itakpe-Warri line to bring the one on this line to four. These four lines would serve this  line until more coaches arrive,” Amaechi said.

    The test run

    Many had wondered why the government would promise three-month free ride window to Nigerians on the Lagos-Abeokuta corridor.

    Proffering an answer in one of the monthly routine meetings, Amaechi said the free ride is to ensure that Nigerians enjoy the speed train while the tracks are being put to test.

    To him, it is better than freely burning the fuel on shuttling the locomotives on the tracks during the test run.

    The contractor, China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC), had given a commitment to deliver the rest of the 156 km project with a running bill of $1.6 billion within 90 days.

    Within the period, the CCECC would start working on delivering on the 10 modern railway station meant for the corridor.

    While four of these stations – Apapa, Lagos, Agege and Agbado, are in Lagos State, to be sited in the western districts are Kajola, Papalanto (Itori), Abeokuta and Olodo stations, in Ogun State, while the Ibadan end of the project would have Ibadan and Omi-Adio stations.

    All the stations are to have facilities such as conveniences, shopping malls, police posts, and a park and ride option and round the clock service when fully on stream.

    Although work has begun at the new Lagos station (known as Ebute Metta Junction EBJ), located at Alagomeji, in Yaba, all other stations are yet to take off.

    Between Iju and Abeokuta, where the tracks presently terminates, are eight stations, and stakeholders are already expressing doubts that some of them may not take off, not to talk of materialising in the next 90 days.

    Speaking at the test run event, Amaechi  indicated that the stations may actually take longer, adding that the government expects them to come on stream within a year.

    “We are happy the third standard gauge in Nigeria, which is Lagos-Ibadan line, has taken off. Itakpe-Warri is the first while Abuja-Kaduna is the second.

    “The line also brought the first standard gauge tunnel in Nigeria to Ogun State. This train will run free of charge and I will compel them to do about three trips a day so that more persons can go to work in the morning and come back in the evening.

    “We are also trying to build our stations and in a year’s time, we would have finished the stations and everything will be running normally and then you will be paying for your tickets.”

    Amaechi’s position has left many to wonder what happens after the three months free ride, especially since the stations, which are to provide passengers with the requisite comfort when they want to obtain their tickets and wait for the train, are yet to be in place.

    “Worst case, Nigerians may have to make do with temporary arrangements to purchase tickets and platforms to board and disembark from the trains at each of the stations,” said the railway corporation’s Managing Director Mr Fidet Okhiria.

    But while Nigerians await clearer directive from the corporation on the modalities for operations, Governor Amosun has lauded the project.

    The governor said the Federal Government must be commended for bringing life-changing infrastructure closer to the people.

    “This is a life-changing event for us and I congratulate all Nigerians because this infrastructure will take Nigeria to the comity of emerging markets and nations.

    “There is no way there can be any socio-economic development without modern transportation infrastructure. What we are doing today will revolutionalise Nigeria in a very special way. The travel time between Abeokuta and Lagos has drastically reduced and that will affect so many things and the  way of life of our people. It will affect prices of agricultural commodities as our people in Abeokuta and environs can take advantage of the ready market in Lagos, and those trading in other commodities can also readily go to Lagos to trade and return on time. It would also affect the housing stock and burst the high rent rate in urban metropolis of Lagos as many people can live in Abeokuta and its environs and commute to their work place in Lagos, without stress,” he said.

    The governor, who stressed the import of the event, which he described as historic for the state, said: “This is not a political forum, we are not window dressing, we are simply working our talk and not campaigning.”

    The governor also said the commencement of the ride will reduce the pressure on most roads, boost productivity and create more employment.

    He said: “With this ride, pressure on our roads will reduce and goods that used to take days through the roads to get to their final destination will get there in good time and in good condition. Burden will be off our roads.

    “This will also create employment and transfer of technology by the Chinese to our people, who are about 90 per cent of workers on site since the construction of the project began.”

    Chairman Senate Committee on Land Transport, Senator Gbenga Ashafa hinted that the project has the potential to open jobs to qualified Nigerians, adding that over 11,000 workers had already been employed by the NRC and about 2,000 others are presently undergoing study in China ahead of full operation of the rail line.

    To Ashafa, the railway is the way to go if the nation is to tackle traffic gridlocks that are taking over all the nation’s urban centres.

    Without a functional intermodal system, the nation, according to him, will continue to grapple in the dark for solution to the transportation crisis that has continued to debase the country.

