Tag: President Muhammadu Buhari

  • Buhari condoles President Magufuli, Tanzanians on ferry disaster

    President Muhammadu Buhari has commiserated with President John Magufuli and the people of Tanzania on the tragic MVNyerere ferry disaster in the south of Lake Victoria.

    The disaster is said to have claimed over a hundred lives.

    Read Also:Presidency tackles Saraki for disparaging Buhari

    Condoling the Tanzanian President on the causalities, President Buhari, in a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, assured his African brother and the good people of Tanzania of the sympathy of all Nigerians as they mourn the death of their loved ones on MVNyerere.

    According to the Nigerian leader, the prayers and thoughts of all Nigerians are with the families and friends of the bereaved even as rescue efforts by emergency services continue.

    The President prayed that God Almighty will comfort all those who lost relatives and friends in the accident and grant eternal rest to the departed souls.

  • Adeosun:  A rather belated exit

    Last Friday, Kemi Adeosun resigned from the government of President Muhammadu Buhari as Minister of Finance over allegation of forged National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) exemption certificate. The story about this forged NYSC exemption certificate broke out in July through a Premium Times report, and since that time there had been intense pressure on her to resign from her ministerial post and in the event of her failure to resign, President Buhari  was asked to sack her. Since the report broke out, nothing was heard from the former minister until her recent action on Friday which I consider to be rather belated if one judges by her background.

    As somebody who grew up into adulthood in United Kingdom, she should know that as a public officer, the only action opened to her in order to maintain her honour was to resign immediately such a serious an infraction on her part was brought out in the public. This is the path of honour usually followed by public officers caught in similar situation in the clime where she grew up.

    For failing to resign in time, the former minister made herself a subject of ridicule in the media. In recent times, people talked less of the good work she was doing in the Ministry of Finance but concentrated on the forged certificate saga. She eventually became a pitiable political football, kicked about by the supporters and opponents of the government. It is a pity that some top government functionaries did not see anything wrong in her presentation of forged NYSC exemption certificate. What mattered to these people who are well learned was the so-called good work she was doing for her fatherland. It is also nauseating for us in this country that most Nigerians view issues of probity and accountability through dim political prism. The praise heaped on the minister after her resignation by the APC spokesman that she showed strength of character and integrity in my view should have been spot on if she had resigned immediately the scandal hit the political airwaves.

    One can only hope that this unfortunate episode would not blight the career of this brilliant technocrat because whatever sympathy one may have for the beleaguered former minister, presentation of a forged certificate is a punishable criminal act. It is unfortunate that her ‘trusted associates’ procured for her a forged certificate signed by an officer that was no longer in the service.

    The resignation of the minister has raised some issues which I shall discuss briefly.

    In her letter or resignation, the former minister said that that she presented the forged certificate to Ogun State legislature when she was being screened for the post of a commissioner in that state in 2011. The same forged certificate was also used for her clearance in the National Assembly when she was screened for the post of a federal minister in 2015.

    These revelations speak volumes about the much-touted efficiency and professionalism of the country’s Department of State Services. This department is the primary domestic intelligence agency in Nigeria and it failed in the duty of authenticating the genuineness of the certificate presented by this lady for the two screenings. This dereliction of by this department has no doubt embarrassed both the Ogun State government and the federal government. The efficiency of this department should not be measured solely by the way the dreaded DSS operatives invade houses of people in commando-like style at night. Ordinary task of authenticating the genuineness of a certificate especially one issued by another government agency should not be a taunting task to a department with such awesome power and facilities like our DSS.  Many people in the country feel that the fear of the DSS operatives is the beginning of wisdom. It does not portray the department in good light that what its operatives fail to discover on two occasions was discovered and brought to light probably by an enterprising investigative reporter of Premium Times.

    One can only hope that the failure of the DSS to verify the authenticity of Mrs Adeosun’s NYSC exemption certificate was not due to political influence. In order for the department to maintain its credibility among Nigerians, the DSS should avoid any government interference in its operations. At present, many opponents of the government feel that some of the actions of the DSS are being influenced by the government.

