Tag: President

  • Nigeria President Cup fails to pay winners

    Cheques of the prize monies of the winners of last year’s Nigeria President Cup, Plateau State have bounced forcing the country’s sports ministry to try to intervene in the scandal, it has been specially gathered.

    Plateau State won the first edition of the national grassroots competition in honour of the country’s President, which was Goodluck Jonathan last year.

    Plateau were promised a cash prize of five million Naira (about $25,000) with other top-placed teams also promised various cash prizes.

    Former sports minister, Tammy Danagogo, former Director-General of the now scraped National Sports Commission (NSC), Al Hassan Yakmut, as well as several World Cup stars like Austin ‘Jay Jay’, Nwankwo Kanu, Taribo West, Peter Rufai, Tijjani Babangida and Garba Lawal were involved in last year’s inaugural competition.

    An official informed: “The sports ministry are trying to intervene in the non-payment of prize monies scandal from last year’s President’s Cup. It called a meeting this week in Abuja with some of those involved in the competition to find the way forward.”

  • Ekiti NAPPS sacks President

    The Ekiti State chapter of the National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) has removed its president, Alhaji Saka Adeleye, over alleged abuse of office and frivolous expenses.

    Adeleye’s alleged offences, according to the panel, violated Article 17 (A) and (B) of NAPPS constitution.

    A five-member caretaker committee has been inaugurated to run the affairs of the association for three months with Prince  Omodara as chairman

    NAPPS Elders’ Council at a meeting in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, on Thursday last week, set up an investigation panel comprising five members to look into the association’s financial records under Adeleye.

    The panel has as members Chief Femi Balogun (chairman), Otunba Segun Ola, Mr. Daniel Alabi, Pastor A.G. Ekundayo and Elder Samson Omoboko.

    According to a copy of the resolutions of Elders’ Council made available to The Nation, the state executive will step aside for six weeks to allow for investigation of Adeleye’s tenure.

    It reads in part: “In view of the grave allegations levelled against the President and the executive members and to give room for fair investigation, the state executive of NAPPS should step aside for about six weeks.

    “The terms of reference of the panel are:

    “To examine the seven-point allegations against the President being the major issue that led to the disagreements with the state executive.

  • Ekiti NAPPS sacks President for misconduct

    The Ekiti State chapter of the National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) has removed its president, Alhaji Saka Adeleye, over alleged abuse of office and frivolous expenses.

    Adeleye’s alleged offences, according to the panel, violated Article 17 (A) and (B) of NAPPS constitution.

    A five-member caretaker committee has been inaugurated to run the affairs of the association for three months with Prince  Omodara as chairman

    NAPPS Elders’ Council at a meeting in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, on Thursday last week, set up an investigation panel comprising five members to look into the association’s financial records under Adeleye.

    The panel had as members Chief Femi Balogun (chairman), Otunba Segun Ola, Mr. Daniel Alabi, Pastor A.G. Ekundayo and Elder Samson Omoboko.

    According to a copy of the resolutions of Elders’ Council made available to The Nation, the state executive will step aside for six weeks to allow for investigation of Adeleye’s tenure.

    It reads in part: “In view of the grave allegations levelled against the President and the executive members and to give room for fair investigation, the state executive of NAPPS should step aside for about six weeks.

    “The terms of reference of the panel are:

    “To examine the seven-point allegations against the President being the major issue that led to the disagreements with the state executive.

    “To examine the income and expenditure profile of the association since the inception of this administration; and

    “To consider the circumstances that led to the award of contracts during the Southwest conference and other incidental and related issues.”

  • When Osinbajo acted as President

    Last week, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo had the opportunity to act as President in the absence of substantive President Muhammadu Buhari, who had attended, in London, an international conference on Syria. After the meeting, Buhari stayed back to enjoy a six-day holiday, during which period it was speculated he would also undergo medical check-up. The short holiday ended last Wednesday and the president returned, preparatory to resuming work the next day Thursday February 11.

