Tag: rich

  • The rich to subsidise health in Anambra

    The rich to subsidise health in Anambra

    Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano has said a new health scheme is underway in the state under which the rich will offset part of the medical bills of the poor.

    It was also stated that a category of Anambra people including prisoners will not have to pay for their hospital bills under the scheme.

    Governor Obiano announced this during a pontifical High Mass to mark the 62nd birthday of the Catholic Archbishop of Onitsha Ecclesiastical Province, Most Rev Valerian Okeke at the Onitsha Prisons.

    Addressing the inmates and dignitaries who joined the Archbishop for Mass at the prisons, Governor Obiano said that his government is aware of the health challenges facing the prisoners and is making frantic efforts to ameliorate them while presenting drugs, toiletries, bottled water and a cash donation of 400 thousand naira to the inmates.

    The State Health Insurance Scheme is organised to enable people who work to contribute for health delivery according to their capability into a pool of funds. It is expected that the pool of money will enable government take care of the health needs of those who have and those unable to cater for most of their health needs. The arrangement is seen as a welcome development for citizens, the state and workers who have not been able to take advantage of the National Health Insurance Scheme.

    Most of the inmates are among the 760 awaiting trial. The governor urged the inmates to see their stay in prison as an avenue through which they would ponder over their lives both present and future and utilise theopportunity to reposition themselves.

    Earlier in his homily, the celebrant Most Rev. Valerian Okeke expressed appreciation to the governor for supporting the prison inmates, describing him as the most prisoner-friendly governor so farin the history of the state. The Archbishop reminded the prisoners not to see their situation as the end of the world but to utilise it to the glory of God. Archbishop Okeke announced that the Archdiocese would within three years construct a modest skill acquisition center in the prisons to allow them use their time gainfully.

    Most Rev Okeke promised to give the inmates a live cow in addition to bags of rice. He brought with him cooked rice, toiletries, and biscuits among other items for the celebration, and later toured the cells with governor Obiano which he explained the Archdiocese had  tiled and fixed ceiling fans and sunk boreholes to supply water to all the cells.

    Also in his vote of thanks, the Auxiliary Bishop of Onitsha Archdiocese Most Rev Dennis Isiuzo regretted that the inmates are mostly young and thanked the governor for not only arranging for the Skills acquisition training and re-integration of the 25 inmates he granted amnesty but also the promise to give them one  million Naira each to start life anew. Most rev Isiuzo said a good state is measured by how the poor and down trodden are treated for which Anambra is rated high.

    Earlier, the comptroller of prisons Mr. Anthony Ubaike, and the deputy comptroller Onitsha prison Mr. Alex Oditah recalled that Governor Obiano is the only governor that visited and granted amnesty to 25 inmates, and gave them soft landing with cash and skill acquisition.

    The highpoints of the event were the cutting of the birthday cake and a novelty football match with the inmates.

  • Is the president rich or poor?

    The furor elicited by President Muhammadu Buhari’s refusal to promptly declare his assets upon his ascendency to power has now been consigned to garbage bin. A snippet of the Buhari and Osibanjo asset declaration form, as released on September 4 by Femi Adesina, the presidential spokesman, jolted us from our reverie. As it has become synonymous with PMB’s shrewd tactics of governance, he patiently waited till the eve of his 100 days in office to prove cynics wrong.

    Let us say Mr. President became oblivious of his campaign promise to quickly declare his assets due to the exigencies of office. Why didn’t Shehu Garba and Adesina, his image-makers who have his ears, advise him? Established, he had his plate full as the nation’s helmsman. However, he ought to know that campaign promises are not items that undergo mutation at various periods. I am categorically sure that the greatest undoing of former president Goodluck Jonathan’s administration is its penchant for broken promises. The former President’s “transformation team’’ innovated, canonized and entrenched the culture of broken promises. And we just hope this presidency will draw a moral lesson from President Jonathan’s misfortune.

    It is with nostalgia I remember President Umaru Musa Yar’adua of blessed memory. It is fascinating to recall how the late president declared his assets without the slightest agitation and drama. Barely less than a month in office in June 2007, he declared his assets to the consternation of Nigerians.  It is no conjecture to state that he was unconsciously carving a reputation for integrity and by extension, engraved his name in the tombstone of time. Little wonder, he was celebrated as a shining example of sincerity by prominent world leaders after his demise.

    Without prejudice, PMB by declaring his asset too, absolutely fulfilled a covenant which resonates with his gospel of a transparent and truly democratic government.  Although, it came at a time when our patience had been massively tested. Yet it is heart-warming that he finally did. No doubt, President Buhari and Senator Shehu Sani who represents Kaduna Central Senatorial District are perhaps the only genuine progressives amongst their peers. While other pseudo-progressives could not act in tandem with their reformist philosophy, this duo exhibited raw courage in making their assets publicly known to the Nigerian public. That’s the spirit of democracy. But beyond commendations, there is the fundamental need for us to painstakingly analyse Buhari’s properties. By so doing, the claim that he his affluent would be better understood. However, let me give a caveat. This writer is not doing the bidding of any paymaster. To put it harshly, my conscience is not an auctioning material. And for the benefit of hindsight, the following is the abridged details of Mr. President’s assets.

    He has less than N30 million to his name. Buhari has a single account with Union Bank and no foreign account. He owns neither a registered company, factory nor oil blocs.  Among his assets are five houses, a farm, orchard and a cattle ranch. In his farmstead are 270 cattle, 25 sheep, five horses, some economic trees and a variety of birds. Again, he is a proud holder of some exotic cars. To be frank, the list appears modest. But regrettably, it belies the assets expected of an archetypal Nigerian president. A typical Nigerian president ordinarily should be richer than what Buhari puts to our face.

