Tag: President Muhammadu Buhari

  • Second term: I’ll do my best for Nigerians, says Buhari

    NIGERIANS were yesterday go a reassured by President Muhammadu Buhari that they should expect the best in the next dispensation.

    The President promised to use his second term in office to take the country to loftier heights, even as he appreciated those who voted for him.

    Buhari spoke when members of the Board of Trustees and Advisory Council of Gidauniyar Jihar Katsina (Katsina State Development Fund) visited him at the State House in Abuja.

    The board members were led by Justice Mamman Nasir.

    According to him, his campaign to all states of the federation was an eye-opener.

    “Thank you for supporting me. I assure you that I will do my best during the second term. We will work for Nigeria and her people,’’ he said.

    REad also: CAN to elders forum: your stand on visit to Buhari baseless

    The President said the crowd that welcomed his campaign train in each state was more than anyone can possibly “induce’’, attributing the turnouts to people’s appreciation of the efforts of his administration.

    Buhari noted that he was the chairman of the Katsina State Development Fund for 17 years, during which period a lot was done to support education, healthcare and agriculture in the state, especially for the less privileged.

    The Galadima of Katsina, Justice Nasir, said the foundation was returning gratitude to God and all Nigerians for re-electing Buhari.

    He said: “We are most grateful to Almighty Allah for bringing you back for another term in office. Our happiness and gratitude go to Nigerians for electing you.’’

    Justice Nasir said the foundation also remained grateful for the years Buhari served as its chairman.

     

  • Buhari in Senegal for Sall’s inauguration

    President Muhammadu Buhari departed Abuja yesterday for Dakar, Senegal, to attend the inauguration of Senegalese President, Macky Sall, following his re-election for a second term.

    On the invitation of his host, Buhari, who chairs ECOWAS, will be the Special Guest of Honour at the ceremonies attended by African leaders at the Diamniadio Exhibition Centre today.

    The Nigerian leader, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, was accompanied by Governors Mohammed Abubakar, Nasir El-Rufai and Tanko Al-Makura of Bauchi, Kaduna and Nasarawa states.

    Read also: CAN to elders forum: your stand on visit to Buhari baseless

    Others on the entourage include the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Geoffrey Onyeama; National Security Adviser Maj-Gen Babagana Monguno (rtd); Director-General, National Intelligence Agency, Ahmed Rufai, and other top officials.

     

  • Christian elders fault CAN’s visit to Buhari

    The National Christian Elders Forum (NCEF) has described the visit of the President of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Rev. Samson Ayokunle, with some CAN officials and Christian leaders to President Muhammadu Buhari on his victory in the just concluded 2019 presidential election as shocking.

    NCEF disassociated itself from the visit claiming that it is: “sub judice” as the determination of who won the 2019 General Election is still in Court. It is therefore premature and presumptuous for anyone to congratulate President Buhari for “winning” an election that is contested in Court.”

    The forum said the visit which was made last week is also not in the interest of Christians.

    A statement issued in Abuja on Monday by the  Chairman of NCEF, Solomon Asemota, (SAN) said: “The National Christian Elders Forum (NCEF) was shocked to read in the news that the President of CAN, Rev. Dr. Samson Olasupo Ayokunle, with some CAN Officials and Christian leaders paid a “congratulatory” visit to President Muhammadu Buhari on his purported victory in the 2019 General Elections.

    “The NCEF wishes to state that the congratulatory visit to Aso Villa by CAN could not be in the interest of Nigerian Christians who daily bear the agony of thousands of their brethren being killed, maimed, displaced and marginalized in the Jihad launched in the northern parts of the country. It is well known the indifference of the Buhari Administration to the murder of Christians all over the country. This indifference has led many, including foreign observers, to conclude that the Buhari Administration is complicit in the genocide that is taking place in Nigeria.

    “The action of the CAN President, Rev. Samson Olasupo Ayokunle, is a further confirmation of all the protests and petitions of NCEF in 2018 querying the faithfulness of Dr. Ayokunle to Christ and to His Church. In its 2018 Report titled FACTORS HINDERING CHRISTIAN POLITICAL CONSENSUS FOR 2019 ELECTION, the NCEF provided irrefutable facts that Rev. Ayokunle deliberately frustrated Christian political consensus in a country in which religion has become a major factor in politics. With this ill-advised congratulatory visit to President Buhari, it should be clear to every Christian of good conscience that Rev. Ayokunle is running CAN as an appendage of APC which has proven by its religiously popularism biased appointments and policies that it is primarily a religious party that is to the disadvantage of Christians whom Rev. Ayokunle claims to be representing.

