Tag: President Jonathan

  • Niger governor commends Jonathan’s decision on national confab

    Niger governor commends Jonathan’s decision on national confab

    Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger on Thursday commended President Goodluck Jonathan’s decision to send the outcome of the National Dialogue to the National Assembly.

    Aliyu spoke at his residence in Minna when intending Christian pilgrims to Israel led by Mr. Abraham Isah paid him Sallah homage.

    “The President is right that everything discussed at the forum must go to the National Assembly.

    “Sending the report of the dialogue to the National Assembly will be in line with the prevailing political arrangement in the country where there is presently sovereignty,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the governor as saying during the visit.

    He was optimistic that the final document that would emerge from the National and State Assemblies after the national dialogue “would be a Nigerian constitution made by Nigerians.’’

    The governor said the country would remain as one even after the dialogue, adding that the nation would be better strengthened democratically.

    Aliyu promised to continue to give equal treatment to Christians and Muslims in the state.

    He urged the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) and its members to continue to pray for the peace of the country and live in harmony with other religious groups in the state.

    Isah commended the governor for his non-discriminatory attitude.

     

  • Nigeria elected into UN Council

    Nigeria elected into UN Council

    Nigeria was on Thursday elected into the non-permanent seat of the United Nations Security Council, scoring a total of 186 out of a possible 193 votes.

    This would be Nigeria’s fourth election into the seat since it became independent in 1960.

    It was also the second time the country would secure a seat in the Council under President Goodluck Jonathan. The first time was in 2010-2011.

    Meanwhile, President Jonathan has welcomed Nigeria’s election into the Council, thanking all member- countries that supported the country’s bid.

    A statement issued by his media aide, Dr. Reuben Abati, said, “On behalf of the Federal Government and people of Nigeria, President Jonathan wishes to convey his sincere appreciation for the support of all member-countries of the United Nations who voted for Nigeria’s election to the Security Council.

    “The President believes that today’s endorsement of Nigeria’s candidature for the Security Council seat by the vast majority of member-countries is a glowing expression of support and encouragement for Nigeria’s active participation in the promotion of peace, security and political stability in Africa and other parts of the world.

    “This is the fourth time since it became independent in 1960 that Nigeria is being elected to the UN Security Council. It is also the second time (2010-2011 and 2014-2015) that Nigeria would be elected to the Council under the Jonathan Presidency.

    “The President is particularly delighted by this historic victory and assures the global community that Nigeria, under his leadership, would continue to make very significant contributions towards the achievement and sustenance of global peace and security.”

     

  • FG committed to boosting local production, job creation – Jonathan

    FG committed to boosting local production, job creation – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday said that his administration will continue to promote the rapid diversification and industrialization of the Nigerian economy in order to create more employment opportunities in the country.

    He made this remark while receiving a delegation from Alstom Worldwide which won the bid for the Afam Power Plant at the State House, Abuja. The delegation was led by Mr. Patrick Kron.

    The President stressed that the Federal Government will also continue to do its best to encourage investors who will support its efforts towards creating more jobs for qualified Nigerian youth.

    According to a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the President said: “The population of our young people is high. If we are unable to provide jobs for these young people, the country could face serious problems. That is why we will continue to encourage companies like yours which can contribute to the training and employment of young Nigerians,”

    Reaffirming his administration’s full commitment to the efficient implementation of its road-map for the development of Nigeria’s power sector, he said that government will continue to ensure that international best practices and standards were maintained in the ongoing privatization of the sector’s assets.

    Jonathan said that he was particularly pleased that the recent bidding for some of Nigeria’s power generation and distribution companies had been considered transparent and fair by the international business community.

    He said: “We will continue to do more in line with globally-accepted business standards and ethics.”

    Mr. Kron, who is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Alstom, told President Jonathan that Alstom which is one of the world’s leading power engineering and infrastructure companies, will work with the Federal Government and the French Government on capacity-building schemes to train more Nigerian youth in the field of power engineering and technology.

    He was accompanied to the Presidential Villa by the French Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Jacques Champagne de Labriolle and the Managing Director of Alstom (Nigeria) Limited, Mrs. Victoria Adefala.