    While our erstwhile leaders are yet to become international billionaires, they’ve stamped their authorities in the continent with stinking wealth. Without prejudice, an international magazine once credited former President Jonathan to be the richest African leader. That was in the age of unbridled stealing from our collective vault. Now, one does not need to consult the oracle to affirm the modest acquisitions status of Buhari compared with other flamboyant African leaders.

    I make bold to state that Buhari’s asset declaration is a conundrum. This is so, because it defies not only logic, but philosophy. The declaration even by a scintilla was not revelatory. Rather, it was an issue which defied our understanding of the worth of political leaders. At the risk of being sentimental, Yar’adua’s declaration was far, and far more credible than Buhari’s. Why? Because it did not give us a ‘take home assignment’ to figure out the monetary worth of his houses, cars, livestock, etc. It was explicit in disclosing the net worth of his assets.

    At this moment, it is pertinent to ask some questions. Can someone who allegedly collected bond to purchase his presidential nomination form become a millionaire upon his inauguration as President? What do you make of a person with five luxurious houses in choice locations? Perhaps, how much do you think the properties may be worth? If one has to pay through his nose to procure a parcel of land in your hamlet, then imagine what it would be in mega cities like Port Harcourt and Kano? These are places where President Buhari has undeveloped lands. And, is Buhari’s farm not a commercial venture? If yes, what are its annual proceeds? What about his cars? Just how many are they and probably their monetary value? I am sure the federal government’s juicy packages for previous leaders have not been abolished. So, how much has PMB’s share accumulated in 30 years? How much does his shares in Union Bank worth? Naturally, his spin doctors may wish to clarify this. But does it matter?

    Now, the line has been drawn. The masses have independently formed their opinions. And not a few are cynical about PMB’s assets declaration. They may not be able to hazard a pin-point guess, but they stubbornly believed that Mr. President may not be living a Spartan life, after all. While their arithmetic instinct may be warped, it’s obvious they scored an ‘A’ by concluding that PMB is perhaps, wealthy too. At the risk of appearing sarcastic, most of them wish they are as poor as Mr. President. To be candid, there is need for Mr. President to be forthright in his policy statements. To be otherwise would be a great disservice to the entire nation.

    The Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President, Adesina, had assured Nigerians that copies of the declaration forms would be made public after the Code of Conduct Bureau are through with their statutory scrutiny. I think that is another golden opportunity awaiting the presidency to right the wrong of their gaffe. Until that is done, we consent that Buhari is not a wealthy President. But can we conclude that President Buhari is a broke Nigerian?

     

    • Mahmud, 200-Level Mass Comm., FLACLGS Minna

     

  • Buhari to IG: prune police attached to the rich

    Buhari to IG: prune police attached to the rich

    •PSC: police have 19,500 personnel shortfall

    President  Muhammadu Buhari has ordered the Inspector-General of Police, Solomon Arase, to reduce the policemen attached to rich individuals.

    The order was given when the President met with Arase, Chairman of the Police Service Commission (PSC) Mike Okiro  and the Permanent Secretary of the Police Affairs Ministry, James Obiegbu.

    “You must ensure that the recruitment process is transparent. Those who will conduct the recruitment must be above board. It should not be heard that they receive gratification or extort money from those who want to enlist in the police,” Femi Adesina, special adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, quoted President Buhari as saying.

    On the stagnation of policemen on same rank for many years, the President counselled the Police Service Commission to review the structure of the police and make recommendations on how the problem could be solved to boost the morale of policemen.

    Speaking with State House correspondents after the meeting, Okiro said there had been a deficiency of about 19,500 policemen since 2010.

    Besides the 10,000 recently approved for recruitment by  President Buhari, Okiro said only 1,500 officers had been replaced of the 21,000 deficiency since 2010.

    He said: “We thought about recruitment of police officers. Over the years, more than 21,000 police officers had retired; some dismissed, some died between 2010 and today. Of this, only about 1,500 were replaced.

    “So we discussed this with Mr. President. Of course, you are aware that a few days ago, Mr. President said the police are going to recruit 10,000.

    “We discussed with him on modalities and how to ensure that the 10,000 people are recruited to maintain security.”

    On how soon the recruitment would start, he said certain procedures and guidelines must first be put in place.

    Speaking on the meeting with the President, he said: “We, permanent secretary of Police Affairs, chairman of Police Service Commission and the Inspector General of Police with their members and management staff, briefed the President on the needs and challenges, success recorded and things to be done to ensure that security is maintained.

    Asked about any specific di rective from the President, he said: “Of course, he has given us assurance that the police will be encouraged, will be funded, will be equipped within the provisions of the budget to make sure Nigerians are provided with adequate security.”

    According to him, the issue of pension for retired officers were not discussed with the President.

    The Permanent Secretary, James Obiegbu, said the President was interested in the welfare of officers.

    He said: “He was interested in the issues concerning their emotions, issues concerning their placing, he was concerned with everything that concerns them.”

    He said Buhari had promised to continue to support the police family with the challenges of funding facing the force.

    “Issues about funding of the police is something that has been on the front burner because it requires a lot of funding and not something the government can do alone.

    “There can never be a specific amount for the police to function effectively. If you know what it takes to keep patrol all over the country, keep vehicles and men on the road, you will have an idea of how funding requirements of police can be.”

