Tag: reputation

  • 2019: Character or reputation?

    Sir: One of the hardest things to be in life is a leader. The fate of a leader is the fate of his people. If he leads a group of people in a society, or a large number of people in a country, the consequences of his decisions will be visited upon all his followers equally. Sadly, an irresponsible leader is often the least affected when the consequences of his actions come knocking in menacing forms.

    There is hardly a time when people outgrow their character when given power or elected to a position of power. In fact, the case is usually the unbridled manifestation of their innate self.

    The mistake people make often is to evaluate a would-be leader, or anybody for that matter, on the basis of reputation – not character. And unlike a person’s character, a person’s reputation is the most misleading basis for evaluation. A reputation can be easily created and doctored. A reputation is like an audience-specific movie; it is often created to appeal to people’s convictions, or as is usually the case in politics – public opinion.

    While I understand that there are people who are truly deserving of their reputation, I must also mention that there are more people whose reputations are ephemeral smokescreens. And that is why it always seems as though power changes people. That is untrue. Power does not change people. You just do not know them enough. Or, it is perhaps incredulous for you to see them in their distasteful and acerbic light – wicked and impassable. For when it seems as though leaders change after being elected or chosen to lead, the truth is that they were able to successfully hide their innate self behind the toga of the reputation that was created for them. And that is why the place of character in choosing or electing a leader must be emphatically prioritised.

    Do not get me wrong: other things matter, too, when choosing or electing a leader. But it is more important to always remember that character is a foundational determinant. The character of the man will determine what his reign would look like. His character will determine his policy direction and cabinet makeup. Just like no ideology is formed in isolation of its maker, no leader leads in isolation of his character. So when choosing or electing a leader, there can be no mistake in evaluating him for that which he aspires to become on the basis of his character.

    What’s more, character is very contagious. That is why many leaders become utterly corrosive after being elected or chosen. And when leaders become corrosive, they destroy everything. From the very fabrics of their leadership to the audiences that they lead – nothing is spared in their self-invoked hurricane of destruction.

    Certainly, many instances of character-deficit in leadership abound in today’s Nigeria. For the true test of a leader lies not in his ability to contrive a reputation, but in his ability to embody the truest character required for leadership to thrive.

    Therefore, it is important that the Nigerian electorate prioritise the unravelling of the character of those who are aspiring for the highest office of service in the land, or any office of public service for that matter, in 2019. The reputation of these candidates who are aspiring for political offices can be enticing, but more than that, their character must be stripped bare and deeply understood by all.

     

    • Adebayo Raphael,

    Abuja.

  • Hubris and national pride

    My established reputation that he has done deliberately little to repudiate, President Donald Trump is renown for carrying himself with the ultimate supercilious swagger. In his own eyes, he is the centre of God’s universe around which all other existences must gravitate or otherwise fall off into ignoble oblivion. Actually, as it seems, they pass or fail the test of qualification for survival on his terms.

    When he comes in contact with those other existences as is inevitable under heaven, he readily throws up pejorative labels for persons or groups against whom he runs in, or whose chemistry simply don’t jell with his own. Not that he has much challenge using those labels openly and with defiant sensationalism. But even where such labels occur Freudianly in private conversations, and later on get leaked to pose awkward public relations or diplomatic moments, he typically spares no time for trite niceties of retraction or other forms of remediation. He is The Donald phenomenon, of which there is no other creation faintly peer-matching, isn’t he?

    The American leader has been openly accused of being racist and particularly hubristic towards non-Caucasians, and he hasn’t seemed scantly bothered by that impression. In his own country, for instance, he has been remarkably insular towards the deprivations of people on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico, which by some alchemy of geo-politics happens to be a territory of the United States. Hurricane Maria struck on that island late last year and has left nearly 3,000 residents dead in its wake, going by the latest update on the ensuing toll. The mayor of Puerto Rican capital San Juan, Ms. Carmen Cruz, only last week accused Washington of responsibility for the huge toll, saying: “The Trump administration killed Puerto Ricans with neglect.” And to boot, he has kept his xenophobic bluster unflaggingly at historic levels.

    The latest of the American leader’s hubristic slips was the report early last week that he allegedly confided in some aides that he never again wanted to meet “someone so lifeless” as President Muhammadu Buhari, apparently following from his hosting the Nigerian counterpart in Washington at the close of April, this year. The Financial Times (FT) published the report, citing “three people familiar with the matter” who were not named. The mention of President Buhari in the report was only incidental, though, as FT was basically using the piece to tout a scheduled visit by Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta to the White House last Monday as a fresh opportunity for Africa to wring some concessions out of Trump who has since coming to the American presidency in 2017 been without an agenda for the continent.