     

  • National ID commission gets December 2014 deadline

    National ID commission gets December 2014 deadline

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday directed the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) to ensure it registers all Nigerians by December 31, 2014.

    He gave the directive while formally launching the enrolment exercise for the issuance of the National Identification Number (NIN) at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to him, the National Identification Number will go a long way to enhance the work of security agencies in the country, reduce the cost of managing the naira cash component in the country, reduce the amount of currency in circulation and boost the fight against corruption.

    Stressing that it will also be essential if Nigeria is to introduce social security or welfare payments, he said that the system is flexible and provides for expansion and upgrading in line with technological advances.

    The President noted that Nigeria cannot be an exception to the global trend towards Identity Management and Centralised National Identity Database, saying that there is already a growing quest for specific databases and identity verification by several government institutions and private sector organizations in the country.

    He said: “The growing identity verification needs, therefore calls for harmonization and integration of identity databases and the development of a universal service infrastructure. To achieve this goal, the National Identity Management Commission should ensure that by December 31, 2014 all persons eligible for registration as provided for in Section 16 of the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) Act No. 23, of 2007 are enrolled into the National Identity Database.”

    “By this same date, all government agencies requiring identity verification and authentication services or involved in data capture activities must align their activities with a view to switching over to the NIMC infrastructure.”

    On the benefits of the registration, he said: “If the work of law enforcement officers is to be enhanced; if consumer credit is to be accessible; if we are to reduce the cost of managing the naira cash component currently estimated at N192 billion per annum; if we are to reduce the amount of currency in circulation currently put at N1.93 trillion; if we are to achieve a multiple pronged approach to the fight against corruption; and finally, if we are to introduce social security or welfare payments, then we must, first and foremost, establish and verify appropriately, the identities of individuals.”

     

  • Eid-El-Kabir: Jonathan preaches tolerance, peaceful co-existence

    Eid-El-Kabir: Jonathan preaches tolerance, peaceful co-existence

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday urged Muslims to continue to meditate on the immense benefits derivable by Nigeria from honesty, selflessness, tolerance, peaceful co-existence, equity, fairness and justice for all.

    In his Eid-El-Kabir message to Nigerians, he noted that all those qualities are integral part of the message of the Holy Prophet.

    He also maintained that he has no hidden agenda in the proposed national conversation as he urged all Nigerians to support the new effort at charting a new course for the country.

    He said: “I extend warm greetings and felicitations to you all as we celebrate this year’s Eid-el-Kabir festival. I also congratulate all Nigerians who have been able to undertake the Hajj this year in fulfillment of their religious obligations.

    “As they undergo the rites of the Hajj in the Holy Land, and celebrate the Feast of Sacrifice here at home, I urge our Islamic Faithful to offer special prayers for peace, harmony, unity, security and progress in our fatherland.

    “I also implore them, as always, to find time in the midst of the Eid-el-Kabir celebrations to meditate on the immense benefits our nation can derive from a greater exhibition by its people of piety, honesty, selflessness, tolerance, peaceful co-existence with others, equity, fairness and justice for all, which are an integral part of the message of the Holy Prophet.

    Jonathan continued: “My administration will continue to promote and encourage the teaching of these commendable virtues of Islam and our other religious beliefs in the knowledge that a greater manifestation of such virtues and ideals by our people will stand our country in very good stead as we strive to overcome the challenges of development and build a great nation.

    “My administration also remains fully committed to the implementation of measures and policies that will further promote and enhance national peace, stability and progress.”

    On the national conference, he said: “It is in keeping with that avowed commitment and my firm belief in the right to freedom of expression and the right of all people in a democracy to make choices on how they wish to live and be governed that I recently announced plans for an orderly national conversation on our problems and challenges. Those who continue to say that the initiative is diversionary or aimed at promoting certain political ambitions are in error.”

     

  • Jonathan seeks EITI’s help on oil theft

    Jonathan seeks EITI’s help on oil theft

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday urged the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) to do more to support the Federal Government’s efforts aimed at checking oil theft in the country.

    He made the call while speaking with the Chairperson of EITI, Ms. Claire Short, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Stressing that the stolen oil business involves the collusion of foreigners, he urged EITI to identify and punish refineries that receive stolen crude oil from Nigeria.