  • The lazy rich

    • The published names of debtors reflects a country that rewards the laggard and punishes the worker

    The nation waited, and when the news broke we did not cheer. The Central Bank of Nigeria gave an August 1 deadline for all banks to publish the names of bank debtors and the amount of their indebtedness. Many of them have complied and at the time of writing, the total amount of indebtedness was over N143 billion.

    Some of the names were prominent.  Such names as Isyaku Rabiu, Helene Esuene, Lanre Tejuoso, Hope Uzodinma, Samaila Sambawa, Sayyu Dantata, Emeka Offor were a fraction of the long lists of debtors. Directors of companies were also included. One of the names mentioned was Abike Dabiri-Erewa. The other was Dayo Adeyeye.  But their assertions that they did not know that company and owed no one have not been countered by their banks.

    We hope all due diligence was carried out in releasing the names, and nobody has been unduly exposed. Other than the two denials, we have not had any denials at the time of writing.

    The following financial institutions have published debtor names at the time of writing this article. They include Sterling Bank, Guaranty Trust bank, Zenith Bank, Fidelity Bank, Union Bank, Skye Bank, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Heritage Bank,  First City Monument Bank, Eco Bank, First Bank, Enterprise Bank, Access Bank, Diamond Bank and Unity Bank.

    Before the deadline, reports were rife of debtors who rushed to the banks to update their accounts so as to avoid the disgrace of seeing their names published. All debtors had till July 31 as grace period to reconcile their accounts with their respective banks. The banks were also required to publish the debtor lists in at least three newspapers.

    This is not the first time we have had this sort of exposure. It happened under the tenure of the former CBN governor, Lamido Sanusi, who is now the Emir of Kano. When he rolled out the names of the debtors, Nigerians gasped for air.

    The situation is no different today. The money owed by these individuals does not belong to them, but the majority of the toiling millions of Nigerians. They deposited their money in the banks on the basis of trust. But a certain sense of entitlement has prodded the debtors to see the money in proprietary terms. They loaned billions of Naira, used it for their own purposes and failed to service the loans. Some owed as much as N6 billion. This is not only irresponsible, but also callous.

    If the CBN and the federal government did not view this indebtedness with extreme prejudice, these persons would cart away our patrimony, furnish their lifestyles of decadence, and turn these loans into bad debts in the event of their deaths.

    This sort indulgence only thrives when the political society does not respect the values of honesty and accountability and allows a few to fatten on the miseries of the majority. They have always worked with the bank executives in making the banks cesspits of corruption.

    The point often made is that corruption in the political class is not possible without complicity of bank chief executives. But rarely have the names of the CEOs of banks been penciled down for collaboration with the business and political elites in the fleecing of the nation.

    The other tragedy is that these debtors parade themselves as role models not only in character but also in business. They are failed entrepreneurs perceived to run enterprises well.

    All debtors should be compelled to pay back their loans or face the severe penalties of the law.

  • Making the rich pay

    Making the rich pay

    •New FG regulations will charge private jet owners and priority air travellers

    In view of the prevailing financial crisis owing, first, to the mismanagement of the nation’s economy, and, second, to the slump in crude oil prices, the Federal Government has woken up to its responsibility of making wealthy  Nigerians pay taxes for the luxury they enjoy. Under the new dispensation meant to generate money, the Federal Government is expected to earn about N37.9bn annually from luxury tax to be imposed on private jet owners. This measure is also extended to air travellers in first class and business class passengers of aircraft.

    In order to increase its revenue profile, the Federal Government had, in April, 2015 announced, through its minister of finance, that all local owners of foreign and private jets in the country would pay a surcharge of N3,200 per kilogramme on the weight of each aircraft annually. From the increasing foreign travels by Nigerians, all first class and business class passengers would pay a flat rate of N15, 000 each as surcharge for overseas trip.

    This means that on the Lagos-London route, economy tickets sell currently for between N220,000 as the summer approaches; business class tickets sell for between N850,000 and N1.2m, and first class tickets sell for between N2.5m and N3.5m depending on the airline. On private jets, it is estimated that all private jet owners in the country will pay an approximate of N7.9bn on luxury tax annually, while overseas passengers travelling in first class and business cabins will pay about  N30bn as travel surcharge adding up to N37.9bn (approximately N38bn) from air travel sub sector. According to available statistics from the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, there are over 190 local and foreign private jets in the country as of today.

    This is a good, even if belated move by the Federal Government. In many countries, wealthy people pay, sometimes through their nose, for the luxury they enjoy. With the country’s economy in dire straits, and about $60bn debt left for the incoming Muhammadu Buhari administration, the government surely needs a lot of money now. In this regard, we expect the Federal Government to be more creative in getting money from wealthy Nigerians who hardly pay correct taxes on their investment on landed properties, especially luxury buildings that dot our major cities. We should not forget individuals who own yachts, speedboats, polo grounds, golf fields and similar luxury items. They too should pay something into government’s coffers.

    Be all these as they may, we warn that no amount of taxes generated from oil and tax on all luxury items will solve our financial problem unless the Federal Government has the political will to block all the leakages that lend themselves to corruption. We all know that the country has made a lot of money from excess crude oil earnings over the years, yet the country is broke as a result of corruption.

    The bottom line, therefore, is for the Federal Government to tame corruption in all areas of our economy, bring more people who presently evade tax into the tax net because tax is an important revenue generation platform. Above all, the government must be ready to pay more than lip service to diversification of sources of revenue generation, apart from crude oil.

