Tag: rich

  • Jonathan, Buhari, the Rich and the Poor (3)

    The heat of politics is on. Nigeria’s 2015 Presidential election is just about one month away. But the sparks flying about from.

    The inferno are still too cool for my temperament and liking. The People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the government party, is throwing feeble punches and scratching the surface, making light of the mood of this season. It is only asking the voters to give it power, all over again, without saying how it would use it to better their lot. The Challenging Party, All Progressive Party, (APC), has to prove beyond reasonable doubt PDP is running the country aground and suggests rescue measures.

    The PDP has found Buhari a larger challenger than he was in 2011 and, so, is seeking to focus its campaign on his person, rather than challenge APC claims that Nigeria is a sick and dying nation. The first jab was at Buhari’s education. The electoral law demands that elective office holders have acceptable “O” Level certification or the equivalent. The PDP campaign says Buhari’s education is below the mark. I saw some PDP supporters rejoicing in Ilupeju, Lagos, when the news came on. But like in the tropical African Sun, they lost gear when they were informed the law accepts equivalents of “O” Level and asked if the training of a Nigerian army general did not make him or her intellectually superior to their own children who had just taken “O” Level exams. Buhari attended courses at the United States War College. Collin Powel who led American troops in the Gulf War and later became U.S. Vice President was Buhari’s course-mate during the war college training.

    The second PDP attack on Buhari’s person is his age. Buhari is 72. President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, of the PDP , is younger .The campaigners say Buhari’s age is phlegmatic but Jonathan is choleric, and Nigeria need a choleric leader to rescue her from the wilderness. There may be a point in a man of Buhari’s age not being able to finish a 100 meters sprint ahead of a younger President Jonathan. But is governance all about this? I see it more related to the aura of the leader of government business. In bygone days in Yorubaland, when the Oracle was consulted through divination before a successor was found for a departed king, the man who would be king may be a poor foreign trader who survived a shipwreck nearby. The shipwreck may even be predestined to bring to this land a man whose aura befitted or suited the new time. Everyone has an aura. The aura has its root in the glow of the spirit, that is man, encased in the physical body of earth, bore, blood and flesh. Clairvoyants see it. Christians will recall the case of the man possessed by demons. As the Lord Jesus passed by, the demons recognised Him from his Aura. The inner eyes of some of his disciples were permitted to be open and behold the spectacle recorded as The Transfiguration. The aura attracts or repels. Good attract good, evil attract evil. Good and evil repel each other because, in the natural law which compels birds of a feather flocks together, only similar species find comfort in the company of each other.

    Thus, the aura of Buhari, not his age, not his capacity for physical endurance, may be what his country requires at this time, for which reason he may have emerged again to give the presidency a crack. Many, if not all earthly events, are in the hands of earth-men. There is no doubt that they move the levers and set the ball rolling. But beyond that point, they lose control over events they let loose. There are forces beyond them which untie knots and smoothen the frills and then seek tools to effect on earth events already put together in other higher realms. This gives meaning to the expression, “as it is above, so it is below”.  For people who watch the auras of world leaders, as anchor for extraterrestrial plans to materialize on earth, some names are not easy to forget. Gorbachev surfaced in the Soviet Union at a time a World War III appeared inevitable, according to Eastern and Western world security bookmakers. But Gorbachev defused the ticking bomb of the Arms Race and helped to dismantle communism, thereby ending the cold War. Nelson Mandela came out of prison in South Africa, has useful to himself and to humanity, wasted as many people thought. It was a time for Black Revenge. The blacks would have annihilated their white tormentors of the ages. But Mandela held the balance between the races, preaching the brotherhood of man.

    We all know Nigeria is a potentially great nation held down by many foibles of man, in particular corruption, from which she needs deliverance. Has that time come? Or is the time for deliverance not ripe? Buhari dons an aura which suggests the time is nigh. In particular, he does not smoke or drink. This suggests he does not need to cling to external aids to be a balanced person.