    One salutary outcome from the resignation of the former minister is that henceforth, any public officer who falls short of the standard required by the office he or she is occupying should not hesitate to resign because this is only path of honour opened to the officer. We used to have this culture in the past but gradually it has been eroded. In the pre-independence Nigeria, we had an example of this culture when in 1955 the late AlhajiAdegokeAdelabu had to resign as Minister of Social Services at the federal level after an inquiry into Ibadan Divisional Council where he was the chairman. In the Obasanjo military administration, the Minister of Finance then was forced to resign as a result of persistent petitions on his fidelity. In the civil service also, there was a notable case of an executive in the Lagos Executive Development Board (LEDB) who was accused of acquiring many plots of land by a member of parliament. This executive had to resign as a result of this accusation in the parliament.

    All the above examples are there for us to follow in order to entrench probity in our public service but unfortunately, people in government allow political considerations to influence their considerations. The cases of Abdul-Rasheed Maina, chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms and that of Professor Usman Yusuf, the boss of National Health Insurance Scheme are sour examples of sordid cover-up of malfeasances perpetrated by public officers. These officers should not be in service by any consideration now. The case of Babachir David Lawal the erstwhile Secretary to the Government of the Federation who was involved in N200 million grass cutting scandal should have been in the same category but for his firing six months after the scandal broke out.

    The resignation of Mrs Kemi Adeosunhas rightly beamed a powerful searchlight on the NYSC service records of some of our top political office holders. These politicians whose names are mentioned in the social media owe it as a duty to Nigerians to place before the public their service records with NYSC. After all, what is good for the goose is also good for the gander. The resignation of Adeosun painful as it, could in the end help to inculcate in our public officers of the need for them to resign when they are found wanting in the offices they hold.

     

    • Professor Lucas writes from Old Bodija, Ibadan.
  • FEC okays 20 silos concession

    …FG to get N6 billion income in 10 years

     

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday approved concessioning of twenty silos in the country.

    The Minister of Agriculture, Audu Ogbeh briefed State House correspondents at the end of FEC meeting chaired by President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Read Also:2019: APC chieftain, Dahiru defects to Sokoto PDP

    According to him, the government stands to get revenue of N6 billion in the first 10 years of the concessioning.

    Each of the twenty silos, he said, has 100,000 tonnes capacity.

    While stating that concessioning the silos will not affect food security in Nigeria negatively, he said that it would boost storage and export of agricultural produce.

    He said that the government however remains the owner of the silos.

    According to him, the concession agreement would be revoked if not properly managed.

    Details later…

     

  • ‘Why Kano won’t support Kwankwaso against Buhari’

    Former Kano State Governor Kabiru Gaya has said Rabiu Kwankwaso will not get the people’s support to unseat President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Gaya, who represents Kano South in the Senate, told reporters the people would deliver about three million votes for President Buhari. According to him, voting out Buhari in 2019 will be taking the country back.

    He said: “I am not Chinua Achebe, but I can play some mathematics in this. With four governors, one serving and three ex-governors, with a three-time senator Gaya on the other side, you will find out that the equation is not balanced and would tilt more to where you have three former governors.

    “So we all need him to come and support Buhari. We initially supported Kwankwaso when he contested the last time. It will take two years to understand the politics of that office before you start thinking of doing anything.

    Maybe the smartest one will need one and half years to understand the office. Then you work for another one and half years, making it three years, and spend the remaining one year politicking to return back. I mean you only get two of the four years.

    “But if you elect President Buhari for a second term, it means the country or the state will now benefit from the full four years, because he will not think about any re-election. I am always an advocate for two terms for everyone.

    “President Buhari is doing well and the only support he needs is a second term…”

  • Kalu visits IBB over Buhari’s re-election

    Former Abia State Governor Orji Uzor Kalu was in Minna yesterday to convince former military President, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, to support President Muhammadu Buhari’s re-election.

    Kalu addressed reporters after a meeting with Babangida at his uphill home in Minna.