    “It would be recalled that during the Elections, Rev. Ayokunle presumptuously deployed a 1,000 man CAN Election Observers team to monitor the Elections nationwide. The action was presumptuous since CAN does not have the Constitutional responsibility of engaging politics. Christian leaders deliberately established Christian Social Movement of Nigeria (CSMN) for this purpose in 2001 as the socio-political arm of the Church. Nonetheless, after observing the Elections, the 1,000 man CAN Election Observers is yet to release its Report before CAN rushed to congratulate one of the contestants. Since all the other Observers have since released their Reports, where is the Report of the CAN Observers Team?”

    REad also: CAN’s post-election visit to Buhari sparks quarrel

    According to NCEF, notable arm of the Church, the Catholic Church, did not join the delegation that went to congratulate President Buhari adding that: “This would be consistent with the Communiqué issued by the Catholic Church expressing concern about the Elections and advising that dissatisfied individuals should seek recourse in court of law. This in the view of NCEF is how a Christian body should respond to issues of this nature.

    “NCEF is making these points for record purposes so that in years to come, if any further evil befalls Christianity in Nigeria, no one would claim ignorance of the issues that led to the emasculation of the Church. As Christian Elders, we affirm that it was ill-advised and ill-motivated for anyone claiming to represent the Body of Christ to rush to congratulate President Buhari pending the determination of the suit in Court.

    “Presently, Christians are mourning over 200 people murdered in Kajuru and Adara in southern Kaduna. There are increasing reports of Clergy routinely kidnapped and murdered in Middle Belt and parts of the North. These are in addition to genocide in Benue, Taraba, Plateau, and other parts of southern Kaduna. So far, no arrest has been made and no one has been prosecuted. Therefore, for any Christian leader to go and shake the hand of the man who has done nothing to stop the genocide is morally and spiritually reprehensible.

    “In addition to the concerns expressed above, it should be remembered that we all witnessed the debacles during the campaigns for the 2019 Elections as well as the violent conduct of the Elections. We witnessed the widespread application of “inconclusive” Elections where the opposition party had upper hand. We saw with regret the way Kano, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Benue, Lagos, Taraba, Bayelsa, and Plateau states Election, amongst others, were handled. The campaign debate and Presidential interview exposed the competence and capability of the candidates and Nigerians spoke through their votes and expressed their preference. Therefore, the will of the people must not be subverted. It is wrong for anyone, or any group of people, to seek to use CAN to legitimize an illegality. That congratulatory visit, we insist, was not on behalf of Nigerian Christians.

    “Fortunately for the NCEF, in making this clarification, no one can accuse the Christian Elders of religious bigotry or ethnic discrimination since both front runners are Muslims from the North and of the same ethnic stock. In the same vein, no one could say that NCEF is holding brief for any political party since NCEF neither supported any political party nor adopted any candidate during the elections. The interest of NCEF is that Democracy should be permitted to flourish and prevail in Nigeria. As President Goodluck Jonathan demonstrated in 2015, the will of the people must not be subverted. We are no longer in the era of Military coup in which individual(s) can impose themselves as rulers over the nation. This is Democracy and the will of the people must not be subverted.  Any attempt to kill democracy by a President who subverts the very process that brought him to power under the instrumentality of stealth and conventional jihad must be resisted and rejected.

    “NCEF aligns itself with the stand of the ethnic nationalities in South West, South East, South South and Middle Belt Zones that the Judiciary should perform its rightful oversight and ensure that the rightful winner of the 2019 Elections is sworn into office in May 29, 2019. If the Judiciary, for whatever reason, is unable to take a stand and defend the will of the people then Nigeria would have destroyed Democracy and signed on as a fascist state.”

     

     

  • Buhari’s new mandate, vigour for national unity

    Sir: Nigerians will not forget in a hurry the tragic events of the past characterized by terrible memories of horrendous attacks by insurgents in the northeastern states; the ethno-religious crisis as well as skirmishes between farmers and herders which displaced many from their ancestral abodes.

    It is therefore imperative at this time to recognize and give credit to whoever helps and preaches the promotion of national security and protection of national interest.

    The re-election of President Muhammadu Buhari offers a new impetus for promotion of national understanding, in the spirit of give and take. It provides a lesson in perseverance, political tolerance and belief in the real tenets of   democracy.

    In Nigeria’s democratic system, the two-term tenure remains the prime privilege that a candidate sponsored by a political party could enjoy after a re-election to that same political office. Evidently, Buhari’s re-election bid was influenced by his popularity and commendable efforts to facilitate and ensure good governance, transparency and a corrupt free nation. However, the programmes and policies of the administration coupled with the president’s avowed commitment to due process have increased the delivery of infrastructural and social developments; promising signposts for social transformation in Nigeria.