  • Jonathan, Buhari, the Rich and the poor (2)

    Next Years presidential and other elections promise to be Nigeria’s hottest by any standard evaluation. For at no time has the opposition to the establishment been as formidable and nation-wide as it is today. The outcome should affect all of us not only in our pockets but in our health as well. Last week, this column saw the line-up as between the powerful and rich, that is the establishment, and an opposition fuelled by progressive or left-wing of the establishment and the motley crowd of largely poor people. Last week, column suggested as well that retired General Mohammadu Buhari, leading the opposition with no more than N1 million in his bank account and only two houses to his name in Nigeria, could defeat President Ebele Jonathan if the poor of Nigeria stand solidly behind him like the Rock of Gibraltar, immune to manipulations by the Establishment on ethnic, religious and “stomach infrastructure” terrain stomach. The stomach-infrastructure is a Nigerian coinage to describe rejection of roads, bridges, schools and hospitals, among other public facilities, in preference for such personal benefits as rice, vegetable oil and some cash.

    Last week, the establishment party, the people’s democratic Party (PDP), rolled out the tanks, as it were, at a fund raising for president Jonathan’s campaign. The haul was impressive in 1979 or thereabout, Chief Moshood Abiola made a N1million cash contribution at the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) national headquarters fund-raising, and this raised eye-brows. Abiola was later to make a bid for the presidential ticket, perhaps because of this large investment, but was told by party-man Alhaji Umaaru Dikko that the ticket was not for sale. A few weeks ago, Jonathan had the PDP ticket. The PDP, by the way, is an offshoot of the NPN. More than N25 billion was raised by a few persons who had not been in public limelight recently, with the exception, perhaps, of Alhaji Dangote, one of Africa’s richest men, who said he was not a politician. One of the donors was Alhaji Bola Yahaya, said to be a friend of Nigeria’s first Lady, Mrs. Patience Jonathan. She gave a whopping N5billion. Prof. Herry Gana, former Information Minister and former chairman of MAMSER, who had not been seen around lately in public, gave another N5 billion to the fund. He said the donation was from his humble self and his friends from the energy sector. Incidentally, the power sector as gulped trillions of dollars in public investments with nothing yet to show for it.

    Mr. Ayeni, chairman of Skye Bank and a power sector business associate of Gen. Abdusallam (rtd), a former Head of State, gave N2billion. This first-round donation of over N20billion by far exceeds what the finance minister has said would be austerity measures in which salaries will be cut and jobs lost.

    Gen. Buhari (rtd) must be wondering where all the money was coming from. So must the army of the poor he is leading. From the donations, it is evident Nigeria’s rich is ready for battle to protect the Establishment. Lots of money will go into advertising and “stomach infrastructure”. In Ekiti State, where PDP man Fayose is governor, the government has already wheeled out live chickens as Christmas presents for the citizens. In Jonathan’s campaign, Buhari’s poor brethren will stretch out their hands for the forbidden fruit. Some will take it and still vote according to their conscience. Some may buckle. But there would be some others who would rise beyond the Tempter and bread and butter. Already, poison arrows are flying at Buhari on the internet. One says: Who stopped the lagos metroline? Buhari’s stoppage of the Lagos metroline project when he was military Head of State in 1983 or 1984 was one of the counts against him in Lagos in the presidential election of 2011.

  • Jonathan, Buhari, the Rich and the poor

    We are back on the starting block of another General Elections race. On Thursday last week, President Ebele Jonathan won a sole-candidate campaign to run for President next year on the platform of his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Former Military Head of State General Muhammed Buhari (Rtd) fought through in a democratic primary to win the All Progressives Congress (APC) ticket. Buhari’s victory over rough riding and cash studded Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Vice President in retired General Olusegun Obasanjo’s Civil Adminstration, set a stage for the Jonathan Buhari encounter next year. Buhari, a one-time military Head of State who, before then had had the fortune to be Petroleum Minister, and after being Head of State, Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF), has just about one million in his bank account and only two houses, one in Kaduna, the other in Daura to his name throughout the length and breadth of Nigeria. That is an incredibly robust and clean testimonial to lead the poor and the have-nots of Nigeria.

