Tag: Rawlings

  • United Nigeria Airlines names aircraft after Rawlings, starts Lagos–Accra, Abuja–Accra routes

    United Nigeria Airlines names aircraft after Rawlings, starts Lagos–Accra, Abuja–Accra routes

    In recognition of the Pan-African ideals and influence of former Ghanaian President, Jerry John Rawlings in the integration of West Coast of Africa, Nigeria’s airline – United Nigeria Airlines (UNA) has unveiled an aircraft in his name and announced the commencement of direct commercial flights on the Lagos–Accra and Abuja–Accra routes.

    The Chairman of the airline and a chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Prof. Obiora Okonkwo disclosed this in Abuja during an arrival and departure mock exercise of the route at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja.

    He said the naming of the aircraft after Rawlings aligns with the airline’s commitment to African unity and regional aviation leadership, adding that members of the Rawlings family will attend the formal unveiling ceremony of the aircraft in Accra on Monday.

    The former Anambra governorship aspirant, noted that having created impact in the domestic operation, the new routes is to position the airline as a strong player in the West African aviation industry.

    To actualise this, Okonkwo said that the airline is expanding its fleet with six aircraft over the next few months — a move he said will deepen aviation access within ECOWAS, boost people-to-people exchange, support trade flows and provide Nigerian travellers homegrown options instead of relying almost exclusively on foreign carriers that currently dominate regional routes.

    Expressing confidence on the viability of the new routes, Okonkwo estimated that more than 200,000 passengers fly the Lagos–Accra corridor yearly, stressing that even before UNA’s maiden flight, market response was already visible.

    “Before we announced Accra operations, only one airline was doing Abuja–Accra direct. Just by our entry, fares dropped almost 50 percent. That is the value of Nigerian participation,” he said.

    Read Also: United Nigeria Airlines inks deal for six aircraft purchase

    He also stressed that Nigerian aviation safety standards meet some of the highest benchmarks globally, with pilots re-certifying every six months — compared to the 12-month cycle in Europe and the United States.

    However, he expressed concern over Nigeria’s heavy aviation tax structure, describing the country as “one of the most over-taxed aviation jurisdictions in Africa”. While Ghana’s passenger service charge at international terminals is $60, Nigeria’s stands at $100. On a Lagos–Accra return ticket, he said, taxes alone can exceed $116 before other surcharges, creating high fares that passengers regularly complain about.

    Okonkwo then urged government to reduce tax pressures and provide single-window aviation financing to accelerate growth. “There is no trillion-dollar economy without flight connectivity,” he said. “Aviation is the enabler — if people cannot move, commerce cannot expand.”

  • Re: Rawlings and Abacha’s blood money

    As one who spent his early years in Ghana in the period prior to and during J.J. Rawlings’ first coming, I’m of the generation that idolised him, not just for his revolutionary fervor but also for his commitment to return power to the people. Therefore, I feel a profound sadness at the truth you have highlighted in your lovely piece. For me, it simply conveys the truth of Abraham Lincoln’s assertion that ‘No man is good enough, or wise enough, to rule his fellow man without his consent.’

    Austin Inyang

    I was at the Ground House reception in Night Shift Colliseum where Ken Calebs Olumese hosted Rawlings some years ago. Rawlings made a fantastic speech but when he spoke about Nigerian Corruption I felt ashamed but told my friend that Nigeria and Nigerians deserved the opprobrium the Former President and Head of State poured on us that night. Movers and shakers of business and politics of Nigeria were seated and indeed wined and dined with Rawlings and his family that night. His daughter even took the mic and sang with the band of Sunny Nneji. Little did I know the very same Rawlings had been a beneficiary of the corruption he so rubbed on Nigeria’s face. And the beautiful daughter and wife didn’t know their murderer-dad and husband was a very black pot calling the kettle black! I read the disgraceful interview in The Guardian. And I wept. When he referred to Ayi Kwei Armah’s “The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born”, his five fingers were inexorably pointing at himself and the fact that he spoke as if he did not know that the joke was on him was more pathetic. I had thought Rawlings was a fallen angel, but I have just realized he is a shameless hypocrite! At the Colliseum that night at Ikeja, our very own Reuben Abati was the Master of Ceremony and he acquitted himself the way only himself knows best to do. I am expecting his take on this disgraceful interview that Rawlings wanted to use to launder his image but which has backfired so badly like a faulty dynamite belt on a misguided suicide-bomber. An area for further intellectual analysis by the media and forensic exploration by EFCC is the gamut of un-receipted transactions of presidential colouration which should span a few regimes backward than the present circumscribed horizon. It is very interesting to know that there are some special messenger jobs in Nigeria where 60% of largesse is kept by the messengers while the designated recipient gets 40% and the transaction is recorded as 100% delivered! That’s what the $5m sent Rawlings but $2m delivered means. Don’t ask me. If you asked me, because “I no know book o.”

