Tag: PUBLIC

  • Osun APC challenges PDP to public discourse

    Osun APC challenges PDP to public discourse

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun State has challenged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to a public discourse on the future of the state.

    The APC said it would like the PDP to articulate publicly ‘why it has been so viciously opposed to everything done by the Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola-led APC government and why the party wants the projects abandoned or destroyed or both’.

    In a statement by its spokesperson Kunle Oyatomi, APC said: “Besides, the PDP should clearly explain what it plans to replace these projects with and how.”

    The party urged the media to moderate the public discourse, which it said should be based on 14 years of governance in Osun State.

    It expressed surprise that the opposition appeared to have lost its voice since the ruling party challenged it to tell Osun State residents what programmes and projects it intended to substitute with what the APC has been doing in the last seven years.

    According to the APC, the PDP and its associates should not be allowed to misinform the people of Osun with lies and fabricated figures designed to make the governor and his administration look bad and hated by impressionable segment of society.

    It said: “We seek civilised engagement with the PDP and others on the critical issues, which will be moderated by the media, because the best governorship election will be based on issues that require thorough enlightenment of the voting public.

    “In spite of the ICPC’s acquittal of Osun government on the false allegation by the PDP of diversion of the bailout fund for salaries, together with the Debt Management Office’s clean bill on the status of the state’s debt profile, evil people are still demonising Ogbeni Aregbesola on the issues.

    “In the light of this dangerous political incitement of the PDP and the wicked fake news peddling, which other opponents of the APC government have made a habit of spreading, it has become necessary to engage these misdirected politicians and a treacherous ex-Head of Service (HoS) in a public discourse.

    “The people of the State of Osun are being taken for a ride by unscrupulous politicians who are shamelessly given the impression that the people of the state are largely gullible, hence incapable of appreciating things of international standard, developed in their communities.”

  • A private letter in the public sphere

    When columnist Olatunji Dare returned to column writing for The Nation on September 12, after a two-week break, with a column titled “Back on the beat,” he drew public attention to a letter sent to him by Yusuph Olaniyonu, Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to Senate President Bukola Saraki. The letter was Olaniyonu’s response to Dare’s column of August 15 titled “A preface to the silly season.”

    Dare said: “Olaniyonu sent it as a “private letter.”  But since it raises issues that belong in the public sphere, I sought his kind permission to publish it herewith, slightly edited.”

    In the said piece, Dare had focused on “those aspiring to be president,” saying what he presented was “by no means an exhaustive list.”  He added: “By the time the game really gets going, we may have as many as 240, if not more…As the game gathers momentum, almost everything else will be suspended.  Everything else will be subordinated to winning.”

    Dare’s list featured Saraki, which is why Olaniyonu wrote to him. The columnist had written: “Where else but up can Senate President Bukola Saraki go in the scheme of things?  Given the way he vaulted himself into his current position, and the Faustian bargain he made along the way, it was clear that he was out for the top job.”

    It is public knowledge that Saraki got to the helm of affairs at the Senate through an unapologetic defiance of his party’s desire and decision. The same twist resulted in a queer combination and cohabitation with Saraki of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as Senate President and  Ike Ekweremadu of the discredited Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as  Deputy Senate President. It is clear that Saraki is politically ambitious and perhaps desperate for high political office. His political moves and manoeuvres are the stuff of news, and stuff worthy of condemnation.

    So, Olaniyonu sounded unenlightened when he tried to fault “The Nation and Punch” for “their constant searchlight on Saraki and their unrepentant mischief against the man.”  He said of Dare’s list of possible presidential aspirants:  ”This error of omission or deliberate decision not to mention Asiwaju Tinubu gave an unmistakable impression that the article in question is part of the ploy by the Bourdillon media/Intellectual Think Thank to which you are widely believed to belong, to quickly take out the other potential rivals long before the race commences. However, I believe The Nation and its columnists will not have the last say on who becomes the next President after Buhari, either in 2019 or 2023.”

