Tag: President Goodluck Jonathan

  • Morocco’s King snubs Jonathan

    Morocco’s King snubs Jonathan

    •Declines telephone conversation

    The patchy diplomatic relations between Nigeria and Morocco may worsen after King Mohammed VI of the North African country turned down a request from President Goodluck Jonathan for a telephone conversation.

    It was learnt that the Moroccan monarch deemed such a telephone conversation a few weeks to the Nigerian presidential election as inappropriate.

    Morocco is an Islamic nation and the authorities there thought that President Jonathan wanted to use the phone call to gain an undue advantage over his challengers in the race.

    Online publication, Premium Times, quoted the Moroccan Foreign Affairs ministry as saying in a statement on Friday that: “The request by Nigerian authorities for a phone conversation between HM King Mohammed VI and Nigerian president was refused by the Monarch who deemed it inappropriate on grounds of the upcoming elections in Nigeria.”

    The Moroccan authorities added that another request by Nigeria to send an envoy to Rabat was equally rejected because the monarch viewed the overture as an attempt by President Jonathan to manipulate his country to secure Muslim votes in the forthcoming election. The ministry said Mohammed VI refused to speak to the president partly because of “Nigeria’s positions regarding the sacred national, Arab and Islamic causes.”

    Jonathan’s main challenger, General Muhammadu Buhari, is a Muslim and the Presidency felt that the support of Morocco might sway a few more votes for Jonathan from Nigerian Muslims. Nigeria and Morocco have not been the best of friends over the years on account of Abuja’s support for independence for Western Sahara which Rabat continues to lay claim to as its territory.

    President Jonathan has been unusually aggressive in his re-election bid, criss-crossing the country to woo people he considers critical to his ambition. Yesterday, he visited Ile-Ife to seek the prayers of Yoruba Obas. A few of them obliged him at the palace of the Ooni of Ife.

  • Jonathan’s comment on Chibok girls callous, morbid, says APC

    Jonathan’s comment on Chibok girls callous, morbid, says APC

    THE All Progressives Congress (APC) is appalled by President Goodluck Jonathan’s recent statement that the Chibok girls are still alive because Boko Haram would have displayed their bodies if they had been killed.

    The party says the president’s comment is   callous, morbid and insensitive.

    In a statement yesterday in Lagos, the National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said the party found the comment “deeply offensive to human sensibilities rather than providing hope and succour for the traumatised parents of the girls.”

    A key role of presidents everywhere in times of tribulations and tragedies, the APC pointed out “is to offer hope and be the Consoler-in-Chief, not to make statements that will deepen the suffering and sorrow of victims.”

    The party said: “one would have expected a president to speak on the basis of actionable intelligence, not some twisted, melancholic and offensive logic,”  adding that the president’s statement played on the fears of the parents of the girls and indeed of all Nigerians concerning the fate of the girls, “who have now been held in captivity for over 300 days, with an impotent government unable to rescue them.”

    It said all that the parents of the girls as well as all concerned people around the world want to know is what the Jonathan Administration is doing to bring the girls home safely and as soon as possible, not a depressing statement about their bodies being displayed via a video by Shekau if they had been killed.

    APC said President Jonathan should borrow a leaf from his Chadian counterpart, who came across as being very presidential in his comments on Shekau, in which he said: ‘’It is in Abubakar Shekau’s interest to surrender, we know where he is. If he refuses to give himself up, he will suffer the same fate as his comrades.’’

    It said the Chadian President’s statement  also contradicted the earlier claim by the Nigerian authorities that Shekau had been killed at least twice, the last of which was backed up with a ‘pictorial evidence’.

    The APC said: ‘’The Shekau that President Deby was referring to is the same Shekau that the Jonathan-led Administration claimed to have killed at least twice, and the same Shekau the same Administration is now seeking to capture alive.

    ‘’Mr. President (Jonathan), how many Shekaus do you want to kill or capture? Or is there a Shekau that is known only to your Administration?’’ APC queried.

  • Another four years of Jonathan means disaster for Nigeria, says Keyamo

    Another four years of Jonathan means disaster for Nigeria, says Keyamo

    Lagos lawyer, Mr. Festus Keyamo, has said another four years of President Goodluck Jonathan in office would be a great disaster for Nigeria.

    He urged Nigerians to vote out the president and enthrone Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate.

    Keyamo alleged that corruption has flourished under Jonathan’s watch to the extent that the malaise is affecting the fight against insurgency in the Northeast region with the service chiefs being the beneficiaries of the resources committed to crush Boko Haram.

    The human rights lawyer spoke in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, on Saturday at a youth summit organised by the state chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Action Group.

    Keyamo said the youths have key roles to play in ending what he called the 16 years of misrule by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), warning that a revolution is imminent in the country if the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, is removed from office before the end of his tenure.

    He deplored a situation in which the Armed Forces of Chad, which is less endowed than the Nigerian Army, is stealing the show in the fight against Boko Haram.

    Accusing the service chiefs of feeding fat on the fight against insurgency, Keyamo regretted that Boko Haram, which he described as a ragtag group, has grown in leaps and bounds with Jonathan failing to use his position as the Commander-in-Chief to crush the terrorists.

    Keyamo said, “I have an inside knowledge that service chiefs are feeding fat off the situation (Boko Haram) without the knowledge of the president or with his knowledge but he is bereft of what to do.

    “How did we get to this point? Under whose leadership has the military been so decimated? It is under the leadership of President Jonathan. Before Jonathan, there had been insurgency, but no part of the country was lost. It was Buhari who crushed the Maitatsine sect. If we give this president another four years, Nigeria will be worse for it.

    “This is the time to speak out; we must not be so comfortable in the South and forget what is happening in the north. The economy of the north has been destroyed under the leadership of this incompetent and clueless president. This government announced a ceasefire deal but Boko Haram responded by carrying more deadly attacks.

    “The same federal government that has announced the killing of Abubakar Shekau (Boko Haram leader) several times is now saying he must be caught alive. Who did they kill before? It is time to give other people chance to see if they could do things differently.”

  • Fuel scarcity and other crises

    Fuel scarcity and other crises

    The nationwide petrol scarcity of the past one week was an embarrassment for a government facing elections in three weeks. Not even the hate rhetoric that has seized the 2015 campaigns can remove the fact that President Goodluck Jonathan owes Nigerians explanations over unfulfilled economic promises he made to the nation four years ago. In this piece, YUSUF ALLI, MANAGING EDITOR, NORTHERN OPERATION revisits the President’s sugar-coated promises and the extent to which he has fulfilled them.

    Time flies. It is almost four years when President Goodluck Jonathan promised Nigerians Eldorado. Armed with a romantic story about a poverty-stricken childhood which saw him traversing Otuoke (his native home) and the shanties in Oguta, Nigerians rallied behind Jonathan in an unusual manner in the political history of the country.

    His 2011 presidential campaign nearly echoed the “Yes We Can” script of the US President, Barack Obama who was as unheralded as Jonathan. The goodwill was enormous to the extent that a certain Emmanuel Bamidele Orevba died while celebrating his victory.  With almost first term in office completed, the economic story of Nigerians remains the same in spite of the usual thumbs-up rating of his team and political jobbers.

    From the decrepit nature of Eagle Square in Abuja, especially the VIP Stand, where he was inaugurated to the killing fields of Bama, Nigerians have become more economically emaciated than they were in 2011.

     What did Jonathan promise the nation?