  • Posers for 2019 electioneering

    Flowery use of language and grand sloganeering are staples of electioneering almost everywhere. As such, oratory and poetic skills have always been assets that are helpful for a typical politician on the hustings – even the average or outrightly incompetent one. With words and slogans, he could build fanciful bubble castles that would become a mirage to actualise when he may really need to.

    Again, let’s be clear that this tendency is nearly universal and by no means peculiar to our country. Most politicians swashbuckle with lofty promises to the electorate during electioneering, but eventually have to deal with ugly brass tacks if and when they get the power they seek. The ultimate test of every elected politician is how well he had prepared for the crude reality that governance inevitably involves. One-time New York Governor Mario Cuomo fancifully articulated this fact in his famous saying that you campaign in poetry, but govern in prose.

    Nigeria is in the thick of electioneering for the 2019 general election and politicians are frantically burrowing for advantage, never mind that the official commencement of campaigning is yet not due on the timetable issued by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The electoral body headed up a warning recently that candidates who emerged from different party primaries should abide by official timelines prescribed for hitting the soapbox. But that has not considerably hamstrung political parties and their candidates from seeking leverage with the voting public by making gilded promises that are for most parts not backed up with concrete projections on how those promises will be fulfilled. A worse tack, obviously, is that some political gladiators are digging in the mud to take down the personality – as opposed to capacity – of their most dreaded co-contenders. That is when, as they say, the gloves are peeled off and the iron knuckles bared.

    Many actors running for the presidential office in the forthcoming poll have thrown up their battle cries. We have heard, for instance, the campaign mantra ‘Project Rescue Nigeria’ touted by iconic activist and respected administrator, Oby Ezekwesili, who is presidential candidate of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN). There are other emergent contenders like former Cross River State Governor, Donald Duke of the Social Democratic Party (SDP), who flaunts his youthful panache as an advantage; and former Central Bank Deputy Governor Kingsley Moghalu of the Young Progressive Party (YPP), who touts his technocratic and scholarly credentials besides his debonair youthfulness.

    The ‘big two’ political parties are no exemption though they are fielding gerontocrats as torchbearers. The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) had got into power in 2015 with the mantra of ‘Change,’ for which responsibility was later deflected to citizens with the ‘Change begins with me’ advocacy; and now it is canvassing consolidation of gains believed to have been made since President Muhammadu Buhari took office, with ‘Continuity’ as its rallying call. On the other hand, major opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is seeking to ‘Change the change’ with Atiku Abubakar that it has thrown up as its candidate. The former Vice President is a vociferous advocate of ‘restructuring’ of the Nigerian nationhood. But following his emergence for the PDP, adversarial focus has been on his alleged sleazy past, such that the 2019 contest is being touted as an integrity battle between him and Buhari who is perceived by admirers as ‘Mr. Clean.’

    We have had a surfeit of electioneering slogans and mantras in this country, but what is the content in actuals as would translate to the fanciful promises being generously made? This should be a non-negotiable question we must hold the political class to ahead of the impending poll, and on which basis voters should make conscious and informed choices if we would break the cycle of leadership failure experienced over the years. In other words, the public should insist that concrete issues and not sloganeering or name-calling drive electioneering by candidates and their parties towards the forthcoming poll.

    It should be basic, for instance, that revenue projections underlie promised deliverables, so it won’t be like building phantom castles where you had no idea what the treasury could ever offer. With more than 80percent of our national revenue coming in from oil, and recent statistics showing that Nigeria presently produces 2.2million barrels daily at prevailing spot market price of $86 per barrel for the Brent crude that the country has, and with proven oil reserves of 37.1billion barrels as at 2017, a genuine office seeker should be able to lay out revenue scenarios ranging from the best possible profile to the worst in projecting what could be available for his / her tenure even if they find the treasury empty upon taking office.

    With such mind games, we should expect to know concretely how prevailing national challenges would be tackled. For instance, the World Bank at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) annual meetings in Bali, Indonesia, penultimate week ranked Nigeria 152nd out of 157 countries on its Human Development Index. World Bank President Jim Young Kim explained that Nigeria, like many other African countries, fell in the red zone because its health and education budgets were too low. What would be the strategy to take the country into the amber zone, even in the medium to long term of a four-year tenure?

    Whereas struggling countries like Mexico, Argentina and Pakistan have over the years recorded appreciable decline in the number of their citizens living in extreme poverty, according to World Bank statistics – Mexico: 11.1million (1998), 3.2million (2016); Argentina: 0.3million (1991), 0.2million (2016) and Pakistan 63.4million (1990), 7.7million (2015) – Nigeria recently displaced India to emerge the poverty capital of the world, with some 87million of her citizens said to be living below $1.90 daily. The profile gets more scary with World Bank data, which reckoned that 92.1percent of the country’s population live below $5.5 daily. What would be done with political power, within projected means, to pull a sizeable portion of this human mass by the boot straps out of poverty? Mexico and Pakistan, among others, doing it shows it can be done.