    Virtually all Nigerians now appreciate the great efforts of the Buhari administration in almost all sectors. But the most critical areas that have received priority attention in the last four years include, but not limited to corruption, security, and employment.

    Corruption has been a debilitating cankerworm, one of the major factors that has kept Nigeria’s prosperity comatose, making the nation’s economy totter and stutter. It is evident that even during the first and second republics, corruption played a very vital role in slowing down Nigeria’s advancement. Politics was used as a lucrative game of cupidity by unpatriotic politicians who embezzled public funds for personal enrichment. The coming of the Buhari administration brought positive transformation that introduced a superior war against corruption with the collaboration of the media, civil society organizations as well as the citizens, encouraged by the whistle blowing policy which paved way for exposing corruption and corrupt politicians.

    The obnoxious inter-ethnic and communal crisis we experienced in this country is beyond description. Hundreds of innocent people were killed; thousands were made homeless, and many others were traumatized as a result of this outrageous intolerance that has seemed intractable. The Buhari administration has tactically dealt with all of that, restored confidence, especially among those living in the Northeast where the crisis is prevalent and the tension is dense. The cessation of attacks and the relative peace enjoyed in the hitherto blood-soaked communities in the North hold the secret to President Buhari’s success in the last election.  He indeed deserves some accolades and commendation in appreciation of his modest achievements.

    No one can deny the impact of intervention programs as N-Power, P-Yes, Tradermoni and the commercial agricultural scheme driven by the Central Bank of Nigeria. Millions of young people have benefited from these interventions and got rescued from their miserable state of poverty. In the last two years, the statistics of unemployed youths in the county has reduced to a great extent.  One can say confidently that no previous administration ever recorded such a feat in employment creation.

    Nigeria is moving forward, Buhari is steering the wheel to drive Nigerians into the next level in order to get Nigeria working again.  Our collective participation and collective action remains the only way to rejuvenate Nigeria’s democracy and redefine its rotten system. Going forward, the nation now requires a national consensus on a definitive path of sustainable development.

     

    • Usman Bello Balarabe,

    Kano.

     

  • Why we want Lawan as Senate President, by APC Governors

    Governors of the All Progressives Congress (APC) have begun the battle to smoothen Senator Ahmad Lawan’s road to the Senate presidency.

    Some of them last night met in Abuja on how to push “the Lawan Agenda.” He is the party’s and President Muhammadu Buhari’s choice for the job.

    Lawan was at the meeting, which was said to be part of steps to keep APC caucuses united ahead of the inauguration of the 9th National Assembly.

    Last night’s meeting, The Nation learnt, was to:

    • sell Lawan’s candidature to all senators-elect, irrespective of political parties; and
    • debunk the notion that Lawan is being imposed.

    The meeting, which began at about 8pm, was still in progress as at 10.30pm.

    The list of the governors and others at the talks was kept under wraps.

    It was gathered that upon endorsement of Lawan by the party last Monday, the President mandated members to “sell the qualities of the nominee to Nigerians, especially senators-elect.”

    One of the organisers of the meeting, who spoke with our correspondent, said: “ The meeting was informed by the directive of the President to the governors to see the Lawan Agenda through in the interest of the country.

    “We want to change the narrative being sponsored by the opposition PDP  that Lawan’s choice and zoning amounted to imposition.

    “Most senators-elect may not be aware that the President actually raised an eight-man search team which recommended Lawan and a few others.

    “It was after weighing options that the President opted for Lawan. It is not a case of the Executive breathing down on senators-elect and members of the House of Representatives-elect.

    “The governors met with Lawan on how to project his inherent qualities, especially his rich legislative experience, and the need to build inter-party confidence/ collaboration before the 9th National Assembly is inaugurated.

    “We do not want the race for the office of the President of Senate to be beclouded by sentiments. This is the time of merit and we want to stick out our neck for these candidates we have recommended.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “The meeting will come up with strategies to reach out to all stakeholders on the Lawan project.”

    President Muhammadu Buhari is expecting Senator Danjuma Goje to set his terms for stepping down from the race for Senate President.

    Goje (Gombe Central), one of the leading aspirants for the job, is expected to quit the race for Dr. Ahmed Lawan, the Senate Leader who is being backed by the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the President.

    Goje is believed to have visited Buhari with Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai.