    In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the President said, “The efforts of EITI in criminalizing ‘blood diamonds’ from African mines have helped in curtailing that illegal business. I urge you to also support Nigeria as we confront the forces stealing Nigerian crude oil.

    “The theft of crude oil from Nigeria involves the collusion of foreigners and the stolen crude is refined abroad. EITI can use its mechanisms to help us track down the thieves and those who receive the stolen crude oil,” he said.

    Noting that Africa was losing a lot through leakages in the mining and extractive industry, Jonathan also urged Ms. Short and her colleagues at EITI to help in ending the exploitation of Africans and African nations by multinational companies engaged in the extraction of the continent’s immense natural resources.

    Jonathan said that in keeping with the Federal Government’s commitment to giving the Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) all necessary support and freedom to discharge its duties, he will inaugurate an expanded inter-ministerial committee next week to ensure greater synergy in NEITI’s investigations and facilitate the implementation of its recommendations for greater probity in Nigeria’s oil industry.

    Commending EITI’s efforts to discourage exploitation and corruption in extractive industries across the world, Jonathan assured Ms. Short and her team that Nigeria will continue to strive for even greater openness and transparency in its oil and mining sectors.

    Ms. Short briefed President Jonathan on EITI’s ongoing efforts to ensure that oil and other mineral resources of countries are well managed and utilized for the benefit of their citizens.

     

  • Nigeria moving forward despite challenges – Jonathan

    Nigeria moving forward despite challenges – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan has said Nigeria is moving forward in spite of its daunting internal challenges.

    Jonathan made the statement at a Pre-Centenary National Praise and Thanksgiving Service held on Sunday at the Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The president urged Nigerians to see the challenges being faced by the country as ephemeral, adding that they should not be despaired.

    Specifically, the president gave the instance of the victory being recorded in the sports sector in spite of the challenges currently being witnessed in the country.

    He recalled that when he visited the Super Eagles at their camp in Addis Ababa on Saturday, he charged the players to win the World Cup qualifying match against Ethiopia.

    According to him, the victory will be a message to the World that the country is moving forward even in the face of challenges.

    He noted that with prayers, commitment and resilience of Nigerians, the country would overcome its challenges.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the event scheduled to start at 3pm was delayed for 90 minutes to enable the president watch the World Cup qualifier.

    The match played in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, ended 2-1 in favour of Nigeria.

    The Praise and Thanksgiving service was organised by the Office of the Special Adviser to the President on Religious Affairs and Chaplain of the Aso Villa Chapel, Ven. Obioma Onwuzurumba.

    The service was sponsored by the Chairman of Nestoil, Dr. Ernest Obiejesi.

    In a brief exhortation before leading the prayers for the nation, Rev. Austen Ukachi, noted that prayers remained the key factor that united the nation for 100 years of its existence.

    Ukachi said that in her 100 years of existence, Nigeria had witnessed series of crises that would have disintegrated the country.

    He noted that it was the mercy of God and the prayers of the faithful that had kept the country united.

    NAN reports that the event featured Nigerian gospel artists like Frank Edward and Hope Davies, American Judy Jacobs and Kurt Carr as well as the Mass Choir.

     

  • Fayemi: I have never been enlisted in a worthier cause

    Fayemi: I have never been enlisted in a worthier cause

    when he  says  his government  will do so and so  for a community, that community can literally go to sleep in complete  trust that  he will not fail them.

    I seek the indulgence  of  readers, following upon my last week article, to  briefly touch on the matter  of the National Conference and  ask a few questions  from those  who still  see  the conference as  the  ‘deus ex machina’  to Nigeria’s multitude of problems. Let me first and foremost; concede that of a truth, President Jonathan, for the love of country, had a change of mind. Are we to ‘ipso facto’,  assume that Mr David Mark, the Senate President was, by some telepathy or an angelic visitation, suddenly divinely  instructed to equally change his own mind or has the Nigerian sovereignty, to which he had hung his opposition like forever,  unknown to us lesser Nigerians,  suddenly taken leave of his National Assembly?