    There are two sharply divergent ways of seeing the short stay of Osinbajo at the helms, the first since this government mounted the saddle on May 29, 2015. One is to see the vice-president as having creditably discharged the onerous duties of the top job of president without scandals and or controversies trailing him. He did not rock the boat; meaning that he could be expected to continue to enjoy the confidence and support of his boss. This way, the president will not be afraid to step out again in future and leave his second-in-command in charge. There had been instances of bosses being unable to go on holidays because they were not sure what to expect from their deputy. There also had been cases of Ogas who attempted to trust their deputy but had to hurriedly cut their leave short to snatch power back and restore parity, as it were. A seamless operation, the type that we witnessed last week between Buhari and Osinbajo, could be evidence that both men run “One Presidency” and that the line of authority is clearly defined and respected by all. It could also mean that the president is minded to follow the constitutional order as opposed to the hideous practice of presidents and governors who side-track their deputy to hand over power to trusted commissioner, Chief of Staff or even their spouses! This is why many deputy governors have been described as glorified errand boys or spare tyres that are hardly utilised by many governors. Personally, I have witnessed situations where a governor travelled outside but effectively transferred power to the Secretary to the State Government or someone else while the substantive deputy governor was left in the lurch.

    Another way of assessing the vice-president’s performance in his six days as acting Number One, however, is to say that it was not only drab but also uneventful. I am not aware of any important statement made by Osinbajo in the six days he was in charge, if, truly, he was in charge. Or was this another make-believe, the kind Williams Shakespeare called “all sounds and fury, signifying nothing”? Except that the news media carried the report that Osinbajo was acting president, no one would have known that he was. He did not “shake” anything; he did not even assert or announce himself. What could the matter be? Timidity or was the man not sure of himself? Is it that there was nothing he would have loved to do differently if he were the president? Perhaps, he was minded not to rock the boat, reasoning that one good turn deserves another. Because while he was away, the president still made all the news form far-away London, hugging the headlines while the acting president carried on incognito back at home. No single important statement that caught anybody’s attention from the Acting President. He should have put a phone call through to Alexander Haig, the egregious Secretary of State to the 40th president of the United States, Ronald Reagan. When Reagan was shot on March 30, 1981 and was wheeled into hospital for surgery, Haig wasted no time in announcing “I am now in charge!” – even though he was not the vice-president who, constitutionally, was the prescribed authority to step in for the injured US president! While no sane person expects Osinbajo, a Pentecostal pastor and level-headed pro-democracy activist, to filibuster, there are those who still felt that he should have ignited some “action” rather than allow drabness becloud a whole six days at the helms of affairs.

    Well, I have only tried to argue the motion for and against; like we used to do in school debate. Readers, feel free to take your choice! There is, however, something good for all of us to take away from what happened: That Buhari not only went on holiday and handed over the reins of power to his deputy, he also did the constitutionally right thing by transmitting a letter to the National Assembly to that effect. In other words, he left no one in doubt that he trusted his second-in-command to actually act as president; he also tied the loose ends. This was what the late President Umaru Yar’Adua failed/neglected or was unable to do as a result of his illness before he was flown to Saudi Arabia for treatment that threw the country into avoidable constitutional crisis. Yar’Adua’s inability to transmit a letter to the National Assembly informing it of his trip outside the country and stating unambiguously that the then vice-president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, would act in his absence, created a lacuna that was exploited for selfish reasons by enemies of our renascent democracy. The political class dithered and the ship of state floundered before it was rescued by a last-minute “doctrine of necessity” crafted by the Senate to smuggle Jonathan into office as acting president. Buhari, therefore, acted well. Our democracy is growing and we are learning useful lessons.