    Details of their discussion remained unknown at the weekend, but a source said Goje was asked to state his terms for dropping his ambition. He is said to be willing to let go.

    Also in the race is Ali Ndume who is said to be planning to formally present a nine-point agenda this week.

    APC leaders are said to be persuading Ndume not to go against Lawan because “the President and the party have spoken.”

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said: “So far, the race is still open, despite the endorsement of Lawan by the party. The Presidency, APC, governors and national leaders of the party have been reaching out to senators-elect and the  two other aspirants (Goje and Ndume).

    “In fact, one of the governors, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, brokered last week’s talks between the President and Goje at the Presidential Villa.

    “At the session, Goje was asked to name his terms which are still being awaited. So far, Goje and Ndume have not stepped down.

    ”All the aspirants have been holding meetings with senators and senators-elect. The comforting aspect is that the APC, governors and our national leaders still have about two months for rapprochement before the inauguration of the Ninth Senate in June.”

    On Ndume, a Senator-elect said: “Although a strategist of the President has had audience with him, he is unrelenting in his ambition to contest for the seat.

    “As at Saturday, Ndume has presented his nine-point agenda to senators and senators-elect who are backing him.

    “The agenda will be presented to the public any time this week. What Ndume told his supporters was that if he is the only senator left in the race, he will vie for the office against Lawan. He said it is either he wins or loses.

    “He is embittered that after sticking out his neck to defend Buhari’s government, he is being sidelined. And he complained against the way the National Chairman of the APC, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, allegedly breathed down on senators-elect last Monday in the presence of the President on the choice of Lawan.”

    The opposition Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) may field candidates for Senate President and deputy Senate President if Goje and Ndume step down.

    A PDP senator-elect said: “At a meeting, we agreed to work with any of the aspirants not imposed by the APC. Some of us are discussing with both Goje and Ndume.

    “In one of the sessions with some PDP senators-elect, we insisted that if Goje and Ndume withdraw for Lawan, we will nominate candidates for Senate president and deputy president. We are not bound by the APC’s zoning formula.

    “Left to us, we want the Southeast to retain the office of the Deputy Senate President . We are thinking of either the present occupant, Chief Ike Ekweremadu and ex-Governor Orji Uzor Kalu, who is a ranking lawmaker, being a former member of the House of Representatives.”

  • NECA hails Buhari on Micro Pension Plan

    The Nigeria Employers Consultative Association’s (NECA) Network of Entrepreneural Women (NNEW) has commended President Muhammadu Buhari on the launching of Micro Pension Plan (MPP) for retired self-employed workers in the informal sector of the economy.

    Mrs Omolola Ajani, Chairperson, NNEW Abuja chapter, gave the commendation in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday in Abuja.

    President Buhari, on March 28, launched the Micro Pension Plan (MPP) which automatically extends retirement benefits to millions of self-employed workers in the informal sector.

    According to her, it is a laudable plan and something that is very welcome as it will further promote the desired saving culture.

    “People want to find alternative means of getting income, thereby going to different kinds of schemes, including cooperatives, which they are not even sure about.

    Read also: NECA hails CBN’s forex ban on textile imports

    “This plan provides security and it is flexible and, above all, safety is key, as it concerns hard earn savings.

    “For instance, if you look at what the Pension Act Reform has done, it has promoted confidence in the pension scheme, but initially, people were against it.

    “Now, people can see that pension scheme has worked out perfectly well and we should promote it,” she said.

    Ajani said NNEW would encourage all its members to subscribe to the plan as it would be beneficial to them.

    She added that a lot of people would think that they did not have much to start saving, “but if you think of provety in old age, that should scare you to going into saving.” (NAN)

  • NASS: APC moves against PDP plot to snatch 13 senators-elect

    • Opposition party targets APC men from Borno, Abia, Oyo, Gombe, Bayelsa, Bauchi, Ogun, Kogi, Sokoto, Imo

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has launched an audacious move to win to its side 13 All Progressives Congress (APC) Senators-elect as part of a grand design to hijack the leadership of the 9th Senate.

    But the alleged plot has  leaked to the APC which has launched a counter move of its own to avoid a repeat of the 2015 infiltration of its ranks in the National Assembly by the PDP, highly placed party sources said last night.

    The APC is in talks with all  its state governors and national leaders  to support President Muhammadu Buhari’s choices for the President of the Senate, Dr. Ahmad Lawan and the Speaker of the House who may be named this week.

    The party is determined to ensure that none of its members contests against APC’s official candidates for leadership positions in the Senate and the House of Representatives in June.

