Tag: President Muhammadu Buhari

  • Oil sector reforms ‘ll boost accountability, says Buhari

    Oil sector reforms ‘ll boost accountability, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday said his administration will implement far-reaching reforms to boost accountability and transparency in Nigeria’s  oil and gas industry.

    He spoke during a meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja with senior officials of Chevron led by the company’s President for Africa and Latin America, Mr. Ali Moshiri.

    His administration, he said, was ready to effectively address the myriad of challenges in the sector.

    The president, according to a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, said: “We understand the situation in the industry and we will do our best to address the challenges affecting exploration, production and distribution of oil products in the country.’’

    Acknowledging the merits of the Amnesty Programme initiated by late President Umar Yar’Adua to reduce violence in the Niger Delta region, President Buhari said his administration will  build on good aspects of the programme.

    He added that his administration will also implement  other measures to enhance security in the Niger Delta and optimise investments in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry.

    Mr. Moshiri had urged President Buhari to restore the confidence of international investors in the industry.

    He identified improved security in the Niger Delta as key to increased investment in the oil and gas sector in Nigeria.

    Mr. Moshiri said Chevron which has 36.7 per cent interest in the West African Gas Pipeline Company Limited, was keen to support the country’s gas sector and bring more electricity to the consumers.

  • BREAKING NEWS! Buhari sacks service chiefs

    BREAKING NEWS! Buhari sacks service chiefs

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday relieved service chiefs of their appointments.

    The announcement was made by Femi Adesina, Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President, while speaking with State House correspondents.

    The Service Chiefs who were relieved of their duties include Lt.-Gen. Kenneth Minimah (Chief of Army Staff), Air Vice Marshal Adesola Amosu (Chief of Air Staff), Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh (Chief of Defence Staff), and Admiral Usman Jibrin.

    As at press time, replacements has not been announced for the service chiefs who were all appointed by ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.

  • The power of atmospherics

    President Muhammadu Buhari recently rejected a proposal by the State House bureaucracy to procure five armoured Mercedes Benz cars worth N400 million for his comfort and safety. On Friday, he and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo announced a 50% cut in their salaries.

    Last week also, he met with within the confines of Aso Villa with the activists from the BringBackOurGirls (BBOG) group which has been campaigning for the rescue of hundreds of kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls. Not only did he meet with them, both sides ended up posing for a group photograph.

    This marks a sea change in relations between the seat of power and this influential citizens group. Before now Jonathan used to barricade himself within the villa while sending some female minister to engage BBOG leader, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili and her team in a shouting match. That is when former presidential aide Dr. Doyin Okupe wasn’t accusing the group of being in cahoots with the evil opposition APC and antagonizing the military. Back it always felt like Jonathan was threatened by BBOG.

    These populist moves that may not significantly change the state of the average citizen’s pocket. But it affects the overall atmospherics and sustains that sense that a new day has dawned in the country and things can never be the way they were ever again. Such symbolic gestures shouldn’t be dismissed lightly.

  • Buhari wades into farmers, fulani clashes

    Buhari wades into farmers, fulani clashes

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday directed ‎the Federal Ministry of Agriculture to fine-tune strategies towards ending farmers / herdsmen clashes in the country.

    The Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Sunny Echono, spoke with State House correspondents after updating the President on the activities of the Ministry at the Presidential Villa, Abuja

    According to him, the blueprint formulated during Buhari’s tenure as Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) will be considered towards resolving the frequent clashes.

    The blueprint, according to him, involves the creation of grazing reserves and stock routes.

    He said: “Incidentally the President had received a detailed report on this when he was at the PTF on how to resolve this problem and this blue print is going to be made available to us, together with experts and others who have also worked on the subject including the recent national economic committee resolution chaired by one of the state governors.

    “We are going to look at all of this and come up with proposals that will address this problem. We are looking at the possibility of delegating stock routes with monuments and establishing of grazing reserves. We are also looking at the issues of ranches across the country and addressing the reality of the farmers’ challenges in terms of the cost of pastures.

    “If we localize all our pastures, you need to provide pasture and the ranges vary depending on the region you find yourself. These peculiar problems are the things that will come up in the blue print.”

    He said that the President also asked the Ministry to work towards restoring the agriculture extension services scheme and to create employment for the youth through agriculture.

