Tag: President Muhammadu Buhari

  • Students hail Buhari for signing Not-Too-Young-To-Run Bill

    Students are excited by President Muhammadu Buhari’s assent to the Not-too-Young-to-Run Bill. They praise him for keeping his promise to sign the law, which has opened up the political space for youths. Students urging the political class to leave office for youths, writes TEMITOPE YAKUBU.

    Youths have made a headway in their clamour for political inclusion.President Muhammadu Buhari has signed the Not-Too-Young-To-Run Act, opening the political space for the young to run for public office.

    He signed the law in line with his Democracy Day promise.

    The bill, which was passed by the National Assembly, 10 months ago, amended Section 131(b) and Section 65 (a) and (b) of the 1999 Constitution on ages for seeking elective positions. It reduced the ages for contesting for President from 40 to 35 years; and House of Assembly, 30 to 25. It retained the ages of 35 and 30 for the Senate and House of Representatives.

    The President signed the law in the presence of some youth leaders led by the Youth Initiative for Advocacy, Growth and Advancement (YIAGA) founder, Samson Itodo, and National Co-ordinator, Faruk Ibrahim.

    The President described the law as “a landmark progress” for the nation, noting that the activism that led to its passage  showed that the youth could achieve anything they desired if they worked for it.

    He canvassed for additional amendment to reduce the age limits for governors and senators, which were proposed, but not carried. He added that the signing of the law was not the end of the journey, but the beginning of more work to be done in engaging young people in governance.

    In their reactions, youth and students’ leaders hailed the President for keeping his promise, urging him to replace old people in his cabinet with youths in line with the law.

    A youth consultant and key figure in the Ondo State chapter of Not-Too-Young-To-Run movement, Oludaisi Omokungbe,  said the law would make young people realise their leadership potential quickly, rather than being referred to as leaders of tomorrow.

    He said:“It will reduce the level of hooliganism in our politics and bring about increased participation of youths in political process. This is because youths will now have the consciousness that we too can get elected into various political offices in the country rather than being errand boys and area boys for old politicians.

    “For me, the law comes with a huge responsibility, because we must now live up to expectations as responsible and energetic leaders. It is a call for more actions and we are ready to harness our knowledge and initiate ideas that will engender economic growth and national development.”

    Oludaisi said he was confident the nation was set to witness a major leadership shake-up in political and economic spaces.

    Similarly, Comrade Farouk Lawal Umar, the Zone A coordinator of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), said the presidential assent to the bill has reinforced his belief that youths should not wait for the future to be leaders.

    He, however, said it was not yet Uhuru for young people until they forge a comsis”. The development, he said, has presented an opportunity for the youth to become more active in political process.

    He said: “It is time we rescued our nation from the hands of the ineffective politicians, who have successfully plunged this country into development crises. For us in NANS Zone A, the Not-Too-Young-To-Run agenda can only be effective when we support the revolutionary ideas of young people who are vying for various political offices. Our objective can only be achieved if we shun money politics and support credible, tested and competent youths to take up leadership of this country.”

    Also speaking to CAMPUSLIFE, Comrade Chuks Obele, Special Assistant to Anambra State Governor on Students’ Matters, said the law has pulled down “key hurdle” preventing the youth from joining politics, noting that it would give young people opportunity to bring their wealth of knowledge to bear in governance.

    According to the former NANS leader, the law should be an opportunity for youths to stand together and leverage their population to cause fundamental change in political leadership.

    Obele said: “This is a wake-up call for students to shun cultism, thuggery and violence in their daily lives; this law has given us a responsibility to be active in politics and stop being used as thugs to derail our democracy. I appeal to political parties to give the much needed support to young people interested in contesting for political positions.”

    To Comrade Godson Okereke, NANS Zone B coordinator, the signing of the bill into law by President Buhari was timely and will serve as political awakening to young Nigerians.

    “It has, to an extent, stirred up the consciousness of youths and students in area of seeking elective offices, but that is not enough because majority of young people are financially incapable to execute political campaign, even though we are excited about the bill,” he said.

    Godson believed that the government was insincere in its approach to open the political space for the youth, noting that the president and most of state governors had failed to appoint youths within the new age limit into their cabinets.

    He said: “Personally, I believe the new law does not have the political will required for youth participation in governance. The only way I can be sure that this move is sincere is when we start seeing the president and governors appointing young people into sensitive positions.

    “As women are given certain percentage to balance gender equality, let the youths also be given this opportunity. It is only then the Not-Too-Young-To-Run agenda would be highly productive and meaningful. I am excited that age is no longer a hindrance against young Nigerians, but we must be sincere as a nation if we really want the young to contribute meaningfully to governance.”

    Former Senate President of the National Association of Polytechnic Students (NAPS), Comrade Lukman Salahudeen, was of the opinion that the law should naturally make old politicians retire and leave the space for young people. He said the present crop of politicians are bereft of ideas and innovation to lead the country in modern times, saying opportunity should be given to the youth to run the country.

    He said: “Having witnessed five general elections in this democratic dispensation, people would agree with me that the richest candidates get the party tickets and carry the day at the end of general elections. None of the previous elections we have had was never free, fair or credible as history has it that only 1993 election was the last credible election Nigeria held.

    “Now that we are all qualified to run age-wise, what young people can do to beat the old politicians in their game is to collect their money to gain access to power. The money collected can be used to effect the needed change in our method of governance.”

    Delta State University (DESLU) Students’ Union Government (SUG) President, Okpako Oghenevwegba, said the bill showed President Buhari’s commitment to the dreams of youths to realise their leadership potential.

    He said: “This good deed by President Buhari will encourage the youths to employ all positive means to actualise our dreams to be part of political process and governance. We don’t want to be stereotyped as political thugs anymore. We are now partners in nation building.”