    He said: “I am in Minna to campaign for President Buhari because I have seen many members of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) trooping in to visit IBB, and I felt we should not be left behind.

    “I have come to have a heart-to-heart talk with the former President and convince him why he should support Buhari to finish his second term. His reaction was blue and white, we have discussed and he said he would think about it and this is a positive reaction.”

    Kalu hinted that he has been in and out of the country soliciting support for President Buhari’s re-election, even as he appealed to Nigerians to give Buhari a second chance as a cohesive country needs continuity in government.

    He added: “President Buhari is already in half time now, he has played four years and in soccer, you have 90 minutes game, he has played 45 minutes and we are appealing to Nigerians to give him another 45 minutes to play. It would make more sense and would be very nice.”

  • Osun guber poll: Lasun campaigns for Oyetola

    Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives Yussuff Lasun campaigns for Gboyega Oyetola at the grand rally for the All Progressives Congress (APC) Candidate in Saturday’s governorship election.

    The rally is ongoing and will be addressed by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Buhari who is presently in a meeting with Osun traditional rulers, is expected at the venue shortly.

    Lasun told the crowd at the Osogbo stadium venue that APC will rule Nigeria forever because it is made up of men of credible character and its laudable programme.

    He reaffirmed his membership if the APC.

  • Buhari’ll make Nigerian port a hub in Africa – Peterside

    President Muhammadu Buhari has a bold and robust vision, national determination, and assiduous plans to make the Nigerian ports, the hub of maritime activities in the West and Central Africa.

    This was disclosed Tuesday, by the Director General, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr Dakuku Peterside at the on-going Association of African Maritime Administrations Conference, holding at Sharma El Sheikh, Egypt.

    Addressing over 2000 delegates and other stakeholders at the conference, the NIMASA helmsman

    said the geographical location of Nigeria  trade lines is favourable and its transformation to a regional maritime hub, he said, cannot be by chance but by having a robust plan, identify its strength and weakness through the efforts of the Federal Government to take financial risk and invest in infrastructure and technological development.

    The Buhari administration, he said, has a long-term, strategic port planning system that will ensure in the next two years that the nation’s sea ports provide adequate capacity to meet the demands of key shipping lines and their alliance partners in sizeable blocks of volume.

    This, he said, means the ability of the Nigeria to develop deep sea ports, berth all types of ocean going vessels and conduct cargo operations timely and efficiently.

    Africa, he said, needs leaders like President Buhari that have strategic vision and viable courage to make bold decisions that will enable the Nigerian sea ports and other ports in Africa to stay ready for the future, be a pacesetter, reap first-mover advantages, and thrive in a dynamic and competitive global maritime business.

    Nigeria’s strategic vision for its ports, he said, are being built on the 3 Cs of Connectivity, Capacity, and Competitiveness

    African leaders, he said, need to emulate Singapore in taking the right decision and make the necessary investment to develop port infrastructure and technology to boost efficiency and economy.

    “Today, we are celebrating Singapore based on the Vision of its leaders. And I am also happy to inform you that the Federal Government of Nigeria under President Muhammadu Buhari is doing everything position to make the Nigerian ports the hub of maritime activities in the West and Central Africa.

    The Federal Government, through NIMASA, Dr Peterside said, is emulating Singapore and other maritime nations of the world in terms of short, medium and long term planning that will assist the Nigerian ports to compete favourably with other ports across the globe and urged other African countries to emulate them.

    The maritime time sector forecast released by NIMASA recently and the training of over 2500 seafarers by the agency, he said, were part of the efforts to make the Nigerian ports competitive.

    He urged African maritime administrators to identify areas where they have comparative advantage, their weaknesses and the opportunities they have to reduce poverty and the high level of unemployment ravaging the content.

    “Be ready to take risk, make necessary investment and grow human capacity.”

    He said, there was need for maritime administrators across the continent to come up with beautiful ideas so that people can invest in their programmes the way the World Bank and other financial institutions did for Singapore in 1972.

    Paucity of fund, according to him, cannot, and must not be allowed to delay the growth of the maritime sector in the continent of Africa.

