Tag: President Muhammadu Buhari

  • Boko Haram: Buhari visits Cameroon, Benin Republic

    Boko Haram: Buhari visits Cameroon, Benin Republic

    To build a more effective regional coalition against the Boko Haram sect, President Muhammadu Buhari will visit Cameroon on Wednesday for talks with President Paul Biya and senior Cameroonian Government officials.

    The talks between Buhari and his Cameroonian counterpart, according to a statement issued by Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, are expected to focus on the full activation and deployment of the Multinational Joint Task Force against Boko Haram, which has been established under the auspices of the Lake Chad Basin Commission.

    President Buhari, who will be accompanied on the two-day trip by six state governors and the Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Defence  and the Director-General of the National Intelligence Agency, the statement said, will also discuss further joint measures to curb terrorism, violent extremism and other cross-border crimes.

    The state governors on the President’s entourage are – Alhaji Mohammed Bindow (Adamawa), Mr. Emmanuel Udom (Akwa Ibom), Mr. Samuel Ortom (Benue), Alhaji Kashim Shettima (Borno), Mr. Ben Ayade (Cross River) and Mr. Darius Ishaku (Taraba).

    President Buhari will also use the opportunity of his visit to Cameroon to meet with Nigerians living in the East African nation.

    The President, who is due back in Abuja on Thursday, will also undertake a one-day trip to Benin Republic on Saturday for talks with President Boni Yayi to round-off the diplomatic shuttles to neighbouring countries.

  • Buhari can’t perform magic, needs time – Tinubu

    Buhari can’t perform magic, needs time – Tinubu

    The National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu on Tuesday declared that President Muhammadu Buhari cannot perform magic to bring instant changes to the country.

    He said that Buhari needs time to plan, examine, re-evaluate what is on ground towards taking accurate steps that will bring about the changes Nigerians desire.

    Tinubu spoke to State House correspondents after meeting President Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to him, Nigeria has had many problems because of policies that were created without adequate and effective planning.

    Responding to a question on delayed changes expected by Nigerians, he said: “Excuse me! Let us calm now here. How long ago? May 29th was when this president was sworn in. It is an international norm all over the world, there is an honeymoon period, at least minimum of 100 days honeymoon.

    “And you won’t allow honeymoon at all? You said change is not coming, change is not by magic it is driven by the people, the spirit and the character and the planning.

    “You see, we have had so much problem in this country in the past because we run into policy blind folded without adequate and effective planning you don’t have results unless you plan well,” he said.

    Continuing, he said: “The time it takes you to plan, examine, rejig, re-evaluate is more important than the time you just rush into taking action because you are either being sentimental, being emotional and being driven by other forces that are not expected.

    “It is not fair to jump into those conclusions. There must be time to plan, to review and even listen to people. There is a separation between a campaign period, articulating your vision, expressing the promises to Nigerians, there is a time to look at wholistically what you inherited, analysis it, distill and then take action.

    “Even in 100 meters race, there is a time to say on your mark, set, ready, go. So you don’t even want a time to be on your mark, set and go? No no no. You are not being fair.” He added

    He said that the purpose of his visit to President Buhari is to ensure that the right tract is maintained.

    He said: “The purpose of this visit is to see my president and our leader. The purpose is to ensure we are on the right tract and coming back from a very successful trip to United States of America.”

    On the report that the President’s meeting with APC members in the House of Representatives on Monday was deadlocked, he said: “That is the conclusion of the press. Deadlock if we are going for literally translation that is people’s opinion, I have not read any comment from the parties whether it was deadlock or not, that is the media conclusion.

    “But the question is a political process it needs to develop its own life to be worked upon to really stabilize and continue to serve the interest of the populace. As a matter of fact when the National Assembly job starts, the job of lawmaking in earnest, the president needs to step in once in a while as he did to let people to understand the import of the expectations of the public and particularly of the international community on various Programmes and institutions.

    “We need to build the institutions, make it viral and effective for the entire country. To step in to douse any conflict is not a wrong thing or do you think is wrong?” he queried.