    President Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan looks like the other side of the coin, a leader of the Establishment. In 2011, this column misread his credentials in two articles titled ESTABLISHMENT EVER LOATHFUL OF THE NEW FRONTIER. At that time, the northern Establishment forbade him to run in the primaries of his party for the presidential ticket.

    Nigeria then, as it is today, was in dire need of change from more than 30 years of northern misrule which left the poor and poorer under successive governments. But young people north and south saw president Jonathan as a potential new frontier leader. This column showed how the new frontiers helmsmen worldwide in all professions, and not just in politics, were harassed, even killed, by Establishment vanguard which hated change. But one reader of this column, Mr Adeniji of Shagamu, thought I got the Jonathan picture wrong. Indeed, the Jonathan Administration has turned out over six years, four of which are full-term, to be anything but a New World regime. Corruption ballooned. We experienced ruling as in the lamentable past, and not governance, which comes from planning to solve problems. The powers of the State were hurled against the well-meaning Oppositon to smash it, while corrupt elements of the Establishment were offered State protection and money-laundering criminals jailed abroad were granted State pardon back home.

    The judiciary was trampled, the legislature meddled with, the military lost some bite and muscle, the economy nose dived. It will be a miracle if, from January 2015, the state governments are able to pay salaries regularly. For their shares of Federal Revenue may not be paid monthly as they fall due, the reason is not far-fetched. The economy still depends more than 95 percent on crude oil exports, 40 percent of which went to the United States. Two years ago, the United States gave a world alert that, by this year, it would become self-sufficient in crude oil provision from domestic sources. Nigeria had two long years to find alternative sources of income to fill the revenue gap due to oncoming 40 percent loss of revenue from crude oil sales, but nothing tangible happened.

    Many Jonathan defenders say he shouldn’t be blamed for Nigeria’s woes under his Administration which have turned the hope invested in him for a New Frontier in 2011 into a nightmare. Many of the people who voted Jonathan in 2011 were young people who did not wish to have their lives wasted as the generation before theirs which Prof. Wole Soyinka described as “a wasted generation”. In my view, a wasted generation is a suffocated and emasculated generation. They are people full of potentials, talents and drive which their country did not allow to bloom. Imagine a gentleman of my generation who scored three A’s in “A” Levels, went to Cambridge University in the United Kingdom (UK), worked in top flight companies abroad, was encouraged to return home to help build his country but has ended up, today, living in a squalid three square meter shop in Lagos. In Europe, this gentleman would be a top flight consultant. You may say everyone is an architect of his fortune and misfortune, and you would be right in a way. But isn’t there a way or ways one’s country may, through supporting love, help one to unfold? Don’t shepherds tend their flock as farmers care for their crops? Why do Nigerians bloom abroad and not at home?

    I know President Jonathan apologist have ready answers, one of which is that he inherited these challenges and should not be blamed for their persistence even in his Administration. To such an answer, I have several questions: didn’t President Jonathan see these problems and promise to solve them? Didn’t he tell us that, as a child, he had no school shoes and bag? Wasn’t that an assurance he knew where the shoes were pinching us and he would, like a diligent physician, heal our injuries? Do we, simply because he inherited these problems, say the problems should persist because he inherited them? Was our hope not that he would solve them. If he has not solved them at full-term, can we not shop for another president? In this matter, many South-South region people have behaved rather clannishly. I teased one of them who runs a small laundry business in Lagos: if you make your full-blooded brother manager of your business which you set up with a bank loan and the business was losing money and you couldn’t repay the loan, what would you do? His reply shocked me. He would fire his brother, he said. So, why can’t Nigeria have another President? He had no reply. But I could read his mind. “This is our turn”.