    Nigeria and other African countries, he said, must emulate continue to emulate developed countries by investing in technology to bringing innovation and efficiency to our ports.

    In allaying the fear of other countries in Africa, he said,: “We are not in competition with ourselves, we are not in competition with our neighbouring ports, we are part of the global community, we in competition with the best in the world,” he said.

    He urged port administrators in Africa to leverage on technology to make the ports attractive for business.

    Representatives of over 35 countries from Africa and beyond and other stakeholders are attending the event.

     

  • National Assembly moves to rework rejected Electoral Act

    The National Assembly Monday took steps to repackage the controversial Electoral Act amendment Bill rejected by President Muhammadu Buhari earlier this month.

    Members of Senate and House of Representatives Committees on Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) held a closed session Monday to articulate ways and means to reconsider contentious clauses of the rejected Bill.

    Read Also:Presidency faults National Assembly on INEC’s budget

    If the Bill is passed by the two chambers, that will be the fourth time the National Assembly will consider and pass the Electoral Act amendment Bill.

    President Buhari vetoed the Electoral Act Amendment Bill 2018, citing drafting issues, which he said were likely to affect the interpretation and application of the Principal Act.

    President Buhari in separate memos to the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, and the Speaker of House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, said that some of the provisions of the Bill would adversely affect the operations of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) if allowed to pass.

    The rejection of the Bill by President Buhari was communicated to the presiding officers of the National Assembly in a letter dated September 3, 2018

    Although the issue of the use of electronic card readers was not raised by the President in his veto of the Bill, some stakeholders believed that the rejection of the Bill by President Buhari also meant that the card reader will not be used for the conduct of the 2019 general elections.

    The Presidency on its part has come up strongly to say that the card reader was not part of what the National Assembly sent to the President for assent.

    President Buhari had in March this year turned down the amendment to the Electoral Law, which altered the sequence of elections.

    The amendment placed the National Assembly election first, followed by presidential election while governorship and state Houses of Assembly elections would hold last in the order of elections.

    Buhari noted that “Section 25 of the principal Act may infringe upon the constitutionally guaranteed discretion of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to organise, undertake and supervise elections provided in Section 15(A) of the third statue to the Constitution.”

    Chairman, Senate Committee on INEC, Senator Suleiman Nazif who spoke briefly yesterday before the meeting went into closed door said, “I know that this committee is in the eye of the storm and Nigerians are desirous and expecting to hear from us.

    “Here we are, again, trying to address the Electoral Act for the fourth time. Nigerians will recall that there was a first Electoral Act (amendment bill), the second and the third one.

    “And if we pass this one it will be the fourth one. I believe that what we are doing is in the best interest of this country.

    “It will address all the fears and we will ensure that we equip INEC with what is necessary and what will ensure free and fair elections in 2019.

    “I will not be in a position right now to address the press and I don’t think any member of this committee is in a position to address the press.

    “We will have to look at what transpired (concerning the bill) in an executive session and tomorrow by 11am, we will call all press men and we will tell you in detail what transpired and the position this committee has taken.”

     

  • Buhari, Bichi and the politics of appointments

    The replacement of Lawal Daura as Director-General of the State Security Service (SSS) aka Department of State Services (DSS), offered President Muhammadu Buhari a unique window to shock critics who have defined him as an ethnic champion on the basis of his political appointments. It was an opportunity he blithely spurned.

    We concede to the president his power to hire and fire. So there were three options open to him. He could have recalled Daura if he was satisfied that he had been unfairly treated.

    He could have retained the Bayelsa-born Acting Director-General, Matthew Seiyefa, appointed by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo. He was not obliged to do so and there is plenty of precedence to show that past heads of state chose to overlook many who were in similar situation.

    Lastly, he could choose to appoint someone entirely new – the option he has now embraced.

    By naming Yusuf Magaji Bichi to the position, the president has – in some ways – plumped for a like for like replacement. The new DSS boss is from the Northwest geo-political zone as his predecessor Daura: the former hails from Kano State while the latter shares the same hometown with Buhari.