     

     

  • APC hails Buhari for ending workers’ misery

    APC hails Buhari for ending workers’ misery

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has hailed President Muhammadu Buhari for coming to the aid of the long-suffering Nigerian workers with a multi-billion-naira package.

    The party aid the aid  will not only ensure that all arrears of salaries owed by many states across the country are immediately paid, but will also make it easier for the states to meet their monthly salary obligations henceforth.

    In a statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the APC said it was particularly delighted that the President has shown that he is truly the father of the nation by eschewing partisanship in approving the intervention fund for all the states, irrespective of which parties they belong to.

    ”We say this because when states were financially handicapped during the tenure of the last federal government, opposition states were hung out to dry why states belonging to the then ruling PDP got generous bailouts,” it said.

    APC said by his action, President Buhari has practicalized his deep understanding of the essence of governance which, more than anything else, is the about the well being of the citizenry.

    The party said worthy of note and commendation is the fact that the special intervention fund approved by President Buhari was packaged without any external borrowing, despite the paucity of funds occasioned by the fall in the price of crude oil and the unprecedented profligacy of the immediate past administration that dried out the pot of national resources.

    It said so early in the life of his administration, President Buhari is walking his talk by showing that with prudence, financial discipline, plugging financial leakages and a deep sense of patriotism, even the nation’s dwindling resources can still be more effectively utilized for the benefit of Nigerians, rather than be looted by thieving public officials who abuse their office.

    APC described as uncharitable and a clear indication that shame has taken flight the situation in which those who created the rot that is now being cleared by President Buhari are the same ones daring to point accusing fingers at the government that inherited their rot.

    ”The PDP that spent the past 16 years plundering and pillaging Nigeria has boasted that the Nigerian people will soon come, cap in hand, to beg them to return to power. What delusion! What arrogance! Who presided over the looting and the mismanagement of public funds that made it impossible for the nation to absorb the shock of the falling oil prices? Who depleted the Excess Crude Account (ECA) without authorization? Who has degraded the standard of living of Nigerians?” the party queried.

    APC said the multi-pronged package approved by President Buhari includes the sharing of about $2.1 billion sourced from the LNG’s payment to the Federation Account; and a CBN-packaged special intervention fund that will offer financing to the states, ranging between N250 billion to N300 billion, as a soft loan available to states to access for the purposes of paying backlog of salaries.

    Also, the President has approved a debt relief programme that will help states restructure their commercial loans currently put at over N660 billion. The implication is that the life span of such loans will be extended, while reducing the states’ debt-servicing expenditures, thus leaving the states with enough resources – which otherwise would have been removed at source by the banks – to meet their monthly salary obligations, among others.

    ”History is repeating itself before our very eyes. Some 31 years ago, Buhari, then as a military head of state, also inherited a huge national rot similar to what has been bequeathed to it by the PDP, and had to approve 480 million Naira for the payment of arrears of workers’ salaries. Truly, the President is a man of destiny,” the party said.

    It said that with thousands of workers made destitute by the frittering away of the commonwealth under a rapacious and wasteful PDP government now being given a new lease of life, their purchasing power being boosted and the nation’s economy being reflated, the change which the President and his party promised the nation has just begun.

    ”We thank Nigerians for voting the APC into power at the centre and for believing in us even when the horizon became hazy, not out of our making but because of the misdeeds of the past. By their relentless support for President Buhari and the APC, Nigerians have indeed demonstrated that what is worth fighting for is worth defending,” APC said

  • Relocation to Maiduguri on course – Army

    Relocation to Maiduguri on course – Army

    Authorities of the Nigerian Army have said the directive given by President Muhammadu Buhari for the relocation of military Command and Control Centre to Maiduguri was being strictly adhered to.

    At a briefing in Abuja on Wednesday, the Army said the grand finale of this year’s edition of the Armed Forces Remembrance Day celebration would take place in Maiduguri.

    Brig. Gen. Donald Oji, who spoke on behalf of the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Kenneth Minimah, however said the celebration would be low keyed.

    “The choice of Maiduguri to host the closing activities of NADCEL 2015 was informed by the need to further raise the morale of our troops in the area of operation by showing solidarity to them and to further reassure the people in the Northeast of Nigeria, particularly Borno State of the renewed determination of the Nigerian Army to end the insurgency in that zone,” Gen. Oji said.

    The celebrations which started on Wednesday will also include a medical outreach programme for the Internally Displaced Persons’ camps in Maiduguri from July 4-5.