    We must momentarily sidestep competing partisan capital that Buhari supporters on one hand, and opposition actors on the other have tried to milk from the FT report (we will shortly return to that issue) and try to unravel possible implications of the alleged utterance for Nigeria’s ties with the Trump presidency. But for a start, it would not do to live in denial that Mr. Trump was misreported. Chances are almost fool-proof that he was not. Even if we discountenance the reputed authority of the reporting medium, namely FT, the alleged statement is vintagely Trumpist, both in essence and by established pattern.

    Apparently owing to the mutual diplomatese that tailed the April outing by visiting Mr. Buhari and host Mr. Trump in Washington, the Nigerian presidency addled last week on what to make of the new report. “I doubt the authenticity of the claim that the President of the USA said that. But if truly he said so, then it is of no significance to us. This is because the same Trump publicly endorsed and applauded the President for a job well done,” Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed was reported saying. Other officials of government who spoke on the matter tagged on that same narrative.

    But let’s just face up to the uncomfortable truth: Trump most likely spoke as was reported. Of course, the hateful slur attributed to him was not the stuff of state policy pronouncements, and that should explain why he couldn’t have taken a press podium to air his gut’s dark workings betrayed by the alleged remark. To that end, it is instructive that neither he nor any American official has risen in swift denial of the FT report. Besides, that the newspaper didn’t identify its sources should not detract from its credibility, because the utterance in issue isn’t exactly the type intended for full-faced spokespersons to put in public domain.

    Should anyone be blindsided by this pattern that is now so familiar anyway? Last January, Mr. Trump was reported to have called out African nations and the southern American states of Haiti and El Salvador as ‘shitholes’ at a meeting in the White House. When the story broke and even his own countrymen deplored the apparent racial bigotry, Trump’s camp only offered tepid prevarications that amounted essentially to no denial. Some four months later when Buhari visited Washington and journalists squared up with Trump at their joint press conference in the Rose Garden, he neither denied nor apologise for the disparaging remark. Actually, he dug in, saying: “The (Nigerian) president knows me and he knows where I’m coming from. And you do have some countries that are in very bad shape and very tough places to live in.”

    But there’s the catch: President Buhari curiously indulged his host. Asked at that press conference about his reaction to Trump’s ‘shithole’ remark, the Nigerian leader parried the question, saying: “I’m not sure about, you know, the validity of whether that allegation against the president is true or not. So the best thing for me is to keep quiet.” Many people felt he missed a golden opportunity to – diplomatically, of course – chide President Trump for his bigotry, being the first African leader to have met the American counterpart in one-on-one encounter since the commencement of his (Trump’s) presidency and following soon after the controversial remark.

    On the heels of that ‘shithole’ report, Nigeria had been stridently mute over the affront whereas some other African countries voiced their outrage. Besides the umbrella African Union (AU) that said Trump’s statement “flies in the face of all accepted behavior and practice,” for instance, Botswana slammed the American leader as “reprehensible and racist,” saying it had summoned the U.S. ambassador to clarify whether Botswana was one of those countries being regarded as ‘shitholes.’ It could well well be that Mr. Trump anticipated some fire along that line, among other things, at the April meeting; in which case his alleged ‘lifeless’ comment says little about reality check and more about his own cynical fancies that were short-fed by the encounter.

    Now, back to politicians. It is a shame that we readily submit our national sovereignty and identity to validation by spurious external standard bearers simply for partisan motives. That is what cheerleaders of the Nigerian president and opposition critics on the sheer basis of Trump’s alleged latest comment have done. A bigger tragedy is that the whole build-up to Buhari’s Washington visit and official narratives thereafter as well signposted this mindset of seeking offshore validation. But if Mr. Trump’s say-so were ever to be the ultimate benchmark, how do we explain his labelling legendary Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein, only last Wednesday, as a “sloppy” and “degenerate fool” who invented stories? That was Trump’s tweeted verdict on the ace journalist over a Bernstein story about his ex-lawyer Michael Cohen that he did not fancy. Bernstein fired back that he has spent his life bringing the truth to light and no “taunt” could diminish that commitment.

    The point here is that we are what we are based on what we really are, for good or for bad, and not what an offshore validator says we are. If political actors seek validation or repudiation, that would come from the true impact of governance on the generality of Nigerians and the verdict of voters at the coming elections.

     

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.

     

  • Leaders, defamation and reputation  

    Tomorrow  is my birthday  and I  dedicate  this piece  to that occasion and  thank  God  for  my   life’s journey so  far  as I share  some of my life experience  in the course  of  today’s  write  up.   Today  however  is  also   the    day  of the governorship  election  in Ekiti  State   and  it  is so  important  to the opposition  PDP party of   outgoing  Governor Ayo  Fayose  that  the party  leadership  has insisted  that  its success  or failure  will  determine  if the 2019  presidential  elections will  take place.  I  take a look at the predicament  of Nigeria’s brilliant  Minister of Finance Kemi  Adeosun  and   compare   my experience  on NYSC ‘exemption’ and insist  that the exemption brouhaha should  not be allowed to derail  a brilliant  career  that  has propelled  economic growth  and development  for  our  nation. I  also   examine  two   foreign  visits by   two global  leaders  and reach  strong  conclusions on their  import  for leadership  values and character  inherent in the backgrounds  of these visits.