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  • Heightened security in Cameroon as Buhari visits

    Heightened security in Cameroon as Buhari visits

    Security in Yaounde, capital of Cameroon, has been beefed up with the expected visit of President Muhammadu Buhari to the Central African nation on Wednesday.

    President Buhari is billed to start his visit to Cameroon on Wednesday and he will hold talks with his Cameroonian counterpart, President Paul Biya, on how to tackle the Boko Haram insurgency.

    After visiting Niger and Chad after his inauguration on May 29, President Buhari had earlier shifted his visit to Cameroon due to the Muslims’ Ramadan fasting and his invitation to the G-7 meeting in Berlin, Germany.

    Security patrols in Yaounde, the country’s capital, have increased since information about the Nigerian leader’ visit was made public.

    Besides thorough checking and searching of cars and trucks with ordinary plate numbers, cars with diplomatic plate numbers are also not spared.

    Speaking to journalists on Buhari’s visit, Nigeria’s High Commissioner to Cameroon, Amb. Hadiza Mustapha said: “It is our tradition in Nigeria that when presidents come into office, his first port of call should be African countries. His visit shows the highest level of cordiality.

    “There is need to synergize between the frontline states on how to confront insurgency, in order to build on the gains so far achieved.

    “Nigeria’s relations with Cameroon have a long history of both economic and political ties anchored on affinities and shared destiny.

    “It is a very significant visit and we are looking forward to it. The President is going to spend a night which shows you how much importance he attaches to it. I’m highly honoured to be receiving the second Nigerian President as Ambassador here.”

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  • My kind of ministers – Buhari

    My kind of ministers – Buhari

    [dropcap]P[/dropcap]resident Muhammadu Buhari on Monday said he will pick patriotic, decent and experienced people to serve as ministers in his administration.

    He assured that technocrats and politicians will make the much awaited list of ministerial of nominees.

    Buhari spoke on “Good Morning Nigeria,” a Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) programme on Monday.

    The President said, “From what I have seen so far, we need really patriotic Nigerians. Those that can work very hard, knowledgeable, experienced and committed Nigerians, to be in charge of ministries.

    “A lot of the institutions of Nigeria, the important institutions, were compromised. Everybody was for himself and God for all of us, it’s most unfortunate.

    “We have the people, educated people, experienced people but everybody seemed to be working for himself, thinking of how much he could get as much and as quick as possible.

    “We have to look for technocrats and we have to look for politicians and certainly we have to look for decent people in this class to give them the responsibility of being in charge of ministries and important parastatals (agencies).”

    Buhari said his government will try as much as possible to “avoid appointing hostages.”

    “By this, I mean people who have been in the system but compromised their personal and professional integrity. It is taking so much time because a number of knowledgeable people have been compromised,” he added.

     

  • The Family Dasuki

    The Family Dasuki


    Whose who hate history and have discouraged our schools from making it a compulsory course of study in our secondary schools should follow the interplay between Sambo Dasuki and Buhari’s men.

    For many, it has gone beyond whether the DSS had warrants, or whether the former NSA had 12 vehicles and five armoured cars, or whether Dasuki had a right to wrap soldiers around his home, or whether his driver spirited away five million dollars, or whether he was guilty of treasonable felony, or whether he clucked peevishly at Chatham under Jonathan.

    For many it is a story not of 2015, but of 1985. According to the story, Sambo Dasuki, then a dashing and ambitious army officer, led a group of soldiers to pick up then military leader Muhammadu Buhari. It was IBB’s coup. Sambo was IBB’s boy. The mission was to stop Buhari from firing IBB and a few other soldiers whose conducts were out of sync with the perceived moral gravity of the Buhari junta.

    Buhari, then as now, was a fatalist, and knew of the plot but reportedly did nothing about it. When Dasuki burst into Buhari’s presence and told him his reign was over, the tall, gaunt and defiant leader still demanded Dasuki and his men to give him the military salute as he was still their superior officer. They obliged before arresting their quarry.