     

  • 2015: Jonathan, Buhari, the Rich and the poor (7)

    Under intense pressure from many fronts last Saturday, Prof. Atahiru Jega’s Independent National Election Commission (INEC) postponed the Presidential election from February 14 to March 26. That is a whopping 40 days ample leg room for President Jonathan and the PDP which can make or unmake the success chances of many politicians. President Ebere Jonathan, rated far behind challenger Gen. Mohammadu Buhari (rtd), should heave a sigh of relief and clink champing glasses with his backers in the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP). In the All Progressives Congress (APC) there may have been a momentary grave yard silence. Gen. Mohammadu Buhari (rtd), tipped he win the polls, may have lapsed into a swoon. To start with, the PDP has enough money to foot another round of campaigns over 40 days which the APC cannot afford. For the first campaigns, PDP raised about N25 billion from only about four of its members. Gen. Buhari depended largely on the N100 personal donations through cell phone recharge cards. The winning joter of the President was the statement credited to the Army that, because it was fighting insurgents in 10 local governments areas in the north, it couldn’t provide adequate security cover for the polls. The police, too, followed in tow. It was a warming to INEC and the country that going ahead with the polls on Saturday could be calamitous, and Prof. Jega, defiant and independent as he may have wished to be, should know a bait had been set for him. And, simultaneously, the PDP began to assail his person as they did Gen. Buharis. The assaults were led by Chief Edwin Clark, a respected South-South region of Nigeria leader who sees nothing wrong with the Jonathan Administration and has become its number one spokesman and apologist. If Prof Jega stuck to his guns, the PDP would, very likely, boycott the elections, plunging Nigeria 51 years back to the 1964 general elections which was boycotted by UPGA, (United Progressive Grand Alliance), a political coalition of the Eastern and Western regions of Nigeria. That boycott discredited the election under which Alhaji Tafawa Balewa became Prime Minister of Nigeria, fermented killings and arson in the Western region and led to Nigeria’s first military coup and the Biafran civil war.

    Even with Prof. Jega refraining from taking a plunge from the cliff to wherever the leap would lead, the government saw the postponement of the polls as dangerous enough to cause trouble that it deployed troops around Lagos and some important cities ahead of the announcement. That was intriguing. For this was the same Army credited with saying it had no potential to provide cover for peaceful elections deploying troops to combat protests. The Army left at least three questions unanswered in a security report of its preparedness for its professional duties to Nigeria it was said to have given the government.

    •If the Army should, but cannot provide cover for a purely civil event, what would happen if the Cameroun or Cod’voire or Niger or Chad were to invade Nigeria in search of territory? Many people know the Nigerian Army would not tolerate that, that it is robust, that it is one of the worlds best Armies, that Boko haram get as e bi, as we say when, the more we look, the more we look at something, the less of it we see. If the Army statement is a political statement, as many people suspect, it would be an unfortunate event that could politicise the Army. We cannot blame President Jonathan for starting this in a civil society in which the army would appeared to be giving instruction to a civil government instead of taking orders from it, or supporting and defending the public will. President Olusegun Obasanjo, whose creation is the Jonathan Administration, deployed troops to win elections he couldn’t win. Now helpless, he must be sad watching whirlwinds and morsoon winds growing out of the winds he unleashed while in office.

    2)               Much as I am a novice in military matters, I believe it is reasonable to assume that soldiers are trained to kill and destroy, when necessary, and that, in civil matters in civilised society, it is to the police that the primary duty of maintaining law and order is assigned. Why do we think there would be such crisis on Election Day that requires the Army’s attention to quelle if we do not believe the elections would be rigged and the voters would protest it. Such indicators are prouded by the President himself in a statement during the last Osun State governorship election when he said the election was a do or die affair”.

    •If the Army cannot overrun Boko Haram in 40 days, what, again, happens to the elections. Will they be shifted again, If they are, with Prof Jega’s appointment be renewed? If the President brings someone else, will the election not be flawed before it has taken place? If the Army is not ready before the President’s tenure lapses, will Nigeria head for an Interim National Government? Is the ING idea the plan of the Establishment to save itself from a probing Buhari Administration? In other words, is it a way of defusing a political bomb inimical to Establishment interests? Will it fit into the theory of the Establishment employing such tactics to save itself politically and economically?

     

    f we fear the Army is being politicized, the church has long fallen prey to mammon. The churches now appear to be competing for the President’s attention and should get plenty of it in the coming 40 days. In which major Pentecostal church has the President not gone to campaign for re-election in a manner which may pitch Christians against Moslems and disturb our Nigeria’s fragile religious peace? Redeemed Christian Church of God? Winners Chapel? Chosen? Each visit has been followed by poisonous propaganda by the President’s men. After the Redeemed visit, it was that he couldn’t anoint two men for the same office. This was a veiled reference to his support for President Jonathan in 2011 and inability, therefore, to swing for Prof. Osinbajo, a Vice Presidential candidate of APC and a senior Pastor of Redeemed. In other words, say the propagandists, President Jonathan has the nod for 2015.

    A worse propaganda broke out after the Winners’ visit the General Overseer, Oyedepo, was said to have threatened to open the gates of hell for any member who voted against President Jonathan. Oyedepo was wise. He taped the proceedings. And according to people who claimed to have watched it, no such thing was said. To have said so would have been calamitous for this gentleman. For hell is not in paradise, and only a resident of hell can open the gates of hell for the inmates. I do not subscribe to the speculations that, like the tail of Halley’s Comet or other comets, made up of gas and dust, hard currency constitutes the tails of these Presidential visits. Over which the churches, excepts perhaps the Catholic Church, are falling over themselves. But I believe the visits, if successful, may set Christians up against Moslems in the South-West region which would appear to be vehemently opposed to a second term for the President. To counter this offensive, the APC would have to keep up the tempo of any damage to the economy by the Jonathan Administration. The APC would appear not to have roasted this meat well enough. Former Central Bank Governor Charles Soludo may not be its card – carrying member, but he has shown the way economic issues can be focused in a campaign focusing on the economy.