    Another option is a likely waive of the Standing Rules of the two chambers to allow open voting during the election of principal officers to monitor the loyalty of the party’s Senators-elect.

    Besides, the APC is discussing with some PDP Senators-elect with a view to giving them the   chairmanship of juicy committees.

    But some PDP leaders are targeting 13 ‘rebellious’ Senators-elect from the APC to produce the next President of the Senate, Deputy President of the Senate and other principal officers.

    If the PDP’s plan sails through it will have on its side about 56 votes for a majority decision leaving APC with 53.

    The PDP targets are Senators-elect from Borno, Oyo, Gombe, Bayelsa, Bauchi and Ogun states.

    The party is insisting that the Standing Rules do not expressly state that presiding officers must come from the ruling party.

    The opposition party said the fact that it has been a convention for the majority party to produce presiding officers does not make it legal or the norm.

    Following the APC’s endorsement of Dr. Ahmed Lawan for the position of Senate President,  the battle for the Deputy President of the Senate is hitting up between Senator Ovie Omo-Agege (Delta Central ) and  the outgoing  Deputy Chief Whip of the Red Chamber, Senator  Alimikhena Asekhame (Edo North)..

    The outgoing Governor of Ogun State, Mr. Ibikunle Amosun is believed to have joined the race for Deputy Senate President even though it was not zoned to the Southwest.

    Investigation by The Nation  revealed that APC and PDP have been trying to outwit each other on the election of the new Senate President, Speaker and other officers.

    While the APC leadership and Dr. Lawan have been engaging Senators-elect on one-on-one talks, the PDP has been trying to mount pressure on most Senators-elect to resist what it has termed “imposition of principal officers” by the Executive.

    Sources said PDP’s agenda is to share power with the APC in the two chambers.

    A top source in APC, who spoke in confidence, said:  “The race is still open despite the fact that APC has made its position known and released its zoning formula for the Senate. We are expecting the party’s idea of power sharing in the House this week. What we are trying to do is to keep our caucus united in the two chambers.

    “But not all Senators-elect and House members-elect have bought into the party’s zoning formula. This is why we have sought the assistance of APC governors and national leaders to engage the new National Assembly members to avoid a repeat of 2015 episode which was plotted and sealed by the opposition.

    “Our main target is to assert our right as the party with the majority in the National Assembly to produce the new set of leaders.

    “We have already asked the nominee for Senate Presidency, Dr. Ahmad Lawan and some Senators-elect to meet with all Senators-elect on why APC must forge a common front. To us, delivering democratic dividends is more important than the sentiments being whipped up by the opposition.”

    Asked if the APC could  regain the control of the two chambers, the source added: “We want to speak with one voice this time around; we plan to present common candidates for all offices due to APC without counter-nominations; and we are also negotiating with PDP Senators-elect and House members-elect.

    “We will not underrate the opposition but we won’t let them have their way like the case in 2015. We are hopeful of getting the figures from APC and PDP members before the inauguration of the 9th Senate.

    A ranking Senator in PDP said: “We are really opposed to any plot to foist leaders on the two chambers. Our fears border on a possible rubber-stamp legislature.

    “Our position is that it is not mandatory for the principal officers of the Senate and the House to come from the party with a simple majority in the two chambers. This has been successfully proven in the 7th and 8th National Assembly.

    “And going by Section 60 of the 1999 Constitution, the two chambers can come up with rules and regulations to guide its proceedings. The section says: ‘Subject to the provisions of this constitution. The Senate or the House of Representatives shall have power to regulate its own procedure, including the procedure for summoning and recess of the House.

    “The modes of voting can be by voice vote, signing of register in a division, electronic voting or even by secret ballot if it is the wish of the new members of the National Assembly.

    “So, if a PDP lawmaker will lead the Senate or the House better, let us go for him or her.”

    On the alleged plot by PDP to poach 13 APC Senators-elect in order to influence the election of new principal officers in the Senate, a party source said: “With 13 Senators-elect from APC teaming up with 43 PDP Senators-elect, we can comfortably elect independent-minded Senate President and other principal officers with 56-man strength.

    “We are discussing with some Senators-elect from Borno, Oyo, Gombe, Bayelsa, Bauchi, Ogun states.

    This is our target which we believe is realizable. We will field candidates for all available offices in the two chambers.”

    The race for the Office of the Deputy President of the Senate however took a new turn with the emergence of three contenders.

    The zoning of the position to the Southsouth has made it a close race for Sen. Ovie Omo-Agege (Delta) and the outgoing Deputy Chief Whip of the Senate, Sen. Alimikhena Asekhame from the Southsouth.