    Let  me comment  briefly  on the Ekiti  Governorship  Election   and  note  that  Nigerians  have  a lot  to learn  from  the results, no matter  who  wins.  At  the election  that brought   power   to  outgoing  Governor  Fayose,   the PDP,  his party  was in power in Abuja  and federal  might was unleashed against  the party  of the incumbent  governor then   who   lost  in all  local  governments in the state. Even  a Deputy Minister  of Finance  was on hand and on the ground   in  Ekiti  State to ensure that security  arrangements were  against  the state governor   then  and in  favor  of his opponent. Now  the tide has changed  and  there  was a sorry  picture   in the dailies  of the outgoing governor  mopping his face from tear gas attacks  and claiming a   policeman  had slapped  him. That  to  me is unacceptable   under  the rule   of law.  Yet   it could   be   payback time in terms of federal  might  and there   really    should be no sour grapes  on that  account.  One   could recall  that    the  governorship   candidate  from the ruling party  today   was  defamed and electorally  humiliated  when Fayose  came to power   and  that candidate  literally   lost his reputation  as a politician  of substance in Ekiti  state. In   today’s   election    however, he has federal  might behind him like Fayose  did  at  the election that brought him to power. Will  history  repeat  itself?   Certainly      what  is good  for the goose should  be good for the gander  and I wish  the good people of Ekiti  State  a peaceful election  today   with  the chosen  Governor   from   a free   and fair  election,   having   a good  journey  to the Ekiti  State House  in consonance with the wishes of the Ekiti   State   electorate.

    In  the embarrassing position on   NYSC exemption   certificate that the Minister of Finance has found  herself  I wish  to share  my  experience  on an ‘ exemption’ on NYSC  that  I got without  soliciting for it. I was  due for NYSC  from UNIFE  as  I   was graduating  before 30 years  of age   with  the NYSC  second  set but  when  the list  of postings came my name  was not on the list. My colleagues were furious and accused  me of manipulating the situation  from NYSC Lagos. I was literally  dragged in a sort of posse  by them to  the Registrar’s  Office  where  the   University  official  in charge  showed  them  the list he sent to  Lagos NYSC with my name on it. He  then  promised  my accusers  that he would check  with  Lagos  which  he  did  and I was  posted  to Maiduguri  which  made  my accusers very  happy. Years  later I met  a friend  of mine who  worked  a t the NYSC in Lagos  at the time  who said  he deleted my name  because  he thought  he was  doing me a favour. I  told him  his favour  was  expensive as it  landed me in Maiduguri capital of the then North  Eastern state  from which  six states  were  later created. I  pray  the Minister  of Finance gets  a less expensive break on her  exemption ordeal  as she has served  the nation diligently  on her present  assignment.

    Let  me now  briefly  comment  on the visits  of   both US President Donald  Trump  to  Europe  and  Britain  and that of  French  President Emmanuel   Macron  to  Fela’s Shrine in  Lagos. In  President  Trump’s case  he was visiting old allies  and friends with  who  relations  have cooled  some what   even  though  both  sides  resolved  before  and during  the meetings  that old friends  are better  than  new  and the  Europeans felt defamed  and embittered because Trump  washed their dirty linen in public by accusing them of not living  up to their financial  undertakings on defence contributions   to their mutual  defence in the North Atlantic Treaty  Organisation – NATO. To   me Trump  is the winner  in spite of the European conspiracy to  defame him  as threatening to break  an old alliance  formed  after the Second  World  War  to counter  the threat  of communism  from the former  USSR  and Communist China. Yet  the EU  nations seem  to have bought into the conspiracy  of  Trump’s  opponents  on the US  domestic  scene that  the Russians under President Vladmir  Putin helped Trump  win  the 2016 US presidential  election.  A  claim  that drives  the US   president mad  and has  seen  him  at  loggerheads  with the US  media, the FBI ,the  Democratic  Party  and even  members of the Republican  Party who  have  voiced  any doubts on the authenticity of his election  victory in 2016.

    We  shall  end up with  the visit  of  the French  President  Emmanuel  Macron  to  Fela’s  Shrine in Agidingbi. I  congratulate  the Lagos State Governor Ambode for finding time to  take  him  round  presumably  on account of diplomatic  protocols.