    In presidential systems that have matured, there is no controversy about the vice president stepping-in in the absence, for whatever reason, of the president. According to Wikipedia, eight United States of America presidents have so far died in office (four were assassinated and four died of natural causes). In all cases, including that of a president who spent only one month in office, “the VP took over the office of the presidency as part of the United States presidential line of succession”. In cases where presidents had to resign, as in the Watergate scandal, the V-P had also taken over. In the case of the failed assassination attempt on Reagan mentioned earlier, the person who stepped in was not the loquacious Haig but the then VP, George H.W. Bush. The VP is very important in the US presidential system – and that is how it should be in all presidential systems properly so-called. He is not an unused spare tyre that no one need bother about. Indeed, he is seen as “president-in-waiting” or alternate president because they know he would step in once the president for whatever reason is unable to continue in office. So, careful considerations are always given to who is chosen to be VP. Candidates as well as political parties expend great efforts in making this choice because the electorate also considers the suitability of the VP to function in the office of president when electing a president. As our own presidential system matures, this should be the sure way to tread. A presidential (and governorship?) ticket is not complete without a running mate. Like the famous African-American politician, Jesse Jackson, once said, “a bird needs two wings to fly”.

  • Boko Haram fighters trained in Somalia, says President

    Boko Haram fighters trained in Somalia, says President

    Mohamud seeks international coalition against terrorism

    Boko Haram fighters were trained in Somalia before returning to Nigeria,  Somalia’s President  Hassan Sheikh Mohamud , said yesterday.

    He spoke at a security conference in Germany.

    “Without a stable Somalia, the whole region of the Horn of Africa will remain unstable and by and large, the African continent. There are proofs and evidence that (for) some time Boko Haram has been trained in Somalia and they went back to Nigeria,” he said.

    “The terrorists are so linked together, they are associated and so organised, (that) we the world we need to be so organised,” he said.

    It was not clear from his comments whether he believed al Shabaab was still training Boko Haram fighters, who have pledged allegiance to Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq.

    Somalia’s al Shabaab, which has links to al Qaeda and wants to overthrow the Somali government and impose a harsh version of Islamic law, claimed responsibility for a blast this month that punched a hole in the fuselage of a plane.

    Somalia, plagued by political in-fighting, corruption and attacks by al Shabaab insurgents, has recently made limited progress towards creating a functioning political system.

    The Federal Government, the World Bank, the European Union, and the United Nations (UN) have concluded a two-week recovery and assessment mission in the Northeastern States ravaged by insurgency as part of its on-going Recovery and Peace Building Assessment (RPBA) programme.

    Led by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), Dr. Mariam Masha, the recovery and assessment team visited Adamawa, Taraba, Gombe, Bauchi, Borno and Yobe states.

    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the Vice President, Mr. Laolu Akande, said the team actively engaged with governors, decision-makers civil society organisations, private sector players, traditional rulers, the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), emergency management, humanitarian and relief agencies and other active partners in the recovery efforts in the affected states.

    The statement said: “The field visit by the technical and humanitarian experts from the global institutions, the statement said, primarily focused on validating the processes through which data are to be collected and how to develop internationally acceptable mechanisms to maintain contact with focal points in all the States.

    “This assessment will also form the pivot for planning a broad-based public sector recovery programme for the Northeast, as well as leverage, synchronise and inform the financing initiatives and projects of Nigeria’s development partners, civil society organisations and private sector groups and organisations,” it said.

    Don’t starve troops of fund, says Onaiyekan

    A lso yesterday, The Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, John Cardinal Onaiyekan, urged the Federal Government to remain steadfast in restoring Nigeria to the path of sanity, probity and accountability.

    Onaiyekan said at the opening ceremony of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN), held at Our Lady Queen of Nigeria in Abuja: “This is not a smooth and easy process, we all are going through, but we need to go beyond the legal processes, to a serious national moral spiritual rebirth.

    “We need to explore alternative and parallel strategies, based on the moral principles of repentance, reparation and reconciliation.”

    He assured the government that the Catholic Church and some other religious groups were prepared to play a positive role in the on-going war against corruption.

    Cardinal Onaiyekan recalled the efforts of the Church towards eliminating corruption, with prayers, warnings and exhortations.

    “We have to put concrete structures of collaboration in place in the on-going war against corruption.

    “The religious institutions of the nation cannot remain aloof while a moral, spiritual battle is raging in the country,” he added.

    Cardinal Onaiyekan praised the government for the success recorded so far in the fight against the Boko-Haram insurgents.

    “It is hoped that the alleged criminal diversion of funds meant for arms into private pockets has now stopped.

