Tag: President Muhammadu Buhari

  • NLC to Buhari: sign Innovation bill

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to sign into law the National Research and Innovation Council (NRIC) Bill.

    NLC President Ayuba Wabba, who spoke with journalists in Abuja, said the bill just passed by the National Assembly was vital to Nigeria’s quest for technological revolution, industrialisation, human security, inclusive national development and shared prosperity.

    Wabba said research and technology were key to the quest for industrialisation and technological advancement, and that the NRIC Bill would ensure adequate funding for researchers.

    The NLC president bemoaned poor funding of research in the country, stressing that there is urgent need to create legal framework to ensure adequate funding in research institutions.

    He said “part of the broad strategy to create mass decent jobs should include very ambitious drive to develop our mining and solid minerals sector”.

    Read Also: Buhari off to Saudi Arabia for Umrah

    “Nigeria is endowed with diverse solid minerals. Unfortunately, since the discovery of crude oil in 1956, Nigeria has progressively lost its pride of place as one of the mining destinations in Africa. The contribution of solid minerals to national GDP has plummeted from 4 to 5 per cent in the first two decades, following independence to about 0.46 per cent or N400 billion contributions to GDP.

    “The near extinction of our mining sector has resulted into major job losses thus exacerbating Nigeria’s unemployment crisis. We call on government to fund access roads to mining sites, provide water reservoirs in mining sites and training of artisanal miners and lapidarists to enhance their value to the industry.

    “It is also important for government to increase funding on the sourcing of geo-scientific data on mining resources as against the current practice of depending on aerial geo-physical survey. We call for the modernisation and development of solid minerals sector with a view to ensuring domestic value addition, local beneficiation and use in other industries.”

    “In the context, the Federal Government should discourage export of any solid minerals in their crude forms. In order to add value to our vast mineral resources and move our country from primary to secondary and tertiary levels of production, research and technology is key. While we commend President Muhammadu Buhari for inaugurating the National Research and Innovation Council (NRIC) in January 2016, we call on Mr. President to go a step further to assent to the NRIC Bill (2019) which had been transmitted to him by the National Assembly.”

    Meanwhile the Academic Staff Union of Research Institutions (ASURI), the umbrella body of researchers in Federal Research and Development Institutions (RDIs), Colleges of

    Agriculture and Forestry, Allied Institutions and Centres, has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to give quick assent to the National Research Innovation Council (NRIC) Bill 2019 recently passed by the National Assembly.

    The Union in a statement by its general Secretary, Dr Theophilus  Ndubuaku, said Nigeria unbelievably operates close to zero budgetary allocation to research, stressing that once signed into law, NRIC Bill will increase Nigeria’s research capacity and improve its technological base.

    The ASURI general Secretary expressed concern that in most of the over 150 Nigerian Research and Development Institutions (RDIs) and centres, research and training activities are self-funded by researchers because they must acquire higher degrees and produce research publications before they can be promoted at every stage of their careers.

    “Consequently, Nigerian career researchers are the poorest cadre of public servants as they must devote over half of their salaries for research if they must advance in their profession. The NRIC Bill 2018 provides for the institutional research and training funding mechanism and infrastructural development for RDIs in Nigeria.

  • ‘Appoint committed persons to serve’

    Sat Guru Maharaj Ji has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to appoint people of proven integrity in his next cabinet.

    Maharaj Ji, who gave the advice at the 32nd anniversary of One Love Family in Lagos, said no government can succeed without credible ministers to drive its programme.

    The cleric added that the President should look out for those who have impacted on the country in the last 10 years in various engagements.

    He said: “President Buhari should look out for those who have shown commitment to service in the last 10 years either as civil servants or government appointees. For instance, in the last four years, the country has not witnessed commensurate progress in the areas of power generation, agriculture, employment opportunities and the fight against corruption.

    “Mr. President must not take anything for granted because Nigerians are going to fully assess him with his second term in office. He should not place emphasis on technocrats alone in the selection because there are other competent people who can deliver. If you go to countries such as Malaysia, China and the Caribbean those who served in these countries do that with dedication and passion.

    “He should engage those who are ready to deliver. Professionals are the best bet to deliver for him. We need people of proven integrity and character. We need people who can stand on their own and take the bull by the horns.”

    He called on government to ban cigarette companies from operating in the country, noting that it was not only spiritually demeaning but also constitutes health hazard.

    “Tobacco companies should be stopped from doing business in the country. It is a leading cause of cancer and other debilitating diseases. The safety of lives is far more important than money making. Any business that degrades or ruins human lives does not deserve the licence.

    “By issuing licences to such companies, government has in effect given them the liberty to destroy lives. In other words, it has given them license to kill. This is what tobacco companies have been doing freely in Nigeria for decades.

    “They have been killing Nigerians quietly in the name of providing jobs and making money for government. Healthy Nigerians are the most important economic asset. This sort of wisdom is what informed generous investment in the continuous development and improvement of life enhancing and life securing policy and institutional environment in places such as the United States of America (USA), Britain, France and Germany, among others.”

    The cleric appealed to politicians to consider the common good than pursuing a personal edification. He said the country has not been relieved of the post-election trauma, adding that the victor should embrace the vanquished.