    Both men, interestingly, were plucked out of retirement to head such a strategic security agency. To overlook the entire cadre of serving directors and fish among retirees makes a very pregnant statement and creates room for conspiracy theories.

    We may never get an explanation as to the parameters used in making the Bichi appointment, but the choice suggests that the president didn’t consider those still in service up to the job. Or it could be simply down to politics or considerations like personal chemistry.

    Perhaps in anticipation of questions as to why those still in service were overlooked, the statement announcing Bichi’s appointment described the new man as a “core secret service operative.” This has led to many sarcastic observations as whether those who have been passed over were mere traffic policemen.

    It is unfortunate that Bichi who may be a fine gentleman and eminently qualified for the position, finds himself the object of such contention and scrutiny. Most times we are reduced to assessing suitability for public office on the basis of our ethnic origin or religious beliefs.

    It is our reality as citizens of a country with many ethnic groups roped together in a shotgun marriage by outside matchmakers. It is a fact acknowledged by our constitution which requires that merit takes a backseat to ‘federal character’ and national spread.

    It is for similar reasons that no party would put two northerners or two southerners on their election ticket. So when presidential aides dismiss those who raise these issues it simply becomes a case of playing the ostrich.

    The problem is not Bichi’s qualification for the role. But it is equally not just about the fact that the new DG is a northerner. It is certainly not about counting and balancing those across our regional divide who have headed the DSS. The agitation and debate is not about whether more southerners or northerners have led the service. The focus is not on this agency.

    This point needs to be made because in his rush to respond to the backlash that the appointment has triggered, Buhari’s Special Assistant on New Media, Bashir Ahmad, tweeted a historical list of Directors-General who had led the DSS between 1990 and 2018. Of the seven, three were from the south while four are northerners. That slight statistical edge is supposed to silence those accusing the president of regional bias.

    But the zealous aide missed the point. Criticism of imbalance in the president’s appointments is a feature that has dogged his tenure from its earlydays. It is mainly about the context and backdrop against which these appointments have been made.

    For instance, when those southerners and northerners were heads of the DSS, who were the other service chiefs and what parts of the country did they hail from? Former President Goodluck Jonathan had many failings, but he like former President Olusegun Obasanjo always tried to appoint the heads of the security agencies in a manner that it was rarely a matter for contention.

    Towards the end of Jonathan’s tenure, the following were heads of the security agencies. National Security Adviser (NSA) was Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) – Northwest; Chief of Army Staff was Lt. General Kenneth Minimah – South-South; Chief of Defence Staff was Air Vice-Marshall Alex Badeh – Northeast; Chief of Naval Staff was Rear Admiral Usman Jibrin – North- Central; Chief of Air Staff was Air Vice Marshall Adesola Amosu – Southwest; Director-General of SSS was Ita Ekpenyong – South-South and Inspector-General of Police was Suleiman Abba – Northwest.

    Obasanjo, for his part, had a unique trick of appointing the core service chiefs from northern and southern minority ethnic groups, while picking the heads of intelligence agencies from the three biggest ethnic groups. So, for instance, when Lt. General Martin Luther Agwai – a minority Christian from Kaduna State was Chief of Army Staff, the Director-General of the SSS was Col. Kayode Are – a Yoruba.

    By contrast, the bulk of the service chiefs and heads of intelligence agencies under this dispensation are from the north – save Chief of Defence Staff and Chief of Naval Staff.

    The argument has been that Buhari has not deliberately favoured the north, but has simply ensured that all zones are catered for in making these appointments. On paper, that sounds reasonable but it actually jars against our reality.

    In making political appointments, it is almost impossible to reflect Nigeria’s federal character as required by the constitution if you are only focusing on the six zones. What happens when there are less than six positions to be distributed? You must then apply another factor to create a sense of balance.

    The truth is Nigerians see themselves more in terms of north and south and that reality has been accepted by our political elite who have now adopted the convention of rotating power between north and south.

    It is this political reality which the president and his advisers don’t appear to take too seriously – and it smacks of gross political insensitivity with the country on the cusp of elections. It, sadly, reinforces all the negative narratives about him.