    This could still jolly well be a happy coincidence. But what then are we to   make of the Pauline conversion of Chairman Tukur, the relentlessly sabre-rattling boss of the ruling party who, only some days before the Independence Day Presidential declaration, wanted  Baraje and company  behind bars, to  suddenly  go soft,  go  on bended knees,  begging the same Baraje to bury the hatchet and join him  in presenting  a united front at the conference?   Are we to assume that all these three persons, and more, are united by love of country?  Can’t Nigerians see this Greek gift and well calibrated diversion, thrown like meat to the dog for the simple aim of keeping it busy on a useless piece of bone?

     Let me equally hazard a guess: in some very coy ways, Nigerians will soon come to see very senior academics, well known for their brilliance, recruited to interrogate the scheme as we saw in the IBB SAP debates. It is a beaten path of unscrupulous politicians cleverly leveraging on these individuals’ integrity.  After all, a night or two at the NICON NOGA will not be a bad idea. Fortunately, there is nothing we cynics can do as it has become a ‘fait accompli. But I will be mightily surprised if the cynics do not laugh last.

     As we wind down to the 3rd anniversary of the inauguration of the  Fayemi administration in Ekiti state, it is apposite for me to take a critical look at a man, and a period, in my home state, which have been  truly phenomenal. I am currently writing a book; not an autobiography, nor one to give earth-shaking behind-the-news  stories  of  epochal political decisions,  having really never been a  politician  in the Nigerian sense;  but one in which I have solemnly declared that, and I quote: ‘ I have never been enlisted in a worthier cause than that of Dr Kayode Fayemi’. And that is neither talking glibly nor intended to patronise.  I have been privileged to be part of building a University from scratch just as I have worked very closely for upwards of three years  with eminent Yoruba citizens, among them the likes of  Lt. General  Alani Akinrinade, Dr Amos Akingba, Professors  Bolaji Akinyemi, Jide Osuntokun, Wale Omole,  Rear Admiral Akin Aduwo, Taiwo Alimi,  Mrs Tola Adenle, Mrs Dupe Ajayi- Gbadebo and Dr Dele Sobowale, to mention but a few, in mid-wifing  a Pan-Yoruba  Socio-Cultural organisation,  but seeing how Fayemi has fundamentally impacted  on Ekiti, my primary community;  his focus,  determination , commitment and self denial,  I have nothing but thanks to God that I am found lining behind a man of such  integrity  in his unstinting service to Motherland.  A man  to  whom, in his back,   Ekiti people have  recently  added  another  appellation  to his ‘ILUFEMILOYE 1’ , as they now call him O WI BE SE BE – ( certainly not deifying him), but  saying that this is a man who, when he  says  his government  will do so and so  for a community, that community can literally go to sleep in complete  trust that  he will not fail them. Such has been his believability that every city, town, village, hamlet and every human settlement in the state has, at least,  one project, completed or on-going. This is, of course, not surprising since his government’s annual budget is structured bottom up as  he and his  team  visit all nooks and cranny of the state to identify the peoples’ needs which then form the locus of the year’s budget. Whatever could not be accommodated that year is an automatic item in the next budget.

    This article is therefore not solely about enumerating brick and mortar, important though they are as it will also dwell on the Fayemi persona. He has remained truthful, not only to the state but, fundamentally, to himself. He has therefore spared nothing towards achieving his promise of making poverty history in the state – a pivotal part of his 8-Point Agenda. This obviously is not a 100 metre dash but rather, a long distance, multi-faceted project which he has followed with every sinew of his being. I once described him as a product of his upbringing and this has helped him greatly. Not one to carry position on his head, his calmness and simplicity – You need to have seen his equanimity fighting those men playing  god for his mandate – have all  made him extremely  easy to work with. Not for him the airs and garrulity so common with public office holders  in our country. Everything he does attests to these and as all, except the thoroughly politically jaundiced would see, he has become a man  after everybody’s heart:  serving as the pivot  of not only his Regional Governors’ Forum but a distinct leader of both the Progressive Governors Forum  and  the much-feared Nigerian Governors Forum, just as he is  a leading light of the All Progressives Congress Party, where those who should know, attest to his sterling contributions. One thing that particularly gratifies me is that when in those uncertain days I, at great risk,  elected to line behind him, people in power were eagerly seeking my support.