    Of course, it is expected that the sovereign electorate will have the last say when the time comes. It is also expected that insightful columnists like Dare will help shape public opinion so that the voters won’t endorse a figure with a questionable track record.

  • Makinde: Public policy and public progress

    For a woman who earned a PhD at the age of 60 in 2008, and went on to become a Professor, her Inaugural Lecture on September 12 provided a stage for philosophical reflection and scholarly thinking. Prof Juliana Taiwo Makinde said: “I feel proud and highly honoured to say that I am the first female Professor of Public Administration in Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, and also the first female Professor to give an Inaugural Lecture in the Department of Public Administration, OAU, Ile-Ife.”

    She added: “I never dreamt in my wildest imagination of becoming a university lecturer, let alone a professor.  My standing here before you today to present my Inaugural Lecture is, therefore, a special privilege from God who has used my husband, Professor Moses Akinola Makinde, as His instrument of positive change in my life.”

    After completing her secondary education in the mid-60s, she worked as a confidential secretary. Her life took another course in 1983 when her husband “went on Fulbright Fellowship to Ohio University, USA,” and he persuaded her to enroll for a degree programme.  “My own intention was to work and make money with which I planned to get some gadgets for our home back in Nigeria,” she recalled.

    As an Education/English student in the Faculty of Education at the Ohio University, her performance got her a place on the Dean’s list in her first year, after which she continued her degree programme at the   Faculty of Education, University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) in 1984.

    Her narrative continued: “By 1987, I completed my first degree programme with First Class Honours in Education/English.  My husband was excited and very happy.   He then persuaded me to go for a higher degree in order not to waste the first class degree that I had, always telling me that with my first class degree, I was a professorial material.  I agreed to go ahead on the condition that he would give me N200 a month throughout the programme. This was just to discourage him from persuading me from going further.  To my disappointment, he agreed.”

    Indeed, this journey took her to a professorial height. When she delivered the 307th Inaugural Lecture of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State, she focused on “Policy Somersaults, Poverty of Policy Implementation and Corruption: Obstacles to Development in Nigeria.”  Expectedly, her lecture was informed by her research into policy matters, “especially the problems militating against the successful implementation of policies in Nigeria.”

    Makinde’s topic was well-timed.  Considering that policy making is a major function of government, and a major factor in governance, it is a reflection of her attention to fundamentals that she chose to talk about policy. She observed: “Various studies have shown that most government policies have failed, at the implementation stage, to achieve the desired results…This problem is what I refer to as poverty of policy implementation, resulting in policy somersaults and which has constituted a big obstacle to development in Nigeria.”

    Obviously, there is a concrete connection between development based on social service delivery by government and proper policy making. Makinde illustrated how “government has failed in many areas in the provision of social amenities to the citizens,” using examples in two critical areas, the health and education sectors. She said: “It is an open secret that education in Nigeria has been witnessing gradual but steady decline in quality in the last few decades resulting in parents sending their children out of the country for their proper education, as well as in pupils learning under trees and dilapidated buildings.”

    Quoting Africa Recovery (2017), she noted: “Healthcare also suffers from inadequate funding. Most health institutions lack basic facilities such as medicines and dressings while government health spending averaged just 4.5% of the budget.”

    Makinde’s list of areas where policy failure has resulted in arrested development includes shelter, employment, security, electricity and water supply. It is difficult to fault her observations because they are observable.

    She argued: “The role of public servants as the implementors of the various policies of government makes them part of the success or failure of public policies made towards ensuring development.”  On the causes of policy somersaults and poverty of policy implementation, Makinde identified problems at the Policy Formulation Stage, the Implementation Stage and the Evaluation Stage.

    Inevitably, she mentioned corruption: “Another critical cause of policy somersault is corruption.” Political corruption is so pervasive in Nigeria, and it may well be the most potent force against policy making and successful policy implementation.