    Buhari spent a long time in captivity. When he walked into a free air, he waltzed back into politics. He dueled IBB over June 12. Later, his body language and speech cadences reflected an unfinished match with the man who truncated him, and he ran for president several times. Some said he had to triumph over IBB, and the marker of that triumph was to take back what IBB took from him. His honour lay in returning to the throne.

    In the course of this epic duel, Dasuki materialised, sword in hand. He broke the first lance in Chatham House, and according to newspaper reports, he subsequently urged all means necessary to stop Buhari and his whirlwind of electoral change.

    Dasuki’s failure is common knowledge.

    So when DSS attacked, the temptation was to reconstruct the standoff as comeuppance. Buhari sought his pound of flesh, it is alleged. Whatever the truth of this matter lies in the speculative realm. And all we urge is the adherence to the rule of law. Dasuki is not above the law, and if he has questions to answer, his historic war with Buhari should take a backseat to the preeminence of the law of the land.

    What fascinates me further though is the irony of the Dasuki family. They are royalty, and the first hint was when his father mounted the throne as sultan. Some in the royal porch thought he had no right to the preeminent seat of the caliphate. In not many words, they called him an impostor. But he soldiered on as the first feather of the royal cock. Questions about his legitimacy haunted him, until the Khalifa, the goggled tyrant, swept him aside. Earlier in his career, Sambo had left his precious perch as a senior officer and ADC to IBB as well documented in Debo Bashorun’s book, Honour For Sale. Things did not seem to work. It was a duel between two eminently undemocratic forces seeking the public to adjudicate on who was legitimate. It is as though it was anticipated in Soyinka’s dark and cynical play, Kongi’s Harvest, where the king and the dictator provide the Hobson’s choice.

    Neither Abacha who ousted him nor the Dasuki family had any legitimacy on the streets, just as Kongi and the oba, and the result was a yam harvest that nourished no one in society.

    It took several years and Boko Haram for a revival of the Dasuki name. GEJ appointed him NSA, and the justification lay in his royal roots. He, a prince, was asked to work the paupers, Boko Haram, to a berth of peace in the Northeast. This column warned that Boko Haram had contempt for princes, and a Dasuki provided an antithesis of the militant’s dreams. It was GEJ’s capital misreading of the conflict of philosophy and social hierarchy of the northern cauldron and conundrum.

    His stewardship stumbled and fell, and Boko Haram became another manifestation of the royal family’s failure. Just like Mark Twain’s famous novel, the prince could not abide the pauper and vice versa. It was partly because of the prince’s failure that voters swept GEJ out of power and Dasuki floated along in the epic gale.

    The DSS standoff is the latest of the Dasuki epic, and something tells me we have not heard the last of it. It is stories like that of Dasuki that provide resources for imaginative novelists to tell tomes of stories of big families, slaughtered ambitions, hubris, intrigues, capitalist acquisitiveness and how such theatrics reflect and prey on the rest of the society over generations. Such books include Dostoyevsky’s Brothers Karamazov, John Updike’s Rabbit trilogy, Thomas Mann’s Buddenbrooks etc.

    Since the Dasuki family tasted the throne, it has lost its innocence. It is like Anton Chekhov’s famous short story called The kiss, when a man lost all concentration for a long time after an unknown lady kissed him in a dark room. He could not replicate the experience and spent the rest of life in despair of that magical moment.

  • Privatisation will continue,  Buhari assures foreign investors

    Privatisation will continue, Buhari assures foreign investors

    • President woos American investors in solid minerals, gas, aviation, health, other sectors

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday spoke of a plan by the Federal Government to widen the scope of Nigeria’s privatisation policy.

    The President listed aviation, telecommunication, energy, gas, solid mineral, health and infrastructural development, as areas requiring private investment.

    Buhari dropped the hint yesterday in Washington DC at a business forum organised by the US  Chamber of Commerce and the Corporate Council on Africa.

