Tag: President Goodluck Jonathan

  • Jonathan’s impunity

    Jonathan’s impunity

    For the duration of his hyperactive and fairly controversial tenure, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi never quite won my unalloyed support for some of his critical policies as Central Bank of Nigeria governor. Under him, for instance, the CBN’s acts of charity rankled in many regards. His banking reform measures were also implemented with a flamboyance and uppityness that left me wondering whether his unduly feisty approach to banks and banking regulations was not more appropriate for tinseltown than for apex banking. Then he often talked nineteen to the dozen, when restraint and reticence would do, and projected himself as the ultimate Nigerian iconoclast, a sort of business and class egalitarian indifferent to the accoutrements of the wealthy as he was not incommoded by the lowliness of the classless.

    Indeed, as some elements of the report prepared against him by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) indicated, Mallam Sanusi, who was brusquely suspended a few days ago by President Goodluck Jonathan, might be inadequate in some respects and needed to painstakingly convince his traducers his integrity was not sullied by any identifiable form of financial and regulatory brashness. Perhaps he still will. But whatever might be said of the suspended CBN governor, no one could accuse of him of a lack of dignity and character. I had reservations about some of his policies as CBN governor, but I never stopped respecting him for what he stood for and how pluckily he fought for what he believed. He called his soul his own and displayed a robustness of principles seldom seen in public office in these parts.

    In contrast to the dour integrity shown by Mallam Sanusi in public office, Dr Jonathan has handled power most obliquely and impiously, if not with the irritating absolutism of a monarch. The president claims to have suspended Mallam Sanusi and describes the process as innocuously routine, but everything surrounding the suspension indicated the dismissive finality of a sack. Not only was the former CBN boss removed, his temporary and permanent replacements were hastily named with a temerity that reeked of political insensitivity and unconstitutionality, and with such absolute lack of grace and class that leaves one wondering how it was possible for Dr Jonathan to demean the Nigerian presidency to such level of pettiness.

    Again, in contrast to his dithering over the proven allegations against former Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah, and in consonance with the subterfuge evident in the suspension of former President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Ayo Salami, Dr Jonathan has choked and undermined the constitution by removing Mallam Sanusi in contemptuous disregard for the law. The excuse he gave for sacking the former CBN boss is that he breached some financial rules. But in reality, the removal was probably due to the president’s exasperation with Mallam Sanusi’s volubility and irreverence. The suspended CBN boss had complained bitterly at least twice about the NNPC’s unorthodox bookkeeping methods and financial malfeasance. And the complaints had elicited intense controversies and triggered insinuations that the Jonathan presidency condoned corruption, body language and all. But the snag is that the oil agency reports to the Minister of Petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke, one of Dr Jonathan’s favourite cabinet members, if not the most favoured minister. Two attempts to reconcile the books of the NNPC merely reduced the gaps, not eliminated them, and gave impression the agency was nothing but a sinkhole and a conduit for funding the politics of the ruling party.

    By peremptorily sacking Mallam Sanusi, Dr Jonathan has finally given indication he will henceforth not be distracted by the constitution in the pursuit of his ambition to govern Nigeria along absolutist lines. Though he was careful not to cite any constitutional provision in sacking Mallam Sanusi, perhaps knowing full well that no such provisions existed to back him, it was nonetheless clear that he gave indication his action was lawful. But there is no conceivable way of reading or interpreting the CBN Act, as amended, particularly the applicable Section 11, to back the president’s action. It is intriguing that any lawyer, not to talk of any rational person, could suggest that the said provision could be construed any other way. Section 11 is not only clear and direct; it is not ambiguous at all. The president himself knew this.

    The CBN Act doubtless empowers the president to remove a CBN governor if necessary, but that power is circumscribed by and contingent upon the approval of two-thirds of the members of the Senate. The president completely discountenanced this provision and went ahead to do the unthinkable. We may not like Mallam Sanusi, but if executive, legislative and judicial actions are to be based on whom we like or dislike, we would have complete chaos. Dr Jonathan, it is clear, is besotted to some of his ministers. Anyone that challenges his favourites pokes a finger in his eyes. When Dr Jonathan suspended Justice Salami and we failed to get him to reverse himself, we unwittingly approved the president’s resort to self-help. If we fail in checking this new impeachable breach of the constitution, we should ready ourselves for more flagrant breaches of the constitution in a tension-soaked election year.

    The sacking of Mallam Sanusi is not just a case of the president getting rid of a headache; it is an indication of the underlying methodology of the Jonathan presidency and an example of his dreadful unease and impatience with the restraining and civilising leashes of the constitution. Dr Jonathan, I have said repeatedly, lacks the depth and idiosyncratic understanding to appreciate the kind of democracy Nigeria should run, and the kind of country we should have, one that should serve as example and provide leadership to the rest of Africa, and one that should challenge even the most democratic country in the world. Lacking such understanding and discipline, Dr Jonathan has constituted himself and his government into a tyranny run by a camorra of friends, avaricious aides and petulant family members. We are in far worse trouble than we imagine, especially in an election year, for the president has more dangerous concoctions on tap.