    This list of “some of the policies that appear to have suffered somersaults” is thought-provoking: “They include policy on poverty alleviation, and policy on education.  Starting with policy on poverty alleviation, it is on record that since independence, many programmes, which include Operation Feed the Nation (OFN: 1979), the National Directorate of Employment (NDE: 1986), the Better Life Programme (BLP: 1987), People’s Bank (1989), Community Bank (1990), and the National Poverty Alleviation Programme (NAPEP, 2001), had been established by various governments at one time or the other to tackle the problem of poverty and food insecurity…in spite of all the above-mentioned programmes, poverty is still very visible among Nigerians.”

    When a policy fails because it is poorly implemented, it raises questions about the intention of the policy and the intention of the policy makers, which may not be the same. Policy making without successful policy implementation amounts to daydreaming.

    Among Makinde’s recommendations, those concerning corruption demonstrate the gravity of the problem as well as the gravity of the solution required.  She proposed:  “No plea bargain should be allowed. Plea bargain only encourages looters to steal more so that at the end of it all, they will still have something substantial to fall back on after paying the bargained amount.  For instance, if the plea bargain is calculated on percentage of total money stolen, then the bigger the money stolen the bigger the percentage to be kept by the plea bargainer.”

    Her final words deserve public attention: “You and I contribute to these problems in one form or the other.  How? You may ask…  When we encourage corrupt politicians by honouring them with chieftaincy titles in our community, or giving them honorary doctorate degrees in our universities, we contribute to corrupt practices… Policy success is the sum total of the commitment of the government and the citizens towards prevention of implementation gap arising from corruption and poverty of implementation of policies.”

    It was a thinking lecture by a thinking lecturer for thinking members of the public.

  • A private letter in the public sphere

    When columnist Olatunji Dare returned to column writing for The Nation on September 12, after a two-week break, with a column titled “Back on the beat,” he drew public attention to a letter sent to him by Yusuph Olaniyonu, Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to Senate President Bukola Saraki. The letter was Olaniyonu’s response to Dare’s column of August 15 titled “A preface to the silly season.”

    Dare said: “Olaniyonu sent it as a “private letter.”  But since it raises issues that belong in the public sphere, I sought his kind permission to publish it herewith, slightly edited.”

    In the said piece, Dare had focused on “those aspiring to be president,” saying what he presented was “by no means an exhaustive list.”  He added: “By the time the game really gets going, we may have as many as 240, if not more…As the game gathers momentum, almost everything else will be suspended.  Everything else will be subordinated to winning.”

    Dare’s list featured Saraki, which is why Olaniyonu wrote to him. The columnist had written: “Where else but up can Senate President Bukola Saraki go in the scheme of things?  Given the way he vaulted himself into his current position, and the Faustian bargain he made along the way, it was clear that he was out for the top job.”

    It is public knowledge that Saraki got to the helm of affairs at the Senate through an unapologetic defiance of his party’s desire and decision. The same twist resulted in a queer combination and cohabitation with Saraki of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as Senate President and  Ike Ekweremadu of the discredited Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as  Deputy Senate President. It is clear that Saraki is politically ambitious and perhaps desperate for high political office. His political moves and manoeuvres are the stuff of news, and stuff worthy of condemnation.

    So, Olaniyonu sounded unenlightened when he tried to fault “The Nation and Punch” for “their constant searchlight on Saraki and their unrepentant mischief against the man.”  He said of Dare’s list of possible presidential aspirants:  ”This error of omission or deliberate decision not to mention Asiwaju Tinubu gave an unmistakable impression that the article in question is part of the ploy by the Bourdillon media/Intellectual Think Thank to which you are widely believed to belong, to quickly take out the other potential rivals long before the race commences. However, I believe The Nation and its columnists will not have the last say on who becomes the next President after Buhari, either in 2019 or 2023.”

    Of course, it is expected that the sovereign electorate will have the last say when the time comes. It is also expected that insightful columnists like Dare will help shape public opinion so that the voters won’t endorse a figure with a questionable track record.