    “Our gallant troops must never again be left with inadequate resources to carry out the dangerous task imposed on them on our behalf,” he said.

    He also urged the government to encourage dialogue across and within religious communities to bring about a lasting reconciliation among diverse groups.

    The Cardinal pointed out that the insurgency in the Northeast had revealed the significant presence of Christian population in the zone.

    “We still have on our hands a lot of healing and reconciliation to do before our displaced people can safely return to their homes, farms and grazing land.

    “They deserve special attention in the programmes of reconstruction and rehabilitation,” he stressed.

  • ‘Education key to overcoming Nigeria’s challenges’

    ‘Education key to overcoming Nigeria’s challenges’

    The President, American University of Nigeria (AUN), Prof. Margee Ensign, has said that Nigeria must ensure education for all in other to overcome its challenges.

    Prof. Ensign noted that Nigeria was facing a new and complex challenge following the fall in the global price of oil.

    The AUN president said this on Monday at the 2016 pledge ceremony (matriculation) of 78 students held in Yola, capital of Adamawa State.

    She said: “I think education is the basis of everything. If you can educate young people – you Nigerians are so creative, so innovative, and so hungry for education.

    “Nigeria has many more resources. They have smart people. They just have to be dedicated to improving the society and think a little less about becoming rich.

    “Nigeria’s new president is determined to crush Boko Haram militarily. Meanwhile, other organizations such as the American University of Nigeria are trying to prevent young people from turning to violence.”

    She said that the institution would assist the new intake to confront new challenges.

    According to her, the institution is focused on the real world and its problems and how to find solutions to them.

    Prof. Ensign added that the institution was focused on creating a new and better future for the students.

    “Class of 2019, we are all here to guide you through your learning.  We are all here to make sure you have all of the educational resources you need in order to succeed, to be making sure you are exposed to new and sometimes uncomfortable ideas and environments, to introduce you to a new and complex and sometimes troubled world.

    “Beginnings are challenging, but of course this is what it means to grow, to learn, to change. To keep learning, one must try new things, confront new and sometimes disturbing ideas, assume new responsibilities,” she said.

    Prof. Ensign said that the institution through its Technology for All program had educated 4,000 children who have no access to education in Yola.

    “TELA, which we call Technology for All, is using a thousand tablet computers to reach 4,000 thousand kids with apps written by our students and another 18, 000 via radio. It is an experiment. The US government is funding this.

    “We are reaching 22, 000 kids. We have like seven months to improve their reading, literacy and numeracy by 50%. It is not a big win though but we think we can do it.  22, 000 kids, 700 sites here in Yola and about 600 students, faculty staff teaching. If we can show that in six months we can improve reading by 50% with 22,000 kids, why can’t you do it all over the country?

    “We have been doing some extraordinary- service at AUN-feeding hungry Nigerians—hundreds of thousands of them, giving women employable skills and income, giving thousands of boys and girls the opportunity to play and learn together in peace through sports, giving street children a meal a day and chance to learn to read, and some hope in Feed and Read. So pleased to tell you that the Irish government recently funded a project called Feed and Read for Girls,” she added.

     