    But the outgoing Governor of Ogun State, Mr. Ibikunle Amosun was said to have joined the race for the Deputy Senate President even though it was not zoned to the Southwest.

    The outgoing President of the Senate, Chief Ike Ekweremadu, has been silent on whether he will vie for the office for a third term.

    A source said: “So far, three candidates have emerged from the APC but being a deft politician, Ekweremadu can spring a big surprise like he did in 2015. The zoning formula favours Sen. Ovie Omo-Agege(Delta) and  the outgoing  Deputy Chief Whip of the Senate, Sen. Alimikhena Asekhame from the Southsouth but if Amosun goes ahead with his ambition, it can redraw the permutations.

    “The zoning formula put in place by the APC is yet to favour the Southeast and the PDP will not mind reaching some accord which can make Ekweremadu to remain in office.”

  • APC, Buhari and 2023 (1)

    IN his response last Friday to the demands by the visiting Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) leaders that he should run an inclusive government in his second term in office, President Muhammadu Buhari spoke guardedly of focusing on merit and national spread “in the area of allocation of political offices”.

    If newspaper reports captured the president’s thoughts and statements well, he is unlikely to mean that the inclusiveness he has in mind would spread to other sectors of national life as counselled by the CAN.

    The Christian leaders, the reports indicate, want no exclusion of any kind, and mean no focus of a particular type, in their admonition to the president. In one of his foreign trips early in his first term, the president had some problems comprehending the concept of inclusiveness when foreign reporters drew his attention to it.

    But Nigerians must reassure themselves that since then, the president has had a better understanding of that concept, even if he is still wary of its full import.

    Since the All Progressives Congress (APC) won the presidency a second time weeks ago, a feat, considering the noticeable dysfunction in the ruling party, neither the president nor the party has embarked on the characteristic spadework winners in major elections undertake before assuming office. This spadework was not done in 2015 when President Buhari won his first term, thus leading to the confusion and wrangling that typified the last four years of his presidency. Party leaders and the rest of Nigeria will hope that beyond correcting the mistakes of the party in electing National Assembly principal officers, the APC and the president will adequately and expertly address the more germane issues of policy and political culture in the next four years.

    President Buhari’s predecessors had the opportunity between 1999 and 2015 to lay a solid democratic foundation for the country and an even more solid political cum economic structure, but they were too carried away by their repeated victories and the trappings of power to notice the more fundamental things needed to build a great nation. Though he was distracted by poor health in his first term, President Buhari still had the chance, assuming he paid attention to the things that mattered, to take a closer and futuristic look at the country’s weak and faltering foundation. Repeatedly, however, and influenced by his uncritical and grossly mistaken view of the country’s politics and economy, he spoke glowingly of the political givens and denied the existence of the unresolved fissures threatening the fabric of the country.

    So far, neither the president nor his party has indicated they wished to address the country’s fundamental problems beyond the ad hocism they have promoted for four years. They even make light of the problems, and have disingenuously tried to reframe them in cultural, moral and religious terms. A look at the margin and spread of the APC/Buhari win suggests that the country is merely reposing some faint hope in the ability of the ruling party to find a way to address the factors that afflict the society, stymie growth, and give a false sense of peace and stability. Whether the president and his party have the competence and understanding to address these fundamental problems or not, they must be reminded that their course of action in the past four years led to nowhere but a cul-de-sac.

    The APC had the upper hand in the 8th National Assembly, though that advantage was naively frittered away. That they found the legislature unmanageable during that period was due more to their incompetence and incomplete understanding of democratic principles than to the selfishness and recalcitrance of legislative leaders who prised power loose from the feeble hands of the ruling party. They could still have handled the legislature very robustly; instead they sulked, damned the world, and resigned to fate. With such an appalling mindset, what is the proof that their unquestioning and overwhelming dominance of the 9th National Assembly would ineluctably translate into a robust and engaging lawmaking culture? None whatsoever. Indeed, with a little more naivety, such as they are perfectly capable of producing, the ruling APC and their president could move to the other extreme of treating the legislature, particularly their own lawmakers, with condescension. Despite their protests to the contrary, none of the aspirants to the principal officers positions in the legislature has exuded the conviction and independence required of effective legislative leaders.