  • How pressure on public officials fuels corruption, by outgoing Perm Sec

    Outgoing Permanent Secretary of Foreign Affairs Ministry Ambassador Sola Enikanolaiye has blamed financial pressure on public officials for the high rate of corruption.

    Enikanolaiye, therefore, urged Nigerians to stop mounting financial pressure on public officers, if the country is to win the war against corruption.

    He spoke at the weekend in Abuja during the sendoff party held in his honour.

    He stressed the need to join hands with the government to rid public service of corrupt practices.

    The retired permanent secretary explained that corruption thrives in many public offices because of how people make unnecessary requests from public officials.

    He said many public servants fall under the pressure from friends, acquaintances and sometimes, unknown people, who make unnecessary demands from them.

    “Nigerians should not try to mount too much pressure on public servants. The expectations are simply too much and too many expect you to give them cash, give them jobs and to help solve all sorts of problems.

    “People you never met before, they don’t know you, they just got your phone numbers and began to call that: ‘I want to get marry’, ‘I want to pay some fees’, ‘I want to do this and that; all sorts of thing.

    “I wonder how you want a permanent secretary or public officials to get that kind of money.

    “We are fighting corruption; Nigerians must join in the fight by not putting too much pressure on public servants, thereby encouraging them to look for all means to meet those high expectations,” he said.

    Enikanolaye said he was able to succeed in his 35 years of service in the ministry because of commitment and discipline, which he enjoined other public officials to imbibe.

  • ICSAN’s Public Practice Day to hold July 27

    The Institute of Chartered Secretary and Administrators of Nigeria (ICSAN) will hold this year’s Public Practice Day for chartered secretaries, company secretaries, lawyers and administrators on July 27.

    The event will hold at the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) Conference Centre at 10, Nurudeen Olowopopo Street (near MKO Abiola Gardens) in the Central Business District of Alausa in Ikeja, Lagos.

    The theme of this year’s event is: Ease of Doing Business in Nigeria.

    A statement by the Registrar/Chief Executive, Mrs Nkechi Onyenso, said the theme was apt because of Nigeria’s current business and investment climate. The nation is ranked 169 among 190 economies in the ease of doing business, according to the latest World Bank annual ratings.

    The statement noted that the low rating would make it difficult for Nigeria to use its status as the African largest economy to the fullest advantage.

    The keynote speaker is Alhaji Bello Mahmud, the Registrar General of Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), while the second speaker, Mr. AdesolaAmoo, an Assistant Director at the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRC), will present a paper on the topic, titled: Corporate Governance and the Integrity of Financial Statements.

    Participants will interact with the Registrar General of CAC and Mr. Amoo on the current initiatives of the CAC and FRC.

  • Be good ambassadors, public servants told

    The Acting Director-General, Public Service Staff Development Centre, Lagos,  Mr. Olufunmi Ajose-Harrison has urged participants at its training programmes to be with greater commitment.

    He gave the charge at the closing ceremony for participants of the three months specialised Information Communications Technology (ICT) training for Secretarial Assistants in the Public Service.

    The course which the Centre started in 2009 is being run in collaboration with Yaba College of Technology as moderator. The school also issue certificates to successful participants.

    Ajose-Harrison said the participants should consider themselves lucky to undergo the training as they would gain tremendously both officially and privately.

    He said the Centre would conduct an impact assessment on all participants in their various offices, six months after the course, to monitor and evaluate their performances regarding the impacted knowledge.

    He pledged that requests contained in their communique would be forwarded to the appropriate authority for consideration.

    The course which had participants drawn from different Ministries, Departments and Agencies had stagnated Assistant Secretarial officers on grade level 9, who would move a grade higher at the completion of the course.

    In their communiqué, the participants said the course has updated their knowledge on information technology and improved their skills in the area of office management and administration.

    The participants also acknowledged the contributions of the coordinators and facilitators while describing the sessions as lively and interactive. “The facilitators ensured full participation of all participants by engaging them in class discussions, interactive group work, tutorial and continuous assessment.” they said.