    Sodiq Muritala, a member of the Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti (ADO POLY) Students’ Caretaker Committee, said President Buhari deserved accolades for signing the bill into law. According to him, the president has demonstrated that the youth should no longer be spectators in nation building.

    He urged students to support youths vying for elective positions and encouraged them to participate in electoral process.

    Acting President of the University of Benin (UNIBEN) SUG, Ifeoma Okogwu, described the development as “a democratic victory” for the youth and students.

    Ifeoma called for caution, noting that development may be a gimmick by President Buhari to regain young people’s support in the wake of the backlash that trailed his recent comment against the youth.

    Federal University of Petroleum Resources, Efurun (FUPRE) SUG president, Emmanuel Ohanwe, described President Buhari’s intention to sign the bill as “a political strategy”.

    He asked: “Why should the president sign the bill and still plead with young people to postpone their campaigns till after 2019 election? This alone showed that this is a political gimmick to deceptively project a pro-youth impression which never exists.”

    Emmanuel advised the government to adjust the cost of buying nomination forms and run political campaign.

  • Letter to the President

    “When the judges did not judge the truth or protect the interests of the oppressed, when the judges connived with tyrants to frustrate the rule of law, the question that arose was clear: who would judge the judges? The quick answer was – the people.” – Major Adewale Ademoyega in Why we struck: The story of the first Nigerian Coup.

    Your Excellency, dear President Muhammadu Buhari. I hope this meets you well. I stand on my rights as a citizen of this country to write my president. You took the oath of office as President of Nigeria and by implication, a citizen like me has rights to engage you on issues that borders on national security.

    Secondly, I happen to be one of those 12 million people who defied all odds and queued up at polling booths during the 2015 general elections to vote you into office. I exercised that duty voluntarily because I believed that you had the capacity and willingness to give our nation that push it desperately needs to break out of the grip of the tyranny of evil doers.

    It may interest you to know that I am of the Tiv ethnic group from Benue State. I do not feel particularly comfortable emphasising my ethnic nationality when I address national issues. This is probably because my childhood was spent in a serene village in the countryside where one’s ethnic group did not confer any advantages or disadvantages, and life was built on trust and cooperation.

    Those were the days of innocence when I was insulated altogether from the raving ethno-religious chauvinism that is choking life out of our beloved nation today. Those were the days when my primary school teachers taught us to recite the National Anthem and take the National Pledge as a mark of honour to our nation. We were taught to pause whatever we were heard the anthem being rendered; to stand at attention in honour of the fallen heroes of our national struggle.

    When I went to the boarding house in one of the unity colleges, my classmates and roommates were drawn from all over Nigeria. We so blended in that community that, most times, we did not even know which states our classmates came from or what dialects they spoke. It did not seem to matter. In that setting, we did not have to try to unite; unity flowed naturally.

    The divisions were not seen between Hausa and Igbo or Christian and Moslem; the only division we had was between senior students and their junior colleague, and between evil and good. My peers and I would sit down and talk about Nigeria, itching to make a difference. The love of our nation flowed in our veins. We had a strong desire to do something for Nigeria, to uphold the honour and glory of the black man, just as Marcus Garvey, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Obafemi Awolowo, Herbert Macaulay and others did. Again, those were the days of innocence.

    I have struggled since I left secondary school to uphold my national identity above my ethnic identity, and to pursue a national vision rather than a sectional agenda. This struggle has been made difficult by those agents of evil, who, ab initio, have sought to tear down our nation along ethno-religious lines. Some of our countrymen initially tried to uphold a national identity but met nothing other than betrayal and frustration, and have now found solace in their ethnic identities.

    Their testimony about the hopelessness in Nigeria is difficult to dismiss. Notwithstanding their testimony, I still nurse, in the corner of my heart, a burning hope and faith that Nigeria will pull through. This faith underlies my determination to be a contributor rather than a spectator; to identify with the national project and not seek solace in another corner of the world.

    Your Excellency, I had thought that your leadership was going to provide that strength of character and resolve that will rekindle the flame of faith which every youth of my generation has in this nation. So far, you have not convinced us, going by what has happened under your watch. Your response to the ethnic cleansing going on in the Middle Belt has raised huge doubts in me about your commitment to Nigeria’s unity.

    You and your political appointees appear rather reluctant and on the defensive each time this issue is mentioned. You said the killings predate your government, which is the truth. You said the murderers are not herdsmen, yet Miyetti Allah tacitly claims responsibility. You say the killers are Libyan armed groups, but at the same time you urge the people of Benue to accommodate their “countrymen” and your government tries to establish cattle colonies for them. You say you have your way of getting information on these things, yet your Inspector-General of Police defied your orders to relocate to Benue and you claimed that for more than a month you never knew.

    Mr President, there are two frightening possibilities arising from this behaviour of yours. One is that, you may be complicit in the ongoing massacre of your citizens. Two, if you are not complicit, then you are thoroughly under-estimating what is happening in the Middle Belt region. I appeal to you to search your mind. The situation in the country calls for genuine leadership. It challenges you and your officials to purge yourselves of every element of ethno-religious and political brinkmanship, and exert your constitutional powers to save Nigeria from the brink.

    The blood of the victims is crying, the pen of history is writing and the eyes of God are watching. May history never record that when Nigeria squirmed in the pool of her blood, wounded by agents of evil – when the last flickers of her hope of nationhood were being blown out – it was the actions or inactions of your presidency that nailed her coffin. Remember, according to the late Dele Giwa, “An evil done by man to man will never go unpunished; if not now, then later, and if not by man then by God. For the triumph of evil over good is but temporary.”

    • Msonter, 500-Level Medicine and Surgery, Benue State University, Makurdi
  • Updated: FEC bids Fayemi farewell 

    The immediate past Minister of Mines and Steel, Kayode Fayemi on Wednesday attended his last Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The Council held a valedictory session for Fayemi, who has resigned his appointment to run for the governorship election in Ekiti State billed for July 14.