    At his inauguration on October 16, 2010, Dr Kayode Fayemi declared: ‘As am ushered into the governor’s office in Ado-Ekiti, make no mistake about it, I will ensure that you the good people of Ekiti state, own this government. I will do this by redesigning my agenda through the village square and town hall meetings. I promise to ‘democratise  governance, modernise agriculture, improve infrastructure, promote free and qualitative education towards the development of functional human capital, provide free health and social security to the disadvantaged sectors of our state; ensure industrial development, tourism and sustainable development as well as promote gender equality and women empowerment’.

    Dr Fayemi has never looked back.

    Today, education which had  reached its nadir in the state has since turned the corner. In addition to free education up to secondary school level and improvements in infrastructure and teacher quality, a total of 183 secondary schools and 836 primary schools have been renovated. Equally 48,000 laptops were distributed to secondary school students as additional 25,000 are already on order. The result was a quantum leap in the last WAEC results in the state which went from about 20 percent last year to about 70 per cent this year. Agriculture has been socialized and today over 20,000 youth have enrolled in the YCAD –the Youth Commercial Agricultural programme – in which they are not only trained in agricultural practice, given implements and additives but  also  given seed money. The programme is now being aggressively aided by a massive irrigation programme funded from the combined constituency projects of majority of the state’s National Assembly members.

    Health has received such a massive boost that only this past week, the Adunni Olayinka Diagnostic and Wellness Centre in honour of our unforgettable late Deputy Governor, for an array of cancer screening for early detection, was commissioned by the governor. This year, all hospitals in the state are being renovated and are to be more equipped.

    The mother of all the Fayemi quiet revolution is the unprecedented N5000, monthly  social security stipend to the elderly which now goes to no less than 25000 over 70 year-old citizens of the state.

    These wonderful efforts are replicated in every sector of governance.

    The governor is ably assisted in all these by two main persons and his entire team, namely,  his wife, Erelu Bisi Fayemi. Those interested in knowing more about this Amazon should please read my article: ELECT ONE, GET TWO, 19 June, 2011 which, in fact must now read like ancient history given her new exploits in empowering our people. The other is Professor Dupe Adelabu, who has fitted seamlessly into the Deputy Governor’s position. She was before her new appointment, the Chairman of the State SUBEB and remains a strong force in the trajectory of education in the state. As things stand today, Ekiti people could not have asked for more. Yet, there are lots more from where all  these came. To God be the glory.

     Next week – A peep into  Fayemi’s 2nd term

  • A broken country

    A broken country

    The failure of President Jonathan’s government to pay states  their money in the past months is paralysing the country

    We are, as a nation, in a peril. But it appears, from the grandstanding of the Federal Government henchmen, including the president, all is well.

    For at least three months now, the states have not received their constitutional financial allocations. And it has implications for governance. But when the president held his routine chat, which has turned into a charade for presidential defiance and bullying, he became defensive, and took the tack that Nigeria is not broke.

    If Nigeria is not broke, how come it cannot pay its bills? How come the state commissioners for finance all across the country, were unable to return to their states with the cheques due to their states from the national coffers?

    The first loud outcries in this regard came from two governors. The first was the governor of Ogun State, Ibikunle Amosun, who in a public forum sounded the ominous note that the state may not pay its bills if the Federal Government did not pay. Following that came the umbrage from the Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi, who took on the finance minister over the discrepancy between what the Central Bank received from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and what the Federal Government claimed it received. The Federal Government said it received $700m while the CBN claimed it should be $2 billion.

    The consequence of this is deep. In a country where virtually all the states depend on the allocation from the centre for their well being, depriving them of their monthly allocations resembles forcing them outside the oxygen zone. Death pangs precede actual giving up the ghost.

    The Federal Government gave them some money, less about N150b. So the states rejected the cheques because of its shortfall, which was immense. It was disingenuous of the federal authorities not to explain to the states the full financial working of the NNPC, and expect the states to accept that the nation did not have enough money to pay them.

    This is irresponsible. A huge and criminal opacity clouds the finances of the NNPC, and neither the minister of petroleum nor the president has shown any visible concern over this obnoxious trend. The finance minister also acts as though it was a routine matter and the absence of money to pay the states did not mean a disruption in the system. The oil minister simply has shrouded herself in indifferent silence. On his part, the president says the country is not broke.