    Also at the Bali meetings, the IMF cut growth projections made for Nigeria to 1.9percent, from 2.1percent, saying the country’s economy was doing poorly. Inflation has averaged at 11percent this year, and Nigeria is among countries with the highest youth unemployment rate estimated at 33.1percent – behind South Africa (53.7percent), Greece (39.1percent) and Spain (33.4percent), but ahead of Italy (30.8percent), Morocco (28.8percent) and Iran (28.4percent) among many others. In a population of 180-200million, it has also been reckoned by domestic assessors that over 108million Nigerians are ‘technically homeless,’ with housing deficit standing at some 18million units whereas about 100,000 houses are presently being built yearly. Exactly how will political power be used to mitigate, if not vanquish these challenges within four years?

    We can’t even begin here to talk about electricity supply and poor road infrastructure, which are also substantive challenges needing to be effectively tackled with the mandate of leadership. But it should be clear that electioneering towards 2019 by everyone affected – the incumbent and challengers alike – should involve concrete and measurable action plans on how power will be used for the real benefit of the populace.

     

    Not Professor Jega’s Twitter handle!

    A twitter handle, @Prof_AJega, is currently posturing on the cyber space as that of former INEC Chairman Professor Attahiru Jega. The account is not his, and neither are the views / opinions expressed through the handle his.
    It is a parody account being operated by an impostor, and sadly can’t be shut down by Twitter rules, which permits parody accounts. The former INEC boss fully disclaims the account and all its contents.

    •Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.

  • Posers for National Assembly, by Shittu

    Lagos lawyer and university teacher Wahab Shittu has raised some posers for the National Assembly, warning it against playing to the gallery.

    To him, the issues raised in resolutions do not amount to impeachable offences as President Muhammadu Buhari alone cannot be blamed.

    Shittu said: “Constitutional provisions, particularly impeachment, are reserved for serious and proven acts of misconduct and not meant to be deployed to settle private scores or get even with the executive or the President.

    “What indicators are on ground to prove the President is not acting in the best interest of Nigerians, given the prevailing circumstances?

    “The other question is whether the National Assembly is not complicit in the present unsavoury economic realities? Therefore, if the National Assembly cannot exonerate itself from blame, where is the moral authority to proceed against the President?

    “My view is that the ruling, including the National Assembly, have a collective response to rescue the economy and guarantee improved living standards to our people and this require constructive engagement. This will not include grandstanding or playing to the gallery by our lawmakers.”

    Shittu said while there are concerns about growing insecurity which has resulted in needless killings, the Buhari administration’s efforts in addressing the challenges ought to be appreciated.

    On allegations of selective prosecution, the frontline prosecutor said: “We can also not say in all conscience that appreciable progress is not being recorded in the anti-corruption crusade of the administration.

    “There is, however, some merit in the advisory that the war should not be selective. The question to ask however is whether anyone is being prosecuted who does not have questions to answer?”

    On the issue of intimidation, the senior lawyer said: “The question of reign of fear and intimidation is subject to proof and l would expect further particulars.”

    On the vote of no confidence passed on the Inspector-General of Police Ibrahim Idris, Shittu said: “The allegations against the IGP remain suspect against the background of ongoing investigation against some members of the National Assembly by the police.

    “Are we right to sanction the lGP for performing statutory functions? This vote of no confidence on the lGP does not make sense to me and that is the popular view.”

  • “We’ll keep them off the streets so that we can sleep at Banana Island!” –  plaudits and posers for Governor Ambode

    “We’ll keep them off the streets so that we can sleep at Banana Island!” – plaudits and posers for Governor Ambode

    First, let’s deal with the praise, the plaudits, before ending this piece with the questions, the posers. Before I watched and heard him on television conduct an extraordinary “town meeting” with the business community in Lagos this last Monday, I hadn’t known much about Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State. As a matter of fact, the very little that I knew about him was not exactly flattering, to say the least: the razor-thin margin of only 150,000 votes – out of over 2 million votes cast – in his electoral victory over his PDP opponent in the gubernatorial race of 2015; and in 2016, the ugly spats between Ambode’s wife, the First Lady of Lagos State, and a state-employed chaplain of a church that had led to the rather highhanded sacking of that man of the cloth. Moreover, when the Governor had come to Harvard last year to give a talk, I had been absent from my “duty post” at the time and thus missed the talk. All of which serves as the background to the pleasant surprise of the following things that I now report about Ambode’s televised meeting with the leaders of the business community this past week.