    “I appeal to the heart and conscience of either the aggrieved or the victor of the recently concluded presidential election to place the survival of and success of Nigeria above personal considerations.

    “Nigerians should prevail on the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) to come together to chart a fresh and edifying course for Nigeria.

    “President Muhammadu Buhari’s victory over Alhaji Atiku Abubakar transcends inter-party rivalry and any personal political interest thinkable. Nigeria has been traumatised for many years. Our country is in need of healing without delay. No right thinking Nigerian politician will deny the fact that Nigeria is obviously in a dilapidated state. This is a colossal national disgrace,” he said.

  • London trip: Apologise to Nigerians, Adesina tells apostles of evil imaginings

    The Presidency on Sunday called on those it described as ‘apostles of evil imaginings’ to swallow their words and retract their ‘tendentious stories’ insinuating that President Muhammadu Buhari was to be hospitalised during his private visit to London.

    Mr Femi Adesina, the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, stated this in a statement in Abuja while reacting to the return of President Buhari from London on Sunday.

    He further condemned online media outfits that reported that the president would not return to Nigeria on April 5 as originally planned.

    Read also: UPDATED: Buhari back in Abuja

    The statement reads in part: ”President Muhammadu Buhari Sunday returned to Abuja, after a 10-day private visit to the UK.

    ”Some reckless online media, irresponsible political opposition, and other bilious groups and individuals, had gone on overdrive since the President left the country on April 25, insinuating that he was going for hospitalization, and would not return after 10 days as stated.

    ”In their vain imaginations, they even stated that fictive doctors have advised President Buhari to stay longer for more intensive care.

    ”Now that the President has returned, can these apostles of evil imaginings swallow their words? Can they retract their tendentious stories as well as press statements, and apologize to millions of Nigerians both at home and in the Diaspora that they have fed with hogwash?

    ”Few days after the celebration of World Press Freedom Day, we daresay that this valuable freedom does not tantamount to liberty to mislead and hoodwink the populace through concocted and jejune publications.”

    The presidential aide, however, reiterated that the Buhari administration would continue to respect and uphold press freedom.

    ”The Buhari administration will always respect and uphold press freedom but the onus lies on those prone to passing off fiction as facts, to remember that freedom demands concomitant responsibility.

    ”Those who further share and disseminate falsehood are also encouraged to embrace responsible conduct,” he said.(NAN)

  • Buhari: Why and how he won, by Garba Shehu

    President Muhammadu Buhari, who came to office in a seismic political shift that swept out of office 16 years of continuous rule by the People’s Democratic Party, PDP recorded yet another resounding victory to win a second term in office, leading his closest rival by a record-setting four million votes.

    His party, the All Progressives Congress, APC gained the highest parliamentary majority in the Fourth Republic in the Senate and the House of Representatives, giving the President an ample room to carry out reforms he wished to carry out, but was outmaneuvered and frustrated by the Eighth National Assembly.

    While campaigning for the 2015 general elections, President Buhari’s All APC made promises to end Boko Haram terrorism and secure the country for it to be efficiently managed; to restructure the economy, halt its downward slide and create jobs and to fight corruption because, as the president repeatedly says, “if Nigeria doesn’t kill corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria.”

    His climactic victory against the then incumbent Goodluck Jonathan, his strong message on the three issues as listed above, his practical and serious approach helped to awaken a nation misled by characters who placed self above nation for sixteen years and more.

    The Buhari administration has established for itself an anti-corruption reputation and has been in office nearing four years without a major scandal.  The African Union has on account of this, selected the President as the continent’s anti-corruption champion.

    The Buhari administration can pat itself on the back for this achievement when it is viewed against the established culture in which corruption is the norm.

    To win the war against corruption and institute transparency in the affairs of government, the Buhari administration introduced a number of fiscal reforms and plugged several leakages.

    In the firm belief that the party was not mistaken about the problems facing the country, Candidate Buhari went into the February, 2019 campaign on the same issue platforms. The President and his party looked certain of victory from the sea of crowds that attended his political rallies all over the 36 states of the federation. He was the only candidate to have campaigned at least once in each state and the Federal Capital Territory.

    These rallies attracted large crowds, mostly of the poor who are trusting in his impeccable qualities of honesty and integrity, and have bought into the idea that he will quickly push their country onto the top by lifting up the economy, creating jobs, securing the nation and ending the nightmarish corruption which had become the order of the day. Some of the events were marked by incidents of road acc ident, podium or building collapse and stampede leading to tragic losses of life.

    At many of those well-attended rallies, the venues fell short of the people gathered. Thousands of supporters outside tried to barge into the inner rings of the venues. Pleas were not heard by surging crowds which resorted sometimes to throwing chairs, sachet water and bottles into the no-man zones in front of the stage.

    It was evident from the commencement of the campaign that President Buhari had a a two-pronged election strategy, one to showcase the achievements of his administration in its first term and two, to cash in on his popularity with the lower rungs of the population.

    The party itself doubled down on President Buhari by zeroing in on his image as a diligent, coolheaded and incorruptible leader. In that enduring appeal, the APC saw a trump card going into the election.