     

    Turn – by – Turn

    I believe one of the messages from the emergence of All Progressive Congress (APC) and its election of Mohammadu Buhari as its 2015 Presidential candidate is the rejection of turn-by-turn politics all over. President Jonathan had been told by the north that he couldn’t pick up the two-year credit of President Yar A dua, who died Mid-Term, not to  mention a second-term ticket. The same signal that a second term isn’t automatic is going to the South-South.

     

    The Rich and the Poor

    The Jonathan/Buhari contest has polarised the Nigeria into the Rich (including the super rich) and the poor (including the underclass). I do not like a two-party system without a balancer third party.A balancer is a third party sufficiently strong enough to halt a winner party from overrunning the defeated through a coalition it can forge with the latter to truncate tyrannical use of power. I guess this was a take-away from the 1969/70 history class of Mrs Odunsi, a Briton at Igbobi College, Lagos. She taught us about how, in modern English and European history, the Tripple Alliance and, later, the Quadriple Alliance maintained peace in Europe. Political Science Professor Eme Awa, now of blessed memory, and Professor Humphrey Nwosu, his former student, taught the same principle at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), emphasising dangers of a bipolar and unipolar world. Nigeria’s First Republic probably collapsed because there was no balancer in the system. The north and the east in the NPC/NCNC Coalition sought to destroy a common enemy, the fast growing and pace-setting West of Nigeria. Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the region’s leader, was jailed, his party liquidated and the West placed under a State of Emergency. But it was a temporary victory. The coalition soon collapsed, and the plotters were soon at each other’s throat. And when the despicable murder of the easterners began in the north, the west was too militarily weak to stop the rot. The coalition had so minimised the West everywhere, including in the military, that when Brigadier Ogundipe took command of the armed forces, northern army privates rejected his authority. Adelanwa, head of the navy and Ogundipe’s kinsman, had to take him away to London. The northern soldiers, who ringed the West up in garrisons at Ibadan, Lagos and Abeokuta after the exit of soldiers from the East, installed Lt. Col Yakubu Gowon as their leader. Soon, he became Nigeria’s Head of State. In place of Ogundipe. Were the West of Nigeria a healthy balancer then in Nigerian Politics, it was possible the civil war which followed would have been averted. The absence of a healthy balancer in Nigeria’s geo-polity has troubled the nation ever since. The battle for power, either for ruling or governance between the Establishment and the opposition had always been fought on two legs, without a balancing third. When it would appear the Establishment was about to lose in the struggle, its military wing or its judiciary wing would come to its rescue. That’s the history of military coups or judicial coups, including the Supreme Court’s verdict that two-thirds of 19 states is twelve and two-thirds of a state.

    Remember Chief Richard Akinjide, an Establishment lawyer, argued this case successfully before an Establishment Supreme Court. Remember, also, that Supreme Court, realising how laughable its judgment was, decided as well that it shouldn’t be cited in Nigeria’s legal references. That judgement gave the Presidency to Alhaji Shehu Shagari, of the Establishment, ending the dream of Chief Obafemi Awolowo to govern Nigeria. In the oncoming Jonathan/Buhari encounter there is no strong balancer. It is possible, though, that Accord Party and Labour Party may grow into that potent force someday.

     

    Akin Awodeyin

    This is an unknown name in Nigeria’s politics. Actually, he is a young philosophy graduate from the University of Lagos (UNILAG). I mention him here because of his views about two years ago on a possible Establishment/Progressive line-up that would throw up President Jonathan and challenger Muhammadu Buhari for a resolution of Nigeria’s lingering problems. At that time, many people thought the North would deny Jonathan a second-term PDP ticket and that a progressive coalition was impossible. Akin Awodeyin, who has had no job since Jonathan came into power in 2011, thought otherwise. He said the Establishment would close its ranks and disarrange the poor even if they were to gang up against President Jonathan. He holds views uncomfortable for people of my age who cannot scale fences, run in the bush and carry guns to shoot and kill people we didn’t know, let alone who didn’t offend us. In simple words, the believes only a bloody revolution would cleanse the nation. But he is sober when, literally, I hold him by the hand and lead him through the Laws of Nature, explaining we can achieve the goal through gradualism and reformation. He would not tell me that is “stupid” thought in our circumstances. But he would, his peers who cannot work around his intellect and make it bow to his spirit. Thus, one fine evening at a gathering of young people in the neighbourhood, he became so angry during an argument that he called them “stupid”, and one of them smashed a bottle on his head. Only a bloody revolution, according to them, will do so.