    President Muhammadu Buhari noted that he was reluctantly allowing Fayemi to go to his state because of his constructive contributions at FEC meetings.

    He said “As I sat here, I watched every minister that spoke and about his contributions, this revealed not only intellect but when he is given the necessary time to contribute to important memorandum, he made contributions. This shows commitment to the progressive of this government and the country.

    “By chance he was given the portfolio of solid minerals and steel development and you know that sector was virtually abandoned. During the colonial days, they took what they wanted from us – tin, columbite and the rest were the priorities until they struck oil somewhere, it was simply priority of investment shifted offshore.

    “When he went in, he began to deal with both Nigerians and foreigners that are exploiting the lack of commitment of those who are responsible of that sector before he went there. If you recall the number of children and women that suffered from the effect of mining in Zamfara State and other parts of the country and the people responsible, knowing that Nigeria will dump as decently as possible.

    “He only briefed me occasionally but he was packing them out of the country, with the cooperation of some his colleagues he will come here and let me know.” he said

    He urged Fayemi to get Ekiti State for APC.

    He said “I hope you will get the Ekiti back for the party. The only time I saw the INEC chair was to insist that go voters Education should be emphasized, so that ordinary Nigerians will believe that Nigeria is beginning to respect them and that their PVC is their status.

    “And then couple with the card readers, God willing we are here with the help of technology. Because, previous elections and I am in the position to say so having lost three times and got to Supreme Court, I know if not for technology, we will be doing the same thing.

    “A lot of constituencies were bought, voters were allocated and results were announced and people were told to go to court if they don’t agree with it.

    “Now, for someone who is looking for the next meal, how is he going to get the money to give   to SAN, to demand for justice for his marginalization.

    “So, we thank technology because with the introduction of PVC and the readers’ card, votes counted. Please go and emphasize this to your constituencies, let Nigerians be respected that they can vote anybody across any party and at any constituency.

    “I think that will give them the pride to voluntarily go and vote. It is not easy to go to Supreme Court three times, but I went through it, I wonder how many people will be proud to go through it in this country.

    “So, we certainly wish you the best of luck but it will take me sometimes to get a substantive minister and more so with the 2019 prospects that I have already indicated. But we need a very strong minister, strong in intellect and courage, so as to make sure that both the Nigerian and foreign collaborators of taking away our resources can be checked effectively.

    “We thank you very much for your contribution for your country. Goodbye, we will come for the inauguration.” he added

    Six members of the cabinet were selected from the six geopolitical zones to speak on Fayemi.

    The Minister of Science and Technology, Ogbonnaya Onu said that Fayemi is both special and unique.

    According to him, he played important roles in the ruling party, All Progressives Congress (APC) and creation of the Progressives Governors Forum.

    Read Also:Ekiti 2018: Election ‘Fire’ will consume Fayose, says Fayemi

    Minister of Interior, Abdulraman Danbazzau said “I found him to be a gentle man and an academic of repute.

    “We became very close during the campaigns. We are going to miss him in this chamber because of his contributions to discussions, which have increased the informed decisions we have taken here.

    “I want to wish him success in the campaign and wish he wins the election.” he added

    The Minister of Women Affairs, Amina Alhassan said that Fayemi has repositioned the Ministry of Mines and Steel in line with President Muhammadu Buhari’s vision.

    She also noted that Fayemi was a gender friendly minister.

    “He is a He for She and has always included women in his programmes. The Nigerian women miss you already.

    On her part, Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun said “He is a unique public servant.”

    The Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi said that Fayemi was instrumental to his success as Chairman of the Nigerian Governors Forum.

    Amaechi, who was former Rivers State Governor, said “It is difficult to speak about Fayemi. You cannot talk about my success as Chairman of Nigerian Governors Forum without talking about Fayemi. I wish him best of luck.”

    Fayemi’s Deputy, Minister of State for Mines and Steel, Bawa Bwari said that the Ministry will greatly miss him.

    He said “What we met on ground at the Mines and Steel Development Ministry, when we came on board, was so discouraging that we didn’t know where to start from.”

    According to him, the success recorded in the sector in the past three years was due to Fayemi’s leadership.

    The Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, who was not part of those selected to speak on Fayemi from the six geopolitical zones, told his colleagues that he had something to say against Fayemi.

    Complaining that Fayemi, who had been very close to him has now been dodging him since his ambition to get Ekiti gubernatorial seat.

    He also pointed out that Fayemi will be more useful at the national level than in Ekiti State.

    Adamu later urged his colleagues to support Fayemi to win the forthcoming Ekiti gubernatorial election.

    In his remarks, Fayemi, who jokingly said that he would have to learn how to dodge bullets, said that his winning Ekiti State Governorship seat will not be a national loss as it will give more opportunity to serve the country and the President better.

    He said “At occasions like this, words normally fail me. But I have to say thank you to Mr. President for the opportunity to serve the people and also for agreeing for me to run for the Ekiti Gubernatorial seat.”

    He also thanked his colleagues for all their supports in moving the country forward and the progress made in the past three years.

    According to him, he had no regret of been called ‘Buhari’s Boy’, because Buhari stood for transparency and accountability.

  • FG injects $9b on infrastructure in two years – Buhari

    …Imposes minimum tariff on amusement park equipment, casino etc

     

    President Muhammadu Buhari has revealed that in the last two years, the Federal Government has so far injected $9 billion dollars into infrastructural development in the country.

    He said that the infrastructures include road, railway and power.

    President Buhari said that the country is investing so much on infrastructure to promote tourism in a steady effort to diversify the economy.

    He also said that this government is investing in Social Investment Programme (SIP) to promote human capital development which has benefited over 9 million people.