    Nobody can question President Buhari’s achievements. They are there for all to see.

    The administration has significantly curtailed corruption to the point of abolishing what is called “grand corruption.” Given Treasury Single Account ,TSA , th e Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information Scheme, IPPS, the Bank Verification Number, BVN number and Whistle Blower schemes, it is no longer possible for people in authority to, for instance, request the withdrawal of millions, or sometimes billions of Naira or US Dollars to be shared among party members as was the practice under the past administrations. To boot, the Buhari administration has signed onto the global Open Government Partnership, OGP.

    Reforms are being carried out in the justice sector with a number of domestic legislations and international agreements to facilitate the identification, tracing, freezing, recovery and forfeiture of ill-gotten assets.

    The administration’s primary sectors of agriculture and solid minerals have experienced growth of 180 and 565 percentage points respectively. Nigeria has today achieved near self-sufficiency in rice production.

    Government has launched a series of funding and capacity development initiatives to support Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises.  The work of the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC), inaugurated by President Buhari in August 2016 has resulted in moving Nigeria up 24 places on the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business rankings, and earning a place on the list of 10 most improved economies.  In this regard, the administration has issued a number of Executive Orders on improving efficiency in the business environment and promoting local content.

    The Buhari administration has also demonstrated a single-minded commitment to upgrading and developing Nigeria’s transport, power and health infrastructure.

    Road projects are ongoing across every state of the country, with many of these projects having been abandoned for many years.

    The country’s narrow-gauge rail network of 3,500 Kms is currently being upgraded; Abuja’s light rail system has been completed and commissioned with a link to the Abuja-Kaduna rail line, which has equally been completed and launched.  The Ibadan-Lagos standard gauge rail is being test run .  Ibadan-Kano has been awarded.

    The administration has successfully reconstructed the Abuja Airport runway, completed and commissioned new terminal buildings in Port Harcourt and Abuja with Lagos, Kano, Enugu and the others soon to be inaugurated.

    Several water supply projects and dam/irrigation projects have been completed and many more on the way to being delivered.  About 100 ecological projects have been awarded and completed in the six geopolitical zones.

    The Buhari administration has more than doubled power generation capacity.  It has increased generation to 8,100 MW and expanded transmission to more than 7,000 MW capacity, and has successfully deployed thousands of solar power systems to rural and urban households.

    This is an administration that has been investing in people. It has introduced a social Investment Programme (SIP), which so far, has four components.  These are the N-power employment scheme that is hitting 500,000 this year, the home grown school feeding program that feeds more than nine million school children across the federation, the Government Enterprise and Empower Program, GEEP giving out interest-free loans to millions of market women, traders, artisans and farmers and the conditional cash transfer, CCT which pays N5,000 monthly to the poorest and most vulnerable households in the country.

    In dealing with security, one of the first major steps by the Buhari administration was the revitalisation of the Multi-national Joint Task force , MNJTF aimed at combating transborder crime and the Boko Haram insurgency.  The MNJTF has the support and participation of neighbouring countries Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Benin, in addition to Nigeria.

    On the day of his inauguration, the President had directed the relocation of the command and control centre of the Boko Haram war to Maiduguri, the epicentre of the insurgency.

    The military has since proclaimed victory over the Boko Haram terrorists, following the capture of their operational and spiritual headquarters, “Camp Zero” in Sambisa Forest.

    So far, more than one million displaced persons have returned to their homes and communities.  About 20,000 hostages have been freed. One hundred and six (106) Chibok Girls, abducted in April 2014 and 105 Dapchi Girls abducted in February 2018 have been released and reunited with their families

    In the area of diplomacy and international relations, the Buhari administration has re-established Nigeria’s position and influence in regional and global arena.

    As a political leader, Muhammadu Buhari enjoys three formidable assets– his record as a disciplined former Army General, his reputation as an honest leader who has not allowed corruption to flourish under his watch when he served as a state Military Governor, Minister of Petroleum and Military Head of State and the public perception of his record as one who stands for and by the truth, Mai Gaskiya.

    The main opposition to President Buhari, the Peoples Democratic Party failed to realize how much these qualities meant to ordinary Nigerians; they did not reckon with the disillusionment of the citizens with their perceived acts of commission and omission for the 16 years they were in power.

    They must by now, have realized with a with benefit of hindsight, that demonization and denigration of an individual does not bring in poll dividends. In their campaigns, they chose to demonise and denigrate Muhammadu Buhari as President. It did not pay.

    Before and after this election, there is no face in the opposition who can match President Buhari’s inspiring character and personality. Many, including this reporter, believe that it wasn’t the rail, road or achievements in the power sector that won this election for President Buhari. No doubt, these and many others are important. They may have added a bit here and a bit there. But what won it for him, was the focus by the voter on the single most important factor of Mai Gaskiya.

    Mallam Garba Shehu is the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity

  • The wild, wild North

    Making sense of how bandits and kidnappers choose their targets is not complicated, if we assume that they are driven largely by economic motives.

    They presumably go after the affluent and influential, those connected with wealth and power, in the sure knowledge that even if their victims are financially hamstrung, their kith and kin would quickly pay up whatever ransom is demanded.