  • Between the General and the President

    Between the General and the President

    THE Eighteenth Brumaire of Luis Napoleon from which this piece derived its title and inspiration is one of the great classics of historical expositions. Written in 1852 as a response to the slow-motion unravelling of the French Revolution, The Eighteenth Brumaire is a sustained piece of polemical brilliance; a tour de force of imaginative perspicuity. Karl Marx was obviously at the height of his intellectual power. Superb insights and witty observations leap from its scornful and sardonic pages like tracer bullets.
    The great German philosopher makes two valid points which are very germane to the issues at hand in Nigeria at this moment. Appropriating Hegel’s earlier observation that historical occurrences and personages tend to come twice, Marx added that the first time it is usually a tragedy while the repeat appearance often yields a farce. Building on this tantalizing insight, Marx goes on to contend that even if the same historical personages happen on the same stage after an interval of time, it is as poor parodies of their former selves.
    In other words, Luis Napoleon was not just a grim caricature of his illustrious uncle, this was how the illustrious uncle himself would have appeared at that material time, a fumbling caricature of his old self, a pathetic pastiche of the real thing. In an interesting and absorbing gloss on this perplexing historical drama, Terry Eagleton has noted that Louis Bonaparte was not just a regressive caricature of his more illustrious uncle, the distinguished uncle was also offering himself as a parlous parody of his former self through his less talented nephew. The gifted family had scraped the bottom of the barrel.
    Echoes of Nigeria’s recent history? Let us not jump ahead of the script. There are important lessons for Nigerians and their elected president to learn from this reappearance of historical personages on the political scene. Today, in his second coming, President Buhari is confronted by an awful mess. The task is even more Herculean than his first coming. It is a revolutionary situation without revolutionary enablers.
    It is obvious from his body language and its abiding militarism, his caustic disdain for shabby politicking that President Buhari would like to cut through the crap and bring immediate restitution to a Nigerian populace braying for the blood of their tormentors. But given the fact that the retired general is a product of democratic consensus, there is no way he can do this without sawing off the tree branch on which he himself is perched perilously and precariously.
    It is a situation that calls for much caution and greater tact. There can be no doubt that if it is to survive this perilous conjuncture, Nigeria needs a wholesale redemptive cleansing. Yet with a compromised judiciary, a section of the political elite screaming from the rooftop and a National Assembly populated by retrogressive elements from the ancien regime, there is going to be a lot of caterwauling and hollering in the land. It is impossible to imagine a civilian regime with this level of daring and pluck. The general is alive, long live the president!!!!!.

  • Ban of tomato paste: Labour calls for forex policy review

    Ban of tomato paste: Labour calls for forex policy review

    The officials of Labour union in some of the local tomato processing companies have called on the presidency to prevail on Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to review the forex policy listing of triple concentrate tomato paste among the 41 items banned from accessing foreign exchange from the official window by the CBN as the inability of the firms to import tomato concentrate which is the main raw materials used in their production process had drastically affected them.

    This is according to the President, National Union of Food, Beverage and Tobacco Employees, Lateef Oyelekan, saying the companies involved should be given the latitude to plan for backward integration as one of the downside of the policy is that it could lead to massive job losses, as an estimated 1000 jobs are likely to be lost in the tomato process manufacturing sector.

    “The jobs of the workers are at stake unless the ban is reversed, and that the opportunity for backward integration would be lost by the affected companies.”

    According to Oyelekan, the quantity of the produce being cultivated presently in the country is not enough for local consumption and the quality is not good enough to be processed into paste.

    He pointed out that it would take years for the planting, harvesting and processing of the produce into concentrate, adding that most of the companies had run out of stock.

    Oyelekan explained that the volatility factor inherent in tomato farming is often a product of seasonal variations, which is itself a function of the variables of weather, agronomy, water, seed, fertilizer, market, storage, transportation, and numerous other agro-allied business dynamics.

    “If triple concentrate tomato paste is now placed among the list of items that will not have access to the foreign exchange market overnight, that line of business has been killed because the government is working from the perspective that there are tomatoes in the environment for cultivation, processing into paste and packaging. Rather than prohibiting the items overnight, why not engage the manufacturers in discussion.”

    He expressed that the objective of the forex restriction was not a bad idea on its own, however lamented that the implementation of the policy has far-reaching implication in the short, medium and long term.

    Also speaking on the policy, President of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Remi Bello, while decrying the policy, warned that most manufacturers might be forced to shut down and move their operations to neighbouring countries due to their inability to access foreign exchange for raw materials and other critical inputs.

    According to him, the government needs to first address the issue of post-harvest wastage emanating from inadequate storage and the absence of processing facilities and the development of agro-allied industry.

    “No matter how bounteous the nation’s harvest is, such productivity will count for little if the produce cannot be stored,” he said.