    This imposes a conundrum. If the country is not broke, we can say the president may be right because the price of oil in the international market is well above $100 per barrel while the bench mark set in the budget is far below that at $75 per barrel. That means that we are nowhere near the danger zone. Yet, the argument has been advanced that we have a high incidence of oil theft, which may have cast a damper on the enthusiasm of abundance. We have always had the high incidence of oil theft though, and there is no data to prove that the volume of theft today so outweighs previous ones as to cancel the advantage of the bench mark vis-à-vis the prevailing oil price.

    Put in balance, we should have enough money to pay the states their entitlements. So, why are we not paying them? One, the NNPC has morphed into a deity in the Nigerian system, an untouchable institution that feels that it is larger than the country that gave birth to it. We cannot understand why the president should allow a minister of petroleum, with her highhandedness fuelled by incompetence, to preside over a ministry that holds the jugular of our economy. Worse still, the president has planted a rampart of defence for this incompetence by explaining away, in terms of politics, the failure of his obligation to pay the states. He said the country is not broke. Mr. President, if the country is not broke, pay the bills!

    The states have a lot of obligations to the average Nigerian. The most important and urgent one is the payment of salaries. This threat also overhangs the federal ministries. The majority of our work force are government workers. President Jonathan should ensure that this dire peril is handled quickly and effectively.

    If the ministries stop receiving their salaries, we can be sure that we are moving gradually into a breakdown of the whole society. The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has grounded the universities for over three months across the country, and the Federal Government under President Jonathan has shown neither imagination nor resolution to resolve the crisis. Yet, another one looms, and if state after state downs tools and cripples essential services, we may be veering towards paralysis, if not anarchy.

    The other consequence is the inability of the states to execute projects. Whether it is infrastructure, hospitals, education or even power, the contractors will stop to pay their workers and the governments cannot deliver on their promises. Governor Amaechi made this point in his outcry less than a month ago.

    What we shall have is not just a broke but a broken country where nothing works. The United States shut down its government over a debacle between the Obama administration and the Republican leadership in the House of Representatives over debt ceiling and the president’s health care programme. A sense of urgency has pervaded the country, and a mere 10 days of shutdown has generated disquiet among workers, even as urgent entitlements have not been paid. Now sanity has returned to the political arena and negotiations have resumed to stave off a major financial meltdown, not only in the U.S but around the world.

    It is that sense of urgency we need, not some bluster by a defiant president or the vacuous rancour from a finance minister or a corrosive indifference from the petroleum minister. The nation is in bad enough shape as it is. Those in charge owe it to those who put them in power not to make it worse.

  • Jonathan tasks African leaders on economic dependency

    Jonathan tasks African leaders on economic dependency

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday urged African leaders to do more to fully develop and exploit their countries’ comparative economic advantages over other parts of the world for the benefit of their people.

    He made the remark while speaking with Botswana’s new Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Louis Matshewenyego Fisher, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Jonathan, in a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, called on African countries to evolve and implement policies that will maximize their economic potentials in order to move away from current “dependency” partnerships with the industrialized nations of the world.

    He urged the African leaders to focus more on building domestic capacity around the strengths of their economies, instead of wasting their efforts on areas in which they lack a competitive edge.

    Acknowledging the inter-connectivity of the world economy, Jonathan said that globalization will work better when African countries take greater advantage of their human and natural resources to enhance their ability to compete effectively with other regions in world trade.

    He also expressed the view that Africa’s competitiveness could be further boosted through increased regional trade and horizontal investment partnerships.

    Jonathan said: “I want to insist that our diplomacy should be based more on trade and economic relations. We must encourage trade between our people and I see that relationship as the bedrock for diplomacy.”

    The President also received letters of credence from the new Ambassador of Czech Republic to Nigeria, Mr. Pavel Mikes, the new Ambassador of Republic of Kuwait to Nigeria, Mr. Abdulla Ahmed Al-Sharrah and the new Canadian High Commissioner to Nigeria, Mr. Perry Calderwood at the State House.