    So, this week the kidnapping plague sweeping through the country finally berthed – symbolically – in Daura, Katsina State, hometown of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The four gunmen who invaded the town had a special target: Musa Umar, district head of the town, who also happens to be father-in-law to Buhari’s aide-de-camp (ADC), Mohammed Abubakar.

    The calculation would probably be that they would harvest a ton of cash given the Abuja connection.

    Their action speaks volumes about where we are in terms of security. To target the family of a senior security aide to the president without fear of the immediate consequences, speaks to the contempt with which criminals hold the police and other state institutions. The fear factor keeps fading fast because the reign of impunity remains unchecked.

    The abduction of the Daura district head is the latest such incident involving high profile figures in the North Central and Northwest zones of the country. Two weeks ago, Mahmood Abubakar, chairman of the Universal Basic Education (UBEC) was seized along with his daughter, Yasmin, by kidnappers operating along the Abuja-Kaduna highway. They were freed a day later, some say after the payment of ransom in millions of naira.

    Before this incident, there was another that occurred along this same expressway. It happened at the same time that Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai was passing through. He made a very public show of stopping his convoy and marching into the bush with his security aides – ostensibly to pursue the kidnappers. Needless to say none of the criminals was apprehended, but there were photo-ops aplenty.

    As fallout from this episode, men of the Federal Anti-Kidnapping Task Force made a much-publicised sortie along the highway. Again, yielding lots of Facebook posts but very little in terms of kidnappers taken out of business.

    After a series of such operations, Acting Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, emerged from a security briefing with President Buhari, to declare the infamous Abuja-Kaduna highway free of kidnappers. They must have laughed loudly in their hideouts.

    Less than two weeks after the IG’s all-clear, they pinched the UBEC chairman and his daughter.

    Northern Nigeria is in deep trouble. In Zamfara, bandits and freelance gunmen with unknown agenda are killing and maiming unrestrained. In spite of bombings and other security interventions, sudden and brutal death has become the reality that unarmed local communities have to deal with for the foreseeable future.

    As has been broached earlier, large areas in the axis around the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Kaduna State and parts of the Middle-Belt have become kidnapper country. Everyone is a potential target as long as you are in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    In Kaduna, reprisal killings between communities do not look like they would go away soon because each vicious episode, provides the rationale for victim communities to hit back in kind. The government, which only becomes aware after the atrocities have been perpetrated, is reduced to mouthing platitudes.

    In other parts of the North Central zone, the gory harvest of deaths associated with herdsmen has largely exited newspaper front pages, but they haven’t been totally terminated. From time to time, fresh reports of mindless killings still pop up.

    As for the Northeast, the Federal Government’s declaration of a technical knockout of Boko Haram insurgents operating in the region, now seems like a celebration called prematurely. Suicide bombers wreak havoc from time to time, while outlying settlements are remain vulnerable to attacks – such as the one that claimed over 20 lives recently in Adamawa.

    The Islamists may be in retreat but they are far from defeated – especially with the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) breathing life into their operations.

    Even more alarming than the fact that the entire region is increasing looking like untamed frontier territory where gunmen reign supreme, is the reality that nothing the government has thrown at the problem seems to be a long-lasting solution.

    For a brief period, the bombing of the bandits in Zamfara looked like a magic wand that would wipe out the problem. It has since turned out to be a mere salve than didn’t address the issue at its core.

    Similarly, whatever magic cure the Acting IG was touting a few weeks back over the rash of kidnappings along the Abuja-Kaduna highway, now looks like something with all the efficacy of a fake drug.

    In the Northeast, the war against the insurgency brings good news one day and embarrassing setbacks another.

    It is a dilemma that demands more than the government is offering – be it community policing or whatever. Beyond urging security agencies to “deal ruthlessly” with bandits, Buhari and his men have to come up with more creative and all-encompassing solutions – especially those that are not politically correct. Nothing should be off the table – whether it is state police or the hard-to-define concept of restructuring.

    Security interventions may be useful in the short term, but they are not enduring answers. For one thing we don’t have enough soldiers and policemen to cover the vast territory that is Northern Nigeria. Isolated communities can never be covered for 24 hours and would always be at the mercy of the killers. What we need are solutions that provide vocational alternatives for the perpetrators of violence.

    At the root of the troubles is a mixture of economic and religious causes. Banditry and kidnapping are enterprises that generate revenues through cattle rustling and ransom payment. The bandits in Zamfara have also been linked to illegal mining activities.

    Our reality is that there is greater illiteracy and unemployment across the north compared to the rest of the country. For as long as the leaders of the region don’t develop their local economies, but remain hooked to the dwindling allocations from the federal purse, the situation can only get worse.

    Unfortunately, a succession of northern governors and political leaders haven’t shown that they understand the gravity of the problem or the urgent actions needed to address their situation. It is a shame that a region that has produced the largest number of our Heads of State never thought it expedient to let their charity begin from home. Now the region is reaping grievous consequences of failure of leadership.

    This crisis has taken five decades to come to a head and it will take more than bombings and posting of police commissioners to address.

    The time has come for leaders of the North to develop a blueprint for economic restoration of the entire region so it can close the gap with the rest of the country. It should be a document that all will agree to implement on a cross-party basis. Today’s crisis transcends mundane partisan affiliations.