    In only two well – researched articles he has shown about #30 trillion from crude oil sales could be in privates pockets! In whose pockets is the money nestling, we are yet to know. APC Vice Presidential candidate Osinbajo is a professor of law. In the next 40 days, can he give us a professional dissertation on the damage to the rule of law which the President swore on the Bible to uphold but damaged? I remember the case of Mr. Justice Salami of the Federal Court of Appeal Vs the Supreme Court Justices. I remember, also the Judge in Ekiti State who was beaten up in the Court room and who had to flee through the window. A President who swore on the sacred Bible to uphold the Rule of Law would have fished out the Judges attackers and brought them to book. But what happened?

    Alfred Rewani

    n a time such as this, Nigerians who genuinely what their country to run well and beautifully cannot forget Pa Alfred Rewani, a state murder victim during the regime of Gen. Sanni Abacha. He characteristically, this prolific writer would have linked us to the past at this time, to enable us know where we are coming from, so we can take only sure steps into the future. When Prof Jega stood his ground against the President and the National Cainal of state did likewise, I wrote the following test, based on my memory of the past about which Pa Rewane would have connected us. The unfolding political event which led to this commentary has been overtaken. But I have decided to live it as intact as I wrote it. I cannot do it as well as he would have…

    CONGRATULATIONS, NIGERIA. By averting a postponement of Saturday’s Presidential election, Nigeria may have averted a dangerous political crisis. An election crisis brought the military to power in 1966, led to the 1967-70 Biafran civil war, led to the overthrow of Gen. Yakubu Gowon’s military government, Saw Gen. Ibrahim Babangida out of power, paved the way for gen. Sanni Abacha to take power and later destroyed him, brought Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo (rtd) back to power, and, under President Ebere Jonathan, may have led to a crisis of yet unknown dimensions. When it comes to protecting personal or party interests, politicians never appear to have a sense of history. Already, the country appears politically divided along the physical shape of the Biafran war years… the eastern region of Nigeria on one side, and the rest of Nigeria on the other. And all it would take to cause commotion could be a careless and unjustifiable political manoeuvre or statements.

    If political campaigns have no other value, that is if election results had been predetermined and polls are mere formalities, they are at least handwritings on the wall. We all interprete political campaign handwritings differently, depending on our education about political behaviour and our emotions. But when you notice panic in a political camp, that’s another handwriting on the wall super-inposed  on those of the political campaigns.  There is no doubt that President Jonathan had a bad product to sell to the electorate. That bad product was what his government has made of the economy of Nigeria in the last four years. On the eve of the campaigns, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the President’s party, sought to present the economic mess as Nigerian feature of a global economic crisis triggered by the collapse of crude oil price in the world market. But the government could not explain why Nigerian pump price fell by only 10 percent against 60 percent in even some non-oil producing countries, and why Value Added Tax (VAT) simultaneously leapt from five to 10 percent.

    To worsen matters on an Election Eve, Nigeria’s currency, the Naira, was devalued from about N165 to the United States Dollar to about N205 today. That means inflation. Many state governments and the Federal Government owed workers salaries for about five months. Meanwhile, the President and some of his ministers lived in opulence. The President had 12 jets in his Presidential fleet against only two jets left behind a few years ago by President Olusegun Obasanjo who left behind a tidy foreign reserve and even sovereign reserve. Both reserves were squandered, and President Jonathan was in the process of adding a 13th jet to the fleet before the campaigns. Even the Minister of Petroleum had an official private jet. It would appear this jet was not in the budget approved for the President by the National Assembly. And this bears testimony to claims by the opposition that the government spends more money out of the Budget than in the Budget. Public finance watchers believe the free petro dollar comes from oil sales not accounted for. In the recent public exchanges between Professor Charles Solido, Former Governor of the Central Bank, and incumbent Finance Minister Mrs. Okonjo Iweala, Professor Solido has used her own data of oil revenue outside the books, which are conservative figures, to show that this free cash circulating in the corridors of power has amounted to N30 trillion!

    I believe the mistake of President Jonathan is his assumption that the presidency is a tea party. He probably didn’t realise early enough that the President is the driver of the craft, the chief servant of the public. He took a back seat, far away from the rigour of work, and handed the work to other people. These other people were no fools. They stormed the treasury, and helped themselves to free cash. The government became loose and he did not have firm control over anything. And, so, when the report card hard to be written four years after in an election, there was nothing substantial to write home about the economy. Corruption had so eaten deep into the government and society that even Gen. Ibrahim Babangida whose regime was before now widely acclaim to aggravate corruption in Nigeria, would now publicly say that, compared with President Jonathan’s, he was a saint! And, to worsen matters, President Jonathan went about making light jokes about corruption. One of his famous comments on corruption was that “stealing is not corruption”. At campaign rallies, he said he couldn’t send corrupt people to jail because the prisons would not take them all. At another forum, he said he couldn’t jail his friends simply because they were corrupt.