    Austin Isikhuemen

    The new world order is a continuous process, hence the emergence of the calibre of Mrs. Catherine Agba and Mrs. Yemi Keri (YK). We should not be waiting till after their death before appreciating the golden ones, especially the ladies. A writer recently asked, “How distinguished are our Senators?” Mrs. Agba and Keri are really distinguished Nigerians. Not like our distinguished treasury-looters. Edo State or Nigeria should lure their likes into service in order to rekindle our ailing institutions and not into politics to be corrupted. Brexit must have been divinely ordered for quiet women’s revolution. From Merkel to May to Hillary. “Male and female, He created them” (Gen. 1:27). “then God blessed them.”

    Elder L. O. David, Econ Alaaye, Ekiti: 08059096244

  • Rawlings and Abacha’s blood money

    Like a witch undergoing the last purgation at death’s door, J J Rawlings’ tongue dramatically came unhinged last week in a fit of abominable rant, thereby diminishing whatever remained of his moral capital as possible hero of post-colonial Africa. He granted an exclusive interview to The Guardian published last Sunday. But by dabbling in the Nigerian affair in a manner that exposes shallow understanding of the nation’s history and greed for dollars, the man once fondly called “Junior Jesus” only succeeded in giving himself away as perhaps the ultimate political Judas.

    In retrospect, regardless of his canonization in the 80s and 90s in some quarters, there remains some murky aspects of Rawlings’ twenty-year reign in Ghana that the tide of history simply cannot sweep out of human memory. True, his political career – first as military lawgiver and later an elected president – was remarkable in populism. But beside that also is the tale of mass murder and impunity. Hundreds of opposition figures including outspoken journalists and independent-minded Supreme Court judges were assassinated or disappeared.

    Sadly, their unresolved cases are now more or less classified as part of Ghana’s political folklore. What all of this then fed in turn over the years was Rawlings’ sense of impunity. The underlying narcissist complex was very much on display in The Guardian interview under reference where he tried, though in futility, to rehabilitate the tainted memory of his benefactor and Nigerian dictator, Sani Abacha, whom he presented in flattering terms as “one hell of a nationalist and very patriotic” who “saved the country”.

    But when Rawlings chooses to speak so loftily of otherwise discredited Abacha, ascribing to him more or less the toga of a messiah, even after it had become public knowledge that he once received $2m ($5m?) bribe from the Nigerian despot, the joke is actually on the former Ghanaian president. At the last count, what Abacha stole and stashed away in foreign vaults was conservatively put at $5b. Now, all that the three former heads of state of Ghana were accused of embezzling and for which they were in 1979 summarily “sprayed like mosquitoes”, to borrow Rawlings’ own euphemism, is not up to five percent of Abacha’s loot.

    The eight top military officers Rawlings had executed in the great purge of 1979 without fair trial included Rear Admiral Amedume and General Roger Felli whose only crime was leveraging their official status to take bank loan! But the great Rawlings who often boiled in rage with blood-shot eyes at the mention of corruption while in power suddenly began to act funny few years ago when one of his political disciples, Tsikata Tsikata, was jailed by a succeeding administration over impropriety reportedly costing Ghanaian taxpayers a fortune. In a fit of anger, he sent invitations to journalists to a world press conference to lambast the executive and the judiciary for their temerity. Only for the session to be called off suddenly before the scheduled take-off.

    The story is told that Rawlings was tipped off that some of the journalists came armed with a mischievous question: whether he ever heard of the old story of eight officers killed in 1979 over alleged corruption. Of course, in a way, the leaking in 1998 of Abacha’s multi-million dollar bribe to Rawlings had confirmed the misuse and abuse of the nation’s resources in the deluded pursuit of influence or favour. By Rawlings’ confession, the donation was unsolicited. All he saw was a car pulling up and someone attempting to drag out a suitcase laden with dollars, right there in the open in Accra. Out of public decency, he reportedly waved the guy to hold it.