    Assuring that there is no going back on the ongoing privatisation programme, Buhari said the government would embark on the privatisation of the listed sectors with improved moral architecture, even as he challenged American investors to take advantage of the liberal trade and investment climate to do profitable businesses in Nigeria.

    He said: “It is my intention to create the necessary environment for future investment in Nigeria. We are the most populous nation with largest market in Africa with vast human and natural resources and blessed with abandoned young skilled workforce

    “We are therefore proud candidate to become the destination of choice for United States investments in Africa.

    “I work assiduously to welcome new investors’ tour country. I will like to remind you all that we are continuing in major privatisation programme with sectors ranging from telecommunication energy, gas, solid minerals, aviation, health and infrastructural development but with improved moral architecture.

    “We will also simplify Visa procedures based on principle of reciprocity. May I therefore, seize this opportunity to formally invite the American business community to take advantage of our liberate trade and investment climate to do profitable business in Nigeria.

    “While I recognise the pivotal role of government in facilitating and promoting economic growth, the private sector must assume an increasing role as part of the engine of growth. We’ll welcome genuine investors who are willing to come to Nigeria for solid mineral exploitation.”

  • Ebonylife TV to host President Muhammadu Buhari today

    Ebonylife TV to host President Muhammadu Buhari today

    As part of his itinerary, President Muhammadu Buhari (GCFR) will be hosted by one of Africa’s television station, Ebonylife TV, in Washington, D.C today. The interactive session tagged ‘Meet & Greet’ will also feature young professionals.

    The Meet & Greet, with Mr. President and Young Nigerian Professionals is expected to host scholars and professionals from all over the United States. A statement from the station says that the event has essentially been designed as an avenue to meet with, and interact with Mr. President, on the prospects and challenges involved in the governance of Africa’s most populous nation and the role that our young professionals need to play.

    “As a channel quintessentially made for the youth, home and abroad, we are extremely pleased that President Muhammadu Buhari appreciates the youth and has demonstrated this commitment and passion even on this historical event in Washington DC by agreeing to include them in his very busy programme schedule. As such, he will be meeting with Young Nigerian Professionals in the Diaspora at this important Meet & Greet being organised by our channel. For this, we’re very grateful to Mr. President and his hardworking team,” says the Executive Chairman and CEO of EbonyLife TV, Mo Abudu.

    At a similar forum in June 2015, the channel hosted the former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega, to an interactive session with the Nigerian youth, tagged ‘Afternoon Tea with Professor Jega’. At this session in Lagos, young and futuristic professionals from every sector of the economy were in attendance to engage and dialogue with the highly respected Professor on some of the critical issues leading to, during and after the 2015 general elections.

  • The persecuted and prosecuted

    The persecuted and prosecuted

    Seven weeks after President Muhammadu Buhari took office the docks of Nigerian courts are becoming overcrowded. A long line of high profile politically-exposed types have been paraded through them in recent times and many more are headed in that direction judging from pregnant statements emanating from the new administration.

    In the last few weeks were have been treated to the unusual sight of former Adamawa State Governor, Murtala Nyako and son as well as his erstwhile Jigawa colleague, Sule Lamido and offspring being ushered into prison vehicles at the onset of their fraud and money laundering trials.

    Equally unexpected was the sight of Stephen Oronsaye, former Head of the Civil Service under President Olusegun Obasanjo, standing for two hours in the dock as he commenced the process of extricating himself from a long list of similar charges as the former governors.

    But for drama, nothing beats the invasion of the Abuja home of former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, by two truckloads of Department of State Security (DSS) agents. He has since been released and the siege on his residence lifted.

    There was never any doubt that Sambo would have many questions to answer regarding the running of the office of NSA in the light of the seizure by South African authorities of $15 million which the Goodluck Jonathan administration claimed it was using to purchase arms.

    The diplomatic incident triggered by that unorthodox transaction as well as rumblings about misappropriation of huge sums set aside for tackling the insurgency in the North East put the spotlight on the man and the recently ousted service chiefs. It would surprise me if he didn’t expect to face queries at some point. His comments in yesterday’s edition of The Nation suggest he was shocked at the speed at which the government has moved against him.