    And, so, quite naturally, the entry of Gen. Mohamadu Buhari (rtd) as a major challenger for the presidency would cause a stir, if not a scare in the PDP. He immediately lay his person bare: he has only two houses in the whole wide world, and less than one million in his bank account. This was a challenge to President Jonathan to publicly declare his assets. The President would not. Even in 2007 when he was Vice-president to President Yar A’dua, who publicly declared his asset of about N960 million, Vice-president Jonathan made no such declaration.  In contrast, Gen. Buhari says his ministers would publicly declare assets and he would empower the now moribund Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to do its job independent of the government.

    The PDP tried to move the campaign away from corruption and the economy. Thus, the person of Buhari became its punch bag. He was hit left and right and all over about his age, health, education, family life and his life span. But it always turned out information about Buhari’s person was false and the lies against his person won him pity and support. There ploys having failed to subsume the challenger, two king jokers were wheeled out of the armoury. One was to trick him into a public debate with President Jonathan who himself avoided a public debate in 2011. Gen. Buhari is not a man of many words. And he may easily get angry. Besides, he could easily make the mistake of a Chief Obafemi Awolowo or a Chief Moshood Abiola. In Aba, heart of igboland, Chief Awolowo said he would ban the importation of stockfish and second hand clothes. Stockfish was, and still is, a culinary delicacy in Eastern Nigeria. Chief Awolowo said life had been drained away from it with the extraction of Cod Liver oil and that it was the sun-dried chaff Norway was selling to Nigeria. For second-hand clothes why should any-one dehumanise himself or herself by wearing clothes, shoes, brassairs and undies someone else had won life out off and discarded? Why should we make ourselves “second-hand” human beings? Unfortunately, these are what a majority of Nigerians have become, unable to break free of the spiritual yoke, which makes them substandard to other human beings, given the huge business in second-hand “everything imaginable” in Nigeria today.

  • 2015: Jonathan, Buhari, the Rich and the poor (6)

    Buhari’s health

    The Peoples  Democratic Party (PDP) began by saying Buhari was too old for the job, but backed down when the ploy did not appear to work. It was probably unknown to the arrow heads of this campaign that, in the United Kingdom for example, the retirement bar has been moved upwards as longevity improved to over 100 years and old people were found to be more mentally and physically astute than they were a few decades ago. Later, this age campaign was enlarged to capture his health. In one of such attacks, he was said to be suffering from cancer. Who would hear that a Presidential candidate was suffering from cancer and waste his vote on him? The campaigners diagnostic report produced a letter purported written by a medical doctor. But the campaign was botched by three different hand-writings. And, in any case, the hospital purported to have issued it said Gen. Buhari was never its patient. This campaign shows how empty the architect can be. Any one who has been close to a cancer sufferer would know Buhari doesn’t look like one. For the sake of argument, why make merry over an opponent health? Who from 40 or 50 doesn’t cover up one condition or other with clothes? Such conditions may range from hypertension and diabetes to drunkenness. President Bill Clinton had 95 percent blockage in his coronary (heart) arteries and had to have “coronary bypass” surgery to survive and carry on in office. A well known former Nigerian President was diabetic. Another had a pace maker (battery) in his heart. Didn’t Ibrahim Babangida suffer from “radiculopathy” while in office? Ayo Fayose assault not to be left out of the Buhari bashing party, this Governor of Ekiti State who enjoys being described as a dirty fighter has just added a real dirty twist to this smear campaign. He caused to be published in the Punch, one of Nigeria’s integrity conscious newspapers, an advertisement which details Heads of State of Nigeria from the Northwest region who died in office and suggested that Buhari, like them, would die likewise. The goal of the advertisement is to dissuade voters from investing their vote and hope on this man. It is an insult to all Nigerian people who come from the Northwest region, to say the least. And it has been roundly condemned nationwide. Even the PDP has condemned it. Fayose comes from the Southwest of Nigeria, a civilised, compassionate and justice seeking region. The forebears of this region have captured in proverbs the wisdom of the Ages for even generations unborn. One of these proverbs says: … ti a ba nja, bi ti kaku ko. This means “… when we quarrel or disagree, our differences are not to cause death.”

    Thus, the opponent is not wished death, and we do not speak ill of the dead. The Southwest is well-known for maturity, civility, accommodation, respect for human life, pursuit of justice and fair play and robust condemnation of omo ita (street child) lifestyle. So, such an attack on Buhari’s person as Fayose, can only weird together Buhari’s supporters in the Southwest, his Northwest region and elsewhere. Such attacks as stated can only be born out of fear and desperation.  Fayose suspects Buhari’s victory may see him out of office if the courts become free again to do their jobs unmolested. Some of the indicators of fear and desperation are to be found in the mathematics of the 2011 Presidential election, in which President Jonathan defeated Buhari by about 12 million clear votes, and the emerging shifting landscape.

    •                Jonathan 22 million

    •                Buhari 10 million

    There were votes for other candidates, including that of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). The bottom line was that President Jonathan beat Buhari by about 12 million votes. That was a whopping landslide which President Jonathan may have replicated on February 14, had the APC presented a candidate of lesser integrity than Buhari.

    Between 2011 and 2015 the landscape 12 million winning or differential votes of President Jonathan may have become significantly fractured in many states, and this probably accounts for the fear and desperation in the PDP to destroy Buhari’s person at any cost. The south-west region voted overwhelmingly for President Jonathan in 2011.