    It is a well-known secret that most of the governors and high officeholders in Nigeria do not write the speeches they deliver in public. In addition, in general, once a speech is delivered, most of our rulers and politicians do not, indeed cannot, effectively field questions arising from speeches they deliver. This is one aspect of the foul underbelly of democratic governance in our country, this fact that our rulers are in general incapable of conducting meaningful public dialogue with the citizenry, especially in the English language. As this is a huge subject, we cannot deal with it in this piece. Coming back to Ambode, I do not know if his speech on Monday was written by speechwriters; what I do know is that from his passionate and eloquent delivery, one can conjecture that he must have had a hand in writing the speech – if in fact he did not himself write it in its entirety. The speech was masterful in its combination of technocratic prowess with social vision. Within five minutes into the speech, I recognized that I was watching and hearing something extraordinary and I immediately started taking mental notes. This essay is written entirely from those notes.

    The formal delivery of the speech was followed by “Question Time”. Again, Ambode acquitted himself brilliantly on this point. The proof of this came from the extraordinarily impressive manner in which the governor dealt with all the questions posed to him, questions that went to the heart of the problems, challenges and crises confronting Lagos as one of the buoyant but festering megacities of the world. Here, I place emphasis on the word all – that is to say, all the questions without exception.

    As the questions were posed, Ambode took notes, copiously. There were two sets of questions. The first set of questions were over a dozen in number; the second set had slightly fewer questions. In any case, as questioner after questioner after questioner had his or her say, Ambode did not stop taking notes. After the number reached 12 in the first set of questions and the questions did not stop but continued, the teacher in me became attentive and I asked of no one in particular, “why doesn’t the official directing the programme limit the questions to one or two at a time and how is the governor going to be able to respond meaningfully to all these questions”? Needlessly and wordlessly, I answered my own question: “of course, he is not going to answer all the questions – he is a politician”! But Ambode did answer every question – and painstakingly so!

    Please bear in mind, dear reader, that although all the questioners were from the business community as a very influential social group, the assembled audience of the governor’s performance at the “town meeting” came from an impressive diversity of interests and loyalties. Permit me to identify the ones that I remember. Representatives of the big transnational corporations were there, but they were completely silent; they could be recognized or identified only by their white skins and by their silent but hegemonic embodiment of the vast economic and ideological muscle that runs planet earth in the name and interests of benign capitalism. The Nigerian-owned big companies were there also in the persons of their MD’s or CEO’s; they addressed the Governor and were in turn addressed by Ambode with rather exaggerated politeness or even deference. Media and communications moguls were also present; and they posed questions pertaining to their own interests. The Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce was also present, represented by my old friend and hallmate at Kuti Hall UI, Bintan Famutimu, who put in a spirited plug for closer ties and links between the Lagos State government and major cabinet members and representatives of the American government.

    And then, there were the women who spoke on behalf of SME’s, the small-scale enterprises. Please note, dear reader, that I say women. A there were only two of them, this made their under-representation at the forum rather coincident with the gender inequality that is so prevalent, so constitutive of economic and social power in our country and our continent. Significantly, both women spoke about industrial activities linked with the recycling of waste products and the training and retraining of our unemployed and putatively “unemployable” youths. In other words, of all the business people who posed questions to the governor, these women were the most upfront, indeed the most insistent on the social good that their industrial and business activities and products entail. For this reason, I admit that I watched the governor’s response to them with much greater attention than I did with his answers to the others. I can report that the governor did not condescend to them and that his response to these two women, these two representatives of SME’s, was of the same passion and eloquence with which he engaged all his interlocutors at the forum.

    An astonishing feat then, that Ambode responded fully and robustly to all these interlocutors equally. Having been a teacher and a speaker at public forums for large segments of my adult life, I know what this implies: only she or he who is filled with passion, focus and dedication can respond to more than a dozen interlocutors with diverse interests, constituencies and loyalties as if every issue matters and everybody counts. But every experienced teacher, every gifted public speaker knows that although all pupils and all issues and their representatives matter and count, they do so differentially. I saw this knowledge, this intuition play out astutely in Ambode’s responses to a good number of his interlocutors.