    Dasuki is not the only member of the last administration who’s been feeling the heat. Former Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has been in the wars – exchanging brickbats with Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole over her management of the Excess Crude Account (ECA) and other actions whilst in office.

    Among other things she’s said to have caused $2 billion to be withdrawn from the ECA illegally. In the ensuing dust-up Okonjo-Iweala first claimed the monies were moved with the knowledge of the monthly Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) meetings – only for state commissioners of finance to deny that they ever signed off on such an action. The minister would later say the amount was spent on payments made for petroleum subsidies as approved by former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The ex-minister has put her travails down to political persecution; accusing Oshiomhole of embarking on a witch-hunt because she declined to approve loan requests totaling N15.37 billion which the governor sought to use to meet state obligations.

    In the current charged political environment in Nigeria, a wise man would refrain from making judgments as to who’s telling the truth or breathing lies. It is safer to wait because sooner or later the four-man panel set up by the National Economic Council (NEC) would make their findings known and the courts would rule.

    However, no one can escape the common thread that runs through the reactions of all those who have been put on the spot by the new administration. Okonjo-Iweala sees political foes at work. Lamido claims Lilliputians intimated by his political profile are frightened that he’s about to sweep to victory in the 2019 presidential race!

    As for Nyako, the problem is Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFFC) chairman, Ibrahim Lamorde, who is desperately trying to insinuate himself into the good books of Buhari by framing innocent men and their angelic children.

    As of today we don’t know what the full list of Dasuki’s ‘sins’ are but he already has a zealous champion in Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) spokesman, Olisah Metuh, who’s crying ‘freedom’, ‘democracy’ and ‘human rights.’

    The more imaginative have suggested that through the visit of the DSS to the ex-NSA’s lair Buhari was finally exacting a revenge that was three decades in planning. Apparently, the retired colonel was among a three-man team of officers who at Sallah in 1985 went to arrest the general when he was military Head of State. So 30 years to the day Dasuki is getting his comeuppance – again at Sallah! Such impeccable timing!

    We should be ready to hear lots of these conspiracy theories as more outrageous exposes emerge of the malfeasance of recent years. The template was put in place by Jonathan when he prophesied before the handover that he and his disciples would be persecuted for their service to the nation.

    Some would be tempted to conclude from the travails of Dasuki, Okonjo-Iweala and others that the former president’s prophecies are coming to pass. But before succumbing to such a temptation let us remember that not only Jonathan’s acolytes are facing the music currently.

    Nyako and former Bayelsa State Governor Timipre Sylva are members of the governing All Progressives Congress (APC). Oronsaye was one of the most influential members of Obasanjo’s team. Lamido was a thorn in the flesh of Jonathan till the very end. He was a member of the rebel G7 PDP governors until he and Babangida Aliyu backed out at the point of defection.

    Whether or not there’s merit or not in ongoing probes, or cases being tried in courts, we must allow the system to resolve them. Too many times the judicial process has been short-circuited through the introduction of politics and sentiment.

    Indeed, sentiment is a curse upon this country. It contributes greatly to the impunity that we wanted terminated. Until people – no matter their station or how highly they rate their service to society – realise that there would be consequences for actions in and out of office, enduring change would never take root.

    Of all the irritating sentimental slop I’ve heard in recent times, the one that takes the prize is the suggestion that Buhari should disavow any plans to investigate wrongdoings of the recent past because Jonathan didn’t challenge the results of the elections. This goes back to the sense that in accepting defeat the former president somehow did us all a favour!

    Even if Buhari entered into some quid pro quo deal with his predecessor not to sniff in his mess as the condition for him going quietly, he will soon discover he has no such powers. He would be going against the laws he swore to uphold by bending them on the altar of expediency for privileged persons.