  • 2015: Jonathan, Buhari, the rich and the poor (5)

    The Presidential election is only 16 days away… on St. Valentine’s Day. It takes nothing away from the aroma of this lovers’ day. Because an election in Nigeria is still as delicate as a chinaware shop in which bulls are running amoks, the right to free movement of persons is curtailed from 10am to 6pm on poll days. After the votes would have been counted, results declared and ballot boxes are taken away by the appropriate authorities, lovers and the love industry will have the rest of the day to themselves. The presidential election campaigns are heating up but are still below the standard expected in an election such as thus in which, arguably, the opposition is presenting the strongest showing ever. Incumbent President Ebele Jonathan and his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) appear unwilling to let the hard nuts be cracked. These are economic questions and corruption which Gen. Muhammadu Buhari and his All Progressives Congress (APC) would like to make and election issues. Accordingly, the PDP has been focussing on the person of Gen. Buhari to pool wool over these questions and distract the electorate. Incidentally, the APC would appear to still be unable to wrest control of the direction of the campaign from the PDP. But this may count in its favour as every PDP manoeuvre fails to unleash a knock-out. In fact, the goal of the PDP to destroy the person of Buhari, at all cost without informing the electorate wither it would lead Nigeria, may expose it as an empty and desperate party ridden with fear. But only time will tell if the APC can rivet through this emptiness, desperation and fear to knock out the president.

    A Presidential election such as this in which the forces are reasonably well matched paints the picture of a boxing ring and two boxers set out for a championship duet. The PDP probably believes that, by focussing attention on Buhari’s person and demolishing it, attention will be shifted from what Buhari represents and which the electorate may be yearning for. … an anti-corruption crusade which will resolve problems such as massive unemployment municipal electricity failure, and inflation, to mention a few. Poor Buhari. The PDP says he has no “O” level certificate. If he hasn’t, that will pitch him as a semi – illiterate against President Jonathan, who holds a Ph.D. But the attackers of Buhari’s person forgot that Professor Kofi Busia, an economist, couldn’t fix Ghana’s economic troubles, which hurled thousands of Ghana’s women on Nigeria’s prostitution market, and that it was flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings who did, by tackling corruption, and made his country’s economy buoyant again. Now, one after the other, Nigerian blue – chip transnational companies have relocated to Ghana. Now, Nigerian youths are invading Ghana for higher education. Now, many Nigerians who cannot find jobs in their own country, and who cannot afford the rigour of dying in the Morrocan desert on their way to Europe, are finding succour in Ghana.

    I do not know why Nigeria’s electoral law prescribe minimum certification for public office holders. But I  suspect the matter of the likes of Barkin Zuwo may have had a hand in it. He was a governor in one of the states in the north. There were so many jokes made of his cognitive deficiencies. One was that when a huge sum of public funds he was suspected to have converted to personal use was found in the Governor’s official residence and he was questioned about it, he expressed surprise that the storage of “government money in government House” was an offence. Another was that when he pressed for the creation of a new state from his state and he was asked which mineral resources” were available in the proposed state to sustain it economically, Barkin Zuwo replied the minerals present there included “coca-cola, fanta and 7-up”.

    On a more serious note, the electoral law prescribes certification. But there is confusion about this. Some people interpret it as “O” Level Certificate, which would imply at least five credit passes.

  • 2015: Jonathan, Buhari, the Rich and the Poor (4)

    Nigeria is at a cross-roads. Wither will it go? Left or right, backward or forward? Mother Nature abhors standstill. It is either hither or thither progress or retrogression! Already, Nigerians who believe the country has been hurtling downhill in her economy, social life and morality wish to dispense with the Ebele Jonathan Administration.

    They want change! There are other Nigerians who believe that the devil you know is better than the one you do not. To such people, it is better to let President Jonathan continue in office for another four years. Between the two poles, even the blind can now tell where the wind will blow in a free and fair election.

    But as I said last Thursday, other than some evident lapses of the Jonathan Administration, there would appear to be no serious issues raised so far in the campaigns to help fence-sitting voters decide which camp it is better to be. To summarise what President Jonathan’s critics hold against him, his government has been slack and has allowed government functionaries and institutions to become loose cannons. The net results have been indiscipline, corruption a national hurtle downhill. Thus, the last six years have witnessed no governance, but ruling.

    There is a gulf between these words. In governance, there is a scheme, an act or a script which weaves a nation together into one organic being. This act is founded on, thorough planning. We had a semblance of this in the four year national development plans. We can all see it in the desire of the United States to become self-sufficient in petrol provision.

    Currently, Nigeria is short of cash, hasn’t paid federal and state civil servants for five whopping months, yet the country is burning money in the oil fields through gas flaring! In ruling, power is deployed not as an engine which moves the country forward, but to maintain the leader in office, harass or distroy opposition.

  • ‘The rich should help others grow’

    ‘The rich should help others grow’

    Sir Chris Nkwonta, businessman and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) senatorial candidate, in this interview with journalists, among whom was SUNNY NWAN-KWO, speaks on sundry issues, including his defection from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and chances of victory in his battle to represent Abia South in the Senate. Excerpts:

    You withdrew from the 2011 race, why?

    Well, I did not participate because when you are engaging in a process you have already known the outcome, then I do not see any reason why I should continue to be part of that process. You know I campaigned vigorously in all the nooks and crannies of Abia State, selling myself to the people. I went to virtually all six Local Governments in Abia South, I ended up at the zone and I was ready to win, then three days to the party primary, I was told there was supposedly instruction that the sitting senator should return and I felt that was injustice; I felt that the Ukwa people and the Ngwa people have rotated this position every eight years, I felt it was wrong for two positions to be zoned to one Local Government and I felt that in the last eight years, not much has been done in terms of senatorial representation. That was why I decided to move to APGA on which platform I’m going to contest and by the grace of God, I’m going to win.