    In an emotional-laden inaugural speech on May 29, 2011, Jonathan asked Nigerians to start dreaming again of a new beginning. He pledged to: grow the economy, make electricity available to all  citizens;  fight for an efficient and affordable public transport system for all our people; create jobs, rebuild infrastructure, provide access to quality education and improve health care delivery; put in place appropriate policy support to the real sector of the economy, so that small and medium enterprises may thrive.

    He equally pledged to create a Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority which will contribute to strengthening our fiscal framework, by institutionalizing savings of our commodity-related revenues; to avoid the boom and bust cycles, and mitigate our exposure to oil price volatility. He promised to pay special attention to the agricultural sector, to enable it play its role of ensuring food security; push programs and policies that will benefit both local and foreign businesses.

    He actually said: “The time for lamentation is over. This is the era of transformation. This is the time for action… Let us all believe in a new Nigeria. Let us work together to build a great country that we will all be proud of. This is our hour. Fellow compatriots, lift your gaze towards the horizon. Look ahead and you will see a great future that we can secure with unity, hard work and collective sacrifice. Join me now as we begin the journey of transforming Nigeria. I will continue to fight, for your future, because I am one of you. I will continue to fight, for improved medical care for all our citizens. I will continue to fight for all citizens to have access to first class education. I will continue to fight for electricity to be available to all our citizens. I will continue to fight for an efficient and affordable public transport system for all our people. I will continue to fight for jobs to be created through productive partnerships. You have trusted me with your mandate, and I will never, never let you down. I know your pains, because I have been there. Look beyond the hardship you have endured. See a new beginning; a new direction; a new spirit. Nigerians, I want you to start to dream again. What you see in your dreams, we can achieve together,”

    What did he deliver?               

    For the first time in 25 years, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) under the administration of Jonathan rebased the nation’s economy leaving it the largest in Africa. The rebased Gross Domestic Product (GDP) saw estimates for 2013 hitting $509.9billion.  The significance lies in what the NBS said: “Before the current rebasing project, Nigeria had not rebased since 1990, whereas the UN Statistical Commission recommends the exercise be carried out every 5 years.” According to the Chief Economist of the World Bank for Africa, Francisco Ferreira, the rebasing has “exposed Nigeria’s investment potential to the world. “Prior to the rebasing exercise, nobody knew that Nigerian economy was as big as it turned out to be.”

    A pro-Jonathan group, Build Up Nigeria listed some achievements of the President as follows: signing into law the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Bill 2010 (Local Content Bill) which has increased local content in the oil and gas sector.  As a direct result of that law Royal Dutch Shell awarded a N7.8 billion ($49.9 million) contract to a Nigerian firm, S.C.C Limited, for the manufacturing of high pressure line pipes that would otherwise have been awarded to a foreign firm. Exxon Mobil also awarded an off shore platform contract to a local firm, Nigerdock Nig. Plc that would otherwise have been awarded to a foreign firm.

    Other achievements are  the establishment of a Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) with a seed capital of $1 billion and the creation of three sub funds- the Nigeria Infrastructure Fund; the Future Generations Fund and the Stabilization Fund which will be the pillars of the SWF; reduction of  food imports by over 40% as of 2013, moving the country closer to self sufficiency in agriculture; and launching of  the Youth Enterprise with innovation in Nigeria (YOUWIN) initiative on the 11th October 2011 which is the administration’s job creation centre piece. On Thursday April 12, 2012, 1,200 Nigerian youths emerged winners of the competition following a transparent process. Each winner receives a business start up grant of between N1million to N10 million.

    Grim realities of the economy

    Contrary to Jonathan’s pledged to the nation, the economy is actually in the reverse gear to the extent that a former Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, Prof. Charles Chukwuma Soludo gave the administration an ‘F’ rating. He said: “Everywhere else in the world, government performance on the economy is measured by some outcome variables such as: income (GDP growth rate), stability of prices (inflation and exchange rate), unemployment rate, poverty rate, etc. On all these scores, this government has performed worse than its immediate predecessor – Obasanjo regime. If we appropriately adjust for oil income and debt, then this government is the worst in our history on the economy.”

    On his part, ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, who spoke at a book launch in honour of a former President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Mustapha Akanbi, said: “What the public know or see of the economy is not what the economy truly is.

    “The economy is in the doldrums, if not in reverse. The often-quoted GDP (gross domestic product) growth neither reflects on the living condition of most of our people, nor on most of the indigenous industries and services where capacity utilization is almost 50 per cent.” The indices for the acclaimed transformation of the nation’s economy are not adding up.

    While struggling to rubbish the observations of Obasanjo and Soludo, the government also tactically came up with austerity measures as oil prices crashed. It was a tacit admission that all was not well.

    According to a research by the International Press Centre (IPC), Jonathan made 91 promises to Nigerians in 2011 which remain largely unfulfilled. Some of the broken promises are: delivering stable, constant supply of electricity; providing stable power supply by the year 2015 so that small and medium scale industries can thrive again;  ensuring that Nigerians do not use generators more than two times in a week;  exploring the coal deposits in Benue and Kogi states for improved power supply;  construction of more dams to build more hydro-power stations.; reduction of  importation of generators at least 90 percent in the next four years.

    Electricity supply

    The worst hit is the power sector which Jonathan in his inaugural speech promised to address.  Although the power sector was privatized in 2014, Nigerians have not felt the effect because outage still persists to the extent of paralyzing economic activities nationwide. Most small and medium enterprises are folding up because of outages.

    In fact, government ministries and parastatals now spend a huge chunk of their recurrent budget on diesel for alternative source of electricity. The new darling of Aso Rock, Governor Ayodele Fayose captured the situation better on December 21, 2014 when he said: “One can imagine the hardship small business owners go through, people running businesses such as barbing salons, welding outfits among others. A large chunk of what could have been their profit is spent on purchasing and fueling generators. The health hazards of generator smoke are also there.”

    At the inception of his government, the power generation in 2011 was 2,800mw but Jonathan said he would increase it to about 4,747 megawatts by December 2011. Four years down the line, the generation as at 2015 is now 3, 479.55mw out of which 3,406 megawatts is transmitted to Nigerians. Since the President disclosed that his administration had so far spent $8.26billion on the National Integrated Power Projects (NIPP), he has been able to increase electricity generation by 679.55megawatts in four years with such heavy investment. This is outside the fact that the government of ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo expended about $10billion to $13.278billion on power projects between 1999 and 2007.

    The unemployment crisis

    Going by facts and figures from the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, about 1.8m young Nigerians enter into the nation’s labour market yearly. This means, in the last four years about 7.2m unemployed have joined the saturated market.

    By its records, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said the economy created about 1.2 million jobs in 2013 fiscal year. On the other years, the NBS simply left the public guessing with its verdict: “Unemployment Rate in Nigeria increased to 23.90 percent in 2011 from 21.10 percent in 2010. Unemployment rate in Nigeria averaged 14.60 percent from 2006 until 2011, reaching an all time high of 23.90 percent in 2011 and a record low of 5.30 Percent in 2006.” But a CBN official said about 70 per cent of 80million youths in the country are either unemployed or underemployed. The Special Assistant on Sustainable Banking, CBN, Dr. Aisha Mahmood, said unemployment remains a severe threat to Nigeria’s economy. She made the disclosure in a paper on Nigerian Sustainable Banking Principle during the 2014 World Environment Day programme organized by the Federal Ministry of Environment in Abuja. “As the population is growing, the resources that we all depend on, the food, energy, water, is declining,” she said. “The demand for these resources will rise exponentially by the year 2030, with the world needing about 50 per cent more food, 45 per cent more energy and 30 per cent more water.