    If we look forward to any salvation, it will certainly not come from the presidency. Those characters in the presidency are too far gone to be redeemable. If we look to the legislature, we would have to ponder which direction to go: is it to the House of Representatives or to the Senate? If it is to the House, it is satisfying to note that that assembly of men is fairly radical and of some use. But the constitution does not give them the kind of powers that would make them tame the president in the face of a grovelling and ingratiating Senate. And if it is to the Senate we look, we would be seeing nothing but a chimera. The Nigerian Senate is a party to the conspiracy to undermine the constitution, blissfully unaware that they are in effect undermining their own very existence. They see themselves more like an arm of the ruling party, nay, a department in the Jonathan presidency. They will do nothing radical or altruistic; and they will not lift a finger in the defence of the people or the constitution.

    Might the judiciary be of any help? Mallam Sanusi has already indicated he would be seeking help in its hallowed precincts. But litigation produces its own paradoxes. By going to court, Mallam Sanusi will be denying us a confirmation of the Senate’s infamy and conspiracy with the Jonathan presidency. The Senate will cite the case in court and decline discussions on the unlawful act of suspending the CBN governor. And since there is already an acting CBN governor, as it were, it would not matter whether the Senate declined to confirm the president’s nominee, Godwin Emefiele. The president can afford to wait it out. So, too, disingenuously, can the conniving Senate. In June, after Mallam Sanusi’s natural tenure expires, Emefiele’s confirmation will be done, and it will seem natural and unimpeachable.

    I restate once again that the problem is not Mallam Sanusi’s competence or style. The problem is that he raised fundamental and disquieting concerns about financial disparities in that most disturbing of arcana, the NNPC, and the fact that the president in sacking Sanusi acted most precipitately and brutishly by assaulting the constitution. If we condone these infringements, we will not only be exhibiting our powerlessness in the face of intense financial impropriety on the part of government agencies, we would also be signalling to Dr Jonathan that his monarchical tendencies, his contempt for the constitution, his demeaning attachment to a few of his cabinet members and his lawless predilections will be winked at. Dr Jonathan has taken the first awful steps in the direction of Somalia, Central African Republic, Sudan/South Sudan and Democratic Republic of Congo. It is no exaggeration to say he has thus taken us closer to the precipice than at any other time in our anguished and chequered history, including the civil war era. Should we indeed be compelled to endure four more years of Dr Jonathan and his lawlessness, as some pundits are projecting, there is no telling what horrifying fate the country would meet.

  • Too little, too late

    Too little, too late

    •Sack of four ministers by president is motion without movement

     

    It came too late, it was utterly anti-climactic and hardly of any effect whatsoever. This is the most apt way to describe the ouster of four ministers from the Federal Executive Council (FEC), last week. President Goodluck Jonathan had dropped the powerful and controversial aviation minister, Ms Stella Oduah. Also gone are: Mr. Godsday Orubebe, Minister of Niger-Delta Affairs; Navy-Capt. Caleb Olubolade, Minister of Police Affairs and Dr. Yerima Ngama, Minister of State for Finance.

    Recall that last September, President Jonathan sacked nine members of his cabinet and none of them has been replaced till date. Indeed, it has been suggested that President Jonathan’s tinkering with his cabinet is more a gambit aimed at the 2015 presidential election than an attempt to rescue the country’s faltering socio-economic conditions.

    The need for a total overhaul of the current FEC had been long overdue as the president’s team has been long jaded, corruption ridden and lackluster. Many of the ministers have been caught with hands in the pie while some had lost any drive or initiative whatsoever.

    The case of Ms. Oduah was spectacularly scandalous. Apart from embarking on a whirlwind of airports renovation which has turned out to be of poor quality, she was involved in the purchase of two bulletproof cars for N255 million found to be grossly over-valued and shorn of due process. It was a scam that shook the entire nation and smeared the country’s image. The House of Representatives committee which investigated the matter found her culpable and recommended a review of her appointment. But the Presidency had dithered, refusing to take any action since last year over an affair that the world came to know as Oduahgate.

    In spite of her firing, the issue of due process and corruption hovers like a gaping bird of prey over the Jonathan administration. He indicated the files were on his desk. Did he fire her because of the scandal? No records show an answer, and until a verdict on the matter comes out of the presidency, Mr. Jonathan is deemed to have papered over this big, scandalous crack.

    Though Mr. Orubebe claimed he was not sacked but quit to pursue his political ambition, he however, proved to be utterly inefficient on his beat as the manner and quality of work on the East-West Road has shown. His ministry, being in charge of this major artery linking the restive Niger-Delta zone to the rest of the country, has been unable to make much headway on this important project more than two years after. Akinbolade and Ngama deny they were axed but their ministries did not epitomise any remarkable service or notable performance.