    Otherwise it was a very  childish  visit  for  a president  of a nation like France  to  make. If  the rationale was  to promote culture it was misdirected. Undoubtedly  Fela  was  a music  genius  and his  music  makes  him  immortal.  His  shrine was  however  at Ojuelegba  in  Lagos  and later  Ikeja   where  he was a terror  to families   that  raised small  girls in those  unfortunate  environment.  For a  French  president to visit  Nigeria  and not visit  the states where  herdsmen  slaughtered  innocent  farmers on their  grazing routes  or displaced people in the camps housing  Boko  Haram victims and survivors is  certainly unbelievable as it is unforgivable and one can  only pity  the French  people  for their  present brand  of  leadership .All    the same  –  Vive  la France!.  Once again long live the Federal  Republic  of Nigeria.

  • Amosun, others call for national reputation summit

    Amosun, others call for national reputation summit

    Ogun state Governor Senator Ibikune Amosun and public relations practitioners have called for a national reputation summit.

    They spoke during a colloquium and awards by the Ogun State Chapter of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) at the Olusegun Obasanjo Library, Abeokuta, the state capital.

    The keynote speaker, Mr. Yomi Badejo-Okusanya, who is also the chief executive, CMC Connect Group, noted the political history of Nigeria, analysing the primordial factors that have affected its image and goodwill since independence. He said the nation had suffered serious image problem as a result of the decay in the system, adding that it has denied the country of her pivotal place in the comity of progressive nations.

    Badejo-Okusanya, who is also the Secretary-General, African Public Relations Association (APPRA), identified impunity as the bane of Nigeria’s socio-political and economic development. Nigeria, he said, “has suffered moral bankruptcy as a result of corruption that permeates every facet of our lives.”

    He praised President Muham-madu Buhari for making genuine efforts at eradicating graft and corruption in government.

    He also supported the summit, saying it would create a forum for stakeholders and communications to find solutions to the already battered image of the country.

    The chairman of the colloquium, Prof Lai Osho of the Department of Mass Communications, Lagos State University (LASU), said: “The nation is going through a rebirth in the way we think, the way we do things, and in our attitude.’

    He added that Buhari has brought sanity back to governance.

    Amosun, represented by the Deputy Governor, Mrs Yetunde  Onanuga, praised the Chairman of the state chapter of NIPR, Mr. Tope Adaramola and his executives for creating a platform for cross fertilisation of ideas on how to make Nigeria better.

    He emphasised that the Change mantra of the ruling political party, All Progressives Congress (APC), has been the driver of the successes recorded in two months of the Buhari government.

    He called for attitudinal change among Nigerians to make the Nigerian project work.

     

  • Is Baga visit boosting Jonathan’s reputation?

    Is Baga visit boosting Jonathan’s reputation?

    Faced with declining brand and reputation equity, President Goodluck Jonathan hopped onto an aircraft and headed for Baga, one of the Northeast towns retaken from Boko Haram. Will the visit raise the Commander-in-Chief’s profile? Brand experts are divided on this, writes ADEDEJI ADEMIGBUJI.

    Abrand analyst and blogger, Ugochukwu Ezeagwula, foresaw in his article on January 17, 2012 that by 2015, President Goodluck Jonathan would lose his reputation equity and thwart his party’s chance in for the general election campaign.

    Ezeagwula wrote against the backdrop of Jonathan’s unimaginable share of minds in the 2011 elections victory, especially among the youth whom he captured through the social media. But certain policies, which the President undertook some years ago and their chain reactions appear to have been his Achilles’ heels in the campaign.

    “The implication of this loss of brand equity will definitely reflect in the performance of his political party at the 2015 general elections. Even if Mr President does anything remarkable and tangible to redeem his image within the next three years, it will only take the grace of God, the sheer forgetfulness of Nigerians and the bite of luck that he has experienced all through his life to regain this lost brand equity,” Ezeagwula wrote.

    “A brand that has lost the trust and loyalty of its consumers cannot think that the best way to earn back these key ingredients of its brand equity is to increase the price of its product without improving on its functional attributes. Neither is it sensible to attempt to increase the price of the product before improving on its functional attributes, which is exactly what the Federal Government has done,” he concluded.

    Four years down the line, the brand loyality that gave him huge votes seemed to have dwindled going by a growing dissonance among his brand consumers in some key geo-political zones.

    For instance, Jonathan pulled over 2.7 million share of votes in Southwest as against Buhari’s 321,609 in the same geo-political zones. His dwindled reputation obviously stemmed from the removal of subsidy on January 1, 2012, when Nigerians were in festive moods of Xmas and the New Year. His action led to nationwide protest and made those who voted for him feel betrayed like a consumers, who had parted with money for a product and ended being dissonance.

    The reputation loss was further worsened by the inability of his team to suppress raging insurgency and its attendant bombing. The series of kidnapping of young boys and girls, loss of lives to Boko Haram until the kidnap of the Chibok girls saga dragged the government global perception rating into the red line, prompting world leaders, the media and celebrities to cry out with an # tag BringBackOurGirls.