    If all those alleging ‘persecution’ would be reasonable they would admit that the offences they are accused of are quite serious. What we owe them is a fair process that allows them to clear their names. They should take comfort in the fact that Nigerian courts have proven that they are able to discharge their responsibilities in a manner that should give hope to those facing charges. The recent acquittal of former PDP presidential campaign spokesman, Femi Oluwakayode (formerly Fani-Kayode) on money laundering charges is a case in point.

    But the accused must decide whether they want to take their chances in the courts of law or resort to blackmailing Buhari and his administration by deploying sentiment. The latter option might provide a temporary feel good sensation but ultimately the media jury is worthless and of no practical effect.

    If newspaper judges declare you ‘persecuted’ on account of your ethnicity or loyalty to the last regime, and a high court judge finds you culpable for criminal acts then you are headed for jail for a long stretch. So what really is the point in all the propaganda? Why not keep your best shots for the judge that counts?

    Ultimately, the success of the clean-up exercise which Buhari is undertaking, may come down to how he responds to the blackmail he’s increasingly being subjected to. Given his past he would be accused of restoring dictatorship even if the police move to apprehend a bank robber caught in the very act.

    Those who have criticised the visit of the DSS to Dasuki’s home have labeled it an ‘invasion’ – creating the impression that it was done illegally. But the former NSA has admitted that the officers had a valid search warrant from a magistrate court.

    How times change! In the days leading to the March general elections, the DSS invaded an APC data center in Lagos – damaging doors and computers. They claimed the place was being used to clone voter cards and hack into Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) data base.

    Several of the staff working in the office were arrested and detained for days. The agents never produced any warrant. Rather than condemn the brutal action of the DSS, Metuh and his party simply echoed the trumped-up allegations against the opposition and called for the law to take its course.

    Where were Metuh and his PDP human rights activists when the same DSS was used to harass Sanusi Lamido Sanusi following his suspension as Governor of the Central Bank? Where were they when the police sealed off the Emir’s palace in Kano for days forcing the ex-CBN chief to be installed as traditional ruler in Government House?

    Members of the former ruling party and those who served under Jonathan somehow believe that they can escape justice for mismanaging the country by blackmailing the police and other agencies that would be raking through their mess in the coming days and months. The authorities should deny them the satisfaction by doing everything by the book.

    Luckily for PDP, in Buhari we have a president who is very sensitive to accusations about autocracy and intolerance. He is bending over backwards to prove how tolerant and democratic he’s become. That’s fine but he should also realise that the despoilers of Nigeria are stubborn characters who will try every trick in the book to get away with murder.

    They will only stop when convinced that they’ve met their match in someone of equal obduracy. Buhari has talked up a storm; he must now prove that he’s the man for this hour.

  • The real pay cut

    The real pay cut

    Buhari may mean well by reducing his salary, but that is usually not where savings will be made

    One thing that cannot be taken away from President Muhammadu Buhari is his passionate interest in checking corruption in the country. Another is his disgust for the high cost of governance which he is desirous of reducing drastically, given his countenance and his electoral promises. This should be expected from someone who rode to power on the crest of his anti-corruption credentials. Apparently, it was as part of his intention to send appropriate signals to public functionaries that the era when public funds are spent anyhow is over that he announced the reduction of his monthly salary from about N1.2million approved by the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC), by 50 per cent. Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, apparently taking a cue from this, also announced a personal reduction of his salary too by the same 50 per cent.

    This can only be symbolic. It does not seem to me that it is going to have any dent on savings for the government. Indeed, if you ask me, the remuneration is small. I do not understand what the country’s First Citizen is expected to do with that. And I am being serious. Anyway, perhaps it was in consideration of how many minimum wage earners’ salaries his salary will pay monthly that the president felt he had to reduce his. He might have meant well, but he should not take the matter that far.

     I am an advocate of good pay for a good job. And as far as I am concerned, we are only deceiving ourselves with the kind of salaries we pay our civil servants, even at the very top. If many of them who had retired had lived on their miserable pay alone, they would not be in a position to buy the official quarters they gave them the option of first refusal when they were leaving the civil service. That is even if they never spent a dime of their salaries in their 35 or so years in service, and even if they had been receiving the salaries they received at the point of exit right from when they joined the civil service.