    Beyond being a run around the roundabout, the entire cabinet makeover remains ineffectual as ministers who ought to have been given a public reprimand through an express pronouncement of sack are being afforded a face-saving exit. In clarifying their exit status, the Minister of Information and Communication, Mr. Labaran Maku, noted that, “The president said he had asked them to go because they indicated interest in playing deeper roles in the politics of the country.” Jonathan’s method of governance has left many Nigerians wondering whether he is serious about setting aright his floundering administration. If ministers found to have brazenly compromised their offices are simply asked to go, then there seems to be no hope for any redemption.

    Apart from those ‘asked to go’, there are still many in the cabinet who have been found wanting, either in keeping proper account of their activities or what is clearly inefficient performance of their duties. The Minister of Petroleum and Natural Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke has been in the heart of mind-boggling scandals in the last two years, yet she sits pretty in the cabinet as if she were an untouchable. Under the watch of Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala who heads the finance ministry and who also wears the appellation of coordinating minister of the economy (CME), the economy has been in the doldrums and the annual budget mere routines with no value-added whatsoever. But she has remained at her desk, inured to the cries of the populace and unmoved to make any change.

  • What becomes of Oduah’s aviation master plan?

    What becomes of Oduah’s aviation master plan?

    Following last week’s sack of the Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah, by President Goodluck Jonathan, anxiety is mounting over the fate of her airport infrastructure projects.KELVIN OSA OKUNBOR reports.

    During Princess Stella Oduah’s tenure, the aviation master plan was dear to her. With her exit last week as aviation minister, questions are being asked on what becomes of the project. Under her watch, she undertook the remodelling of 22 airports across the country , which were scheduled to be implemented in phases.

    Besides, she initiated the airport city concept, otherwise known as aerotropolis, the building of perishable agro-allied terminals and replacement of obsolete air nivagation facilities at airports across the country.

    Part of the projects in the master plan include the five international airport terminals in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Enugu and Kano to be built by a consortium of Chinese investors.

    Others are the construction of the General Aviation Terminals (GAT) for charter operators in Lagos and Port Harcourt and a state-of-the-art car park, transit passenger lounge, and an independent power plant at the Lagos Airport.

    Some aviation players, including Comrade Benjamin Okewu, President of the Air Transport Services Senior Association of Nigeria (ATSSSAN) believed that the projects would be completed despite her exit; others, including Comrade Olayinka Abioye, General Secretary, National Association of Air Transport Employees (NUATE), think otherwise.

    Okewu said the projects would be completed because aviation workers have resolved to ensure projects meant to benefit Nigerians are not abandoned.

    He spoke of plans by aviation workers to remind whoever is appointed her successor to ensure he or she does not deviate from the master plan.

    In a statement, issued after a meeting in Lagos, Okewu and ATSSSAN’s Deputy National Secretary Tarnongu Captain said all hands must be on deck to ensure that the exit of Princess Stella Oduah should not have any negative impact on the aviation industry.

    The group said it was not averse to change since it is the only thing that is constant in life .

    It said it was time for the President to appoint a person with sincere and fundamental interest of the aviation industry at heart.

    The association assured President Goodluck Jonathan of its readiness to provide the platform and safety valve to support the in-coming minister to ensure that the Transformation Agenda in the aviation industry is not truncated.

    Abioye alleged that there is nothing to convince industry players that the projects would be completed because they were shrouded in secrecy.

    He said details of the scope of work and the contractors handling the projects are not in the public domain.

    The Secretary-General, Nigerian Aviation Professionals Association (NAPA), Mr Siedu Abdulrasaq, believes that all the projects initiated by Oduah will be completed. He says there are competent hands in the team she left behind to complete the projects.

    He said the former minister has put the necessary measures in place to see to the completion of her numerous projects, including the airport remodelling and the aerotropolis project.

    But an airline operator who pleaded not to be named said there is no need to entertain any fears over the projects that Oduah left behind because they were funded by the government.

    He said: “Because these projects have changed the face of aviation, there is no way they will be abandoned, whether Oduah is there or not. Look at the airport terminals. These projects will continue because they are in the interest of the aviation industry.’’

    Mr Chris Aligbe, an aviation consultan, said it would not be acceptable for the government to allow the projects to hang in the balance because of the minister’s exit.

    He said: ‘’It is not ideal for anybody to think that the ambitous projects started by Oduah will be abandoned. Government is continuous, so who ever is appointed to head the ministry will work with heads of aviation agencies to ensure the completion of the projects. This has to be so, because these projects have turned around the sector which for many years was almost comatose.