    However, these issues undoubtedly are making it difficult for the President to a roller-coaster re-election bid this year as predicted by Ezeagwula.

    Two weeks to election, Jonathan’s new military offensive on the insurgents appeared to be shoring his image after the military had been equipped with  more weapons and strategic cooperation with neihgboruing countries such as Chad, Niger and Cameroun to end the militants’ tenancy in  the Sambisa forest.

     

    Will the onslaught reverse Jonathan’s reputation?

    To some of his loyalist, the success being recorded is key to his bid, especially with the postponement of the election, which gives the President an ample time to regain his lost reputation that gave him the seat four years ago. The commendation that came after the military bombardment of the insurgents has been torrential, even from members of the opposition party. Prompted by a motion of urgent national importance moved by Hon. Muhammad Tahir Monguno of All Progressives Congress (APC), Borno State, the House praised the military for its bravery and steadfastness, noting that in the previous months, Boko Haram nearly overrun Borno State.  The tide, according to Monguno, is now turning against the insurgents as a result of the gallantry of the soldiers.

    Also, Jonathan is being scored high by some economic experts. “The truth is that when placed on a dispassionate measurement platform, President Jonathan has recorded more accomplishments than people are willing to give him credits for,” said the Chairman, African Centre for Business Development, Strategy and Innovation, Sam Ohuabunwa, in his article  in a business paper. “In the years Jonathan has been president, our economy has grown between six and seven percent per annum. This is one of the highest growth rates in the world,” Ohuabunwa said.

    Against his renewed efforts to rebuild his reputation, brands and communication experts are divided if the efforts will rejig his brand equity. A top manager at Caritas Communication, a reputation management and brand development agency, Robert Utiko, said the president has regained his reputational equity. “It has helped GEJ regain lost reputational equity. The military has been proactive, posting updates on it successes in the campaign. GEJ has visited the troops on the battlefield to encourage them. GEJ is gradually being projected as a leader, who can take tough decisions,” he said.

    But a Managing Partner at Radi8, a PR agency, Mr. Toni Kan, believed otherwise. “There are many things that can erode a brand. In Jonathan’s case Chibok and Boko Haram have been key brand erosion. So, it follows that winning the war against Boko Haram will help with his brand equity. What the Boko Haram insurgency has done is to show the CEO of Brand Nigeria as an incompetent and incompetence has a negative impact on public perception, which then affects the brand.”

    While the efforts appeared enough to redeem the president’s reputation equity, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer at Ashton&Layton and former communication manager at Cadbury, Mr. Gbenga Adebija, said GEJ renewed positioning has limited gain because the timing is late. “Timing is a critical factor in any brand building initiative and so it is difficult to forsee any significant benefits to the GEJ brand, especially because in the view of major stakeholders, the military onslaught against the insurgents is obviously orchestrated for political reasons.

    “A brand equity is significantly enhanced when it’s objectives are seen as altruistic or at least not so transparently driven by personal motives. Brand GEJ also brought the bells and whistles with the military attire, dark shades and swagger stick, but the dysfunctional timing means limited gains to the brand Jonathan. At best, the Sambisa military initiative provided a platform for GEJ supporters to cheer, but in terms of actually winning over doubters and increasing the number of GEJ brand ambassadors, the benefits are definitely at lilliputian levels,” said Adebija.

    A manager at Hi-Media Network, Mr. Sanjo Oyekan, said it was too late for anyone to judge the result on the president image building effort because this has worked for some personality brand in the political sphere in the past.

    Wether the onslaught will add up and contribute little or nothing to his reputation and brand equity, time will tell on March 28 when the election holds.

  • Is Baga visit boosting Jonathan’s reputation?

    Is Baga visit boosting Jonathan’s reputation?

    Faced with declining brand and reputation equity, President Goodluck Jonathan hopped onto an aircraft and headed for Baga, one of the Northeast towns retaken from Boko Haram. Will the visit raise the Commander-in-Chief’s profile? Brand experts are divided on this, writes ADEDEJI ADEMIGBUJI.

    brand analyst and blogger, Ugochukwu Ezeagwula, foresaw in his article on January 17, 2012 that by 2015, President Goodluck Jonathan would lose his reputation equity and thwart his party’s chance in for the general election campaign.

    Ezeagwula wrote against the backdrop of Jonathan’s unimaginable share of minds in the 2011 elections victory, especially among the youth whom he captured through the social media. But certain policies, which the President undertook some years ago and their chain reactions appear to have been his Achilles’ heels in the campaign.

    “The implication of this loss of brand equity will definitely reflect in the performance of his political party at the 2015 general elections. Even if Mr President does anything remarkable and tangible to redeem his image within the next three years, it will only take the grace of God, the sheer forgetfulness of Nigerians and the bite of luck that he has experienced all through his life to regain this lost brand equity,” Ezeagwula wrote.