    He saved his next word till they had walked to a discreet corner. When he finally confronted Abacha’s emissary who he identified in The Guardian interview as Ismaila Gwarzo (then National Security Adviser) and described as “noble, quiet-looking, respectable-looking”, Rawlings claimed he was told the largesse was from Abacha. (With another NSA currently embroiled in the scandal of sharing $15b arms funds, we now know the seeds of infamy were sown in that office long ago.) NOW, listen to the sleazy words addressed to Gwarzo by the sitting president of a whole nation after apparently losing selfinhibition at the sight of mint-fresh dollars, sounding more like the would-be receiver of a stolen valuable weighing the risk: “I hear you people don’t provide assistance without the world hearing it with a twist.

    ” Then, he added: “Don’t think that when you bring this, whatever it is, that would shut me up from criticizing if I think you are wrong, or if I disagree”. To this “conditionality”, Rawlings quoted Gwarzo as retorting: “Sir, we need you more than you need us.” Well, the visiting NSA could not be more forthright. Abacha’s dollars was to buy the conscience of Rawlings and other African leaders as tyranny deepened in Nigeria. Against that backdrop, it then becomes easier now to situate the conspiracy of silence among the nation’s neighbours in the west coast and indeed across the African continent while sheer terror was being unleashed on the opposition in those dark days.

    Three kinds of fate awaited dissents then: grave, gulag or exile. Ostracized by the civilized countries over the June 12 crisis, the diminutive tyrant holed up in Abuja now sought to, in Wole Soyinka’s words, bring Nigeria down to his level. Under Abacha, Nigeria resorted to the company of fellow political reprobates. Abuja simply became the preferred destination of other dictators on the continent as well as political scoundrels and scavengers looking for what to eat under the guise “solidarity visits”. As the Rawlings’ testimony has revealed, there was an unending flow of suitcases of dollars as honorarium. Only a few like Nelson Mandela refused to be bought into turning a blind eye on the unspeakable evil unfolding in Nigeria then. Initially, Mandela’s attitude to Abuja was that of critical solidarity against western “meddlesomeness”, naively assuming a uniquely African solution could be found.

    By the time playwright Ken Saro-Wiwa, alongside eight others, was hanged after a sham trial on November 10, 1995, the South African hero finally realized he was dealing with a demon. Henceforth, he related to Abacha in that light. But the spell of dollars and the prospects of more briefcases would seem too overwhelming for the likes of Rawlings then to stand straight and speak in clear and unmistakable terms against the atrocities in Nigeria. And the free dollars from Nigeria would probably have gone unacknowledged publicly had Abacha not ended the way he did. When Gwarzo was held to account for the billions that had passed his hands under the guise of securing “national security”, he listed, among others, that Rawlings, yes the same revolutionarily incorruptible JJ, had quietly benefitted to the tune of $5m. Of course, the man so implicated was doubly discomfited. On top of the shame of being exposed would seem deep anger at being swindled. As Rawlings insisted in the interview, the amount counted in the briefcase Gwarzo handed him was actually $2m, not the $5m documented in Abuja.

    But Rawlings’ thunderous denunciation of corruption today would have made more sense had he taken a step further to furnish us with the details of how the $2m received was utilized for Ghana’s direct benefit to demonstrate the transparency he is ever quick to evangelize about. For instance, after Abacha’s courier departed, was the entire cash declared or partly to Ghana’s exchequer? How was it recorded: “unsolicited foreign aid”? “Stomach infrastructure” from Nigeria or – to ensure some confidentiality – simply a kind neighbour? These were the simple – yet critical – details the self-assigned anti-corruption warrior of Ghana conveniently chose to deny us. Perhaps, the dollars Rawlings collected could still have been justified as a fair price for his silence had the verbal diarrhea that permeated the entire interview not also led him into making a more colossal gaffe on MKO. Who, other than a psychopath with warped values, could have spoken so callously of the memory of MKO in the manner Rawlings did? Hear him again:

    “Some may not want to hear it. But the departure of that gentleman called (MKO) Abiola, the one who passed away, saved Nigeria from a probable explosion.” There are a few inferences to be made from the foregoing statement. An endorsement of the popularly held – though clinically unproven – notion that Abiola was willfully “murdered” via a cup of poisoned tea with a view to forcing a closure to the June 12 conundrum. Well, shedding the blood of the innocent may not mean much to a depraved dictator like Rawlings whose hands are still wet till date with the blood of three of his predecessors summarily executed in 1979. But rejoicing at MKO’s “departure” as the former Ghanaian leader did is to misread the historic portents of June 12, the cause of which he was unwilling to compromise.