    “There is no debate that the former minister of aviation, Stella Oduah made her mark in the sector, with the massive infrastructure upgrade, the ambitious aerotropolis, the proposed cargo terminals, the new international terminals, these were projects others could not deliver in the past. Despite the scandais and other issues raised by stakeholders, I think she made her mark, and the greatest disservice by any successor is not to continue from where she left off.’’

    Sheri Kyari, an Aircraft Engineer and Executive Director of Centre for Aviation Safety and Research, said there is no need to fear over the noncompletion of the projects Oduah left behind.

    Kyari said: ‘’One may be tempted to be afraid, but stakeholders want government to sound it to her successor that the greatest disservice to the industry master plan is not to complete those ambitious projects that take aviation to the next level. Honestly, Oduah made her mark, with courageous and ambitious projects that will take aviation to the next level. I do not think government would be insentitive to do that. This is because the expectation of industry players is so high, as to what becomes of those projects in the master plan. Despite the scandals, this was one minister that took the bull by the horn to deliver projects that have changed the face of aviation. If other ministers did a little of what Oduah did, the aviation sector would have moved forward.’’

    It is believed that the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET) and the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), should work towards completing the projects.

    In an interview in Lagos, Chairman of Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON), Captain Nogie Meggison said Oduah contributed her best to turn around the aviation sector.

    Meggison said Oduah attracted a lot of funding into the aviation sector, which helped her carry out the massive airports rehabilitation programmes.

    The AON chairman said her leadership style may appear controversial , but, she ensured any project she was convinced about was executed .

    He noted that if she had some knowledge of the rudiments of aviation, perhaps she could have done better.

    Meggison said: ”Today, we may be clamouring for the appointment of an aviation professional as minister, but Oduah before she left attracted a lot of funding into the sector, which helped her to carry out the remodelling of airports.

    In other critical areas of the aviation sector, she could have done better, if the information at her disposal at the time of leaving office was available to her when she assumed duties two years ago. But, we must admit that she tried her best.”

    However, during her tenure as aviation minister, Oduah fought a running battle with many concessionaires, whom she said were shortchangingTHE government through fraudulent airport concessions.

    She said the collective wealth of the nation, was being enjoyed by a tiny fragment of the population through airport concessions that were skewed against the interest of the government.

    This led to the revocation of the concession agreement with Maevis Limited, for the provision of automated airport management system at both the Lagos andAbuja airports.

    The matter is still in court. She also had a running battle with Bi- Courtney Aviation Services Limited, over the tenure of its concession of the new Domestic Terminal Two of the Lagos Airport as well as the building of hotel and conference centre opposite the new domestic terminal.

  • 2015: Jonathan holds secret meetings with Ooni, Alaafin, Emir of Kano

    2015: Jonathan holds secret meetings with Ooni, Alaafin, Emir of Kano

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday crisscrossed Oyo, Osun and Kano States for curious ‘private’ meetings with three of the nation’s top traditional rulers – the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade and the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero.

    Officials gave no details of the meetings other than calling them “private”.

    Although, Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State was on hand to personally welcome the president to Oyo State, and even accompanied him to Oyo Town, Governors Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State and Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano did not show up to receive him.

    Only their deputies – Mrs. Titi Laoye-Tomori (Osun) and Alhaji Abdullahi Ganduje- received the president.

    The president’s helicopter landed at the Ibadan Airport around mid-day.

    On hand to receive him with Gov Ajimobi were the Oyo State deputy governor, Chief Moses Alake-Adeyemo, speaker of the House of Assembly, Monaurat Sunmonu and the Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Oloye Jumoke Akinjide.

    From Ibadan, the President flew to Ile-Ife for an appointment with the Ooni.

    After a brief introduction of the eminent personalities who had gathered at the palace to receive the president, he and his host, Oba Sijuwade, retired into an inner room for discussion.

    It lasted for about 30 minutes.

    He was accompanied to the palace by the Osun State deputy governor, Mrs. Laoye-Tomori.

    Among the people at the Ooni’s palace was a PDP governorship aspirant in the state and a native of Ife, Chief Iyiola Omisore, who said that the president’s visit was a demonstration of his love and respect for the traditional institution.

    The visitor departed the palace at 3.45 pm, declining to state his mission in the ancient town.

    His next port of call was Oyo Town where he met with the Alaafin for 50 minutes.

    Again, he did not tell reporters why he was in the town.

    He merely said that it was a private visit which he did not expect to be reported.

    But he also acknowledged that he is a public figure whose activities cannot be hidden.

    The president lauded Oba Adeyemi for the peace reigning in the state and the country at large.

    He told the crowd who had gathered in the reception hall for his arrival that he was at home to visit his father.

    Jonathan said he also came to thank the people of the state and the entire Southwest people for the support given him and the PDP in the 2011 election.

    He, however, refrained from making political statements, saying it could be interpreted as campaigning.