    “A brand that has lost the trust and loyalty of its consumers cannot think that the best way to earn back these key ingredients of its brand equity is to increase the price of its product without improving on its functional attributes. Neither is it sensible to attempt to increase the price of the product before improving on its functional attributes, which is exactly what the Federal Government has done,” he concluded.

    Four years down the line, the brand loyality that gave him huge votes seemed to have dwindled going by a growing dissonance among his brand consumers in some key geo-political zones.

    For instance, Jonathan pulled over 2.7 million share of votes in Southwest as against Buhari’s 321,609 in the same geo-political zones. His dwindled reputation obviously stemmed from the removal of subsidy on January 1, 2012, when Nigerians were in festive moods of Xmas and the New Year. His action led to nationwide protest and made those who voted for him feel betrayed like a consumers, who had parted with money for a product and ended being dissonance.

    The reputation loss was further worsened by the inability of his team to suppress raging insurgency and its attendant bombing. The series of kidnapping of young boys and girls, loss of lives to Boko Haram until the kidnap of the Chibok girls saga dragged the government global perception rating into the red line, prompting world leaders, the media and celebrities to cry out with an # tag BringBackOurGirls.

    However, these issues undoubtedly are making it difficult for the President to a roller-coaster re-election bid this year as predicted by Ezeagwula.

    Two weeks to election, Jonathan’s new military offensive on the insurgents appeared to be shoring his image after the military had been equipped with  more weapons and strategic cooperation with neihgboruing countries such as Chad, Niger and Cameroun to end the militants’ tenancy in  the Sambisa forest.

     

    Will the onslaught reverse Jonathan’s reputation?

    To some of his loyalist, the success being recorded is key to his bid, especially with the postponement of the election, which gives the President an ample time to regain his lost reputation that gave him the seat four years ago. The commendation that came after the military bombardment of the insurgents has been torrential, even from members of the opposition party. Prompted by a motion of urgent national importance moved by Hon. Muhammad Tahir Monguno of All Progressives Congress (APC), Borno State, the House praised the military for its bravery and steadfastness, noting that in the previous months, Boko Haram nearly overrun Borno State.  The tide, according to Monguno, is now turning against the insurgents as a result of the gallantry of the soldiers.

    Also, Jonathan is being scored high by some economic experts. “The truth is that when placed on a dispassionate measurement platform, President Jonathan has recorded more accomplishments than people are willing to give him credits for,” said the Chairman, African Centre for Business Development, Strategy and Innovation, Sam Ohuabunwa, in his article  in a business paper. “In the years Jonathan has been president, our economy has grown between six and seven percent per annum. This is one of the highest growth rates in the world,” Ohuabunwa said.

    Against his renewed efforts to rebuild his reputation, brands and communication experts are divided if the efforts will rejig his brand equity. A top manager at Caritas Communication, a reputation management and brand development agency, Robert Utiko, said the president has regained his reputational equity. “It has helped GEJ regain lost reputational equity. The military has been proactive, posting updates on it successes in the campaign. GEJ has visited the troops on the battlefield to encourage them. GEJ is gradually being projected as a leader, who can take tough decisions,” he said.

    But a Managing Partner at Radi8, a PR agency, Mr. Toni Kan, believed otherwise. “There are many things that can erode a brand. In Jonathan’s case Chibok and Boko Haram have been key brand erosion. So, it follows that winning the war against Boko Haram will help with his brand equity. What the Boko Haram insurgency has done is to show the CEO of Brand Nigeria as an incompetent and incompetence has a negative impact on public perception, which then affects the brand.”

    While the efforts appeared enough to redeem the president’s reputation equity, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer at Ashton&Layton and former communication manager at Cadbury, Mr. Gbenga Adebija, said GEJ renewed positioning has limited gain because the timing is late. “Timing is a critical factor in any brand building initiative and so it is difficult to forsee any significant benefits to the GEJ brand, especially because in the view of major stakeholders, the military onslaught against the insurgents is obviously orchestrated for political reasons.

    “A brand equity is significantly enhanced when it’s objectives are seen as altruistic or at least not so transparently driven by personal motives. Brand GEJ also brought the bells and whistles with the military attire, dark shades and swagger stick, but the dysfunctional timing means limited gains to the brand Jonathan. At best, the Sambisa military initiative provided a platform for GEJ supporters to cheer, but in terms of actually winning over doubters and increasing the number of GEJ brand ambassadors, the benefits are definitely at lilliputian levels,” said Adebija.

    A manager at Hi-Media Network, Mr. Sanjo Oyekan, said it was too late for anyone to judge the result on the president image building effort because this has worked for some personality brand in the political sphere in the past.