    Amaechi, Rivers and South-South APC

    Strange things are happening in Rivers State. After the political conflicts of the last general elections and, indeed, of the last five years, I was astonished to hear Governor Nyesom Wike, following his victory at the polls, call on his bitter foes on the All Progressives Congress (APC) side, for cooperation and reconciliation.

    My initial reaction was that the comments were tongue-in-check. But at Easter, Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, again, struck the same reconciliatory tone – asking the people for forgiveness and unity, declaring that the state was far from where they envisaged it would be at this point.

    Anyone who has followed the harsh rhetoric that has trailed the power struggle by both sides, would therefore have taken notice when Amaechi’s allies in the APC for whom Senator Andrew Uchendu spoke recently, accepted Wike’s olive branch.

    The results of the governorship election in which APC never got to participate were never in doubt given the advantages of incumbency which Wike enjoyed. The closest he had to a challenger was the AAC’s Biokpomabo Awara’s feeble effort.

    Now that the battle has been won and lost, what should a strategic politician do? Continue to moan over spilt milk or begin to plan ahead for the next contest?

    The good thing is that there would be no incumbent on the ticket in four years – meaning the playing field would be more level. Lowering the political temperature gives the minister the opportunity of resolving the internal conflicts that ended up denying the party a chance to challenge Wike effectively.

    Such was the bitterness of the legal battles fought by Senator Magnus Abe – who like Wike was one of Amaechi’s closest allies having served as Secretary to the State Government under him – that reconciliation may seem like a farfetched dream at this point.

    Still, if Amaechi and Wike can be singing the same hymns of reconciliation, nothing makes it impossible for him and Abe to kiss and make up. That is why politics is referred to as the art of the possible.

    A change of strategy is imperative as the parties begin to look forward to 2023. In this wise, APC’s relative weakness in the south is something the party needs to address because PDP may have lost the presidency, but emerged with better national spread – having governors in every zone.

    In the south APC is strongest in the Southwest and weakest in the Southeast where it once again received an electoral rebuff.

    The South-South zone therefore offers the party the best option for shoring up its presence down south. Aside Edo where it has a governor and produced the APC’s national chairman, much hope was invested in the party riding on the supposed political strengths of former Akwa Ibom Governor, Godswill Akpabio, to penetrate the state. That turned out to be a forlorn hope.

    Which brings us back to Rivers, aside Edo and Akwa Ibom, as the party’s best hope of enhancing its national spread and shoring up its position in the South-South zone. There is no denying that APC retains substantial support in the state despite not being on the 2019 ballot.

    If it had had candidates, even if Wike had prevailed in the gubernatorial contest the parties would have shared the state assembly, House and senate seats. The challenge for Amaechi as the party’s leader is to build again on that latent support base by dealing with all the recent fractures.

    His job should be made easier by the fact that whatever losses have been suffered on the home front, have been ameliorated by the success of the presidential campaign which he headed. That virtually guarantees that he would be one of the returnees in Buhari next cabinet. A role in Abuja gives him the continued relevance necessary for this sort of effort.

     

     

  • ‘Buhari needs best hands for Next Level agenda’

    The Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, Mr Joe Igbokwe, has advised President Muhammadu Buhari on selection of ministers. In this interview with Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN, he speaks on the performance of the party at the 2019 poll, Igbo presidency, Federal Government presence in the Southeast and other sundry political issues.

    What was responsible for improved performance of the APC in Lagos during the governorship election?

    Lagos remains the stronghold of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Southwest. It is true that the margin between the APC and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the presidential election was narrow, compared to what we had in governorship poll. One major factor responsible for this was that some Yoruba pastors told their congregators not to vote for President Muhammadu Buhari whom they described as a killer and herdsman. Again, the Igbo in Lagos voted for Atiku Abubakar, because of his running mate, Peter Obi, who is an Igbo man. The Igbo told APC governorship candidate, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, that they would vote for him, but will vote Atiku/Obi in the presidential election. The APC believes in free and fair electoral process; we don’t influence results like the PDP used to do when they were in power. We believe that power belongs to the people and that every vote must count for our democracy to grow.

    Are you sure the Igbo in Lagos voted for the APC governorship candidate?

    Yes, they did. I and some Igbo leaders made humungous efforts to ensure they voted for the APC governorship candidate. We visited all markets where there is large concentration of Igbo people to sensitise them. Even, Senator Ifeanyi Uba joined us in the crusade. We told them that they stand to benefit a lot by pitching their tent with the ruling party. We have large population of Igbo in Lagos. They have their major investments in Lagos; they don’t have one-quarter of their investments here in Lagos in the Southeast. I don’t know how Lagos will look like if the Igbo decided to leave. This is why our host community should see Igbo as partners in progress and treat them well. Lagos is second home for Igbo. They spend 11 months in a year in Lagos. They travel home during Christmas and Easter celebrations.