    He said: “I thank not only the people of the state but the entire Southwest for the support we received in 2011. I have come to reciprocate the gesture with the hope that things will continue as well. We are one, I remain your own.”

    Oba Adeyemi initially declined comments, saying his guest was on a private visit.

    But, when asked about the possible effect of the visit on Oyo politics in 2015, the monarch said President Jonathan did not discuss politics with him and that he was only thankful for the peace reigning in the state and the country.

    Oba Adeyemi said that the president enjoined him and other traditional rulers in the country to ensure that Nigerians continue to live in peace with one another.

    A former governor of the state, Dr Omololu Olunloyo, who was present at the meeting told journalists that the president did the right thing by visiting the Alaafin and the Ooni of Ife.

    President Jonathan had earlier travelled to Kano and was accompanied to the palace of the Emir of Kano by the Kano State deputy governor, Dr Abdullahi Ganduje and the CBN governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi,.

    He lauded the Emir for restoring peace and stability to the metropolitan city of Kano.

    The visit lasted about 20 minutes, 10 of which he spent in private with the monarch.

    The President told the emir and his advisers: “We are on a private visit to Kano and to wish you good health. Let me use this opportunity to thank the Emirate Council for closely partnering with the government to ensure stable security in Kano.

    “We wish our Emir long life and good health. We need people like the Emir to guide and encourage the government for the good of the nation.”

    In his response, the emir, Alhaji Bayero reminded the president of the need to restore peace and economic stability to the country.

    The emir sued for an all inclusive participation in the running of government, saying: “Peace and unity of this country is very paramount to us. We urge the government to further work hard to improve economic stability in Nigeria, adding that he wants the government to carry everybody along and ensure equal sense of belonging.”

    He pledged that the emirate would continue to support the government to move the country forward.

    The emir prayed for continuous political stability and economic growth of the country.

  • National Conference: Jonathan shops for chairman

    National Conference: Jonathan shops for chairman

    •Jumbo allowances for delegates

    •North pushes for chairmanship

     

    President Goodluck Jonathan is shopping for the chairman, deputy chairman and secretary of the planned National Conference as preparation for the talks heightens.

    Delegates can also expect mouth watering allowances, The Nation gathered yesterday.

    Some forces in the presidency are understood to be pushing for the appointment of a retired Chief Justice of Nigeria or a retired judge of any of the courts in the land to head the conference.

    A top government source said that whoever would preside over the conference would be a person of “unimpeachable character.”

    Sources also suggested that the president was under pressure to slash the allowances of the 492 delegates following revelations that each of them might return home with as much as N12.195 million at the end of the three-month conference.

    Five names are said to be on the list of those being considered by the president as chairman of the conference and a source said that the president is keen to appoint a chairman who will appeal to all Nigerians.

    Said the source, “We know that some people are making a strong case for a retired Chief Justice of Nigeria, or a retired judge as the chairman of the conference. Others are calling for tested constitutional lawyers or bureaucrats.

    “The president is being careful in nominating any Nigerian with political leaning to avoid the conference starting on a controversial note.

    “The good thing is that Nigeria is not short of men of integrity; it is left to Nigerians to appreciate them.”

    The source explained that the president would appoint the chairman, deputy chairman, and secretary of the conference.

    He added: “So far, the North is pushing for the chairmanship of the conference going by the precedent that past conferences were mostly chaired by the South.

    “Some have also emphasised the need for the South-West to retain the chairmanship slot in view of the ‘rancour-free job that Senator Femi Okunrounmu’s Committee has done.

    “I think as soon as the president is done with the reconstitution of the cabinet, the structure of those who will manage the conference will emerge.”

    It was also gathered that the president might cut the budget for the conference because the projected number of delegates had been reduced.

    The federal government had voted N7 Billion for the conference based on the initial delegates of about 571.

    Following the unwieldy number of delegates, the president reduced it to 492.

    It was learnt that the budget may be reduced to either N6billion or N5billion.

    Also, there were concerns that each of the 492 delegates may earn as much as either N12, 195, 121.95 951, 219 or N10, 162,601.62 for three months if N6billion or N5billion is voted for their allowances.

    At the rate of N5billion, each delegate may earn N112, 917.79 per day.

    If N6billion is budgeted for the allowances of the delegates, each of them may be paid N135, 501.35 per day.

    A source said: “I think the president may reduce the budget because what was put in the 2014 Appropriation was based on about 571 to 572 Delegates before the President pruned it to 492 Delegates.

    “All I can tell you is that the delegates will be paid only allowances per day to cater for their needs in Abuja. It is too early to assume how much of the N7Billion budget will be voted for the allowances of the delegates.

    “The details are being worked out. And as soon as the principal officers of the conference are in place, things will take shape.

    “What we are proposing is to ensure that the National Conference has its own secretariat different from government bureaucracy.”