    Wether the onslaught will add up and contribute little or nothing to his reputation and brand equity, time will tell on March 28 when the election holds.

  • Whose reputation will this PDP not shred?

    Whose reputation will this PDP not shred?

    If Odikanlu knows this much, and still proceeded to advise as he did, it should be quite reasonable to conclude that he deliberately wants the forthcoming elections rigged in favour of both the PDP and President Jonathan who gave him his present job

    The minute ‘Goebbels’ started the campaign for troops deployment I knew that desperation had set in. PDP, at the best of times, is like an asylum of desperadoes even when not facing a make or mar election capable of finally terminating its corruptive tendencies.  Recently, two court judges,  one at the High Court and the other of  the Appellate,  both  well aware of the prevailing security situation in the country, have done justice to their oath of office and the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by declaring  that ‘”even the President of Nigeria has no powers to call on the Nigerian armed forces and to unleash them on peaceful citizens, who are exercising their franchise to elect their leaders, further stressing that “whoever unleashed soldiers on Ekiti State disturbed the peace of the election on June 21, 2014; acted in flagrant breach of the Constitution and flouted the provisions of the Electoral Act, which required an enabling environment by civil authorities in the conduct of elections.” A more courageous Appeal Court should, however, have made the logical consequential order of invalidating the election. But no matter, the judges upheld the dignity of the courts.

    And I salute them.

    Therefore, for anybody, however seemingly well placed, to advise the president to continue in that flagrant illegality is to demonstrate the greatest level of irresponsibility which is why the Nigerian Bar Association must move rapidly to discipline Chidi Odikanlu, Chairman, National Human Rights Commission, and a professor of Law to boot. Or how ludicrous can a professor of Law get advising, not that a decision of court be appealed but that the transgressor should continue in that damnable illegality? I verily believe he had been compromised or hugely compromised himself to vomit that baloney unashamedly on national television. And some questions naturally arise:  Is it possible that Professor Odikanlu has not heard of Ekitigate? Does he, like President Jonathan, consider a tape secretly recorded by a Military Intelligence Officer, a captain – present at the scene – who felt thoroughly humiliated seeing the manner in which bloody civilians were humiliating his Commanding Officer – a Brigadier-General- a fabrication too?  Could it be that those who recruited distinguished international diplomats to underwrite a suspected Memorandum of Understanding have also got him? Can Odikanlu tell the world what proportion of Nigeria is in a civil war?  Where exactly does intellectualism stop and banal ethnic preferences take over?

    And just in case he honestly has not heard about Ekitigate, it is that deployment of soldiers, allegedly on presidential orders, in cahoots with a notorious Igbo election rigger, who came to Ekiti with a huge stash of money withdrawn from the Umuahia branch of the Central Bank of Nigeria, thereby indicating government as the financiers of the electoral heist, as well as photocromic ballot papers. It did not end there, as also present was a group of Yoruba politicians; some currently serving on President Jonathan’s cabinet, and a Brigadier General all for the sole aim of rigging the Ekiti State governorship election for the president’s party.

    If  Odikanlu  knows this much, and still proceeded to advise as he did, it should be quite reasonable to conclude that he deliberately wants the forthcoming elections rigged in favour of both the  PDP and President Jonathan who gave him his present job. I am still at a loss as to why he had to tell Nigerians on national television that he is not a politician, even without being asked.

    ON THESE MERRY-GO-ROUND OVER THE LAST NATIONAL TALKSHOP

     First it was Akure but this past week, the Jonathan Southwest Campaign train, aka PDP’s Afenifere, which it became when the likes of Senator Omisore started attending its meetings, crawled to Ibadan. The way they are going about it, you would think only Yorubas attended the National Conference. In what has become a rare moment of candour, a respected member recently declared the Akure meeting a PDP affair which, of course, Nigerians know too well. Otherwise, can they tell us who is picking the bills? Or can these people, in the name of Oduduwa, swear by the god of iron that they have not been compromised? Already, the Anambra APC has asked Ohaneze to return its own N6.2B bribe delivered in two tranches of N1.2B and N5B. The Yoruba nation is waiting for their response. But by the way, isn’t the promised oil pipeline security contract getting too late in coming? Is this tardiness not a confirmation of how President Jonathan actually holds us in these parts? And by the way, why are these respected elders being herded all over Yoruba land on an issue that is pan-Nigerian, acting like only they attended the conference? Is the Yoruba nation in any way ennobled by this obsequiousness?

    No, I am well aware it took them a whole lot of effort to persuade the number one hater of a National Conference to become its ultimate convener. Of course, only the uninitiated would not have heard that they allegedly wrote the conference’s original memo, got one of its members appointed to jump start it and had the highest number of any group delegation. Didn’t they even attempt to also donate the chairman?