  • President Buhari’s courageous budget

    President Buhari’s courageous budget

    Last week, on Tuesday, December 22, President Muhammadu Buhari presented his government’s budget estimates and proposals for FY 2016 to the National Assembly. In view of the falling revenues from oil and non-oil sources this year, it is a bold budget. The Federal Government intends to spend N6.08tr in the fiscal year, of which N1.84tr (more than 30 per cent of the budget) will need to be borrowed from internal and external sources. The FG is optimistic it can cover the deficit. As the president observed in his budget speech at the National Assembly, the budget deficit, though huge, is equivalent to less than three per cent of Nigeria’s GDP. But it will take our overall debt profile to 14 per cent of the GDP. This is well within the acceptable threshold of debt to GDP ratio.

    As it was his first after his election as president the budget was eagerly awaited by the public to see how the promised changes in the country would be reflected in it. Fiscal year 2015 had been quite bad for the domestic economy. It is estimated that the growth rate which had averaged seven per cent before 2014 dropped to less than five per cent this year. Revenue from oil exports fell sharply by nearly 70 per cent. In the course of the year, the FG resorted to huge deficit financing to the tune of about N1.5tr to keep the economy going. Twice, the outgoing PDP and the new APC federal government had to borrow from the CBN to pay salaries and pensions. Only a month ago the new APC federal government secured the approval of the National Assembly for a supplementary budget of N500bn. And last week the Finance Minister announced that funds available for sharing by the three tiers of government in November fell by N132bn from the previous month. The ECA has been virtually depleted. The SWF and the limited foreign reserves are facing pressures.

    Revenue/Expenditure Profile

    Revenue projection of the FG in 2016 is N3.86tr, a little over half of the proposed budget of N6.08tr. The FG intends to finance the deficit by a combination of domestic borrowing of N984bn and foreign borrowing of N900bn totalling N1.8tr. In both cases, it is going to be tough financing such a huge deficit. The crude oil benchmark is $38 per barrel but the price of oil in the global market has dropped to $32 per barrel. There is some expectation in official quarters that the oil price will rebound next year, but this is by no means certain. On account of this, the projected revenue from oil in 2016 is only N820bn. Non-oil revenues from Company Income Tax, VAT and Customs and Excise is expected to yield N1.45tr.

    On the expenditure side, the budget provides N1.8tr for capital projects, an increase of N557bn on the 2015 budget. The balance of N5tr will be accounted for by recurrent expenditure, still rising despite the government’s efforts to reduce the cost of governance. There is a special intervention fund of N200bn to take care of the government’s phased social welfare programme.

    A mildly reflationary budget

    The proposed FG budget did not elicit much surprise as it was, basically, a modestly reflationary budget, intended to give the spluttering domestic economy a short in the arm, Although many commentators thought it to be the biggest FG budget ever, it is not quite so. In 2014, the PDP federal government planned a bigger budget. It was forced to scale back the budget by prevailing economic realities. Its projected revenue was given as N7.33tr. In the current year it was N6.83tr. But there was a loss of some N1.5tr in revenue in the course of the year. The actual FG expenditure in the current year, including the deficit financing of some N1.5tr, is quite close to the budget proposals of N6.08tr for 2016. In spite of the fall in oil revenues the government recognised the need to increase public expenditure to stop the economy from going into outright recession. It was already stagnating. The approach of the new FG to the 2016 budget is neo-Keynesian. It is bold and it involves spending more to keep the economy afloat, even if it means a huge deficit financing, essentially more borrowing from domestic and foreign sources. The alternative to this mildly expansionist budget is slower growth, if any.

    However, some questions need to be asked regarding revenue projections. The obvious sources of additional revenues are company tax, customs duties and taxes, all of which are projected to rise in FY 2016. But I think that, in present circumstances, the optimism regarding revenue increases from those sources may prove illusory. In the case of customs duty, the prohibition placed on some imports will negatively affect total revenue from that source. This is one of the reasons that tariff increases are considered preferable to outright bans. In the case of taxes, revenue from company tax is unlikely to increase by much, if at all, as the manufacturing industry has slowed down in the last two years. With regard to VAT, an increase from five per cent to 10 per cent, will not lead to a significant addition to the national revenue as income from VAT represents an insignificant part of the total national revenue. An increase in VAT could also lead to a reduction in consumption and tax derived from it.