    On the nomination of delegates, the source said: “Consultations are still in progress. And for those to be nominated by the president, the presidency is tidying up this end.”

  • Gulak dares Northern leaders over support for Jonathan

    Gulak dares Northern leaders over support for Jonathan

    The Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Ahmed Ali Gulak declared yesterday that Northern leaders who are threatening to vote against President Goodluck Jonathan in next year’s election are free to keep their support.

    He said there are other people from that part of the country who are willing to vote for the president.

    “If you say you won’t vote for Goodluck another person would vote for him even from your own house. If Ango Abdullahi says he will not vote for Goodluck Jonathan, Tanko Yakassai will vote for him,” Gulak said on the Kaduna based Liberty Radio against the backdrop of continued agitation by the Ango Abdulahi-led Northern Elders Forum (NEF) for the return of the Presidency to the North in 2015.

    Gulak blamed the turbulent regional politics of the First Republic for most of the socio-political problems confronting Nigeria today.

    He said:”Nigeria got it wrong maybe right from the beginning. Don’t forget that immediately after independence, we had military coup because political development at that time was turbulent. Don’t forget operation wetie in the Southwest and the fact that Zik had to leave the Southwest party to form the NCNC. Don’t forget that our politics at that time was regionalised.

    “The Southwest had the Action Group (AG), the North had the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC) and the East had the NCNC. And because politics was so regionalised, people went to their regional cocoon and I think that was where we started getting it wrong.

    “Instead of looking at issues from a nationalist point, we were more regional and after that turbulence that followed, the Military came in and there were coups and counter coups until 1979 when we again had a taste of democracy under Shehu Shagari. After four years, the military again came in.”

    Speaking on the reported pressure by President Jonathan on his deputy to give the governorship ticket of the state to Senator Isaiah Balat, Gulak said “this is the handiwork of the opposition who have come back with their mischief.”

    He said:”President Goodluck has nothing to do with Kaduna politics in terms of who becomes governor. It’s entirely in the hands of the Kaduna people.

    “We know their tactics which is to divide the house, bring in differences for the opposition to come in and take over. The strategy of divide and rule, causing confusion within the presidency and the PDP will not work”.

    Gulak asked Nigerians to leave the interpretation of the constitution on the eligibility of President Jonathan for the courts to decide, saying “let us leave that to the court to decide. President Goodluck became President on 6th May, 2010 after the death of late President Yar’Adua and the constitution says on the death of the president, the vice becomes the president. President Goodluck did not write the constitution.”

  • Jonathan’s late salvoes

    Jonathan’s late salvoes

    President Goodluck Jonathan may have eased out four members of his so-far uninspiring cabinet, and seems set to bring in more notable persons, but it is doubtful whether the reshuffle will have quite the remarkable momentum he hopes to create for his performance as president and his re-election campaign. His Chief of Staff, the much reviled and hated Mike Oghiadomhe, has been shoved out. So, too, were the haughty Stella Oduah of the Aviation ministry, the officious Caleb Olubolade of Police Affairs, the imperious Godsday Orubebe of the Niger Delta ministry and the relatively unknown Yerima Ngama, Minister of State for Finance. Having watched with macabre delight the effect the reshuffle was having on the country, the president, reports suggest, is now seized by a frenzy to draw more blood. Converted to bloodlust and energised by the sanguinary effect of sacking his men, the president will probably do a little more, if not at a high level, then at a more sober and lower level.

    The president is believed to be prepared to bring in well-known persons, some of them retired generals, former governors, senators and technocrats. Many think his new team is more likely to be accurately described as star-studded, and he himself seems to have rediscovered the zest to tinker with things. He will also probably think he is in the process of assembling a team that will deliver the presidency to him once more, that is, if the truculent and bellicose former President Olusegun Obasanjo does not derail his wagon. My private thoughts are that Dr Jonathan’s cabinet reshuffle is motivated by wholly expedient reasons, nothing to do with performance, public morality, or even ideas.

    His paradigms will not only remain the same, woolly and stifling as they have been since he assumed office, they will also fail as usual to achieve any significant purpose. The problem with the Jonathan government, as everyone knows, is not just a case of long-lasting policy inconsistencies, accentuated by bureaucratic in-fighting; it is a case of acute absence of a solid inner core around which his governing paradigms could coalesce. So, the reshuffle as well as the selection of new cabinet members will neither be dictated by any attempt to reinforce the ideas that underpin and propel his government nor be geared towards demolishing his image as a bumbling president and recasting him as a statesman or a charismatic leader. When he assumed office, there was no indication of a genuine conviction about what and how his government should look like; there is nothing at the moment to indicate such a conviction has been birthed.