    “In Nigeria, there is the issue of youth and employment. 70 per cent of the 80 million youths in Nigeria are either unemployed or underemployed. We are all witness to what happened recently during the immigration recruitment exercise and this is simply because 80 per cent of the Nigerian youth are unemployed”.

    In its Economic Report on Nigeria released in May 2013, the World Bank noted that “Nigeria’s annual growth rates that average over seven per cent in official data during the last decade place the nation among the fastest growing economies in the world. The growth has been concentrated particularly on trade and agriculture, which would suggest substantial welfare benefits for many Nigerians. Nevertheless, poverty reduction and job creation have not kept pace with population growth, implying social distress for an increasing number of Nigerians. Progress towards the fulfillment of many of the Millennium Development Goals has been slow, and the country ranked 153 out of 186 countries in the 2013 United Nations Human Development Index.

    “Job creation in Nigeria has been inadequate to keep pace with the expanding working age population. The official unemployment rate had steadily increased from 12 per cent of the working age population in 2006 to 24 per cent in 2011. Preliminary indications are that this upward trend continued in 2012.”

    Also in June 2013, the  Honorary International Investors Council (HIIC), inaugurated in 2004 as a presidential advisory body to attract global financial players into the Nigerian economy expressed concern about “the growing unemployment rate and the rising number of poor skilled workforce” in Nigeria.

    The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, once said she was losing sleep over the high unemployment rate nationwide. She said: “Each year, about 1.8m young Nigerians enter into our labour market and we need to ensure that the economy provides jobs for them.

    “When you look at Nigeria, for over 50 to 60 years, we’ve been working without the key institutions that some other people have. We keep making stopgap solutions. For 50 years, we didn’t have a Bureau for Public Procurement; for 50 years, we didn’t have a Debt Management Office. So many of the institutions that we have now are new and if you stand back, you’ll see there are still many gaps. It is now our job to try to fill those gaps.”

    Depletion of foreign reserves

    Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves fell to $34.51 billion by January 13, down 20.2 percent from $43.24 billion a year earlier, owing to draw downs by the Central Bank to defend the naira. Data from the bank showed that Nigeria’s reserves have steadily declined, falling 3.2 percent month-on-month.

    Addressing journalists at the end of the monthly Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) meeting in Abuja (24th February 2015), the Minister of State for Finance, Ambassador Bashir Yuguda said the nation suffered substantial loss of revenue due to drop in crude oil prices as well as a 33 per cent decrease in export volume between November and December, 2014 which translated to a loss of $159.88 million. He said: “The shut down and shut-in of trunks and pipe lines at various terminals continued to impact negatively on the revenue performance.

    “Non-oil revenues performed below the 2014 budgetary provisions. Yuguda linked the fall in non-oil revenues to fall in the price of crude oil in the international market which he said other revenues are tied to. This financial loss he said has resulted in the continued shrinkage of available funds shared by the three tiers of government so much so that the three tiers shared N500.130 billion for the month of January 2015 from the Federation Account. The minister of state for finance disclosed that $2 billion was left in the Excess Crude Account with an additional N19 billion residing in the Domestic Excess Crude Account.

    Soludo, however, faulted the excuse given by the Federal Government for the decline in foreign reserves. He said: “For comparisons, President Obasanjo met about $5 billion in foreign reserves, and the average monthly oil price for the 72 months he was in office was $38, and yet he left $43 billion in foreign reserves after paying $12 billion to write-off Nigeria’s external debt. In the last five years, the average monthly oil price has been over $100, and the quantity also higher but our foreign reserves have been declining and exchange rate depreciating.

    “My calculation is that if the economy was better managed, our foreign reserves should have been between $102 -$118 billion and exchange rate around N112 before the fall in oil prices. As of now, the reserves should be around $90 billion and exchange rate no higher than N125 per dollar.”

    Agriculture

    This is a controversial sector where the Jonathan administration prides itself as having achieved much. Minister of Agriculture, Dr.  Akinwumi Adesina, says it succeeded in smashing fertilizer syndicates in the country. Hitherto, fertilizer meant for peasant farmers was exported by a cabal which had hijacked the system for a decade and a half. The fertilizer was being distributed to only 11 per cent of the farmers. But it is claimed that within 90 days in office, the corruption in the fertilizer chain was cleaned up.

    The government also introduced ‘Cassava Revolution’ which led to an output of over 45 million metric tonnes in 2014 according to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Following cooperation with the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), the government developed 40 per cent substitution of Cassava flour for wheat flour. The government has also received support from

    international institutions like World Bank ($500m); IFAD ($80m) and $500,000 grant; African Development Bank ($250m); Ford Foundation ($750,000) and DFID 130,000 pounds.

    A former Minister of Agriculture under ex-President Obasanjo, Alhaji Adamu Bello has, however, described the so-called achievements as paper work. He said all the facts and figures from Adesina could not be verified from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

    He said the “performance of the sector in terms of GDP growth had been on a steady decline since former Obasanjo left office in 2007. He said the data from the NBS said the last time a growth rate was recorded in the sector was in 2007 with 7.20 per cent.

    Between 2008 and 2011, the growth rate was 6.30 per cent, 5.90, 5.60 and 5.60. In 2012 and 2013, even though a target of 8 per cent was set, the growth rate was 3.97 and 4.50 per cent growth.

    Bello said: “I have noticed that the achievements being mentioned at various fora, especially by the Senior Special Assistant (SSA) to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, have no basis except that they were stated by the Minister in charge of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina.

    “I have personally spoken with the SSA as to his source and he told me that he got all he said from the minister. I reminded him that there are independent government agencies especially the National Bureau of Statistics that he should check with, and he promised to take up the issue with the minister and revert back to me.”

    He described the saving of N870billion on fertilizer subsidy as a “figment of imagination” of the Jonathan administration. Bello added: “It is only God the Almighty that will judge the unfair way past administrations are being portrayed. To claim that there was subsidy of N870 billion spent on fertilizers since the use of fertilizers was initially encouraged by the government about 40 years ago is most unfair, as I doubt if the entire agricultural budgets for the whole period was up to that sum.

    “For a fact, from 1999-2007, the total subsidy on fertilizers was under N25 billion. This can be verified from the Budget Office of the Federal Ministry of Finance. However, according to Dr. Adesina, the subsidy, which was abused and corruptly taken was claimed to be N26 billion annually over a period of 40 years.”

    Inflated food prices

    Notwithstanding self-glorification in the Agriculture sector, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) admitted that inflation has led to increase prices of food and consumables in January.  It said: “In January, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) which measures inflation rose by 8.2 per cent (year-on-year) 0.2 percentage points from 8.0 per cent recorded in December… Food prices increased at the same pace in January as recorded in December at 9.2 per cent. Most groups that contribute to the food sub-index increased at a faster pace during the month.

    “Prices increased at a faster pace in most major non-food divisions such as housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels; furnishings and household equipment, maintenance and clothing and footwear divisions.”

    Tales of waste and corruption in the oil sector

    In the last one week, Nigerians were forced to go back to the agonizing era of fuel queues as a result of mismanagement of the oil sector, especially payment of fuel subsidy. In 2012, a N382billion fuel subsidy fraud was uncovered by the Presidential Committee on Verification and Reconciliation of Fuel Subsidy Payments, which was  headed by the former Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Access Bank Plc, Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede.