    Speaking Monday in Abuja at the opening ceremony of the 61st meeting of the United Nations World Tourism Organization Commission for Africa (UNWTO-CAF) theme: “Tourism Statistics – A Catalyst for Development”

    The President who was represented at the occasion by the Secretary to the Government of the Federal, Boss Mustapha added that to attract investment in the tourism sector, the government will be imposing minimal tariffs on amusement park equipment, casino, materials for hotel construction etc.

    Read Also:Buhari, Obasanjo, Saraki, Dickson mourn ex-Appeal Court president

    His words, “The theme: “Tourism Statistics – A Catalyst for Development” is apt and could not have come at a better time than now, considering the significance of Tourism Statistics and Tourism Satellite Account (TSA) in measuring the contribution of the tourism sector to the national economy.

    “The importance of tourism and its potentials to national economies cannot be overemphasized. Tourism, as we all know, contributes to the wealth of nations and the well-being of citizens, largely through foreign exchange earnings, generation of revenue, creation of employment, knowledge, cultural integration as well as increase the GDP of the country.

    “We are making steady efforts to diversify the economy through agriculture, solid minerals development and tourism. We are also investing heavily in infrastructure to promote tourism. This administration has injected about US$9 billion to strengthen its investment in power, roads and railway in the past two years alone.

    “Also, this government is investing in Social Investment Programme (SIP) to promote human capital development which has benefitted over 9 million people. These programmes include our Home-Grown School Feeding Programme that is providing one meal a day to 7.4 million pupils in 22 states of the Federation; N-Power programme that has employed 200,000 university graduates and is about to employ 300,000 more; the Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) under which some 297,973 poor homes are receiving 5,000 Naira monthly; and the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP) that has provided loans to hundreds of thousands of small business owners.

    “The Government is committed to providing Public safety and security to all Nigerians, investors and tourists. Government is also investing a lot of resources into building the inventory of equipment and capacity of security agencies to keep the country safe.

    “Your Excellencies, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, it may interest you to note that Nigeria is a country with a population of over 180 million people and over 250 ethnic groups, each with a unique story, and these stories are finding expression in our movies, music and many other creative ideas. Our music and movies, in particular, have taken the world by storm and, for the creative young talents in our dear country, Nigeria; the best is yet to come.

    “It is on this basis that I call on tourists and investors in the tourism sector to consider Nigeria as their second home. This government has attractive investment incentives for investors in the tourism sector including but not limited to:

    “Pioneer status to all major tourism projects;

    “Minimum tariff on imported tourism equipment, amusement park equipment and materials for hotel construction and furnishing, dedicated transportation for tour operators and equipment for restaurants not manufactured in Nigeria;

    “Minimum duty on Casino equipment; Work permit for foreign workers with specialized skills within the industry; and

    “Land at concessionary rate by state governments to tourism investors.

    “Government is also deepening the legislative and institutional capacities for the protection of intellectual property rights in Nigeria. This will give all investors the assurance of security of their rights especially in the creative industry.

    “Let me use this opportunity to earnestly commend the leadership of the UNWTO, the Commission for Africa (CAF) and, most importantly, the Tourism Ministers from all over Africa for considering Nigeria worthy of hosting this great event this year. Nigeria will continue to count on your support to host more international events as we will also support you whenever the opportunity knocks at your door.

    “Your Excellencies, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, it is now my pleasure to declare open the 61st meeting of the UNWTO Commission for Africa.”

    Minister of Information and Cultural, Alhaji Lai Mohammed said that the conference has helped the government test its policy on Visa on arrival for investors.

    He also informed participants that President Buhari has handled the security situation in the country which makes it possible for the conference to hold without fear since four years ago; nothing of the nature would have been able to take place in Abuja due to the fear of Boko Haram.

  • Buhari becomes Red Cross grand patron

    President Muhammadu Buhari was on Monday decorated at the Grand Patron of the National Red Cross Society at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The event, where he was decorated by the National President of the Society, Bolaji Anami, took place at the Council Chamber of the State House, Abuja.

    Buhari said “I appreciate this honour bestowed on me.”

    Read Also:Buhari, Obasanjo, Saraki, Dickson mourn ex-Appeal Court president

    The President specifically thanked the Society for its supports in the North East and the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps.

    He assured the Society that the Federal Government will look at its challenges.

     

    Details Later…

  • 2019: I’m still in Imo guber race -Nwosu 

    …Says my ambition is divine

     

    The Chief of Staff to the Imo State Governor, Ugwumba Uche Nwosu, has described as unfounded and baseless, reports that he has suspended his governorship ambition over the opposition mounted by the ‘Coalition Group’.

    Nwosu stated that rather, his ambition has been strengthened by the activities of the opposition, which he affirmed has prepared him for the task ahead, stressing that cheap blackmail and propaganda can’t stop his ambition.

    The Chief of Staff and former Commissioner for Lands, who was reacting to a publication in one of the national newspapers that he may have jettisoned his push for the Imo State governorship, following the outcome of the party’s congresses, confirmed that his support base across the state has continued to swell by the day, which he said is rattling his opponents.

    He maintained that he is not disturbed by the political intrigues and controversies that arose during the course of the contentious APC Congresses in the state, noting that his ambition is “divine and cannot be truncated by any man”.

    Read Also:2019: Imo Deputy Gov rejects Okorocha’s Senate offer

    According to him, those behind the report of his purported withdrawal from the race are those who are already losing sleep over his growing acceptance among the Imo electorate, adding that, “no amount of cheap blackmail or sponsored falsehood in the media can distract him or derail God’s plan for Imolites through his mandate”.

    He said, “there is nothing that can be farther from the truth than such report that I have suspended my ambition. It is those in the opposition that have suspended their governorship aspirations because of the fear of Ugwumba Uche Nwosu. They are afraid because they know that they don’t stand a chance against the will of God and the people.