    From what Akin Awodeyin and his likes are saying, the defeat of Abubakar Atiku by Mohammed Buhari and the offer of a stronger Opposition to President Jonathan would not necessarily des-establish the Establishment.

     

    Will Buhari defeat Jonathan?

    In the line-up, Gen. Buhari represents the poor, the under
    privileged and the underclass. The crowd is too large
    and segmented to easily differentiate here. But I would like to mention two groups many observers are looking at. The young voters of 2011 who stood by President Jonathan, believing the man who, as a boy, had no school shoes and bag and books would take good care of deprived people like them. They had no jobs many years after graduating from the university. Many young women among them are still too poor to fend for themselves that they have to depend on their parents not just for food and clothing but for things as basic to a woman as brassieres, under briefs and menstrual pads. They wish to be married and to have babies. But where is that young man today who is keen to marry before he is 35 or over? Where is he going to find the money to rent an apartment, furnish it, take care of his folks and himself before he adds the responsibilities of marriage, for such people, their lives have been stagnant, motionless. They are angry without knowing why. One of the reasons for the anguish is that the Law of Motion, a natural law, compels us humans, like everything which exists, to be in motion. That’s why the clouds, like the air, the waves of the sea, our lungs, hearts and blood circulation, to give a few examples, are in motions. Don’t even babies kick in the wombs? So, if our lives are stagnant, we are unhappy, especially if we had been promised some motion. Is this another “wasted generation” or would Prof Soyinka have a worse definition for them? In my “wasted generation” we had jobs, we earned fairly well. The trouble was that we weren’t fully engaged, even in old age, to actualise ourselves. This generation still has nothing going for it despite the Jonathan Promises of 2011. Some university graduates who are lucky to have menial jobs earn about N20,000 a month, a little above the minimum wage. Many young people continue to flee abroad, some through Morocco or Lybia, dying in the desert or in the sea, on their way to Spain and Europe.

    President Jonathan had promised that, in his tenure, no Nigerian would go to bed without food in his or her stomach. Had this promise been kept, the youth would not have been despising their country and fleeing it.

    To worsen maters, the government has admitted a major side in the economy which has warranted devaluation of the currency, effects of which will begin to materialize next year in salary cuts, job losses, inflation and psychic pain.

    Under this scenario, the deprived will seek change and find a messiah. Even the Children of Israel found one in Moses who feed them from the enslavement of Egypt. They also sought one from the yoke of the Romans.

    Their own, poor people cannot free themselves except through a revolution which, in many cases, worsen matters. It is from the ranks of kind-hearted members of the Establishment, the progressives among them, that a peaceful salvage comes. It is such people who have put together the political machine in what Buhari is riding today. If the machine or all the poor galvanizes underpriviledged and hold them, Buhari should win.

    Will President Jonathan defeat Gen. Buhari?

    People like Akin Awodeyin believe poor people are gullible. They are like soldier ants mushrooming and marching tenaciously in a long file not easily broken. Even when they are disarranged, these ants soon regroup. But they cannot stand ash. Pour ash over them, and that’s the end of the story. It is said that many factors can easily break the solidarity of the poor. Gen. Buhari would have to tackle these poisonous factors if he hopes to defeat President Jonathan. One of the factor is ethnicity. South-south people refused to join the national protest against petrol price hike imposed by President Jonathan, not because they did not feel the pinch, but because it came from a “son of the soil”. Thus, the president looks forwards to detaching South-South poor from Buhari’s train.