    The discovery followed nationwide protests over fuel price increases initiated by government in a bid to remove the subsidy. The crisis forced the government to introduce a Subsidy Reinvestment Programme (SURE-P) to intervene in critical infrastructure. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has so far recovered about N5billion from persons and organizations indicted in the fuel subsidy scam. The number of 121 suspects, including companies, on trial in connection with fuel subsidy scandal and oil theft in the Niger Delta kept on thinning by the day. Yet the government could not pay N185billion debts owed petroleum marketers until they refused to lift products. The tardiness, occasioned by bureaucratic delay in payment by the Ministry of Finance, had been caught up by the recent devaluation of the Naira and oil marketers are to get N30billion ‘compensation’ for the losses recorded.

    Prior to the latest drama over fuel queues, a former Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi (now the Emir of Kano) had in a letter to President Jonathan blown the lid on non-remittance of $49.8billion out of $67billion realized from total crude oil lifting from January 2012 to July 2013.

    After investigation by the Senate Committee on Finance, it discovered that $20billion was yet to be accounted for by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and those managing the oil sector. In its report, PwC said the gross revenue from crude oil lifting was $69.34bn between January 2012 and July 2013 and not $67bn as earlier stated by the Senate Reconciliation Committee, what was remitted to the Federation Account was $50.81bn and not $47bn. At the end of a Forensic Audit Report, NNPC and the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) were asked to refund $1.48billion but those responsible for the sleaze were spared the rod. Whatever is the figure the state is trying to protect, Sanusi was vindicated that the system in NNPC is untidy.

    A leader who should know better, ex-President Obasanjo said: “We had not adequately prepared for the rainy days in the management of proceeds from oil and gas resources. With crude oil purchase by the U.S. from Nigeria going down by some 30 per cent in the last three years as a result of shale oil revolution, things are not looking up in the oil and gas sector, and hence, in the economy.”

    Another former CBN Governor, Soludo, in a response to the Minister of Finance, said N30trillion might have been “stolen or lost or unaccounted for or simply mismanaged under your watchful eyes in the past four years.”

    In his letter to Okonjo-Iweala he said: “I was really embarrassed to read that one of the reasons for declining forex reserves is ‘oil theft’. Under you as Minister of Finance and coordinator of the economy, the basket of our national treasury is leaking profusely from all sides. Just a few illustrations! First, you admit that ‘oil theft’ has reduced oil output from the average 2.3 – 2.4 million barrels per day (mpd) to 1.95mpd (meaning that at least 350,000 to 450,000 barrels per day are being ‘stolen’.

    “On the average of 400,000 per day and the oil prices over the past four years, it comes to about $60 billion ‘stolen’ in just four years. In today’s exchange rate, that is about N12.6 trillion. This is at a time of cessation of crisis in the Niger Delta and amnesty programme. Can you tell Nigerians how much the amnesty programme costs, and also the annual cost for ‘protecting’ the pipelines and security of oil wells? And the ‘thieves’ are spirits? Come on, Madam!

    Second, my earlier article stated that the minimum forex reserves should have been at least $90 billion by now and you did not challenge it. Rather it is about $30 billion, meaning that gross mismanagement has denied the country some $60 billion or another N12.6 trillion.

    “Now add the ‘missing’ $20 billion from the NNPC. You promised a forensic audit report ‘soon’, and more than a year later the Report itself is still ‘missing’.

    “This is over N4 trillion, and we don’t know how much more has ‘missed’ since Sanusi cried out. How many trillions of naira was paid for oil subsidy (un-appropriated?). How many trillions (in actual fact) have been ‘lost’ through customs duty waivers over the last four years? As coordinator of the economy, can you tell Nigerians why the price of automotive gas oil (AGO), popularly called diesel, has still not come down despite the crash in global crude oil prices, and how much is being appropriated by friends in the process?

    “Be honest: do you really know (as coordinator and minister of finance) how many trillions of Naira, self- financing government agencies earn and spend? I have a long list but let me wait for now. I do not want to talk about other ‘black pots’ that impinge on national security.

    “My estimate, Madam, is that probably more than N30 trillion has either been stolen or lost or unaccounted for or simply mismanaged under your watchful eyes in the past four years. Since you claim to be in charge, Nigerians are right to ask you to account. Think about what this amount could mean for the 112 million poor Nigerians or for our schools, hospitals, roads, etc. Soon, you will start asking the citizens to pay this or that tax, while some faceless “thieves” were pocketing over $40 million per day from oil alone.”

    “The very people government exists to regulate have seized the levers of government as policymakers and most government institutions have largely been ‘privatized’ to them. Mention any major government department or agency and someone will tell you whom it has been ‘allocated’ to, and the person subsequently nominates his minion to occupy the seat,” he said.

    Mr. Soludo said while Nigeria has for years enjoyed oil boom and increasing budget, poverty and unemployment reached unprecedented levels under President Jonathan.

    “This is the only government in our history where rapidly increasing government expenditure was associated with increasing poverty. The director general of NBS (National Bureau of Statistics) stated in his written press conference address in 2011 that about 112 million Nigerians were living in poverty. Is this the record to defend?” he said.

    “For example, currently in Nigeria, it is estimated that more than 60 per cent of graduates of our educational system are unemployable. You can understand why many of us are amused when the government celebrates that it has established twelve more glorified secondary schools as universities. I thought they would have told us how many Nigerian universities made it in the league of the best 200 universities in the world. That would have been an achievement.”

    Devaluation and corruption

    The high-level of corruption in government had created a wedge between the President and some of his benefactors, especially ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo. This has manifested in granting state pardon to well-known looters of the treasury; legal soft-landing for economic crimes suspects; concession of strategic  posts in the economy to friends or acquaintances who in turn install their cronies; lack of transparency in privatization of  firms; outright graft/ stealing  in government as the case with Pension Scam; weakness in rising to any corruption challenge in a ministry or parastatal etc.

    Soludo painted the scenario thus: “The very people government exists to regulate have seized the levers of government as policymakers and most government institutions have largely been ‘privatized’ to them. Mention any major government department or agency and someone will tell you whom it has been ‘allocated’ to, and the person subsequently nominates his minion to occupy the seat.

    “This is the only government in our history where rapidly increasing government expenditure was associated with increasing poverty. The director general of NBS (National Bureau of Statistics) stated in his written press conference address in 2011 that about 112 million Nigerians were living in poverty. Is this the record to defend?” he said.

    “For example, currently in Nigeria, it is estimated that more than 60 per cent of graduates of our educational system are unemployable. You can understand why many of us are amused when the government celebrates that it has established twelve more glorified secondary schools as universities. I thought they would have told us how many Nigerian universities made it in the league of the best 200 universities in the world. That would have been an achievement.”

    The devaluation of the naira has created fresh distortions in the economy. From officially exchanging at N168 to a dollar less than three months agos, it is now about N215 to N220 to a dollar. Most Nigerians believe that a tighter fiscal regime would have been better than devaluation.

    Reports by a national daily indicate that about $25billion (N4.95trillion) in foreign investments had been lost in the last few months. More job losses are likely because industries depending on imported resources or materials have to pay higher foreign exchange.

    Ex-President Obasanjo said devaluation will hurt the poor. He said: “Sooner or later, the naira will have to be drastically devalued without any advantage to our one commodity economy but with horrendous disadvantage to already impoverished Nigerians.