    Again, it was thought that savings from a reduction in the cost of governance would release additional funds for spending. Here, the savings will not be much as there are still 37 ministers. Though a commendable achievement, the reduction of federal ministries from 36 to 27 will not lead to much savings. The federal bureaucracy remains unduly large and President Buhari, understandably, does not want to stir up political and ethnic crises by applying a severe cut in the federal bureaucracy. A merger of some federal agencies is on the cards. While this has become necessary it may not lead to much savings. It was argued that privatisation of some public enterprises would reduce the cost of governance. It should have, but it has not as new FG agencies were started again.

    The Oil Subsidy

    Although President Buhari has carefully refrained from announcing the end of the so-called oil subsidy, it appears he has been finally persuaded that it is time for it to go. It is no longer financially sustainable. There is no explicit provision for it in budget 2016. Nearly 30 per cent of the total FG budget (some N1.5tr annually) was being spent on this subsidy. Even after the fall of global oil prices, the oil importers were still claiming subsidies on their oil imports. For instance, the price of diesel, long deregulated, at the gas stations has fallen by over 30 per cent. But not so oil. This shows clearly that the so-called oil subsidy was a massive fraud. Some of the fortunes made by the oil importers almost certainly found their way into the PDP electoral war chest.

    If a rigorous audit of the NNPC, a cesspool of corruption and theft, is done, it will be discovered that these oil importers were some of the biggest financial donors to the PDP in the recent presidential and general elections. If the subsidy is finally removed, there will be savings of some N1.5tr. This will substantially reduce the huge budget deficit of the federal government. It might not need to borrow more than N500bn in the next financial year. In fact, what the FG should do is to place oil imports on open licence. With competition among the importers the price of fuel in Nigeria will fall rapidly and significantly. It will then be seen clearly how, over the years, the nation has been massively defrauded by its oil importers.

    Sectoral Allocations of the Budget

    It is in the sectoral allocations of the budget that one can see a lot of bold initiatives by the Buhari APC federal government. Power, Works and Housing get a hefty N433.4bn, the highest ever. Considering Nigeria’s huge infrastructure deficit, this allocation is commendable. But though quite capable, many think that the Minister, former Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola, is being overloaded with responsibilities for three key economic sectors. It is better for him to handle power alone, the most critical of the three sectors, while an additional minister is appointed for Works and Housing.

    Both Education (N369.6bn) and Health (N221.7bn) have also received reasonable allocations, while Transport will get N202bn, not unreasonable in our present difficult financial situation. However, it is doubtful that the continuing rehabilitation of the railways, the completion of the southern coastal road, the Lagos-Ibadan highway and the second Niger Bridge, can be fully addressed within these limited financial provisions for public transportation, unless it is the intention of the FG to resort to external borrowings for these huge capital projects. Alternatively, these projects may be included in the medium term plan and executed over five or more years. It is unlikely that foreign investors will show any interest in these giant projects, or lend funds for them. China and India have both been forced by the global economic slow down to cut back on their investments in Africa.

    Defence will get only N294bn. This is strange in view of the ongoing insurgency and other internal threats to the security of our nation. However, interior/police will get N145bn. When added to the defence vote, this is as high as the vote for Power, Works and Housing. It is also possible that the new APC federal government has found ways of increasing defence spending in the current fiscal year, including the $1bn it had planned to raise abroad.

    The Proposed Welfare Package

    To redeem its electoral pledge, the APC federal government will introduce two new welfare packages next year. These are the feeding of school children once a day and a welfare payment of N5,000 per month to the poorest in our country. The cost of these has not been shown in the budget. But it is likely to be minimal. First, there are less than 100 federal secondary schools in the country. The programme will not extend to the states, some of which have similar programmes. Equally, the number of the poorest to benefit from the N5,000 per month largesse will be kept pretty low, far less than the 25 million originally planned. If not, the two commendable programmes will be unsustainable. The President also deserves commendation for his plan to recruit some 500,000 university graduates as teachers in federal institutions. This will have a positive impact on the situation of mass unemployment that is a source of concern in our country, as it has the potential of fuelling social conflict.