    Early in the year, it appeared as if Buhari was beginning to understand the point being made when he pledged to review his appointments to address the perceived imbalances.

    What happened next was a return to the barricades as the administration rolled out a list of ‘appointments’ to justify the president’s position. But it was a poor and unconvincing statistical defence that sought in some places to make an equivalence of, say, the position of the chief of a major security service with that of a special assistant or executive director in a parastatal.

    Security appointments are strategic, sensitive and powerful. We saw how influential the position of National Security Adviser was under Sambo Dasuki. Such offices would always attract attention and need to be shared equitably.

    Some who have come to Buhari’s defence, argue that in appointing Bichi he had done nothing wrong – given that some of his predecessors like Jonathan and Obasanjo equally named their kinsmen as heads of the DSS.

    My response would be: whatever happened to ‘change begins with me’? Change should not just begin and end with catching and jailing looters. It should extend to the way government is run; it should include uniting a country historically divided along lines of ethnicity. If his predecessors were content to be locked in their ethnic prisons, does Buhari have to execute the same routine?

    By repeating the old and redundant practice of appointing key security chiefs from one’s ethnic redoubt, Buhari cannot claim to be different from his predecessors.

    One of the enduring lines from his inaugural speech in 2015 was where he famously declared: ‘I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody.’ In naming the new DSS, it would have been an excellent affirmation of that early position for people in the deep southern state of Bayelsa to be able to feel that, by retaining their son, a president from the far northern state of Katsina truly belongs to them.

  • Resources’ll be utilised for all Nigerians, Says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday in Abuja assured Nigerians that the country’s resources will be retained and utilised for the benefit of all citizens, with a strong focus on infrastructure.

    Buhari made the remark when a delegation of Ogoni leaders from the Supreme Council of Ogoni Traditional Rulers and elected leaders of MOSOP visited him at the State House, Abuja.

    Read Also:Nigeria’s water resources troubled, says don

    The delegation also included the academia, women, community and religious leaders.

    Buhari, in a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, said “We will not abuse the trust. What belongs to Nigeria stays in Nigeria and will be utilised by Nigerians,’’

    The President said the challenge of infrastructure in Ogoni-land would have been long resolved with more focus and commitment to improving the lives of the people, instead of the award and re-awarding of contracts without implementation.

    He urged the leaders to prevail on their youths and sensitize their communities more on the benefits of the clean-up process, especially with the involvement of the international community.

    “Certainly I am aware of the challenges in Ogoni-land. But I want to appeal to you as institutionalized leaders to speak more to the youths. With patience, we will prevail together in restoring the environment, especially with involvement of the international community,’’ he said.

    The President noted that the degradation of the environment over the years had undermined the economy of the Ogoni people, adding that commercial farming and fishing will pick up after the restoration.

    “We are working hard to change the situation. I know that if we had power in the country, many Nigerians will create and face their businesses,’’ he said.

    In his remarks, the leader of the delegation, His Royal Majesty King GNK Ogininwa commended the President for the achievements recorded in restoring security and the economy, while calling for more Federal Government attention on the plight of the people in Ogoni-land.

    “Through you, Mr President, we will achieve great things in Ogoni-land,’’ he added.

    King Ogininwa conferred the title of “Meni-Doo-Lenu’’ on the President, meaning the “the King of Doing Good Things in Ogoni-land’’.

    A member of the delegation, Prof. Walter Ollor, presented a list of the needs of the Ogoni people, which includes a national recognition for the Ogoni 12, which includes Ken Saro-Wiwa, improved security and establishment of a Centre for Environmental Excellence.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the meeting, River State Governorship aspirant, Senator Magnus Abe, said “We are supporting the president because of the things he has done for us; we believe that whatever he can do, he will continue to do.

    “Today, our Majesty conferred a title on the president, and the title he gave the president is Menedolenu of Ogoni, that is the King that does good things for Ogoni people.

    “The president is one of us; he has shown that special relationship with the Ogoni people; there is no condition for whatever the president wants from us,’’ he said.