    As a matter of fact, Dr Jonathan has shown over the few years that his leadership style is marked by a noticeable reluctance to do what is right and a marked stubbornness to amend what is wrong. He waited almost forever to get rid of Mr Orubebe even after it had become obvious the minister specialised in fomenting animosities in the Niger Delta than making friends for the president. Dr Jonathan also demonstrated an unrestrained foul mood in disciplining Ms Oduah after her serial indiscretions had all but alienated virtually everyone in the Aviation industry, civil society, and an incredulous international community stupefied by our government’s slothfulness. It is not clear what Dr Ngama’s faults were, or why the president should skip the head of that ministry and hit upon the seldom-seen and little-known Minister of State.

    Left to Dr Jonathan, and had circumstances not pushed him to act, there was no way he would have unhorsed Ms Oduah. He proved quite reluctant to do what was right when he stuck adamantly to Bamanga Tukur, the arcane gerontocrat who turned both the PDP and reason itself on their heads. Until it became impossible for him to ignore the uproar triggered by Alhaji Tukur in the ruling party, the president was determined not to touch the former party chairman. Whether now, in the past, or in the future, Dr Jonathan will neither act out of conviction nor out of principles. On many occasions in the past he had acted solely out of expediency, dithering and pussyfooting all the way; he will continue to do so until the end of his presidency, whether or not he gets a second term.

    Closely leashed to his often expedient way of handling grave matters is the fact that the president always acts when it is too late. When he finally and reluctantly removed Ms Oduah, he had left the matter to fester every badly until there was no honour left for him in the ugly incident of the armoured cars scandal. It had been expected the president would act firmly and expeditiously by sacking Ms Oduah and sustaining the integrity of the presidency. Instead, he left the matter for far too long, and tongues to wag ceaselessly, before he stirred himself. Whether he convinced himself his re-election chances were threatened by his lack of principles and promptness, or others persuaded him he risked a second term by doing nothing, we may never know. But at least we know he is a skilful procrastinator, one with an eye perpetually on the main chance.

    Some of the names bandied as candidates for ministerial appointments are gentlemen the country is familiar with. They are strong, may add value, even if nominal, to the Jonathan presidency, and are ordinarily not bad choices. But for a government devoid of positive qualities other than the character of nothingness it both embodies and engenders, and for a government that values expediency over principles, these ‘strong’ men may end up adding nothing to the government, not even in an election year, contrary to the president’s expectations. Indeed, we should expect more procrastination, more surrender to expediency, more sacrifice of everything valuable on the altar of politics, and less adherence to the cause of anti-corruption, justice, fair play and equity. These, in short, typify the essential character of the Jonathan presidency. This character will not change in a million years, and it must shock the rational mind that any talented politician should invest his accomplishment and person on a government whose primary and primordial notions take on life only when mediocrity and farce manifest.

  • Jonathan and  Obasanjo’s bellyaches

    Jonathan and Obasanjo’s bellyaches

    THE Daily Sun newspaper quotes former President Olusegun Obasanjo as reiterating that President Goodluck Jonathan vowed before his election in 2011 not to seek a second term if he was elected that year. Reading what Chief Obasanjo said, it was impossible not to be singed by his anger, nay bitterness. Hear him: “President Jonathan said, not only once, twice, publicly, not only in Nigeria, outside Nigeria, that he would have one term, and said that to me…One of the things that is very important in the life of any man or any person is that he should be a man or person of his word…If you decide your word should not be taken seriously, that’s entirely up to you.”

    Barometer can of course not vouch for the character of President Jonathan, nor is he competent to defend his vacillations. But it is curious that Chief Obasanjo keeps accusing his opponents of precisely the same faults and weakness of character that have shaped and sullied his narrow worldview. President Jonathan, he says, does not honour his word. Did Chief Obasanjo ever once honour his? President Jonathan’s lack of scruples is in fact probably not even as dishonourable as Chief Obasanjo’s absolute lack of consideration for democratic principles. For eight years the latter was president; yet he could not appreciate the contradiction, not to say the inanity, of coaxing himself to flout constitutional provisions on term limit.

    If there is still a politician naïve enough to think a president could be cajoled into forfeiting the opportunity of re-election, that politician must be living in a fool’s paradise. Power is an aphrodisiac, it is said, and aphrodisiacs do not temper excitement and hunger for anything.

  • Aviation stakeholders insist on expert as minister

    Aviation stakeholders insist on expert as minister

    Stakeholders in the aviation industry yesterday called on President Goodluck Jonathan to appoint a professional with technical background as minister of aviation.

    In an unprecedented, unanimous decision, the stakeholders said their demand is not negotiable.

    The stakeholders include the Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON), Aviation Roundtable and professional unions, including National Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers (NAAPE), National Association of Air Traffic Controllers (NATCA), Nigerian Professional Pilots Association (NPP) and Air Transport Services Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (ATSSSAN).

    Others are: National Association of Air Traffic Engineers (NAEE), National Cabin Crew Association (NACCA) and National Air Traffic Communicators Association of Nigeria (NACAN).