    The Yoruba and Igbo have had good relations in the past. For instance, it was in Lagos that Igbo properties were kept and returned to them during and after the civil war, even with the rents collected on them. It also happened in the North, but not the South-south. Igbo property is said to be abandoned in the South-south. Professor Wole Soyinka, a Yoruba man braved the odds to visit Biafra during the war and came back to tell the Federal Government to stop the carnage being perpetrated by the Nigerian soldiers. He was put in jail for this. The kind of loyalty and service that late Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya offered the late Dr. Nnamdi Azikwe was unprecedented. When the killers of the late Head of State, Major General Aguiyi-Ironsi, surfaced during his state visit to Ibadan, the capital of the old Western Region, his host, the Military Governor, the late Col. Adekunle Fajuyi, told them if you must kill him in my domain you have to kill both of us. Fajuyi sacrificed his life for national unity.

    These are the things that cemented our relations. It didn’t start today. When Zik returned from overseas, he started his political career in the Western Region. The Southeast is small in population, because Igbo don’t stay at home. They move to anywhere they can find fortune. Igbo are mobile businessmen. You will find them in Kaduna, Kano, Jos, Ghana, South Africa, Canada, South America,Asia, Europe, United States, etc.

    The Igbo voted massively for Atiku/Obi during the presidential election.

    Don’t you think that this will affect the quest for Igbo presidency in 2023?

    I told them, if you want to produce President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in 2023, work with Hausa/Fulani/Yoruba alliance. I had expected them to vote the APC, so that they can have a shot at presidency in 2023. After the civil war, no Igbo man has ruled this country. I told them to play politics of inclusion but they voted PDP thinking Atiku will win. What will happen in 2023? It is not yet concluded. There could be a compromise for the sake of national unity.

    The Igbo are not happy with their present status in the country. It is only the Southeast that has five states. With that we have smaller number of representatives in the National Assembly and the federal allocation to the region is small, compared to other zones. In Canada, a small group of people called Quebec with less than 10 per cent of the total population produced the current Prime Minister of Canada. They are French-speaking people. The President of Rwanda is a Tutsi, an ethnic group with less than 10 per cent population of Rwanda.

    It is possible for Nigerians to sit down and say the Southeast is not happy, let’s have a presidential candidate from the zone for the sake of equity, justice and fairness. In addition, create additional state for the zone. If this happens, the agitation for Biafra will vanish.

    But, the Southeast is clamouring for the Deputy Senate President of the 9th assembly. Is it feasible?

    Who among them will be considered for Deputy Senate President? There is no APC ranking senator from the Southeast. You can’t eat your cake and have it. Anyway, we can bend the law for the sake of unity. Our national leaders may say let’s have compromise for the sake of peace, because when there is peace there will be development. Professor Harold Laski of the London School of Economics said politics is superior to economy. Politics should not be left to politicians alone. We are not making progress because of bad politics.

    Can we say there is no more division in Lagos APC?

    There is none. APC has a deep structure in Lagos. It is maintained throughout by hard working people. To the glory of God we have two gentlemen, Babajide Sanwo-Olu and Obafemi Hamzat, coming on board that to take Lagos to the next level. They belong to Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s school of thought. We shall support them to achieve their goals

    The presidency and the APC national caucus have endorsed Femi Gbajabiamila for House of Representatives Speakership. Was it by accident?

    It was designed. He had been positioned in the House for it. He was supposed to be the Speaker in 2015, but for the rebellious acts of some APC members in the House who connived with the PDP elements to truncate the party’s arrangement. We don’t want to throw the issue of National Assembly leadership open in the House. APC has majority in both chambers to decide the leadership of the 9th National Assembly. In spite of the party endorsement, Gbajabiamila and the APC Senate President candidate, Senator Ahmed Lawan, have been going round the country seeking support from APC legislators-elect and the opposition members as well.

    What would you advise President Muhammadu Buhari in choosing his new cabinet?

    He should go for the best. Only the best is good enough for Nigeria. We told Nigerians during the campaign that the president, if re-elected, would take Nigeria to the next level and they are waiting for it. He is a trusted leader. He can’t do it alone; he needs capable hands to assist him.

    There are a lot of saboteurs in the system; there are PDP moles in government. You find them in INEC, military, civil service and the judiciary sabotaging the government. For President Buhari to continue to fight corruption, build infrastructure and invest in the economy and security, he needs the support of loyal people, otherwise they will constitute an impediment and slow down the process.

    The Buhari administration’s investment in agriculture is paying off in rice production. But the smugglers are trying to undermine the government’s efforts. I am in support of the suggestion that government should set up special courts to handle cases of economic saboteurs and the corrupt elements in the system. Our judiciary is corrupt. That is why people are calling for the establishment of special courts manned by incorruptible judges. We need to protect the interest of local rice farmers. There should be a task force to apprehend the saboteurs. Smuggling is a crime. They should be jailed.

    How would you rate the achievements of the Buhari administration in the Southeast?

    The infrastructure development in the Southeast under the Buhari administration is fantastic. What the PDP didn’t achieve in Southeast in 16 years, Buhari has done it in less than four years. Road construction is going on in all the Southeast states, major critical roads like Enugu-Port Harcourt road, Enugu-Onitsha road, Second Niger Bridge and many others are in progress. The Independent Power Project (IPP) in Ariara Market in Abia State financed by the Federal Government is wonderful. Light has improved in that area. Even  in Adelabu Street where I live in Surulere, Lagos, we enjoy 21 hours power supply every day.