    “We are very focused on the goal and we cannot be distracted. If you observe correctly, you will discover that we are not resting on our oars, we are moving and taking our message to the nooks and crannies of the state, while the so called Coalition Group are running around in hotels in Abuja looking for ways to subvert the will of the people, they are not on ground and none of them can win any election in Imo”.

    Nwosu who urged his supporters and the APC to disregard the malicious rumour, stated that what transpired during the botched APC Congresses in the state has revealed the plans of the opposition parties to infiltrate the APC with the intention of introducing crisis that will mar the chances of the party during the 2019 election.

    He said, “those same people who fought Governor Rochas Okorocha and even called him all sort of uncomplimentary names, some even went as far as selling the falsehood that he was working with President Muhammadu Buhari to Islamize the Southeast when he was building the APC, are the same people who are pretending to love the party. We know their plans and their sponsors but just like we defeated them in 2011 and 2015, we will also defeat them in 2019 and President Muhammadu Buhari will have landslide victory in Imo and other Southeast states”.

  • Fair deal, but …

    President Muhammadu Buhari, in his May 29 Democracy Day broadcast, rolled out an impressive list of achievements. The President  reeled out his score card, based on his government’s three pillars: security, corruption and the economy.

    In general terms, he was true in what he claimed his government had done. But whether that score card has met the general high expectation of the change mantra, that propelled the president and his All Progressives Congress (APC) to power, is another matter.

    Still, given the rather tenuous juncture at which the administration took over in 2015, it should be fairly proud of its achievements, forged in the most difficult and testy of times.

    The president was, therefore, right on the money in his opening assertions, in the second of his 37-paragraph speech, when he said, inter alia: “The commemoration of this year’s Democracy Day is … a salute to the resilience and determination of Nigerians …”  Indeed, it has been tough for everyone, the governors and the governed — a crucible Nigeria had not experienced for a long time.

    That is why, to every claim the president has made, there is probably a counter-claim, earnest or cynical. But that would appear a function of a polity that agrees it has glaring problems, but fiercely disagrees on how to solve them. Also, there is hardly any agreement on how to tackle spin-offs from a problem being solved. That is, because the society reeks with mutual distrust — ethnic, religious, communal.

    Take the security question. On Boko Haram, the most critical security blight the administration inherited, the president said — and it is true — that his government has done much better than the Goodluck Jonathan Presidency.

    Enthused the president: “Before this administration came into being three years ago, Boko Haram held large areas of land spanning several local governments in the North East.  Today,” he added, “the capacity of the insurgents has been degraded, leading to the re-establishment of authority of government and the release of captives”.

    True — and those right in those troubled spots — returning emirs that fled their courts; and locals that sought refuge in the bush and in Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps — would probably appreciate that remarkable transition, much more than those commenting, hundreds of miles from the North East vortex.

    Yet, despite that progress, the Dapchi school girls’ capture — all 104 of them — re-echoed the shameful abduction of the 276 Chibok girls, of the Jonathan era. Though the Buhari Presidency moved fast to negotiate the release of the Dapchi girls, save the sole Leah Sharibu, still in captivity for insisting on her Christian faith, that Chibok could repeat itself in Dapchi put a dent on the administration’s anti-terror score card. Still, it is also fair to say that Buhari has negotiated part-release of the Chibok girls — what Jonathan could not do. But that the rest are still in captivity gores not a few.

    Even then, as the government was lifting the Boko Haram siege, another pestilence of killers were descending upon the land, this time mainly in the Middle Belt. In the first quarter of 2018, the killings were so brazen, particularly in Benue and Taraba, as to rubbish whatever records the administration had chalked up on security.

    The crisis is not helped by the simplistic blaming of every killing on “herdsmen”; and the explosive allegations that the killings were “ethnic cleansing”. Later investigations, however, would reveal a more complicated problem, spanning farmers-herdsmen tension, politically motivated killings allegedly by cult groups, and even ancient feuds revived by crippling poverty, among sundry anomie.

    But whatever the scope or source of these killings, the Buhari administration cannot claim to have made  a dent on security without eliminating the bloodletting  and making every corner of Nigeria safe. It should also be wary of declaring success on the war against terror. Until the last terrorist, suicide-bombing soft targets, is curtailed, the war on terror cannot be won.

    On corruption, the Buhari government, of truth, has much to crow about.  Aside from big name convictions, the anti-sleaze war has not only been on the front burner, there is increasing consciousness that maybe a Nigerian government is at last ready to punish corruption. Indeed, only on May 30, the long-drawn trial of the Revd. Jolly Nyame, Taraba two-term governor from 1999-2007, ended in a 14-year gaol term, without any option of fine. That is an encouraging feat.

    The president was also right on the strict implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA), ironically an initiative of the Jonathan Presidency, which didn’t have the will to walk its policy talk. Aside from saving a large quantum of cash  — the president put the figure at N200 billion — from pilferers, implementing TSA is attacking corruption from the preventive side. That is far cheaper than chasing stolen funds. But the most obvious gains from the anti-sleaze war would appear generally doing more with less, when compared to the boom period of the Jonathan administration.

    Still, there are abiding worries, in some quarters, that the corruption war is one-sided, and driven by political affiliations, rather than strict merit. But another view point has also countered that the opposition was crying wolf, just to corral sympathy.  Whatever it is, President Buhari must ensure the corruption war is fair to all.

    From corruption to the economy, the adminstration’s third pillar. Again, from the recession that dawned with its entry into office, the economy would appear at last on the mend. The president, quoting the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), said the economy grew by 1.95 per cent, in first quarter 2018, against the deficit -0.91 growth in first quarter 2017, even if back then, the economy was inching its way out of recession.