    Rising from an emergency meeting yesterday in Lagos, the convener, Captain Nogie Meggison, who is chairman of AON, said there could be no better time to appoint a professional as minister given the enormous challenges in the sector.

    Megison said stakeholders will not accept any minister, who, out of limited knowledge, would make mistakes that could affect several lives.

    He said the professionals came together to urge Jonathan to appoint an aviation expert as minister because of the sensitivity of the industry.

    Failure to appoint a professional as minister, he added, will take the industry several years backwards, noting that previous ministers could have performed better if they had sufficient knowledge of the sector.

    Meggison explained that though the immediate minister, Princess Stella Oduah attracted robust funding to the sector, her limited knowledge of aviation led to some of the unpopular policy decisions.

    According to him:”It is only an aviation professional that will understand the problems of the sector, not a politician.

    “At a time like this, appointing a non- professional will take the industry several years backwards.

    “If a new minister is appointed now without a knowledge of aviation, it would take him nine months to twelve months to have a grip of the industry.”

    The NAAPE President, Isaac Balami, said stakeholders will not succumb to any threat or blackmail until the president appoints an industry expert as minister.

    “The mistakes we have made in the past are enough. We cannot continue in the old fashion of recycling politicians to oversee the aviation sector,” he insisted.

    The President of Aviation Roundtable, Captain Dele Ore, said there is no going back on the agitation for the appointment of an aviation professional as minister.

    According to him: “We need somebody to hit the ground running, a seasoned professional, who does not need ten months or one year to learn the rudiments of aviation.

    “If Dr Aliu, an aviation expert trained in Nigeria, could be elected as the President of ICAO, why can’t an aviation professional run aviation industry?”

  • The tragedy of 2015 presidential campaigns

    The tragedy of 2015 presidential campaigns

    Before the third quarter of this year, the profiles of the two main political parties’ standard-bearers may become discernible. Pessimism should be deplored, but the chances of the two big parties presenting inspiring candidates are fairly remote. President Goodluck Jonathan is doing everything possible, notwithstanding the vitriolic denunciation and unease of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, to get himself elected as the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate. If he runs, as he is almost certain to do, it will not be on account of any exemplary work he has done to remake and refit the country since he assumed office, or on the grounds of any inspiring image he has projected thus far. As far as both work and image are concerned, Dr Jonathan is an uninspiring and exaggerated blank.

    If he runs, he will not base his candidacy on what he hopes to do, though he and his party will effuse a smattering of national or even ideological agenda encompassing social, economic and political issues. Nor will he feel the compulsion to demonstrate competence, savvy, charisma and consistency, all of which are components of strong and statesmanlike leadership. He has not shown a modicum of these attributes right from his assumption of office, and they are not intrinsic to him. It is therefore inconceivable that he will feel incommoded by their nonexistence in his character makeup. He will instead base his candidacy, as his political tutelage has taught him, on the geopolitics of his background, the support he can muster from his rabid followers and supporters, the voluble and recriminatory effusions of jobholders and paid party hawks, and on the potentials of his appointees’ muscle flexing.

    When he assumed office, the convoluted process had nothing to do with him as a person, or on his background, or on his perceived competence. The people and the legislature were rightly concerned about issues of political decorum and the need to save and uphold the constitution. Concocting a so-called doctrine of necessity upon which Dr Jonathan rode into power was therefore as much a reflection of our concern for stability and continuity as it was an indication of the kind of polity we wished to nurture, one in which a person’s background, faith or social standing was irrelevant. But since he assumed office, Dr Jonathan has done especially little to burnish both his image and credentials. It is also clear that Chief Obasanjo’s reservations about Dr Jonathan has nothing to do with the president’s competence, for the former is himself famously regarded as a hugely distracted and anachronistic politician and leader.

    But the tragedy does not appear to end with either Dr Jonathan or the PDP. As a matter of fact, there is little indication that the opposition party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), will itself present a remarkable paradigmatic difference. The party may not have tasted power at the centre to elicit assessment or comparison, but there is much already in it to present us ingredients for a fair conclusion of what direction the party may wish to follow. There are enough tested, charismatic and brilliant politicians in its fold, but its presidential candidate is unlikely to be judged by any of these great attributes or be produced with the peculiar and desperate needs of the country in view.

    The truth is that if the party is not to come to grief in 2015, it must also focus on the geopolitical dynamics of the country, the campaign for rotation, the need to be sensitive to issues of religion, and the general safeness and acceptability of the candidate himself.

    The party has promised a transparent process for electing its candidates; but that process will be modified and vitiated by exterior and even ulterior factors, leading to the selection of standard-bearers more safe than adequate for the country’s radical needs. But all may not be lost; for in the end, the performance of a candidate once he assumes office, and in particular for the APC, may be influenced by the internal competitiveness, ideological stature and general stamina and robustness of the party in power.