    The Chief of Army Staff is expected to lay wreath at the military cemetery in Maiduguri and will visit the 7 Division hospital where injured military personnel are being treated.

    He will also address troops and present medals to deserving officers and men.

  • Relocation to Maiduguri on course – Army

    Relocation to Maiduguri on course – Army

    Authorities of the Nigerian Army have said the directive given by President Muhammadu Buhari for the relocation of military Command and Control Centre to Maiduguri was being strictly adhered to.

    At a briefing in Abuja on Wednesday, the Army said the grand finale of this year’s edition of the Armed Forces Remembrance Day celebration would take place in Maiduguri.

    Brig. Gen. Donald Oji, who spoke on behalf of the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Kenneth Minimah, however said the celebration would be low keyed.

    “The choice of Maiduguri to host the closing activities of NADCEL 2015 was informed by the need to further raise the morale of our troops in the area of operation by showing solidarity to them and to further reassure the people in the Northeast of Nigeria, particularly Borno State of the renewed determination of the Nigerian Army to end the insurgency in that zone,” Gen. Oji said.

    The celebrations which started on Wednesday will also include a medical outreach programme for the Internally Displaced Persons’ camps in Maiduguri from July 4-5.

    The Chief of Army Staff is expected to lay wreath at the military cemetery in Maiduguri and will visit the 7 Division hospital where injured military personnel are being treated.

    He will also address troops and present medals to deserving officers and men.

  • Why PMB is right  to hasten slowly

    Why PMB is right to hasten slowly

    Last week I promised to publish more of the responses to my column of June 17 on the controversy that has trailed Dr. Bukola Saraki election as Senate president, a controversy that does not seem about to go away or even subside so soon. Accordingly I have devoted about a third of today’s column to some of those responses.

    Before then, however, some words about President Muhammadu Buhari’s seeming slow speed of decision making and his orders to the country’s service chiefs on June 12 to dismantle the military checkpoints that had riddled our highways and towns.

    First, the military checkpoints. In the last four years, travelling on our highways and commuting within our towns had become a nightmare, especially in the North where the checkpoints had been more prevalent. They had, on average, nearly doubled travel time within and between towns, had become avenues for extortion of travellers and had occasionally led to the harassment, maiming and even killing of those who dared resist such extortions.

    The trade off was supposed to be at least the curtailment of the movement of Boko Haram personnel and their arsenal. Their abduction of Chibok girls two years ago and their frequent bombings of soft targets – schools, churches, mosques, markets and the like – clearly exposed the ineffectiveness of these checkpoints. Indeed, far from securing society from such attacks, the checkpoints constituted potential killing fields; it was a miracle that it apparently never crossed the twisted minds of the insurgents to explode bombs in the massive traffic go-slows and hold-ups caused by the checkpoints. One shudders to imagine the level of human and material destruction that would’ve resulted therefrom.

    However, for some inexplicable reasons, former President Goodluck Jonathan rejected all entreaties, including those from some ex-military heads of state who obviously knew a thing or two about national security, physical or otherwise, to dismantle the checkpoints. It was as if someone somewhere was intent on inflicting suffering and pain on Nigerians under the guise of keeping them safe from Boko Haram.

    Some people have argued that without the military checkpoints things could’ve been much worse. This is not impossible but the argument is more speculative than factual, given the limited military capacity of Boko Haram, even compared with our hitherto seemingly out-gunned army.

    President Buhari may have seemed slow in decision making, but on this issue of military checkpoints, his orders to dismantle them within a month of being sworn in could hardly have been prompter – and more right; if nothing else, it is bound to drastically reduce the cost doing business in the areas affected and lift the terrible trauma of siege mentality the checkpoints had inflicted on people.

    All of which takes me back to the first issue of the president’s seemingly slow speed in decision making. Nothing captures this better than a caption story in The Guardian last Sunday. In what is potentially an award winning piece of photo journalism, the newspaper devoted half of its front page to a beautiful picture of a lone tortoise crawling across the huge, but at the time apparently empty, forecourt of the Aso Villa with the bold caption “Slow And Steady Wins The Race.”

    Few readers would miss the newspaper’s sarcastic but subtle dig at the president. And as if to agree with it, on the same day, the Daily Trust on Sunday, whose stable no one can accuse of being an enemy of the president, published an editorial which clearly suggested it is unhappy with the speed of his governance.