    Foreign reserve has also grown to US$ 47.5 billion in May 2018 from US$ 29.6 billion in May 2015, when the administration took over. Of course, there is the huge investment in agriculture, symbolised by rice and yam, two popular staples, that drive the government’s policy sing-song that Nigeria must grow what they eat and eat what they grow. The president said the aggressive cultivation of rice has reduced rice importation by 90 per cent, within three years. Also, all over the country there is clear evidence of fixing roads, and building rail — the result of 30 per cent of the budget on capital expenditure, a rarity, many would say, since 1999.

    At best, however, what the administration has done is priming the economy for its eventual rebound. For it to achieve real success, it must continue on the right path of fiscal discipline and an even increased spending on infrastructure, not to talk of finally delivering on the power sector, which generation is now put at 7, 000 mw. Then, and only then, would its exertions translate to direct citizens’ joy and less hunger in the land.

    But aside from these three pillars, the Buhari Presidency should be more sensitive to appointments, to conform to Nigeria’s diversity. The president has always argued that his cabinet has met the national spread, as demanded by the Constitution — which is true. But others have countered that his security appointments are skewed to the North, thus eliciting some form of alienation from those parts of the country that feel left out. The president would therefore do well to be more sensitive on this score and balance the appointments.

     

     

  • Are Nigerians getting poorer or richer?

    Despite the positive outlook in the economy as indicated in the rise in the nation’s foreign reserves and other pointers, the jury’s still out on the true state of the economy, writes Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf

    One area the President Muhammadu Buhari government has faced public scrutiny lately is in the area of the economy. This is because a lot rides and depends on the state of the economy. It goes without saying that the wheel of the governance can either grind fast or slowly depending on the direction of the economic managers.

    With the benefit of hindsight, not many economic watchers are convinced that the Buhari administration has attained any lofty heights as far as economic growth is concerned.

    To many of these analysts, there have been few promises kept but a lot of promises broken and even promises ignored outright as the Buhari-led government enters the last year of its first term.

    Speaking with a cross-section of Nigerians drawn from different walks of life, they argued matter-of-factly that things are not the way they should be. In one word, the economy is in a parlous state.

    Firing the first salvo, Henry Boyo, renowned economist and social commentator in an interview with our correspondent said Nigerians are suffering a lot of privations more than they are willing to admit.

    According to Boyo, one way to understand the true picture of the level of poverty in the system is to examine the purchasing power of the average man on the streets.

    “The reality is that the Nigerian citizen has become much poorer. Incidentally, the basic driver of this social poverty can be traced to the shenanigans they’ve in the forex market.  It’s a market where the Central Bank itself consciously and deliberately inundates the market with excess and surplus naira, which it proceeds to borrow at 10-16 per cent as the case may be.”

    Reminded that the federal government also launched what was thought to be a vehicle to drive its economic agenda in the form of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), the Itsekiri-born technocrat pointedly jeered at the whole idea.

    “If you want to believe that it’s up to you.  I have told you the truth. What you’re asking me to talk about doesn’t mean anything. Has it impacted in your life? Do you even understand what it means?  Somebody is taking your money or the treasurer of your purse is borrowing money he doesn’t need and storing it away at 15 per cent and you yourself is looking for money to borrow and he says you should go and borrow from elsewhere and you don’t think that is serious enough? You’re talking of the ERGP which you yourself don’t understand.  It’s a case of the more you look the less you see.”

    Echoing similar sentiments, Austin Okere is Founder and Chief Executive Officer Computer Warehouse Group Plc, while assessing the impact or otherwise of the ERGP said at the centre of the leadership crisis is the issue of lack of sincerity of purpose.

    “I think the problem we have is that we run election economics. Great men think about the next generation but politicians think about the next election. And insofar as the economy is about amassing enough money  to manoeuvre or win the elections by all means, then another four years, we go back to the same square, then if a new government comes in, it starts exposing saying oh, look at the money that was amassed and they say it was for election and say, ok.”

    Pressed further, Okere, who also sits atop as the Founder and Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Ausso Leadership Academy, said regrettably, “In an election year, a lot of time and resources are wasted. So we only have two productive years and if you’re not lucky, the new government comes and rollback everything that has been achieved, it becomes a problem. I didn’t use to see a lot of refuse in Lagos but now there’s refuse everywhere. So what did the past government did right and what are we discontinuing that should be continued? These are pertinent questions we need to address at every point in time. In any case, it’s the same party. So there’s a problem somewhere.”

    In a statement issued by the National Publicity Secretary of Socialist Party of Nigeria (SPN), Chinedu Bosah and made available to The Nation, noted that the government has failed to achieve the three cardinal programmes thus far.

    Specifically, Bosah said: “On the economy, President Buhari government has also failed woefully. Living conditions of most Nigerians are much worse now than three years ago as a result of the anti-poor policies of the regime. Education is still underfunded and Nigeria has the highest number of out-of-school children in the world that stands at 10.5 million. The government is increasingly commercializing education by periodic hike in fees at the tertiary level and more students are forced out of school. The budgetary allocation to education is about 7% which is criminally inadequate.”

    On the heartening news that the nation’s foreign reserve stands at $47.5 billion, the rights activist said this was not an ingenious move after all.

    “Unfortunately, the President reduced food security to increased local production of rice. Most of the rice consumed in Nigeria is still being imported. The Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development said that Nigeria spends about $22billion (N6.7 trillion) annually on food importation and yet the proposed budgetary allocation to Agriculture and Rural Development is a paltry N119 billion.”

    On power, he said: “The President applauded his government for generating 7,500 MW of electricity but what he did not tell us is that over $20 billion public funds has been investment in the power sector in the last 15 years. Besides, due to the poor transmission and distribution infrastructure and facilities only less than two-third of the generated MW are eventually supplied to consumers. Fundamentally, 7,500 MW is very small for a population of 180 million people. The President did not address the very vexatious issue of widespread unwarranted and outrageous estimated bills issued to consumers by the Distribution Companies which is a rip-off. Besides, he has stuck with the electricity privatisation, which has proved to be a monumental failure.”