    So, President Buhari should continue to earn his salary as stipulated by the RMAFC. I am not going to concern myself with whether it is legal for him to reduce his salary via a letter instead of collecting the full pay first and now returning the half he has pledged to reduce it by to the government. For me, there can only be legal issues if the president decides to increase his pay himself, or directs that other people’s pay must be increased or reduced simply because he has reduced his own.

    One thing I know for sure is that the president needs money to enable him fulfil his campaign promises. And quite unfortunately, many of those who are asking him to do miracle even as he is yet to settle down are those who looted the country’s treasury, necessitating the decision to slash his pay himself, as a way of sacrificing for the country. Now that it is the very people who looted the treasury that are asking for democratic dividend from Buhari, with what do they expect him to do the magic? I guess the right place to begin is to make them cough up what they stole and not the self-denial by the president of a lawful and rational salary.

    If therefore President Buhari is desirous of making money for government, he already has his job cut out for him. The appropriate place to begin is to insist that those who stole public funds, especially in the immediate past, should return same or face the music. What I am saying in essence is that, as for pursue, President Buhari must pursue the public officials who stole so much for Nigerians to notice. As for catching up, he must catch up with them. And as for retrieving the country’s money that they stole, he must retrieve the stolen funds. This is the position I canvassed on this same page a few weeks back. We would be surprised at how much the country would recover from the shameless looters. It is only those of them who repent and return a substantial part of what they stole that we can be talking about forgiveness or plea bargain for.

    But to be running from pillar to post, as former President Goodluck Jonathan was reported to have done last week due to his phobia for probe will not yield any result. President Jonathan cannot feign ignorance that his government was damn corrupt; all of us said that even when he was in power. But since he chose to see the massive looting as mere ‘stealing’, he should not start blaming anyone now that a king that does not think there is wisdom in distinguishing between stealing and corruption is in power.

    Moreover, President Buhari should prune the number of aircraft in the presidential fleet. We do not need 10 or 11 aircraft, gulping more than N10bn annually. It is a luxury we should not have any business with in the first place but for the profligacy of the immediate past. Also, Nigerians must be ready to resist the attempt to make law making a big deal that should deserve all manner of outrageous pay and comfort. People did this same job in the first and second republics and, in spite of the financial recklessness of the Alhaji Shehu Shagari era, there was still some sanity on the question of remuneration for the country’s law makers then. In spite of the over-pampering that our present law makers enjoy, they have not performed better than those of the past. The only thing they have excelled in is the outrageous wealth that they keep making and annoyingly display at the expense of the average Nigerian. Their pay and allowances must be revisited.

    Furthermore, President Buhari should study the expenses at Aso Villa; there are too many areas where he could curb wastage there. We have had cause to shout in the past when we saw some of the budgets made in the villa for all manner of items; say on entertainment and feeding, generator sets, presidential pets and all.  The president should continue to send the right signals about his seriousness to fight corruption.

    This is not to say that President Buhari has not been sending some signal already. He had, only on July 8, for instance, rejected five new armoured Mercedes Benz S-600 (V222) valued at N400million cars for his use. The Permanent Secretary, State House, Mr. Nebolisa Emodi, who told President Buhari of the plan to buy the cars was not doing anything wrong or new; that had been the tradition – new president; new cars! But do we have to waste money changing such vehicles that have the best of attention and care simply because the users have changed? That is part of the ways money is wasted at the seat of power.

    The president would do well to peg the number of  special advisers at the 15  that he had sought the approval of the National Assembly to hire, as against the 23 hired by his predecessor. He should also have a look at the Orosanye committee report on the need to prune the present number of ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs)  from the present 541. Of course the president may slightly increase or reduce the number further in view of the country’s present economic challenges and even the need to remove duplication of functions by some of these MDAs. He does not have to punish himself for the sins of his prodigal predecessors.