    “We urge President Muhammadu Buhari,” the newspaper said in concluding its editorial, “to immediately appoint an SGF (Secretary to the Federal Government), appoint a full complement of personal staff and nominate ministers without further delay.”

    I agree with Trust that he should appoint the SGF and his full complement of personal staff without further delay. Indeed he should’ve done so from day one, especially as he has had close aides who possess the requisite skills, integrity and loyalty for the jobs and have done similar jobs for him long before he entered politics in 2003.

    However, I disagree with the newspaper and those who share its sentiments that he ought to nominate members of his cabinet immediately. By implication, the president does need a cabinet to deliver on his promises. But nothing in the constitution says there is a deadline for constituting it. Of course, doing so should not take forever. At most it shouldn’t take more than his first hundred days in office.

    In that case the man still has about two more months to go. If his current pace looks too slow to meet his 100-day covenant with Nigerians, I think it is because, as Nigerians, we seem too much given to drama. It is also because we underestimate the depth and scope of the mess which the hitherto ruling PDP had made of Nigeria in the last 16 years.

    In the lead editorial of its June 20th edition, The Economist of London said Buhari’s coming to power is an opportunity for Nigeria as “Africa’s most important failure (to) at last come right.” In that same edition, the newsmagazine carried a 16-page special report with the president’s picture on its cover captioned “Opportunity knocks” on how to get it right this time.

    Opportunities like this come only once in a long while in the life of a nation. It is therefore better and safer for the president to err on the side of caution than rush into judgement and risk getting it all wrong. One hundred, even 30 days may be too long to pick one’s closest aides, but it is certainly not too long to put together a team competent and sincerely committed enough to do the heavy lifting that should turn this country around from the mess it is in.

     And now to the Saraki controversy

    Sir,

    Much as I share some aspects of your analysis on Saraki in The Nation of June 17, the last paragraph was off the track. In eight years, Saraki transformed Kwara in the areas of urban facelift, education, agriculture and roads.

    Olatunde Ayodabo,

    +2348033604983.

    Sir,

    You got it right when you said “Saraki served himself more than he served society.” You only forgot to add that he ruined Societe Generale Bank and the bank’s customers’ businesses. He has ruined so many things in Kwara. Now, who will deliver the 8th Senate from being ruined by him? Only time will tell.

    Leke Adeyemo

    Ilorin. +2348134616449.

    Sir,

    I don’t think it is fair to blame President Muhammadu Buhari on the recent election of Saraki and Dogara as President of the Senate and Speaker House of Representatives on the wrong assumption that he is the leader of the party. There is nowhere in the APC Constitution which says that the elected president or governor from the party shall be leaders of the party at national and state levels respectively. The constitution only says the president shall be a member of the National Executive committee and governors, members of state executive committee. Party chairmen are leaders of their party at all levels.

    Secondly, APC   senators and House members must learn to cooperate with PDP senators and House members for the smooth passage of their bills since they lack two third majorities in both chambers.

    Hussaini Dangaladima,

    Dan’iyan Zazzau Suleja

    +2348163422383

     

    Sir,

    I read your piece of Wednesday, June 17, 2015 titled “Saraki as President of the 8th Senate.”  President Muhammadu Buhari at 72 cannot be wrong when he said he was not interested in whoever emerged as the principal officers in the two legislative houses. He said and did the right thing and should have been fully backed and supported by the party.

    Instead, the party chieftains decided to act in their own wisdom but with what result? DISGRACE! They have since learnt the hard way and have been crying over spilt milk. They forgot the Yoruba adage which says that “Oroagba bi o se laaro, a se lale,” which means  “The saying of an old man, if it does not come to pass in the morning, will surely do in the evening”.

    The strong man of Lagos politics should be told in plain language that this is politics at the national level and not at state or regional level. APC should wake up. PDP is prowling around and roaring like a hungry lion looking for whom to devour. Let them put the episode behind, reflect on the lesson learnt and bounce back stronger.

    Ologun B. Freeman,

    Utako, Abuja.

    ologfreemania@hotmail.com

    Sir,

    There should be no soft landing for Bukola Saraki. The best option for him is to resign. The decisions of the party hierarchies remain sacrosanct. He must be told in clear terms that Nigeria Federation is not Kwara State that his family members see as their patrimonial estate.

    +2348073344775.