    However, in the view of Omooba Olumuyiwa Shosanya, founding father of Association of National Accountant of Nigeria (ANAN), there is a lot to cheer about in the President Buhari administration.

    The technocrat who was a member of the think tank that designed the manifesto of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) recalled that the government came into the being when the situation was really rotten for the country.

    Waxing philosophical, he said: “It’s like someone who bought a house that was built on a swamp. He has two choices: either he continues to improve on that house which is already sinking or he can decide that the proper thing to do is to demolish the house and have a solid foundation because if he tries to manage the house as it is, the house will eventually sink. But what the government has done since it came in was that it met a house that was already sinking and what it had to do was to demolish and then build. And when you’re building on a swamp, you need a solid foundation. This is what this government has been doing. And right now, if you’re using the terminology of a builder, the house has left the level of foundation to lintel level. And it’s solid.

    On a ratio of 0-100%, the financial expert said, he would score the government 60%. “I score this government 60% and I think 60% is very good in an examination, it’s more than average. So in my own opinion, this performance has given this government a return ticket. They’ve the ticket and the boarding pass; they’re just waiting to catch their flights. All the other political parties are just wasting their time. Left to any other political party in this country, this country would have been in liquidation. So we must thank President Muhammadu Buhari for a job well done.”

    Government speaks

    Expectedly Mr. Femi Adesina, Special Adviser to the President (Media and Publicity) in a statement outlined key achievements accomplished so far by the administration.

    In the statement titled, ‘The Economy: Facts Are Stubborn Things,’ the President’s media minder while lamenting the fact that some people have made it a pastime to deride the government, however said there is a lot to cheer about.

    Citing the recent report of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Adesina said: “The economy has recovered from the slow-down and eventual recession, which started in 2014. There has been improvement with stronger growth for three successive quarters. From contracting by 0.91% in Q1 2017, the economy has grown by 0.72% in Q2 2017, to 1.17% in Q3 2017, and 2.11% in Q4 2017. The Q1 2018 GDP shows that the economy has recorded a GDP growth of 1.95%, compared to a contraction of 0.91% in Q1 2017.”

    Besides, he said, the growth was driven largely by agriculture and industry. “The Nigerian economy is on the road to diversification. The oil sector’s contribution to GDP is 9.61%, while non-oil sector’s share is 90.39%. One of the factors responsible for the positive performance of the economy in Q1 2018 was the spending of about N1.5 trillion on infrastructure projects in 2017. For the past 15 months, inflation has declined consistently from 18.72% to 12.48%. The country is steadily on the road to single digit inflation rate.”

    Expatiating, Adesina said: “The first quarter of 2018 saw a continuous growth in total capital importation into the country, the fourth consecutive quarterly increase since Q2 2017. The total value of capital imported is $6,303.63 million, a 17.11% growth over the figure reported in the previous quarter.

    Foreign reserves stand at $47.79 billion, compared to $29.6 billion inherited in May 2015, after about six years boom in oil prices in the international market. The increase came at a time of modest oil prices, showing transparency and accountability by government.

    Nigeria’s Stock Market ended 2017 as one of the best-performing in the world, with returns of about 40 percent just as tax revenue increased to N1.17 trillion, in Q1 2018, a 51% increase on the Q1 2017 figure. Milled rice production has increased from 2.5MT to 4MT, and rice imports have dropped from 580,000MT in 2015 to 58,000MT in 2016. Millions of dollars have been saved, he stressed.

     

  • Remembering Orubebe

    Classical. First of its kind. Wow. Or how best can one capture a situation where a serving minister tried to truncate the announcement of the result of the last presidential election? It is really difficult to forget. So, I was not surprised that President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday remembered Elder Godsday Orubebe, a former minister of Niger Delta Affairs, at the 2018 Democracy Day lecture.

    Buhari said the ex-minister should have been invited to listen to Attahiru Jega, a former chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), who was the lecturer. Orubebe had harassed Jega that day, saying: “Jega you have been compromised, we are no longer confident in you.”

    “Here, I must digress to raise an observation about the programme organisers because I did not see Mr. Orubebe who ought to have come and listen to Prof. Jega deliver his lecture. This is a major observation.

    “That instance, for those of us who were lucky that there was light and we had the television to see the confrontation between Orubebe and Prof. Jega, it will remain a life impression to many of us.”

    Orubebe’s action led to a new lexicon being added to our local dictionary. I remember a friend sent me  a BlackBerry message, which read: “New word now in the English dictionary: ‘Orubebe’ (noun): The process of trying to disrupt a smooth running process, especially through a fraudulent and dishonest means”; (verb): “to make an attempt to disrupt a gathering/smooth running process…” : E.g. Noun: The birthday party resulted in an Orubebe before the police intervened. Verb: Every time Liverpool FC is winning Manchester United, they always want to Orubebe the match.”

    Orubebe, who is founder of the Glory Sanctuary Christian Centre (GSCC), Ogbogbagbene, Burutu Local Government, Delta State, really danced naked in the market square without being ashamed.

    Because defeat was staring the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the face, he enjoyed his naked show being beamed live on national television stations. He thought it was good for the cameras to record him; so he moved forward before making his point. He spurned the advice that he could be heard from where he sat. He wanted his face to be seen and ended up being the worse for it.

    He cut a pitiable sight as he sat on the red rug close to where Jega and other senior officials of the electoral umpire were. His request: the process must be stopped. He had started his theatrics first standing and when he seemed to be making not much sense to Jega, he sat on the red rug and for close to 30 minutes, he held everyone hostage and no plea could make him leave the stage. He screamed, shouted and giggled like a man desperate to have his way. His eye balls bulged as though they would jump out of the socket as he shouted: “No, we will not take this.”