    At their urging, weren’t honest Yoruba leaders like Chief Deji Fasuan and Senator Biyi Durojaiye substituted with pliable characters? All these, and more, we know and you would almost think they are a re-incarnate of the immortal Alao Aka Bashorun whose seminal idea a national conference in Nigeria is. But no matter, a people in need of political shelter will sure lap on to something!  But, again, why has implementing the recommendations of a Pan-Nigerian conference suddenly become their business alone? The answer is simple: it is the only seemingly passable justification for their in-explainable support for an irredeemably corrupt government Awo would never have touched with the longest pole.

    But how come their traditional collaborators are not in on this?

    Are they telling Nigerians that six months is too short for President Jonathan to do anything on the recommendations beyond setting up the Adoke committee to review it but which, in truth, was a deliberate delay tactics? What Nigerians now know is that once the conference failed to produce the expected two extra years for the president, the convener most probably lost all interest.  It is the failure of that promise that made the president distrustful of their promise on Yoruba votes. This also led to last week’s campaign shuttle during which the president re-commissioned a project Obasanjo had commissioned way back 2007 at which Gbenga Daniel was present and smiling broadly. The president, whatever PDP Afenifere may be telling him, knows that he has done nothing to deserve Yoruba votes. He knew he treated the Southwest with utter disdain while simultaneously enabling another geo-political zone to take complete control of Nigeria’s regulatory agencies thereby further pauperising the Yoruba and turning erstwhile controllers of the commanding heights of the economy into hapless, marginal players whose banks were indiscriminately confiscated and their PPP projects illegally and summarily terminated. Shouldn’t President Jonathan have remembered that besides our massive votes for him in 2011, it was the Soyinka’s, the Falana’s and co, who rescued him from the mafia then out to eclipse his political life? Yoruba-friendly, indeed!

    Let me conclude this piece with the wise and timely words of an OduaPathfinder Editorial: ‘When PDP’s Afenifere says it wants the Yoruba to support Jonathan because he will implement the conference recommendations, it is obvious, from the recommendations of the Conference, that Goodluck Jonathan is not in pursuit of “True Federalism” but the strengthening of his presidency contrary to established concepts of Federalism. Hence he must be rejected at the polls. This is the historical imperative for the Yoruba Nation.”

     CONFIRMING PRESIDENT JONATHAN’S ‘IMPRESSIVE’ ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR

     The heavy security attached to Femi Fani-Kayode as he continued defence in his money laundering case at the Federal High court, Lagos, this past week, made up of “five fully armed RIOT policemen and more than four plain clothes security policemen” – all protecting a man on trial for allegedly laundering N100M, must reckon as the most brazen demonstration of President Jonathan’s selective and effete anti-corruption war.

    It is, of course, one more reason CHANGE has become a must, if Nigeria is to survive.

  • Magazine’s report damaged my reputation, Oshiomhole tells court

    GOVERNOR Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State, on Friday, told a High Court sitting in Benin City how a soft-sell magazine, News of the People, published a story which damaged his reputation and plunged his family into agony.

    Testifying in Suit No B/556/2011, against Dockland Communications Limited, publishers of News of the People magazine (1st defendant) and Amzat Loye, Publisher (2nd defendant), Oshiomhole told  the court, presided over by Justice Efe Ikponmwonba, that the magazine deliberately published the fictitious story to impugn his character.

    In a question and answer session with the counsel to the magazine Mr. Yinka Muyiwa, Oshiomhole, who is seeking N250 million damages against the magazine, said one of his brother governors even called him to know if the report was true.

    The session went thus:

    Defendant’s counsel: Your Excellency, Mr Governor, presently you are not married.

    Oshiomhole: Yes.

    Defendant’s counsel: As an unmarried man, you are free to mingle,

    Oshiomhole:  I am a public officer, and as you have rightly pointed out as a governor, what I do or fail to do is important. My character is important and people’s opinion of my personal life is important. My children are still in agony. The magazine published this just a few months after my wife passed away and this publication coincided with my daughter’s wedding. A governor who I invited to the wedding asked me if I was the one going to wed or my daughter. Your image as a public officer is very important.”

    The counsel who asked the governor to show how his character was damaged and if he was referred to as a drug addict in the publication caused the governor to read a portion of the publication thus ‘one wonders if he takes enhancement drugs’. The governor explained to the court that his conclusion and that of many people who called him was that he uses drugs.

    The counsel told the governor that despite the publication he won the election, to which Oshiomhole said: “After this publication, I had very serious family crisis because my children were still in grief over the death of their mother. Yes, I won the election in spite of the publication. The votes could have been more if not for this publication.”

    The magazine had in its report in one of its publications of 2011 used the headline on the front page and page 19, thus: “Oshiomhole’s sex power exposed: Impregnates young girl six months after death of wife”, which the governor found libellous.

    Hearing in the case continues.