    It was adjudged the fairest and freest poll in Nigeria’s electoral history at the time. Besides, in one single day, the nation’s age-old fault-lines of religion and ethnicity were miraculously healed. MKO, a southerner, defeated his challenger, Othman Tofa, in his native Kano in the north. The Muslim-Muslim ticket also broke the sectarian barrier by winning massively in predominantly Christian South-South and of South-East. These historic gains were sadly allowed to waste by treacherous Ibrahim Babangida and his perfidious apologists. Indeed, those unconscionable acts of yesterday partly explain the monumental mess Nigeria finds herself today. By the way, one hopes President Buhari would not succumb to the emotional blackmail in Rawlings’ effusive praise of him in that interview. Perhaps, it is time to renew the bid initiated in 1998. Upon discovery of the nocturnal payment that year, then head of state, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, had politely asked Rawlings to refund. A request he never dignified with even a reply.

    Now, with the receiver openly admitting collecting $2m from Abacha, it would not be out of place to ask EFCC to explore diplomatic means to ensure Rawlings made a refund in the spirit of the chastity the man himself speaks so passionately about today.

  • Obi, Rawlings, Asobie flay corruption in Nigeria

    Former Ghana President Jerry Rawlings, Anambra State governor, Mr. Peter Obi and former President of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Professor Asisi Asobie, have condemned the level of corruption in Nigeria.

    The trio spoke yesterday at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Anambra State during the 2nd Zik’s Annual Lecture series of the Faculty of Social Sciences (FSS).

    The speakers also extolled the qualities of the former Nigerian President, late Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, whose name the institution was named after

    Rawlings, who was the Guest Lecturer, likewise Asobie, narrated how he assumed power in Ghana, adding that if he had not done what he did by eliminating some corrupt persons, Ghana would not have been where it is today.

    “I struck in a coup in my country because of the sufferings and humiliation of my people to save them from the hands of evil doers and I have no regrets whatsoever.”

    According to Rawlings, “Corruption arises from a state of deviation from the moral or spiritual norms; it is a deliberate refusal to operate based on set rules, regulations and laws and with a wicked, if not evil desire to circumvent the punitive actions that come with such deliberate deviant actions. Corruption manifests itself in many ways.”

    “Corrupt practices include undue influence for selfish benefit. With respect to governance, from where the greatest power flows, this largely refers to improper interference with the freedom and integrity of several facets of governance in the form of bribery, coercion and intimidation. The end result is always impairment of the integrity of a political process.”

    According to Governor Peter Obi, everybody in Nigeria was guilty of corruption, adding that it kills professionalism and hard work.

    His words: “Corruption should be blamed on everybody, we are all guilty of it, we are all corrupt, I am no longer fighting corruption but the greed in the system because, there are so many tollgates in Nigeria.”

    Furthermore, Obi said corruption ruins everything, adding that there was so much distortion that led to corruption. He said fighting corruption was a challenge for everybody in the country.

    Former President of ASUU, Prof Asobie, stated that the country was fighting corruption by enacting laws and creating various forms of commissions without implementation.

    “Corruption has become a very important point because, it is the greatest obstacle to development of any country. There is growth without development in the land.

    “There was corruption under Nnamdi Azikiwe and Abubarka Tafawa Balewa and abuse of office, but Nigeria was relatively clean and not endemic like what we have today. They were guided by values of merit, impartiality and reward.

  • Rawlings’ wife not left out

    GHANA’S first democratically elected President Jerry John Rawlings and his wife, Nana Konadu Agyeman was duly invited to attend the inauguration.

    The former First Lady had resigned from the NDC and became the presidential candidate of the National Democratic Party (NDP). The party failed to contest the 2012 Presidential elections due to her failure to meet the Electoral Commission’s deadline for submission of nomination forms. She was subsequently disqualified.

    On several occasions, Mrs. Rawlings urged the electorate to vote out her former party, the NDC, because it failed to transform the nation.

    She also backed a free SHS policy, which the opposition NPP was championing.

    So, only a few expected her at the Black Star Square, venue of yesterday’ inauguration.

    Decked in her trademark – Ghanaian mode of dressing, Mrs. Rawlings attended the inauguration and radiated all through, throwing banters when necessary and exchanging pleasantries.