    His eyes also spoke volume about the pains he was going through at the suffocating fate of his darling party under whose platform his dream of governing Delta State crashed like a pack of cards. He kept jumping up and down and raising his hands to drive home his point. All he wanted was for Jega to return to his office and empanel a body to investigate his party’s petition.

    He said Jega was biased against the PDP and deliberately not investigating the complaints about events in some All Progressives Congress (APC) stronghold. Orubebe, an Ijaw man from Ogbobagbene, Burutu Local Government Area of Delta State, who was born on 6 June 1959, could not stand the coming fate.

    The elder later apologised in an interview with reporters, saying he regretted his naked dance in the market square. He said his emotion got the better part of him. He begged Nigerians and the youths who look up to him to forgive him, adding that as an elder in the church he went beyond bounds. President Goodluck Jonathan’s commendable act of conceding defeat even before official declaration of Buhari as the president-elect must have made him feel like a fool. The man he thought he was fighting for knew it was time to leave the stage.

    That incident was not Orubebe’s first ‘public show of shame’. His quarrel with boxer Bash Ali while he was Minister of Niger Delta was messy. The contents of text messages between the duo became public knowledge and the sort of language Orubebe deployed put a question mark on his person.

    The crux of the matter between Orubebe and Ali was whether or not the Ministry of Niger Delta promised to sponsor Ali’s championship bout. Orubebe said he never committed his ministry to sponsoring the proposed Guinness Book of Records bout of the ex-World Boxing champion.  Orubebe, in a telephone interview with this newspaper at the time, said his ministry had nothing to do with sports. He added that all he did was to recommend Ali to the National Sports Commission (NSC). Ali, however, insisted he had a commitment from the ministry, through the minister, to sponsor the bout.

    Ali’s claim, said the minister, showed that he needed psychiatric help. Orubebe said:  “That man came to me with his proposal and I said these are things that can be done by the National Sports Commission (NSC). I gave him a recommendation note to see the Minister of Sports at that time.

    “Later he came to me that some people told him that the programme will be included in the budget of the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs.

    “I said if other people are lying, I will not lie. The Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs has nothing to do with sports, the programme could not have been part of our budget. So, it is not in our budget.

    “This agitation of Ali is dated back to the tenure of ex-President Umaru  Yar’Adua. At a point, he was so impressed with my assistance that he wrote a letter to Yar’Adua telling him that I am the only minister who speaks the truth. I still have a copy of the letter with me.

    “Sometime this year, he sent me a text that is it because he insisted on a transparent deal that the budget for the programme was not released? I asked: What has my ministry got to do with Sports?”

    “Bash Ali is a big fool. He is good enough for the psychiatric hospital in Uselu. I think it is a mental case and I want to advise his family to take him there. I am not bothered about what he is saying about me.”

    However, documents obtained by this newspaper at the time showed that Ali had a deal with Orubebe’s ministry to sponsor the bout. The ministry also championed the setting up of a Local Organising Committee (LOC) to stage the fight. Orubebe’s ministry, in a letter, asked the NSC to nominate one of its senior officials to serve on the LOC.

    In the August 27, 2009 letter, the Ministry of Niger Delta, wrote the Chairman of the National Sports Commission on its readiness to support Ali’s fight. The letter, signed by Dalhatu Sule on Orubebe’s behalf, reads: “I am directed to inform you that the ministry is in the process of supporting an International Boxing Tournament between Bash Ali of Nigeria and John Keelon of Britain.

    “We are therefore seeking for your nominee to serve as member of the committee that will work out the modalities on how to arrange and finance the tournament.

    “Your nominee should be an officer of not below the rank of Assistant Director.”

    In another letter, also signed by Sule on Orubebe’s behalf on September 8, 2009, Ali was assured that “a committee has already been set up to work out the modalities for the great fight.”

    But, after some months, Orubebe changed his mind. So, in a December 15, 2009 letter Sule, on Orubebe’s behalf, wrote the fighter that the ministry had no money to sponsor the bout, which it had earlier set up a committee to organise.

    The letter reads: “I write to refer to your letter of 24th November, 2009, on the above subject matter and to inform you that we are just a fledgling ministry that barely took off this year and as such, extreme budgetary constraints has been a problem to grapple with. In this regard, the Niger Delta Affairs Ministry would not be in a position to sponsor the historic boxing defence bout between Ali of Nigeria and Keeton of Britain. Please accept the warm assurance of the Honourable Minister’s highest regards.”

    It is not in doubt that Orubebe actually gave Ali the hope that the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs would support the fight. Why he had a change of mind is hazy. Ali claimed it was because of his refusal to part with some of the $14.2m allegedly budgeted for the fight under skill acquisition in the ministry’s budget, an allegation the ex-minister denied. The ex-minister said the fight was never budgeted for by the ministry.

    My final take: For Orubebe, the ghost of his naked dance will roam the earth for years to come. Already, his Wikipedia entry has recorded it. This happened minutes after the dance. I am sure some books have also recorded this, making it something that will be talked about years after those of us still around would have gone to the great beyond. The lesson in this is that we must always think before we leap. Orubebe did not that day.

    • Parts of this piece first appeared on this space on April 3, 2015
  • Buhari mourns Wale Aboderin

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday extended heartfelt condolences to the family of the Chairman of Punch Nigeria Limited, Mr Gbadebowale Aboderin, who passed away at the age of 60.

    The President, in a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, also commiserated with all members of the Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN), the media and sports industry in the country on the death of the respected entrepreneur and philanthropist.

    Read Also:Punch Chairman Aboderin dies at 60

    President Buhari believed that Aboderin, who was greatly admired by his peers in the media and sports industry, will be long remembered for his resourcefulness, managerial proficiency and invaluable contributions to the growth of these sectors.

    The President prayed that God Almighty will comfort all who mourn him and grant his soul eternal rest.