    In the North, President Jonathan may have a hard day against propaganda that he is the actual sponsor of Boko Haram. Many people in the north have swallowed the propaganda. The propagandists say he is destablishing the North to weaken it politically against the 2015 polls.

    Propagandists say he is destabilising the north to weaken it politically and physically against the 2015 polls. President Jonathan says he know the financiers, but has failed to mention them. North Claims this is an attempt to divert attention from the real promoters. This much Governor Muritala Nyako as Governor of Adamawa State, dared to venture, and it earned him his impeachment which was well enjoyed by the President.

  • Dangote, Adenuga on list of the rich

    Dangote, Adenuga on list of the rich

    Two Nigerian billionaires have made the Forbes’ list of the world’s richest.

    Dangote Group of Companies President Aliko Dangote is number 43, moving up from 76 last year, on the list of about 1,500 billionaires. His net worth is $16.1 billion.

    Globacom chief Mike Adenuga Jnr. is number 267 on the list, with a net worth of $4.7 billion.

    Mexican telecoms giant Carlos Slim is, once again, the world’s richest person, followed by Bill Gates. Amancio Ortega of Spanish retailer Zara moves up to No. 3 for the first time. He is the year’s biggest gainer, adding $19.5 billion to his fortune in one year. He moves ahead of Warren Buffett, despite the fact that the U.S. investing legend added $9.5 billion to his fortune. This is the first year since 2000 that Buffett has not been among the top three.

    Forbes said the ranks of the world’s billionaires reached all-time highs. The 2013 Forbes Billionaires list now boasts 1,426 names, with an aggregate net worth of $5.4 trillion, up from $4.6 trillion. The U.S., once again, leads the list with 442 billionaires, followed by Asia-Pacific (386), Europe (366), the Americas (129) and the Middle East & Africa (103).

    Resurgent asset prices are the driving force behind the rising wealth of the super-rich around the globe. While last year almost as many fortunes fell as rose, this year gainers outnumbered losers by four-to-one. Many new names made the list, thanks to free-spending consumers. To name but a few: Diesel jeans mogul Renzo Rosso at $3 billion, retailer Bruce Nordstrom at $1.2 billion and designer Tory Burch at $1 billion.

    Dangote retains his position as Africa’s richest man for the third year in a row. The past year has been eventful for 55-year-old Dangote. In October, he sold off a controlling stake in his flour milling company to Tiger Brands of South Africa. He pocketed $190 million in cash. In February, his Dangote Sugar Refineries acquired a 95% stake in Nigerian sugar producer Savannah Sugar, in a bid to maintain its dominant position in the Nigerian sugar industry.

    Dangote stepped up his philanthropy in the past year, giving over $100 million to causes ranging from education to health, flood relief, poverty alleviation and the arts. He also acquired a yacht, which he named after his mother, Amiya. Dangote started building his fortune more than three decades ago when he began trading in commodities, such as cement, flour and sugar, with a loan he received from his maternal uncle. He delved into full production of these items in the early 2000s and went on to build the Dangote Group, West Africa’s largest publicly-listed conglomerate, which now owns sugar refineries, salt processing facilities and Dangote Cement, the continent’s largest cement producer. A fitness buff, Dangote jogs every day.

    Adenuga built a fortune in mobile telecom and oil production. He founded Globacom, Nigeria’s second largest mobile phone network, in 2006. It has 24 million customers in Nigeria, operates in the Republic of Benin and recently acquired licences to roll out in Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire. His Conoil Producing is one of Nigeria’s largest independent exploration companies, with a production capacity of 100,000 barrels of oil per day. Adenuga made his first fortune at 26 in the 1970s by distributing lace and other materials.

    Other Africans who made the list include Mohammed Al-Fayed, Isabel dos Santos and Desmond Sacco.