    “We will all sink deeper in poverty except for those who have corruptly stashed money abroad and who will start to bring such illegal and illegitimate funds back home to harvest more naira. All the economic gains of recent years and the rebuilding of the middle class may be lost.

    “The political will, the discipline, the ability to take the hard measures to reverse the trend will appear not to be there at the leadership level, if the understanding is not there.

    “In the end, more businesses will close down, businessmen and women, entrepreneurs and investors will incur more debts. Foreign investors may temporarily stop investing in a downturn economy.

    “Because of the naira depreciation, workers, particularly in the public sector, will ask for pay increase which may be justified but will sink us deeper in the swamp.

    “The scenario which may sound alarmist is hard to imagine but the signs are there and it would appear that those who should act are dancing slow foxtrot while their trousers are catching fire.”

    Will Jonathan enjoy luck till the end?

    Deep in his mind, Jonathan is aware that the economic omen is bad but he is looking for a second term ticket to try his ‘luck’ to salvage the situation. Yet, he does not have the political will and a strong economic team to carry out such miracles.

    With the presidential election 20 days away, the President is enjoying the rare luck that Nigeria is a nation where citizens pay more attention to hate, religious and ethnic sentiment than matters of economic policy. Or else, his fate would have been sealed by now.

    But even if he manages to conjure a short term solution to the fuel supply crisis before poll time, it might not be enough to prevent a tortuous and lonely trip home to Otuoke as the inherent contradictions in the economy take their toll of longsuffering citizens.

     

  • President visits Ooni, Owa, Ataoja for blessings

    President visits Ooni, Owa, Ataoja for blessings

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan yesterday visited the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, the Owa Obokun of Ijesaland, Oba Adekunle Aromolaran, and the Ataoja of Osogbo, Oba Jimoh Olanipekun, all in Osun State, in the latest of his vote seeking trips to the Southwest ahead of this month’s presidential election.

    Oba Sijuwade wished Jonathan success at the poll and mandated about 50 other traditional rulers present at the event to pray for the president, who sat down while the prayer went on.

    Earlier in their separate remarks, the Orangun of Oke-Ila, Oba Adedokun Abolarin, the Owamiran of Esa-Oke, Oba Adeyemi Adeniran and the Oluresi of Iresi, Oba Sikiru Adeseun, demanded the creation of Oodua State with headquarters in Ile Ife, and the completion of ongoing federal government projects.

    President Jonathan said he had reduced the cost of importing food annually from N3 trillion to N600 billion.

    Jonathan, who was accompanied by the  chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Alhaji Adamu Muazu, and other PDP chieftains, listed his administration’s achievements in various sectors, including agriculture, education, health and road construction.

    He said: “In other countries affected by the crash in prices of oil in global market, people are already queuing to buy food and other things, but we are able to avert a situation like that here because of increase in food production over the years.

    “We have used N3.3 trillion to import food but we ensured that our national food production expanded by an additional 21 million metric tons between 2011 and 2014, a record, exceeding set target of 20 million metric tons we targeted for 2015.

    Responding to issue of marginalisation of the South West, Jonathan promised to correct all errors against the geo-political zone in his second term if re-elected.

    He assured that whatever belongs to the South West will not be taken to another region.

    He said ideas in the National Conference report will transform Nigeria and further assured that he was ready to implement what are contained in the report if re-elected.

  • Okon bemoans his dollar loss

    The recent charm offensive directed at the old West by President Goodluck Jonathan has come and gone. But it was not without its merry moments. For a whole week, the seat of governance appeared to have been relocated to the old Marina in Lagos as Jonathan tried to woo the stubborn and politically tempestuous children of Oduduwa to rally behind his electoral ensign.

    It was a long queue of political renegades, ideological orphans and other notorious state mendicants. Men and women disappeared into the bowels of Marina only to come out grinning from ear to ear with their flowing agbada and caps fearfully distended and bulging with illicit largesse. After a particularly nasty traffic disruption which subsisted for hours, snooper overheard some exasperated market women around Balogun dismissing Jonathan as Johnny Walker or Jonnie Waka Waka in local parlance.

    Na only now him waka come?” an Ijebu woman was overheard sneering in bitter derision.  Another took a shrill umbrage at being told that she could not enter the Cathedral Church where she had worshipped for over forty years on the grounds that the presidential train was already ensconced.

    The aftermath of this Poverty Alleviation Scheme was equally dramatic. The entire region was literally drowning in greenback. There was a dollar deluge which temporarily affected the exchange rate of the naira and fed directly into the current biting fuel shortage. Area boys around the Marina were overheard discussing in hushed tones how to forcibly recuperate their own share of the relief material.

    But it does appear as if the looming revolution will begin from the kitchen. A week after the gravy train departed, snooper was lounging in bed savouring the return of the early morning rains to Lagos when he overheard some animated discussion between the irascible Okon and his palaver prone mentor, Baba Lekki. It was filled with subversive ranting and wholesale excoriation of the Nigerian political elite.

    “Baba if no be say na dis yeye man I dey serve, I for don become millionaire for dem dollar”, the crazy boy lamented bitterly as snooper stiffened up in bed waiting for any eventuality. But Baba Lekki was in a foul and contrary mood.

    “Foolish boy, asiwere, you no get hundred naira for pocket you dey talk about millionaire. A beg  wey dem paraga jare”, the old man snorted as he burst into sadistic laughter.  But Okon rose stoutly to the occasion, carrying the battle directly to his mentor and tormentor.

    “Baba no be dem reason why hunger dey wire una be dis? No be dem reason why poverty don scatter your life for Obodo after dem deport you from London? Like all dem foolish Yoruba people, you no get business sense at all at all”, the mad boy snarled. Baba Lekki was momentarily stung by the ferocity of the response.

    Oya digbolugi, come tell us how you fit be millionaire for this obodo, after the bourgeoisie people have captured the commanding heights of the economy. You are suffering from lumpen delusions”, Baba Lekki noted with an affectionate scowl as he alternated between pidgin English and perfect English.

    “All dat na jibiti grammar. Dem never fetch you hundred naira. Abi no be dem Shina boy come say grammar no be success? See my oga na so so grammar him dey blow even when him bedsheet don tear. Listen baba, if I dey work for one of dem Yoruba Oba I for don become millionaire”, Okon insisted.

    “So how you go do dat one, yeye boy?” Baba sneered.

    “You see, after dem Goodluck don give dem Oba yafunyanfun dollar, dem smart Oba baba come see opening, he come ask him driver, him cook and him herbalist to go dress like dem small small village oba, so him come give dem title and him come dey introduce dem to Jonathan one by one. He come call him driver and come tell dem Jonathan, your Excellency, dis one be him be, him be, I don forget dem Yoruba title him give dat one..”

    Oluoko of Okopo”, Baba Lekki interjected.

    “Thank you, baba. So dem Jonathan come dash dat one plenty dollar. Next him call him cook and come say, your Excellency dis one be , dis one be, wetin he call am again?”

    Onisibi of Obelawo”, Baba Lekki interjected again.

    “And dem Jonathan come  giam dollar gbua and dat one wan faint. Dem Oba come call him herbalist and come tell Jonathan, baba, wetin be him own title sef?”

    “Gbekude of Ikubadeje”, the deranged old man supplied, now clearly enjoying the drama.