    Altogether, this is a courageous budget reflecting official concern for the poor in our country. It points the way to the development of a more compassionate society. As usual, the implementation of the budget will be difficult, as there will be some major constraints, one of which is that Nigeria does not yet have the executive capacity for such a huge budget. Some aspects of the budget, such as the removal of oil subsidy will be resisted by Labour, which is also asking for an increase in the minimum wage. The government has to find a way of mollifying Labour on these issues to avert damaging industrial disputes and strikes in the country.

  • Letter to the President

    Sir, it is me again…just bear with. Now, instead of travelling hither and thither with the petroleum sector migraines generated, there are other sectors that can bring lasting benefit to the nation while killing multiple birds with one stone. Though I sense there are those who might (?) prefer you out there since the cat not being at home tends to give the mice a field day. I hope for our sake this is not so.

    As for me Sai Baba, I would rather you stay at home and provide serious consideration to spearheading those activities that would make us proud, including your honourable self.  No matter how well intentioned your travels and the huffing and puffing in the petroleum sector, the nation cannot afford long bouts of passion without action which would only yield, at best, fractions of success.

    Sir, talking about the cattle herders, this is gold – meat – mine waiting to be produced, processed, packaged and distributed both locally and abroad.  This is apart from the leather hides that would be produced for bags, shoes, belts, accessories, clothes, etc. The Emir of Kano has identified this as Nigeria’s ‘series of broken value chains’ which we deliciously consume unproductively as ponmo from the cows. I prefer you engage with them and set up cattle ranches nationwide. If India, a cow-revered country can do it, what are our excuses? Monumental gains to be made include, integrated farming, reducing tensions nationally and promoting inter-ethnic peace, relatively less power needed compared to industrial-manufacturing firms, the attendant increase in rural employment and culminating in the useful engagement of the transportation sector.  Additional bonuses to be gained would promote the activities of leather producers, integrate with agro-technical vocational institutes, engage business centres to advertise their products, banking sector to provide funds – hopefully they would see the benefit if you don’t renege on the Treasury Single Account (TSA) initiative, tourism and hospitality to advertise all kinds of products made and not excluding abundant suya hot spots for entertainment.  We are talking serious money here. The start up cost is relatively low as they are already there roaming around endlessly and increasing tensions nationwide.  The land is there, the products (cattle) are in abundance, the labour (herdsmen) available, all that is required is the right leadership, direction and organisation that would lead to the eventual modernisation and revolution of the husbandry sector and its activities intertwined with the agricultural institutes and curriculum development of the education sector.

    If ever there is a moment to strike while the iron is still hot or seize the reins of progress at the right spur of the moment – this is it. One is to identify the moment, one is to seize it. This is an area no person in the country can rival you on right now.  As a Fulani man yourself, this is an undisputable advantage ethnically and linguistically that cannot be disguised.  To add to that, you understand the terrain and activities as a cattle owner and all the modus operandi attached to the husbandry sector.  As if you aren’t blessed enough, this is supported by abundance of influence from your personality, authority with presidential clout and access to state power.

    I have always thought of Abuja as a control and distribution city not adding value to the economic activities of the country.  If you spearhead this agricultural husbandry revolution, you would be leading the transformation of Abuja into a consultancy and advisory capital city adding to the coffers of the nation – economically via the provision of employment, agriculturally through rural development and ultimately adding to the nation’s financial fortunes.  You cannot find this mileage of historical legacy in any other sector where you are eminently well qualified and equipped with the tools to achieve a revolutionary change in so short a time.  I say so short a time because this can be done and results achieved during the dispensation of this administration – second term or not. Not only would Fulani cattle herders be singing your praises but farmers who have benefitted from integrated farming would be praying for your soul both for here and in the hereafter.

    Sai Baba, the international reputation and respect you will gain from this, even the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and agricultural institutions would be writing theses about it for decades to come. Stay back and fight the fire.  My house cannot be burning and then I go on holiday to see people who are not ready to provide me water but more than happy to see my house burn.

    Whenever you finally leave us, succeed or fail, nothing would happen to you sir.