    Election results in the South-south have not changed since 1999. What is responsible for this?

    The South-south is known for electoral fraud. It didn’t start today. The zone is known for election rigging since 1999. Votes don’t count in the South-south. Some rogues with the support of security operatives would seize electoral materials and write out results. Anyway, some aggrieved candidates have gone to the election petition tribunal to seek redress. We are waiting for the tribunal’s findings and rulings.

  • President off to UK on 10-day private visit

    President Muhammadu Buhari left last night for the United Kingdom (UK) last night for a 10 day private visit.

    The President took off from was in Maiduguri, after a day working visit to Borno State, where he inaugurated a number of projects executed by the Governor Kashim Shettima administration.

    In a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity aide, Mr. Femi Adesina, the President is expected back in the country on 5th May, 2019.

    The statement reads: “Further to the official visit by President Muhammadu Buhari to Lagos Wednesday where he commissioned a number of projects executed by the State Government, the President is scheduled to depart for Maiduguri, the Borno State capital for another official visit Thursday.

    Read also: NLC to Buhari: overhaul security architecture

    “He is expected to commission developmental projects especially in the sectors of education, healthcare and roads.

    “At the end of the visit, President Buhari will be proceeding to the United Kingdom on a private visit. He is expected to return to Nigeria on May 5, 2019.”

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo presided over the weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting which held yesterday.

    The weekly meeting was shifted because of the Easter break.

  • Bitumen as elixir to Niger Delta infrastructural development

    The administration of President Muhammadu Buhari has shown commitment to infrastructural development. BOLAJI OGUNDELE reports that Matrix Energy has intensified efforts towards complementing Federal Government’s determination to achieve its aim.

    With the Federal Government’s determination to aggressively improve infrastructure across the country, Matrix Energy, through its subsidiary, Aida Energy, has commenced bitumen distribution with delivery of its first bitumen vessel, MT Jin Zhou Wan on April 17.

    In a chat with reporters in Warri, Delta State, on the rationale behind investing into bitumen, the Chief Operation Officer (COO) of Matrix Energy Group, Mr. Loqman Salam-Alada, said the group identified inadequate infrastructure in the reception facilities for bitumen, distributing trucks as well as a supply gap.

    “We have good relationship with most of the major construction companies. We sell diesel to them and identified the stress and pain they go through in getting bitumen supply. We also noticed the way some marketers are taking advantage of the market. Our coming into the market will bring stability and healthy competition.

    “The best we can do is to support government’s aspiration of ensuring that all the materials required to make good roads and rail tracks are available. That is what we are doing now, especially as government is seen to be sincere in its efforts towards infrastructural development,” he said.

    He further said that for the company to meet the demand of supplying bitumen across the country’s geo-political zones, it had acquired a total of 32 distribution trucks, expecting to take delivery of 20 more before the end of June.

    On the capacity of the storage depot, Salam-Alada said the Aida Energy facility has the capacity to store up to 5,700 metric tons of bitumen, seven million litres of Aviation Fuel and 13 million litres of AGO, adding that the company intends to maintain a seamless supply culture as it would receive fresh cargo of the product every two weeks to ensure availability.

    “The vessel arrived with 5,400 metric tons of bitumen. We completed our bitumen facility last month and it is the first cargo that has just arrived. We will commence discharge any moment from now. We have a facility whose capacity is about 5,700 metric tons. The same facility also has tanks for storage of aviation fuel. The cargo will soon arrive in the country.

    “Our investments and improvement strategies have resulted in the expansion of our storage capacity to about 150 million litres of Hydrocarbons, enabling us to receive, store and distribute a wide range of petroleum products including LPG (Cooking Gas), Gasoline/PMS, Gasoil/Diesel, Aviation Fuel, Household Kerosene, Bitumen and Fuel oil. At present, Matrix Group is the only company in Nigeria that can handle all of these products.

    “Matrix Group is truly an integrated company with the capacity to transport its products from terminal and storage facilities globally to our storage facilities in Nigeria, load with our own trucks and deliver to our retail outlets and ultimately to the end users.

    “The dominant and unique position was not built overnight. We have kept investing. The fortunate part of this is that all these infrastructure and investments have created a lot of jobs and benefits for our host communities”, he said.

  • Buhari not sleeping on duty – Presidency replies Rev. Mamza

    The Presidency has described as unfair the comment by the Catholic Bishop of Yola Diocese, Rt. Rev. Fr. Stephen Mamza describing President Muhammadu Buhari as ”sleeping on duty as Commander-in-Chief.”

    Malam Garba Shehu, the President’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, stated this in a statement in Abuja on Sunday.

    The presidential aide observed that it was unbecoming of a religious leader, like Mamza, to engage ”in an action that broke the old tradition of staying above politics”.

    He said: ”In an action that broke the old tradition of staying above politics, the Catholic Bishop of Yola Diocese, Rt. Rev. Fr. Stephen Mamza delivered a homily in which he spoke angrily against President Muhammadu Buhari, whom he described as ‘sleeping on duty as Commander-in-Chief.’

    ”This is not a fair comment.