    The APC stopped just short of securing the overwhelming two-thirds majority needed to dispense with the stalling tactics and filibustering of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). But their dominance is nevertheless still suffocating. President Buhari and his party gave the impression that their efforts at reforming the country was hamstrung by an uncooperative 8th National Assembly. It is not true. Their efforts were undermined by a lack of reformist agenda, one which the country could identify with or own. If they still do not produce a great reform programme in their second term, the unchecked power of a president who seems above everything else to love power for its own sake will reinforce the supineness of a legislature eager to surrender its powers of oversight. The outgoing legislative leadership duo of Bukola Saraki in the Senate and Yakubu Dogara in the House of Representatives actually gave a semblance of how a legislature should function. Had the independently-minded Dr Saraki not been offensively self-centred, he would, together with the reflective and even-tempered Mr Dogara, have given Nigeria the most effective legislature since 1999.

    If by a miracle the National Assembly can find the character to be independent, they should be able to nudge the rather staid and conservative President Buhari into recognising the divisions in the country which the outcomes of the recent elections reflected. This hope may be far-fetched, but it is not unrealistic. The APC must understand that increasingly an iron curtain is being drawn roughly between the North and the South, and between ethnic and religious groups. There are of course other pockets of disasters waiting to happen, in addition to the ubiquitous but needless conflicts laying the country waste in all the six geopolitical zones of the country. But if the APC can stop living in denial and find the discipline to study all the factors predisposing the country to instability, and if they can rein in their monarchical tendencies, they should be able to grapple with the country’s existential problems, problems which need fundamental solutions far beyond the tinkering and pussyfooting both the ruling party and the president have deployed in the past four years.

    The APC under the excitable Adams Oshiomhole is a little more disciplined than it used to be. But though Mr Oshiomhole is capable of flying off the handle at short notice, the party must thank him and his executive committee for finding the boldness to confront and contend with the fiefdoms some of the party’s notable state leaders had created. By unhorsing the feudalists in the states so unceremoniously, but with implacable resoluteness, the party gives itself a fighting chance of running more optimally and very successfully than it has done so far. But this also implies that more battles lie ahead, for the party’s leaders have made more enemies in one year than they made in five.

    The 2019 elections exposed the political ineffectiveness of the cabal around the president. While they are adept at manipulating, and sometimes misusing, power, they lack the shrewdness to face up to the machinations of the political opposition, not to talk of running the ruling party with the brutal and fierce efficiency needed for these times. On Thursday, the APC celebrated one of their party leaders, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in Abuja. They are fortunate to have someone in their midst whose instinctive grasp of Nigeria’s political dynamics helps them to anticipate and checkmate the plans and calculations of the opposition. Exiled shortly after the party first gained office in 2015, he was restored only when it became clear that those built to replace him had neither his savvy nor his connections and reach. In fact, had there been no such reconciliation at the time it happened, the 2019 elections would have been lost altogether, for Asiwaju Tinubu, both in 2015 and 2019, virtually held the party together, sharpened its focus, and inspired their victories. He is much criticised, often unfairly, but he takes consolation in the fact that he evokes so much passion around the country, and neither his friends nor his enemies are indifferent to him.

    The political reverses in Imo, Oyo, and to some extent Osun and some other states provide lessons for the APC in how a party can easily lose influence or power. If the APC is to avoid disaster in 2023, they must learn their lessons. They must encourage the ongoing restoration of party supremacy, separate party dynamics from the executive arm of government, retain faith in the party’s internal conflict resolution mechanisms, reform and expand party finances, and embark on large-scale recruitment of new members. They must also sharpen their ideological focus, gradually weed from their ranks the conservatives and reactionaries who have diluted their worldview, and generally run a better, tighter and more disciplined party. They must resist the temptation to view the opposition PDP from a haughty and moralistic pedestal. Nigerian democracy needs the opposition. The PDP, despite the president’s many pejorative statements and the anti-graft bodies’ excitableness, not to mention commentators’ unreasoned descriptions and stigmatisation, is a partner in building and sustaining democracy. The opposition must be accorded the respect and cooperation needed to sustain their confidence in the system. After all, sometime in the future, the APC will find itself again in the opposition; and if they do not institute a great culture of tolerance and cooperation, they could one day be hoisted with their own petard.

    More importantly, as the country moves in the coming years towards engaging the factors and issues that will shape the 2023 elections, it is important for the president to set the right tone if the initiative is not to be taken away from him before 2021 is over. He enjoyed only a limited and qualified success in his first term. In fact, by most considerations, that success was so slender that it had no pretence to be described as a success. The economy is still not out of the woods, and there is nothing to suggest that the president understands the workings of a modern economy. He must, therefore, assemble a first-rate economic team to grapple with the country’s many socio-economic challenges. In his first term, he surrendered the presidency to a cabal, probably out of his own lack of surefootedness, and ran an insular and ineffective security system that proved a woeful failure in enthroning peace and stability in the country. That insularity was undergirded by opaque and jaded cultural prejudices. He must trust his instinct to open up, recognise the power of ideas which openness and representativeness facilitate, appreciate that the ideas and successes that could sustain his legacy can only proceed from a qualitative assemblage of close aides and advisers, and if he can manage it, begin to recognise that indeed he is president of the whole country, including president of those who voted against him and still loathe him.