    “Kai, kai na him Jonathan come finish dat one with dollar. So for evening, baba kabiyesi come say make dem call all of dem make dem come settle account, but dem don vamoose. Dem don cross dem border and dem don dey make merry for Cotonou. Na him baba come dey cry like small pikin. Dem French police say dem no dey take dem order from Nigeria police and dem wan shoot dem  naim dem come pick race. Baba, sebi you now see why I say I for don become millionaire?” Okon concluded gloomily.

    “You see, that is what is known as primitive redistribution of primitive accumulation”, Baba Lekki snapped and summarily dismissed Okon.

  • Appeal Court clears  Jonathan to contest election

    Appeal Court clears Jonathan to contest election

    THE Court of Appeal in Abuja held yesterday that President Goodluck Jonathan was qualified to contest the next presidential election.

    The court held that Jonathan had never taken the oath of office as elected president, except in 2011 and could not be said not to be qualified to further stand election.

    In a unanimous judgment by a five-man bench, the court held that President Jonathan could not be said to have taken the of office as President twice before now, because he became President after the death of President Umar Yar’Adua, not through election, but by mere constitutional provision.

    The judgment was on an appeal filed on April 16, 2013 by Cyracus Njoku, who challenged the March 13, 2013judgment by Justice Mudashiru Oniyangi (then of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), but now of the Court of Appeal).

    Justice Oniyangi had dismissed Njoku’s suit and held that President Jonathan was eligible to contest in 2015.

    On whether Njoku has locus standi to initiate the suit, the appellate court agreed with Justice Oniyangi’s finding that he did not by virtue of the fact that the case was speculative and imaginary, and that none of the reliefs conferred any benefit on him.

    Justice Datijo Yahaya, in the lead judgment, upheld Justice Oniyangi’s finding as to the eligibility of President Jonathan for the next presidential election.

  • 2015 elections: Jonathan covering his  tracks, says APC

    2015 elections: Jonathan covering his tracks, says APC

    THE All Progressives Congress Presidential Campaign Organisation has alleged that the President Goodluck Jonathan administration was beginning to cover its tracks for fear of losing the rescheduled presidential elections.

    The campaign organisation said some of the Federal Government’s programmes being implemented by ministries, department and agencies (MDAs) ahead of the presidential election were aimed at protecting the Jonathan administration from the inevitability of General Muhammadu Buhari winning the presidential election and because of his zero-tolerance for corruption.

    Director of Media and Publicity of the Organisation, Mallam Garba Shehu, said in a statement that one of such policies was the independent revenue e-collection scheme under the Treasury Single Account initiative.

    Shehu described the Federal Government’s beginning of the initiative as “too little, too late” and only predicated on the anticipation of an inevitable win by Gen. Buhari in the March 28 presidential elections.

    He said: “These are obviously last-minute attempts by the President Goodluck Jonathan government to plug loopholes in federal revenue collection by centralising the process, a clear reaction to their expectation of Gen. Buhari’s coming to power.”

    He said the directive that all revenue collections of MDAs, which used to be deposited in banks, should now be sent directly to the Consolidated Revenue Fund at the Central Bank of Nigeria through electronic payment channels was suspicious.

    His words: “They didn’t do this all these years, and now with barely four weeks to go, they suddenly think this is essential. It is even more suspicious when viewed along with the report of the inauguration of the Automated Aviation Revenue Project by the Ministry of Aviation. These people are clearly plugging the loopholes, obviously having stolen enough.

    “The idea to plug loopholes is on its own desirable, but it should worry any well-meaning Nigerian that it has taken this administration the better part of nearly six years for it to realise that the bane of this government is outright stealing, waste and mismanagement of resources.”

    Shehu recalled Gen. Buhari’s declaration at a Lagos town hall meeting last month that corruption would drop a significant percentage immediately he was announced winner of the elections, even before he began to take formal measures to stem official graft.

    “This is a clear manifestation of what the General said. They know they have only four weeks left in government and they have started covering their tracks.”

    The APC campaign organisation, however, said the president should blame himself for the poor quality of aides and advise that he has benefited from since his days as deputy governor of Bayelsa State.

    According to Shehu, the recent statement credited to the president on the quality of advice he has been receiving from his aides amounts to self-indictment and a revelation of the quality of person of the president.

    He added that the revelation by the president was an indication that since he had been in leadership positions, the people have had to cope with mediocre, insincere and poorly thought-out and un-coordinated leadership, adding that it was no wonder that leadership by Jonathan at the national level has been in “fits and starts, lacking coordination, depth and vision and unable in the past six years to lift the country from where he (Jonathan) met it”.

    Shehu noted: “We in the APC consider it an act of God, especially a few weeks to the March 28, 2015 presidential polls that President Jonathan who insists on his re-election should make this revelation which to a large extent gives a deep insight into his person and character.

    “The president or the leader of the country selects his aides and the reason behind the selection is to enable him understand the country and govern effectively. In the case where aides or advisers fail in their duty, the president or leader ought to accept responsibility as the buck stops on his table.”

  • Jona’s metamorphosis

    Wole Soyinka’s Jero plays, Trials of Brother Jero and Jero’s Metamorphosis, are world famous.  The two plays are a satire of how a prophet, a beach hustler, really, upped his act.  Jero himself would appear a grand symbol of free-wheeling hustling in Nigeria’s power universe.

    “After all, it’s the fashion these days to be a desk general!”, was Jero’s last mischievous blurt in Jero’s Metamorphosis.  It was the era of military rule, where by the grace of coup-making, people, just like that, became desk generals!

    But Hardball, this morning, is not discussing literature or even military rule, that best-forgotten era of Nigerian public life.  It is rather intrigued by the sudden metamorphosis of President Goodluck Jonathan, less than six weeks to an election he correctly gauged he would have woefully lost, had it held on its original date of February 14.

    Indeed, there is a bit of the Jero in our Jonathan.  If Jero pimped and hustled for survival, using religious trickery, Jona too jumps and hustles for re-election, turning 360 degrees from a Boko Haram dove scared stiff even to visit grieving Chibok parents, whose 278 daughters were carted away by Boko Haram, to a hawk glad-handing the troops at the fronts.  Why, our new beloved General-Field Marshal even did a dramatic stick-sit, just like the original!  God, drama would never end!

    Whatever has stampeded our president into this act of emergency general, even if in truth, he were ceremonial commander-in-chief of the armed forces? Fear of — indeed, blind panic about — woeful electoral defeat!

    Still, it is interesting to see our president grandstanding as a compassionate general, who cares about his troops.  Maybe he does.  The problem though is that he is showing it too late in the day, and too close to election to suggest that he only cares about the vote that he hopes the drama would harvest.  Well, no crime, even if well and truly annoying.  But it is only fair the new general is put on notice that Hardball is not fooled by his latter-day theatrics — neither would most Nigerians.

    By the way, the Jonathan presidential campaign, during the unfortunate Buhari certificate saga that never was, gave the impression Gen. Buhari was an “illiterate” who had “no school certificate” result.  Though he rose to be a Major-General, what they hinted at was that military education was worthless.  Yet, the commander-in-chief was all too happy scrambling into a camo for his battle front drama.  As a PhD holder and sound academic, he ought to have donned his academic gown and mortarboard before diving for the front!  So, military education is not useless, after all?

    Another irony: it is amazing how Jonathan so much grandstands to be a general in charge, even though he be a civilian, and how Buhari remains supremely proud of his military past while being comfy with his current civies.  If you call it the titanic imagery of perception, you won’t be wrong.  But again, our folk know which of the two is fake and which one is real.