    It had 18 participants drawn from various Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs) who went through courses ranging from Computer Fundamentals, Desktop Publishing, Web Technology, Management Information, Use of English, Secretarial and Office Management, Business Mathematics, Business Communication and Microsoft Word.

  • Group seeks intervention in public healthcare

    The Association of Public Health Physicians of Nigeria (APHPH) has called for the improvement of primary healthcare services nationwide.

    The association made the call during its yearly conference with the theme:  Revitalising the grassroots, held at the Lagos Sheraton Hotel, Ikeja.

    Chairman of Lagos State chapter Dr. Oladoyin Odubanjo said primary healthcare services are useful in the treatment of common diseases in communities.

    “When we talk of burden of disease, that is, the kind of diseases and how much of them the people have, you find out that most of them are common diseases that can be treated at the very basic level of treament.That is they don’t require very expensive type of treatment.  That means, if government takes care of the primary healthcare, most people will be healthy, and our general community health outlook will be pleasant’’

    He added that the association is working closely with Lagos State Ministry of Health towards achieving public healthcare service

    “We are working very closely with the Lagos State Ministry of Health which is why we have the commissioner for health here with us but our job is to collaborate with the ministry, offer advice as necessary and support the ministry in achieving very good healthcare delivery especially at the primary care level and that I must say is happening in Lagos State. We are constantly being consulted on issues” he said.

    The keynote speaker, former Minister of Health, Prof Eyitayo Lambo, described public healthcare as the foundation which should not be ignored but made strong. The former minister said: “You have the secondary, the primary and the tertiary. The primary is the foundation, the secondary is like the wall of the building and the tertiary is like the roof which makes the foundation most important because even if you make the roof with gold and the walls with silver and the foundation is weak, the building will fall. Ninety percent of the problems that take people to seek formal healthcare can be taken care of by an effective primary healthcare system but right now people by pass the primary, they even by pass the secondary because its either they are not functional, so if we really must attack and provide and attain universal health coverage, we have to first address the primary healthcare system and make it strong

    “We have a federal system and the constitution or the law has not been enacted to spell out the roles of each of the levels of government as far as health is concerned.  So if somebody says local government is for primary healthcare, state government for secondary healthcare and Federal Government for tertiary healthcare, do ask where it is written. It’s not written anywhere except the first national health policy of 1998.

    “So, until we clearly and the best place to define this in the constitution. I’m not saying the constitution should spell it out fully but at least let the constitution say primary healthcare is largely local government, secondary is largely state, and tertiary is federal because if you don’t spell it out, everybody’s business is nobody’s business and you cannot hold anybody accountable but when you spell it out, then we will know who to hold accountable” Lambo concluded.

    Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Dr Jide Idris, said the state government supports the primary healthcare service and it is working towards making it a better place for healthcare.

    “Lagos State fully supports the primary healthcare system and the core function of that is community mobilisation and there is no way you can have effective primary healthcare service without community involvement of empowerment and I also agree that that aspect has not been fully addressed but it is about time to do so

    “I can’t give you a time limit because we all know the challenges we are facing nationally, one major aspect of that is the behaviour of the people and that was why I said trying to change behaviour is part of empowerment and you can’t change behaviour overnight, it requires constant education and enlightenment ,so I can’t put time on it’’.

  • NLC to workers: prepare to vote out public officers

    NLC to workers: prepare to vote out public officers

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has called on workers to obtain their voter card with a view to voting out anti-labour public officers, who contribute to non-payment of salaries across the states.

    Its President, AyubaWabba, who stated this in Abuja, while reacting to the complaints of non-payment of salaries by local government workers through the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE)President, Ibrahim Khaleel, urged workers to vote out political office holders who oppose minimum wage.