    ”There is so much that has changed in the past three to four years in and around Yola, and the Catholic Church in particular that a true assessment would show that but for the Change Administration of President Buhari, things would have continued the way they were, or even get worse. These could not have happened if a Commander-in- Chief was asleep.”

    Shehu, however, noted that Mamza was part of the success story recorded by the Buhari administration in Northeast, especially in Adamawa.

    ”Bishop Mamza was, and is still a strong member of the Adamawa Peace Initiative (API), composed of religious and community leaders which did the lovely work housing and feeding 400,000 displaced people from Northern Adamawa and Borno States in 2015.

    ”The API also did the extraordinary work of easing tensions between Muslims and Christians during that period and ensured that both groups did not turn on one another based on suspicion.

    ”As widely reported by the local and international press, in the premises of St. Theresa’s Cathedral where Rev. Mamza ministered, there were more than 1,500 IDPs, mostly women and children on whom the church administered food rations and issued bags of maize, cooking oil and seasoning.

    Read also: Sri Lanka: Pope, Buhari kick over bomb attacks

    ”We are truly touched and very grateful for the work that the Bishop and the others had done in that difficult period,” he said.

    The presidential spokesman maintained that as ”the Boko Haram has been degraded, the more than 400,000 displaced people absorbed by the Adamawa community have all gone back to Borno State and to those council areas in northern Adamawa.

    ”In addition to the capital,Yola, the towns of Michika, Madagali and Mubi which had been occupied by Boko Haram during their military advances have since been retaken by the Nigerian military”.

    According to him, the military personnel are also clearing litters of Boko Haram’s carnage and are, through the support of the administration as well as local and international partners, rebuilding roads and bridges, power lines, burnt schools, markets, destroyed churches and mosques.

    ”Without an iota of doubt, the Northeast is better off with President Buhari than it was under the previous administration.

    ”That should explain the massive turnout of voters in the region, in spite of threats to life and property, to vote for the return of the President for a Second Term of four years.

    ”Sadly, one of the realities of today’s Nigeria is that it easy to blame President Buhari for the violence all around us,” he added

    Shehu condemned situations were community leaders were ”too scared to blame the warlords and the sponsors of killings” because they fear for their own lives.

    He said: ”What is happening in several communities racked by inter-ethnic and religious violence is arising from the refusal of community leaders to point at known criminals in their midst for the law enforcement agencies to act against them.

    ”They rather blame President Buhari for their woes.

    ”It is indeed an irony that in the week that Bishop Mamza was speaking, another Bishop with a known commitment to peace, and results to show for his work in neighbouring Plateau State, is being dispatched to go to Taraba, Adamawa and Benue  to work in collaboration with security agencies in mending broken inter-communal relationships.”

    While sympathising with families of those who lost loved ones as well as those injured, Shehu said this senseless violence could never be condoned by the Buhari administration.

    He added that the administration’s intense security efforts and peace building would not only continue, ”but will expand in response to such explosions of violence in the country.”(NAN)

  • NASS leadership: Group advocates open ballot system

    A socio-political group under the auspices of Advocates of Good Governance (AOGG) has urged members-elect of the national assembly to insist on the open ballot system as they get ready to elect the principal officers of the two chambers.
    In a release signed by Comrade Ishola Williams on its behalf, the group insisted that an open ballot election that will have each legislator voting openly for its preferred candidates is the only way to deepen the much talked about independence of the legislative arm of government.

    The group also warned the ruling All Progressives Congress against allowing a repeat of the events of 2015 that saw President Muhammadu Buhari having to struggle with the leadership of the current 8th assembly, saying the 9th assembly offers an opportunity to correct the mistake of 2015.

    “We recall the experience in 2015 that saw the emergence of the leadership of the national assembly that caused avoidable friction with the executive. The 9th Assembly provides an opportunity to right the wrongs of 2015,” the statement said.

    The release also added that “We have watched, with keen interest, the on-going debate as to who becomes the leader of the 9th Assembly. There has been an unusual cacophony regarding the impending National Assembly leadership.  We notice three tendencies. There is the one being favoured by the party that made zoning paramount. There is another tendency that is being supported by the opposition and there is yet another and final one that is playing the “spoiler.’’ This one is merely intent on “ruining” the chances of others it perceived as the leading tendency.

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    “We believe that the interest shown by the various tendencies is a positive development for our growing democracy but we hasten to add that such interests should be mindful of the implications on good governance of desperation for power and going overboard.

    “We recall the experience in 2015 that saw the emergence of the leadership of the national assembly that caused avoidable friction with the executive. The 9th Assembly provides an opportunity to right the wrongs of 2015.As advocates of good governance; we strongly believe a transparent election conducted in the open will be a step in the right direction.

    “Any measure short of every representative or Senator voting transparently will be a dent on good governance. We advocate that every lawmaker should vote what is a reflection of the wishes of his constituents. We condemn the idea of a secret ballot   on an issue as important as the election of the Leadership of the National  Assembly. We however, subscribe to the global practice of making every voting in the parliament open and not secret. Lawmakers have no say but the wishes of their constituents. Therefore, they should rise to the occasion of serving the interests of their constituents rather than their personal desires.”