    APGA is hardly known in Abia; where lies your optimism?

    I think we should be looking more at the individuals and not the party per se. What is a political party without human beings? Human beings make up a political party and in any political party where the preponderance of men and women are not good people, what do you expect or where the fielded candidate is not acceptable to the people? So, I think we should go beyond that and unmask the individual who is the person that is running on this party platform. I have been around for quite some time, people know me and I believe there are people who are not happy with the way I have been treated by the PDP, they are there, they are waiting. So, I do not have any problems with the fact that APGA is not as strong as, maybe, the PDP. I believe that my popularity, my acceptance, the programme that I will put in place once I become the senator of Abia South will endear people to me.

    If I get to the senate, I will ensure I contribute towards the process of making quality legislation in the Upper Chambers of the National Assembly. I will also empower youths and bring about the development of Abia South because as a senator, you have network of contacts with other senators including those that will be over seeing the Works Ministry, those that will be overseeing the educational and other sectors. I’m saying this because one of the problems we have in this country is that we have teeming unemployed youths and one of the things I am going to do is that youths will be empowered. I have already started doing that through the Chris Nkwonta Foundation where we have trained over 148 persons as we speak now. I will also ensure that infrastructure gets to the zone that I represent through a synergy between me and the government at the state level, so these are some of the things that I have in mind if I’m elected.

    I will not close my eyes to the bad network of roads in my zone. Though as a senator, you may really not be awarding contracts, but I am of the opinion that any senator that is representing his or her people very well should be able to attract federal presence to his zone. Go to Enugu State and see what Senator Ekweremadu is doing, go to Benue and see what David Mark is doing. I believe that if you are able to sell yourself amongst your peers, amongst your colleagues in the National Assembly, you should be able to bring about a rejuvenation in terms of the state of infrastructure in the state where you come from. For example, we have a federal road that runs from Ikot Abasi in Akwa Ibom State to Obehie in Abia. The contract for that road was awarded in 2006 and up till now, nothing much has been done.

    The question is why is it so? Any senator that is worth to be called a senator should have highlighted this. He should have drawn the situation to the attention of the federal authority.

    Being rich, why are you going to the Senate? 

    Well, I’m not aware I’m rich, but assuming I’m rich as you have said and stay in the comfort of my home and get detached from the larger society, of what use is that wealth? So, basically, what is propelling, pushing and driving me is to be able to do more, to leverage on the political platform and be able to reach out to people by way of employment because if you are rich and the people around you are poor, by definition, you are a poor man.

    In every community, you find people that God has elevated, God may not elevate everybody. God in His wisdom will choose one or three persons and it is for a purpose and if you understand that purpose, then your days will be long and whatever God has given you will not diminish. And what is that purpose? God wants to use you as a caretaker which is to say, ‘I have given you this and I want through you to reach other people’ and that is basically what I have been doing so far and this is what I will continue doing when I’m  in the senate. My mission in politics is service.

    What is your selling point?

    As I speak with you now, I’m not carrying any political baggage, I’m unencumbered, and I’m free. Again, you need to look at my antecedents, what I have been able to do even before venturing into politics and then juxtapose that with what the incumbent senator has done or is doing, if any.

    The edge I have over others is that I am someone who is development oriented, I am someone who feel for people, I am someone who would want to see things done properly. I am not if you like the conventional politician, I’m a businessman who is in politics, that is the selling point I have.

    People talk about experience, but let me tell you about experience, how does it start? By the time you get into the National Assembly and spend a month to three months even if you are a dummy, you should be able to understand the workings, the mechanics and the way things work there.

    If you look at all that I have been able to do so far in my life; people that I have granted scholarships, people that I have taken abroad for medical attention, it will give you an idea as to what edge I have over the other people.

    Recently, I read in the newspaper that Senator Smart Adeyemi distributed 50 vehicles and gave out N10m cash to members of his constituents, that is empowerment. But here have you heard of any such largesse?

    Who has drawn the attention of the condition of federal roads in Abia South to the federal government? What is the essence of going to represent people? Is it not to look after their welfare, to protect them?  What we have seen in the past seven and half years is abysmal failure, so I will go there to make a difference.

    Are you satisfied with the level of development in the state?       

    No, a whole lot of work needs to be done especially in Abia South and Aba in particular.

    People said you left the PDP because you were not a loyal party man?          

    If anything, it’s PDP that is not loyal. But then how do you define loyalty, what does loyalty mean? In 2011, I was a clear winner of that primary election, but on the night before the election, touts were brought in as delegates. I had ample evidence to go to court or leave the party at that time, but I did not.

    When the party’s reconciliation committee led by General Ike Nwachukwu came to my house, the first thing I did was to play a video clip of what happened in the field to them and when they saw it, they knew there were no primaries. But I told them that as a loyal party person, I would accept their pleading, that I would remain with the party and that I would support the party and I did.

    In 2011 immediately after the primary, when I invited the Governor T.A Orji to my house, I hosted him here, collapsed my structure and gave him two brand new buses plus other things I did for him and asked all my supporters to work for him. What does that tell you, loyalty or disloyalty?

    Then in 2012, I came out to run for governor and there was this argument that because of our numerical strength and because of the fact that governorship was coming to Abia South for the first time, that we should allow our Ngwa brothers to go first and at that time, I was getting a whole lot of support from Abia North. There was nowhere I did not go and after telling them what I would do if I became the next governor of Abia state, they all accepted me. But when I was prevailed upon, I said okay, fine, let me go and run for the Senate. What do you call that, loyalty or not loyalty?