    Still, the president would have averted all the panic had he done what he was paid and feted to do.  Instead he virtually slept, for some five years, only to jerk awake!  A Rip Van Winkle once slept for 20 years, only to jerk awake to see everyone had left him behind.

    President Jonathan tells himself he is no Rip Van Winkle.  But we’ll see about that on March 28!

     

  • Jega and the  forces of darkness

    Jega and the forces of darkness

    Speculation is rife that Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof Attahiru Jega may be sent on pre-retirement leave this week. Will it be legal for President Goodluck Jonathan to do that? No, say lawyers, who argue that Jega is not bound by civil service rules, writes ADEBISI ONANUGA.

    DURING last month’s Presidential Media Chat (PMC) Dr Goodluck Jonathan denied that there were plans to send Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof Attahiru Jega on terminal leave. Despite his denial, the issue keeps popping up.

    Last Thursday, the All Progressives Congress (APC) senators raised the alarm about a plot to force Jega on terminal leave this week.

    The caucus said the plot to send Jega away before the rescheduled March 28 presidential election was being orchestrated by some members of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and others  in high places.

    It said those behind the scheme intended to serve Jega a letter from the office of the Head of Service of the Federation, directing him to proceed on leave.

    The senators said the President lacks the power to remove Jega under any guise without the Senate’s consent.

    The Minority Leader, Senator George Akume, told reporters in Abuja that the plot would be resisted.

    Akume, who described the plot as unwarranted, said: “We oppose the removal (of Jega) because it is criminal, illegal and unconstitutional.”

    The handwriting has been on the wall that PDP is no longer comfortable with Jega conducting the general elections. The party, it is believed, is bent on removing him before the March 28 presidential and National Assemblies the elections.

    Akume referred to an Office of the Head of Service of the Federation’s memo dated August 11, 2010, titled: “Re: Request for clarification on pre-retirement leave”, which states the categories of officers involved in pre-retirement leave.

    Paragraph two thereof states: “I am to further inform you that paragraph 1 of the Circular clarified that the content of the circular is only applicable to core officers who run their Civil Service to retirement at thirty-five (35) years of service or sixty (60) years of age and not for a definite tenure as is the case under reference.”

    Akume noted that terminal leave is only applicable to core civil servants who retire after 35 years of service or 60 years of age and not for those who have a definite tenure as in Jega’s case. He said Jega could only be removed, if he had done anything to warrant such action – with the consent of two-thirds majority vote of the Senate.

    Does the President have powers under the constitution to remove Jega or ask him to proceed on terminal leave? Section 157  of the 1999 Constitution as amended states: “(1) Subject to the provisions of subsection (3) of this section, a person holding any of the offices to which this section applies may only be removed from that office by the President acting on an address supported by two-thirds of the Senate praying that he be so removed for inability to discharge the functions of the office (whether arising from infirmity of mind or body or any other cause) or for misconduct.

    “(2) This section applies to the offices of the Chairman and members of the Code of Conduct Bureau, the Federal Civil Service Commission, the Independent National Electoral Commission, the National Judicial Council, the Federal Judicial Service Commission, the Federal Character Commission, the Nigeria Police Council, the National Population Commission, the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission and the Police Service Commission.”

     

    Activists oppose bid

     

    Anthony Cardinal Okogie and other prominent Nigerians have condemned the plot.

    Okogie said: “If he is not due or not meant for terminal leave, which then would be an illegal move, then the court will have to look into it. Prof Jega has his fundamental human right. If he is not meant to be on terminal leave, then he can fight for his fundamental human right.”

    Activist lawyer, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN) said it would be rash and irresponsible of the government to remove Jega.

    “If they do that, they will scuttle the election and that will slide the nation into a political and constitutional crisis.They should leave things the way they are. The polity is not owned by one person. It is owned by all of us,” he said.

    Retired Police Commissioner Abubakar Tsav also feared that forcing Jega out  “will create a lot of problems. If Jega conducted elections in other states very well, especially Ekiti State and the PDP hailed him, why are they scared about this?” he said.

    “Any attempt to remove him will create confusion in the country. It will make the international community to see the country as unserious. In fact, it appears the ruling party is scared of  General Muhammadu Buhari’s popularity.”

    Lagos lawyer, Festus Keyamo, said of the alleged plot:  “First of all, Prof Jega is not subject to civil service rules. So, it will be wrong to send him on terminal leave based on civil service rules. Second, this would be the  second  brazen attempt to destroy the sanctity of the forthcoming elections, the first one being the postponement of the election, and this would be the second brazen attempt. And it will be a second one too many.”

    A constitutional lawyer Fred Agbaje berated Federal Government for not debunking the rumours which, according to him, has been flying around for over a month.

    “The citizens are justified in their perception of the intention of the government to remove Jega under the guise of terminal leave. It has grave implications for the country. The fears are justified going by the antecedents of the government at denying things of this nature or matters that bother on national interest.”

     

    Half-hearted denial?

     

    But the supervising Minister for Information, Edem Duke, said the government is not planning to remove Jega before the elections, adding that he would leave office in accordance with laid-down service rules.

    Duke said: “On the issue of the INEC chairman, I align myself with what the president said that he has no plan to sack the INEC chairman. That is not to say that if it is time for the INEC chairman to naturally exit his office, then the natural course of things will not take place.

    “It is like talking of a civil servant who has done 35 years or achieved the age of 60; we now begin to say that he must not retire or he must retire. I think all of that is in the terrain of the presidency and he has spoken.”

     

    Other lawyers speak

     

    Lawyers agree that the President cannot unilaterally ask Jega to proceed on terminal leave, which amounts to removal. The appointment, tenure and removal procedure of other public servants are not specifically mentioned in the Constitution as in the case of the INEC chair. In other words, say the lawyers, Jega is not subject to the letters of the civil service rules.

    They said it would be unconstitutional for the President to ask Jega to proceed on terminal leave without valid reason(s). They said the 1999 Constitution specifically provides that the INEC chair can only be removed if there is evidence that he is unable to discharge the functions of his office or for misconduct.

    Besides, they noted that Section 157 of the 1999 Constitution provides that Jega can only be removed by the President with the support of two thirds of the Senate.

    Asking him to go on terminal leave before the expiration of his term, they said, equates to removal from office and unless there is evidence that Jega is infirm in mind or body, or has engaged in gross misconduct, he cannot be removed under any guise before the end of his tenure.

    A former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) president, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), said it is unimaginable that Jega would be removed in the middle of an electoral process.

    “I do not think the President will do it or even contemplate it. Not at this period.

    “Prof Jega’s tenure as INEC chairman is regulated by the constitution and under the same constitution, the INEC chairman is the returning officer for Presidential election. If Jega is sent on terminal leave now, it will amount to sabotaging the already scheduled elections.

    “The President will have to nominate another person who will be subjected to security screening.  After that the name will be forwarded to the National Assembly for approval and all this cannot be done within the weeks we have to conduct the elections.

    “Let us assume they are able to conclude the clearance process. When does the man settle down to plan for election if May 29 is sacrosanct? There are a lot of logistics problem that will be involved and so, I have serious reason to believe that no president will contemplate such a thing at this time.

    “The inherent dangers are limitless and if that is done, we should as well forget about holding elections and the May 29 handover date. If May 29 is sacrosanct, INEC chairman’s tenure is sacrosanct.  People arguing that it is line with civil service procedure for a public officer who haven’t gone on annual leave should proceed on three months terminal leave should tell us if the President’s Ministers will also proceed on three months terminal leave. I think it is better not done.”