    His words: “We must prepare to vote out governors or any political officer holder, who is refusing to pay us salary. We must continue to lament. We have the power, so we must use it this time. Workers, pensioners and their households, who are in one way or the other suffering the inhumane treatment of non-payment of workers’ wages, must be voted out of office in the next election.”

    He urged unions and workers to unite for a vibrant struggle against oppressive employers, adding: “Every member of the labour movement, irrespective of the union, must understand that it is only in unity that we can achieve our objective.

    “Therefore, we all must in solidarity play our part in order to achieve success. So, commitment, which,  of course, will bring us to working together, is the key.

    “And every leader, no matter the union or association in the labour movement, must consciously see the welfare of its members as very essential in all we do. It is, therefore, important that anytime we have a need for national action, all affiliates must deem it sacrosanct to mobilise their members for such action.”

    Also, Wabba stressed the importance of local government autonomy, saying: ‘’Local government areas are very important to the social-economic welfare of every citizen in Nigeria, because we all come from one LGA or the other. So, granting autonomy to LGA system in the country will in so many ways make things better for us all. In fact, it will pay the political elite a lot if they strengthen development in LGAs. Both influxes of people from rural areas to the urban cities and other vices that accompany rural-urban migration will drastically reduce’’

    Khaleel, who appreciated the leadership of NLC for initiating the familiarisation visits, urged the  the Congress to strengthen its relationship with affiliates and see all of them as important aspects of NLC’s existence.

    He further stressed that capacity building and inclusiveness are crucial in the effort of the NLC to survive the challenges ahead and succeed as an umbrella body of labour movement, which every other union and association should look up to and run to in times of need.

    While he expressed worries about the persistent trend of non-payment of salaries, especially to local government council workers, he said the N6,000 minimum wage, which the Zamfara State Government has continued to pay its workers was worrisome and shameful.

    He then called on the NLC to specifically intervene in cases involving the NLC Chairperson in Ogun State and the state government, and the seizing of Akwa Ibom State’s NULGE chapter’s check-off dues for five months by the state.

  • Lagos, bank recommend new book to public

    Lagos State Government and a commercial bank have recommended a new children book series, the ‘Amazing Adventures of Izi and Larry The Dinosaur’ written by Olusegun Akande, to the general public.

    At the official launch of the new children’s book series, held in Lagos, the Lagos State Deputy Governor, Dr Oluranti Adebule has commended the author, Olusegun Akande for his contribution towards children’s educational development as well as the way he is affecting lives with his knowledge, talent and service to humanity.

    The launch of the new book series titled the ‘Amazing Adventures of Izi and Larry The Dinosaur’ published by Quramo Publishing under its Mango Books imprint took place at the Quintessence, Parkview Estate, Ikoyi.

    The Deputy Governor who was represented by a Director General at the office of Quality Assurance, Ministry of Education, Mrs Ronke Soyombo in her recommendation to parents and general public, said “the book will serve as a good resource for children, parents, guardians, professionals, teachers, principals, students, Librarians and school authorities”. She further encouraged parents and guardians to get copies for their children.

    The author, Olusegun Akande said “the Amazing Adventures of Izi and Larry The Dinosaur tells the story of two very good friends, eight-year-old Izi and magical, flying dinosaur, Larry – who lives in a zoo. Together, they go on wonderful adventures in which Larry teaches Izi about different ethnic groups and cultures; they see the world as a kaleidoscope of many customs and practices held together by tolerance, kindness, and understanding. This unique series comes in a box set of five intriguing stories”.

    Also speaking at the book launch, the Chief Executive of Standard Chartered Bank, Mrs. Bola Adesola said “this is an encouragement to children and a welcome development, because many Nigerian children are being taken abroad at early stages without the knowledge about their country”. Mrs. Adesola said further “schools no longer teach history, but books like these help to teach Nigerian culture, as it is easy to read , fun to understand, and helps children to connect with their culture.

    Segun has done a fantastic job in coming up with this master piece of a book and he should put it on social media such as Amazon, I-books so that children can enjoy the graphics therein”.