    Whether President Buhari likes to hear it or not, and no matter how ruthlessly he may want to proceed against his foes in the coming months, by late 2021, the county will be looking beyond him. If the legacy he has in mind is to be a two-term president just to obliterate the humiliation of his 1985 deposition, he will largely get his wish. But if his desire is to have a lasting and more noble impact on Nigeria, not on a section of it, he will have to inspire himself to do a complete turnaround in his policies and ideas, whether they are grainy or glossy, or original to him or not, and by seeing every section of the country as one, herdsmen and farmers alike, Igbo and Yoruba, Tiv and Ijaw. Then, he must find a way to kick-start restructuring, a concept that has alarmed and discomfited him in equal measure, a concept he does not want to hear about at all, but a concept that is indispensable to the country’s peace and progress. And he must abandon the ossification that makes him spontaneously suspicious of new ideas and paradigms.

    If the salary agitation he is contending with does not tell him that the present country’s structure is unsustainable; if the education crisis the country is embroiled in does not indicate to him a terrible alarm bell ringing; if the massive insecurity overwhelming the security agencies does not show him something evil is afoot; and if the 2019 elections which were far less efficient than those of 2015 do not alert him to the steady and relentless decay and decline of the country, then he is incapable of understanding any obvious messages, let alone hidden ones. He has promised to leave the country better than he met it. But fine words butter no parsnips. Let him walk the talk by also promoting constitutionalism and the rule of law, which are today in far worse shape than when he assumed office. He will leave office in a few years, and his party will not always rule the country. It is, therefore, urgent that both the president and the APC design a national system that will allow them survive and flourish even out of office.

  • Ogun governor-elect, deputy meet Buhari at Aso Rock

    Ogun State governor-elect, Dapo Abiodun, and his deputy, Mrs. Noimot Salako-Oyedele, after receiving their certificates of return from the Independent National Electoral Commission at Abeokuta, the capital of Ogun State, paid a courtesy visit to President Muhammadu Buhari at the state house, Abuja. They were in Aso Villa to appreciate the president’s support and encouragement before, during and after the guber election.

    According to reports, the president enjoined the duo to work hard towards further developing the state and not to betray the people’s trust in them, noting that there is much work to be done in Ogun State. Abiodun and his deputy, in turn, solicited the support of the federal government as they promised to work for the overall development of the state.

    Present at the visit was the All Progressives Congress (APC) leader in the state, Aremo Olusegun Osoba. The duo also used the opportunity to pay a thank you visit to the vice president, Professor Yemi Osibajo, as well as the national leader of the ruling party, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, as part of their parleys with APC leaders in Abuja.

    They also visited and held talks with the party’s national chairman, Comrade Adams Oshiomole, and another prominent leader of the APC, Chief Bisi Akande, at various locations in the nation’s capital. The APC leaders advised them to run a true government of the people so as to salvage the current debacle in the state. They urged them to listen to the yearnings and aspirations of the people of the state in a bid to fulfill the party’s manifesto

  • Nigeria still can’t feed itself – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has said that Nigeria is still facing the challenge of feeding itself and providing raw materials for industries through agriculture.

    Buhari, who stated this yesterday at the opening of the 40th Kaduna International Trade Fair, however said the challenge remains, despite agriculture contributing 25.5 per cent of the Nigeria’s GDP and 50 per cent of its labour force.

    Kaduna International Trade Fair is a 10-day annual event organised by the Kaduna Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (KADCCIMA), where both local and international business ideas and inventions are showcased.

    Represented at the occasion by the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Okechukwu Enelama, the president identified creation of a strong linkage between agriculture and industry as a sure way of bringing about sustainable growth by creating new jobs and improving value addition.

    According to the president, “Nigeria has continued to face the challenge of meeting domestic food requirements and providing raw materials for the manufacturing sector and export.”

    In his speech, Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai, while congratulating KADCCIMA for 40 years of successful trade fair outing and organisation of the private sector to contribute to national development, assured that, his government would continue to build the needed human capital by equipping teeming youths in the state with skills for entrepreneurship development.

    The governor, who was represented by the Deputy Governor-elect, Dr. Hadiza Balarabe, enumerated the successes of the state through its investment friendly environment.