    Abuja-based lawyer, Sebastine Hon(SAN) submitted that it would amount to a flagrant breach of the Constitution to force Jega to proceed on terminal leave.

    “In the first place, Jega as INEC chairman is not a civil servant but a creation of the Constitution of Nigeria. This, then, removes him from the control, overt or covert, of civil service bureaucrats like the Secretary to the Federal Government or the Head of Service of the Federation. Consequently, neither of these bureaucrats has any scintilla of power to order him around.

    “In particular, they cannot lawfully ask him to proceed on terminal leave as being speculated. He should ignore such directive if it is ever issued. Secondly, Jega enjoys a constitutional term of five full years. Unless the procedure for Jega’s removal from office as spelt out in section 157 of the Constitution is scrupulously complied with, upon the reasons for such removal as also adumbrated therein being strictly construed, Jega’s period can only come to an end five years after he was sworn in.”

    According to Hon, “It must be borne in mind that section 155 of the Constitution is the federal equivalence of Section 201 of the same Constitution, which has created five-year tenure of office for similar ‘independent’ bodies established for the states.

    “The Supreme Court, in voiding the dissolution of the Kwara State Independent Electoral Commission, held in Governor of Kwara State vs. Ojibara (2007) All FWLR (Pt. 348) 864 that the framers of the Constitution deliberately donated a five-year tenure to the members of the Commission – one year more than the four-year tenure of political office holders – ‘with a view to create continuity and stability in the electoral process and governance’ and that membership of that Commission is not meant to ‘change with the fortunes of the political parties in a state.’

    It concluded that the conditions stipulated in the Constitution for the removal of members of the Constitution must be strictly complied with and that removal based on ‘the general interest’ of the State or due to change in government policy is not permissible. The Court of Appeal was to strictly follow this decision in Dangana vs. Governor of Kwara State (2011) All FWLR (Pt. 593) 1851, wherein it voided the dissolution before the expiration of their five-year tenure, of members of the Kwara State Judicial Service Commission. See, also, Okungbowa vs. Governor of Edo State (2014) All FWLR (Pt. 753) 1975″.

    Hon contended that it would amount to a flagrant breach of the Constitution and a gross abuse of power for anybody to contemplate the removal, by whatever means or name, of Prof. Jega from office. Such move, he said, would send wrong signals to all impartial observers and will definitely, as is already apparent, overheat the system. “This ill-intentioned move must be vigorously resisted by all persons of good will,” he said.

    Lagos lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) said since Jega’s appointment enjoys constitutional flavour he cannot be sent on sabbatical or terminal leave. He, however, recalled that his last media chat, the President gave the erroneous impression that he could hire and fire the chairman and national commissioners of the INEC.

    “With respect, the chairman of INEC has renewable five-year tenure pursuant to section 155 of the Constitution. The appointment of the chairman of INEC is subject to the ratification of the Senate. Since Jega has declined to resign as demanded by some leaders of the PDP he can only be removed with an address of the President backed by a resolution supported by not less than two thirds majority of the members of the senate.”

    To him, there is no basis for the fear of the ruling party over Jega’s neutrality or loyalty. He conducted the 2011 presidential election which won by Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. And he was so returned and declared. Regardless of the fear or anxiety of certain principalities it ought to made abundantly clear that Professor Jega is not a civil servant. His appointment is not at the pleasure of the President or the ruling party.

    A member of the Ogun State Judicial Council, Abayomi Omoyinmi said it would be absurd for the President to want to remove Jega. According to Omoyinmi, “Section 157 of the constitution is clear on grounds upon which any Chairman of bodies established by Section 153 of the Constitution which includes INEC may be removed by the President acting on an address supported by two-thirds majority of senate. Such grounds include inability to discharge the functions of the office or for misconduct”.

    Said Omoyinmi: “Jega cannot be removed from by the president unless it can be proved that he, Jega has been unable to discharge the function of his office arising from infirmity of mind or body.  Jega has not exhibited this neither can any misconduct offence prove so far against him in the course of his duties.

    “Any attempt to sack Jega based on terminal leave is illegal and unconstitutional because terminal leave is only applicable to core civil servants under the civil service rules and not definate tenure rule as in Jega’s case. The Federal Judicial Service Commission like INEC is one of the bodies listed under section 153 of the constitution. Can you then imagine if the Chairman of the Judicial Service Commission who is the Chief Justice of Nigeria is told to go on terminal leave before his tenure ends  at the statutory age of 70years”, he argued.

    A legal scholar Wahab Shittu said Jonathan removing Jega under the guise of retirement leave weeks to the election in which he is a contestant is like a team changing a referee before a football match kicks off.

    “My answer to that will be to draw an analogy. The president is a contestant in the forthcoming presidential election. He’s an interested party. If you likened that to two football teams who are competing, can one of the teams just before the game starts decide to send the referee on suspension or on leave?

    “The president cannot do that because he is in the race. If the president takes such a measure, it will be seen as a coup against the democratic process and a subversion of the will of the people.

    “I want to believe that it is a speculation. It is in the realm of conjecture. It is something that can never happen because the president will not ordinarily toil with the wishes and aspirations of the Nigerian people.

    “Jonathan cannot even ask Jega to proceed on leave without getting the support of two-thirds of the Senate. Again, every law derives it’s legitimacy from the will of the people. Nothing has been done by Jega to deserve any such treatment,” Shittu said.

    Former Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association(NBA), Ikeja Branch, Monday Ubani said the President and the ruling party should know that they cannot employ civil service rules that are applicable to civil servants to ask Jega of INEC, whose appointment is tenured, to proceed on any terminal leave before disengagement. He argued that Jega of INEC is not an employee of the President for him to be removed in such a lackadaisical manner.

    “My submission is that neither the president nor any of his aides have the legal right to ask him to proceed on any terminal leave and they do not have the right to terminate or sack him without complying with the express provisions of the constitution that created the body of INEC in the first place”.

    According to him, the chairman of INEC can only be sacked by the president if has the consent and approval of at least two third majority of the members of the upper chambers(the senate) and the grounds must include that he the INEC chairman is unable to perform his constitutional duties which  grounds must be verifiable. The constitution of Nigeria is the supreme law of the land and it binds all authorities in Nigeria including the office of the president,

    “In fact the president swore to uphold the provisions of the constitution on the day he was sworn in. The president can be impeached if he refuses, fails and or neglect to uphold the provisions of the constitution. Therefore it is my belief that the president or any other person will not toy with the supreme law of the land by violating any of the sections especially the one that applies to INEC in an election year. The president has stated that he has no reason to tamper with the office of INEC chairman and we echo amen to that statement believing that the president of Nigeria will not lie to his citizens.

    He said the consequences of illegal removal of Jega from office will create unnecessary crisis in the country, the end of which nobody can fathom. Every political actor/actress is advised not to stress the foundation of this country which everyone knows is not very strong. Undue stress of the nation’s foundation could be catastrophic.

    Former Chairman, NBA Ikorodu, Kazeem Adebanjo, said: “Constitutionally, Jega cannot be sacked just by a stroke of the President’s pen.”  He hinged his position on Section 157 of the 1999 Constitution which, he said, prescribed the circumstances under which he can be removed from office. He noted that none of those reasons is applicable in his case. “It, therefore, beats one hollow to hear this rumour. Perhaps the APC predicated its suspicion on the antecedents of the President and his penchant for sidetracking the provisions of the law with impunity.”