    More women have joined the ranks of the world’s wealthiest. Of the 1,426 people on the new 2013 Forbes list of the world’s billionaires, 138 are women. That’s up from 104 women last year. New women billionaires include fashion designer Tory Burch and Hong Kong finance executive Pollyanna Chu.

    The world’s richest woman is Liliane Bettencourt, the 90-year-old heiress to a 30% stake in cosmetics group L’Oreal. With a fortune that Forbes pegs at $30 billion –up $6 billion from last year – she ranks ninth wealthiest overall. A surge in the value of L’Oreal shares over the past year helped put her back among the top ten richest for the first time since 1999. Bettencourt, a widow who suffers from dementia, was replaced on the L’Oreal board in February 2012 by her grandson, Jean-Victor Meyers. In 2011, her fortune was put under the guardianship of her daughter, Francoise Bettencourt-Meyers, after a three-year legal battle.

    The second richest woman is Christy Walton of the U.S., who inherited her husband John Walton’s stake in Wal-Mart when he died in a plane crash in 2005. She clocks in at $28.2 billion — up nearly $3 billion from a year ago due to an increase in the price of Wal-Mart stock.

    The third richest woman is yet another Walton family member — Alice Walton, daughter of visionary retailer Sam Walton, who founded Wal-Mart with his brother in 1962. Alice Walton, ranked number 16, has a net worth Forbes estimates $26.3 billion, up several billions from the previous year. Walton opened her Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas in 2011. It features works from her personal collection.

     

  • Utaka strikes it rich

    Utaka strikes it rich

    Montpellier striker John Utaka is set for his biggest pay day yet by season’s end when his contract will be up and he will be a free agent.

    During the January transfer window, French champions Montpellier turned down big-money offers for the 31-year-old Nigeria striker and now in June he will leave them for nothing.

    A close associate of Utaka informed MTNFootball.com that a Qatari club tabled a bid of about nine million Euros for the player, while there was also another offer from China worth about six million Euros, but all these were rejected by Montpellier.

    “John was very disappointed not to have moved in the winter transfer window after some serious offers from Qatar and China, but he has now put that behind him and he cannot wait for the season to come to an end when he will leave as a free agent,” the source informed.

    “What this means is that when he leaves in the summer, Montpellier will get nothing for his transfer and it will be left for him to decide what percentage his agent will get on his next move. The truth is that he has started counting the days to his departure.“

    Utaka has revived his career after a rather difficult time in England with Portsmouth. He showed how much of a comeback he made last June when he was recalled to the Super Eagles for a series of qualifiers after a two-year absence from the national team.

    However, he was not considered for a place on the final squad to the 2013 Nations Cup in South Africa.

  • The rich also cry

    The rich also cry

    Flood is no respecter of persons. Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman Audu Ogbeh, Minister of Trade and Investment Samuel Ortom, former Anambra State Deputy Governor Chinedu Emeka and other men of means can testify.

    The flood has not spared even monarchs, whose palaces have been submerged.

    As the poor are mourning their losses in thousands, the rich are doing so in millions and billions. State investments, such as a rice plantation, run by Viatnamese for the Edo State government, has been overrun by water.

    Ogbeh, former Attorney-General and Justice Minister Mike Aondoakaa and a former Governor of the state, the late Rev-Fr. Moses Adasu, lost property estimated at several millions of naira.

    The late Adasu’s Covenant Clergy Retirement Home on Beach Road and Covenant Projects Company on the Makurdi-Gboko Road were submerged. The floods also overran Ogbeh’s Makurdi home.

    Hundreds of bags of rice, which Aondoakaa stocked in two warehouses on Ogbeh’s premises as raw materials for the Miva Rice Factory, were destroyed.

    The Minister of State for Trade’s 350 hectare rice farm has been submerged.

    The houses of the former Anambra Deputy Governor, former Minister of Transport John Emeka and the palace of Igwe of Umueze-Anam are flooded.