    For instance, to the CEO of a company who posed a question about her and her company’s “tax fatigue”, Ambode was respectful while slyly justifying the crucial importance of taxes and even more taxes for a state like Lagos. To big entrepreneurs who wondered about the logic behind the bloated number and scope of workers on the public payroll in the state, Ambode was polite, even deferential in his endorsement of the logic of rationalization on which big companies are run; however, he insisted that governments cannot, indeed should not, be run exclusively or even primarily on the same logic; human and social interests, the governor argued, should override logics of rationalization and profit maximization that drive the activities of big corporations.

    I have stressed the fact that the interests, perspectives and constituencies represented by the governor’s interlocutors were quite diverse. I must now observe that it seemed to me as I took in the whole performance that Ambode felt that as diverse as these interests and forces were they not conflicting and whatever tensions and conflicts might exist between and among them could be reconciled to the advancement of the progress and development of Lagos state. The old Marxist term for this idea is “non-antagonistic contradictions” as opposed to and in contrast with antagonistic contradictions. Ambode did not use these terms, but I was deeply moved by two particular instances when he expressed a passionate advocacy for contradictions especially characteristic of the city of Lagos in the apparent belief that they are non-antagonistic contradictions. Permit me to briefly relate these two cases.

    People think that one of the worst present and future nightmares of life in Lagos pertains to the number of cars plying the roads, relative to how many cars the roads, the streets, can take. Not so, argued Ambode passionately; the worst problem of street life, the governor argued, is the number of people on the streets with absolutely no provision for them to be on the streets in safety and comfort. No pavements, no sidewalks, no margins at the edges of the asphalt for people to walk on in safety, relaxation and even leisure. You hear talk about cars and congestion all the time, Ambode declared, but who speaks for people without cars, people that happen to be the overwhelming majority of Lagosians? As a columnist who has in the past both humorously and seriously argued for a “Pedestrians’ Bill of Rights” in our cities, I was particularly moved by Ambode’s eloquent and impassioned restatement of this issue.

    Even more moved was I by the governor’s playfully ironic joke that serves as the title of this piece: “We’ll keep them off the streets so that we can sleep at Banana Island!” The “we” here apparently refers to Ambode and his audience, his interlocutors at the “town meeting”, the crème de la crème of Lagosian society, the economic, social and political elites of the city and the state of Lagos. What of the “them” that are to be kept off the streets? These are the talakawa, the denizens of the “Other Lagos” none of whom was present, indeed could be present at that encounter between the Governor and the business elites. Of the 25 million that constitutes the population of the city and the state, “they” happen to be the vast human and demographic majority whose internal majority is a whopping 65% that are under the age of 35. If we can find gainful employment for “them”, if we can keep “them” busy and engaged in productive activities that keep “them” off the streets, Ambode was in effect saying, then we, the elites, can sleep at night without being haunted by the specter of their invasion of our homes, our rest, our peace, our security, our conscience. I do not think I have heard or read of a more powerful expression of the social contract between the rich and the poor, the powerful and the powerless from any of our rulers and politicians in a long, long time, in fact since the days of Obafemi Awolowo and the People’s Redemption Party.

    In conclusion, I now go, briefly and succinctly, to my questions for Governor Ambode and indeed for all of us. I have only two posers. The first one pertains to the forces and interests involved in the realization of the social contract. Basically, I ask: who is present and who is absent, who is included and who excluded in the adjudication of struggles over the social contract? At the “town meeting” of the Governor with the business elites, the poor, the talakawa, together with their representatives, were absent. Would it have made a difference if they had been present and had also been vocal about their interests? Please note that as I stated at the start of this essay, Ambode’s electoral victory was about 150,000 votes out of over 2 million votes cast. The two million was itself only a fraction of the population of the state, which is 25 million. Will Governor Ambode correct this massive disenfranchisement of the majority of the people of his state? Will he bring the “Other Lagos” directly to the table and not only raise their presence as a specter that to disturb the peace and the good conscience of the rich?

    Second poser: In the 1990 and 1999 Constitutions, Second Chapter titled “Fundamental Objectives and Directives of State Policy” it is clearly stated that it is unfair, as all previous Nigerian Constitutions had assumed, that the goals of development and social justice cannot be pursued simultaneously and indivisibly, that “development” must take place first before economic redistribution can take place. Both Constitutions made it mandatory for the Nigerian state to pursue both goals together; however, this was made non-justiciable meaning that the Nigerian state and its functionaries cannot be legally forced to observe or actualize this provision, this clause in the Constitution. From his speech last Monday, especially in the segment wherein he fielded all those questions, I conjecture that Ambode is on the side of this constitutional clause. Will he step forward now and say so? More to the point, will he state what forces, what allies, what coalitions he, his administration and his political party intend to mobilize to realize this objective?

     

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu