Tag: Soludo

  • Soludo: Nigeria undergoing reset with subsidy removal

    Soludo: Nigeria undergoing reset with subsidy removal

    • Illiterates holding us hostage, says Kukah

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s twin economic policies – removal of petrol subsidy and floating of the naira – got yesterday the full support of Anambra State Governor Charles Chukwuma Soludo.

    Soludo reasoned that it was sensible to eliminate the ‘’debilitating scam’’ called subsidy which benefitted largely the urban elite to a more productive social contract that created opportunities for all.

    He spoke yesterday while giving the convocation lecture at Abuja-based  Veritas University.

    It was the 13th convocation of the institution.

    At the event, Archbishop of the Catholic Diocese, Sokoto, and Veritas University Pro-Chancellor/  Chairman of the Governing Council   Matthew Kukah lamented that ‘’uneducated persons’’ have held the country hostage through banditry. 

    Soludo, who was Central Bank of Nigeria(CBN) governor between May 2004   and  May 2009,  commended Tinubu for also ending ‘forex and electricity subsidies.”

    The governor said: “Nigeria is undergoing a fundamental and disruptive reset. Hopefully, we have ended the debilitating scam called fuel subsidy as well as the forex and electricity subsidies.

    “We have entered a ‘muddling-through’ phase which we must navigate carefully. Soon we must migrate from the destructive subsidies that benefitted largely the urban elite to a productive social contract that creates opportunity for all.”

    Soludo encouraged Nigerians to sit up and craft a pragmatic new deal and an emergency national infrastructure plan akin to the United States(U.S) Marshall Plan to catapult the nation to great heights.

    He added: “As we muddle through the shocks occasioned by the needed disruptive changes, we must sit and craft a pragmatic New Deal for Nigeria plus an emergency national infrastructure plan akin to the U.S Marshall Plan for Europe after the Second World war.

    ‘’Some elements of the new deal such as the minimum wage legislation, draft tax reform bill, and planned cash transfers are positive signs.

    “This moment calls for historic coordination between the federal and state governments to agree of the critical elements of the augmented New Deal and Marshall Plan as well as their implementation to deliver outcomes within the shortest possible time.

    “A key issue will be the ‘national plan’ for the deployment of the apparent ‘fiscal/subsidy windfall.’

    ‘’I say ‘apparent’ windfall because much of the nominal increase in fiscal revenues is largely money illusion. In the  US,  dollar terms and real purchasing power terms, much of the current revenue windfall is still far lower than in previous years.

    Read Also: Nigeria undergoing reset through subsidy removal – Soludo

    ‘’For example, a state that received N5 billion or  $43.4 million as monthly federation account allocation in 2007/8 when the exchange rate was N118 to a dollar and a bag of cement sold for a few hundred Naira would need to receive at least N77 billion a month at current exchange rate and prices to be restored to its 2007/8 position. But the state does not get even a third of such.

    “Fixing the oil output will be a critical game changer in the short to medium term. However minuscule or even non-existent the windfall in real terms, the federation must be seen to intentionally execute a new deal that pragmatically coheres with our peculiar federalism while urgently addressing the needs of the people.

      “Besides the humongous investment to build infrastructure for the 21st century, we urgently need to prioritise our national investment in human capital— to transform our abundant human resources into productive capital. In the 21st and 22nd centuries driven by digitalisation, only societies that intentionally mine their human capital will triumph.

    “Deploying our depleting natural resources to invest in the bridge to the future—human capital—will not only give our teeming population a stake in society but also secure their future.

    “As a country, we must aim to remember this time in our history as the moment when we dared to remove the negative subsidies but deployed a part of the windfall to benefit our children and youths—via their education and health.

    “At the minimum, we should set a national target to bring down the out-of-school children to zero within 5-8 years, and qualitative tuition-free secondary education to all Nigerian children within 10 years, while mainstreaming selected centres of excellence for the exportable labour force.” 

    The governor charged the graduating students not to fail the country. 

    He said: ‘’The future you seek is in your palms, and only those who plan can control the future. As I look into your eyes, I can see hope.

    ‘’Nigeria may not have offered you much, but in fulfillment of your divine purpose on earth, you will be expected to give more than you have received.’’

    Bishop  Kukah expressed concern with the ways uneducated persons have held the country hostage as a result of banditry activities.

    He explained that the consequence of this is that people no longer feel safe.

    The cleric harped on the need to clear the circle for the sake of the younger generations.

    “The consequences of that for us as a country is that scientists, professors, the richest of Nigerians, even the president doesn’t feel secure because uneducated people have now held this country hostage. Whether they are bandits or by whatever name, we must clear that circle,” Kukah said. 

    Vice-Chancellor of the university  Hyacinth Ichoku, pledged the continued dedication of the institution to quality education, system, and moral value of students.

  • Moghalu: Why Soludo should not be re-elected

    Moghalu: Why Soludo should not be re-elected

    Dr. George Moghalu was the National Auditor of the All Progressives Congress (APC) until August, when he left the party. In this interview with JIDE ORINTUNSIN, he explains why he opted for the Labour Party (LP) to pursue his ambition to govern Anambra State.

    Why did you defect from the APC to the LP?

    My leaving the APC is not about me. Two critical indices in political contestation must be weighed before making final decisions. And those two indices are the person and the platform. These are two political components. For you as the person, it is about you making the decision.

    You will probably consult your family or those very close to you, your loved ones. It is understandable, but it is about you making the decision. However, as far as the platform is concerned, it involves you and your political family.

    It involves your friends. A lot of people and issues were considered before the decision was made. For me, once I made up my mind to run for election, the next thing was the platform.

    So, I decided to talk with my campaign organisation, friends and followers, particularly those who believe in my ideology and principles and can work with me. After all considerations, the odds appear to favour the LP.

    But the LP is going through some serious crisis…

    I’m afraid I have to disagree that the LP is in a serious crisis. As I always say, political parties are human organisations. In any human organisation, there will always be issues like this because interests and ambitions are bound to clash. So there are bound to be some disagreements, but they are all resolvable because they are all part of human evolution. It is a human organisation. So, for me, it is not a big issue. I believe its differences will be resolved, just like other political parties. That is why we are all human beings.

    Will it be right to say you are eyeing the LP ticket for next year’s election?

    There is no doubt; that I want to run for the governorship of Anambra State. I have made it abundantly clear. I have spoken about it in private and in public. That is not even a contention. I will run for the governorship of Anambra State God willing.

    Are you sure the odds favour actualising your ambition through the LP?

    I don’t see any oddity because it is a process. What is the process? When you are in a political party and they throw a position open and you are desirous, you throw your heart in the ring and members will decide if you are their best option. If you are, they will support you; if not, they will support whoever they consider as their best option.

    If you are lucky to be that person, you will move to the next level: the general election. You will appear before the Anambra State electorate, the state I come from, to ask for their support. And even if you are lucky to get their support, to God be the glory.

    Have you considered your chances of winning in Anambra, an APGA stronghold?

    Yes, I have considered the challenges and I can tell you that my chances are very high. The realities are more than having a party like APGA as a tradition in the State. The situation is a case of people having a wrong assumption.

    Read Also: Ajayi has greater chance of winning, says PDP Publicity Secretary Fadaka

    Yes, APGA has been in power in Anambra for a long time now and that is a fact we must acknowledge. But the truth is that the situation on the ground today is not the very best. Are the people happy with the government? I can tell you that the answer is no.

    You can do an independent investigation; you can talk to as many people as possible: APGA is not on the ground as it used to be. It is about who the people want. The Anambra state political elite is going to consider the persons involved, weigh them according to their merits and their demerits, check who will be better for Anambra State, and then give the person an opportunity.

    So, I am not bothered about what APGA has done, there in the past. They have been there before, but an incumbent administration has been changed in this country. We are going to do lots of things when we come to power to change the narrative in the State.

    What is Governor Soludo doing that you can do better?

    There are many of them. It is against my principles and I find it difficult, to criticise any administration without providing a viable alternative. I will unveil a comprehensive manifesto that will deal with all the issues about governance.

    But I can say, off the cuff, that the government of Soludo has failed in terms of infrastructural decay. Anambra State has not had it this bad previously. There is total infrastructural decay. I repeat, Anambra State has not had it this bad before. The government has failed in many areas; insecurity is at its maximum.

    I wonder how somebody will expect foreign or local investment in an insecure state. No investor will come to any State if they feel it is insecure. We have challenges, insecurity is alarming in our state, and it’s very disheartening.

    There are quite a lot of things they have not done well, especially the economic policy, surprisingly, very surprisingly. The economic policies are not having much impact on the lives of an average Anambrian. Their style of taxation is not also the best. There are many other things that Anambra State people will not like or have rejected and will not accept. We feel so disappointed.

    From your consultations so far, what is the level of your acceptability among the people?

    If you ask an average Anambra man that question, I can comfortably tell you that I have reasonable goodwill in the State that I can build on. My people know my competence and capacity.

    A school of thought believes Peter Obi motivated you to join the LP. How true is that?

    Not at all, but that is not to say that Peter Obi does not have an impact to make in the politics of Anambra State. Anybody who says that he does not have an impact is a joker. The truth about it is that he is a light in Anambra State; he served the State creditably well and left on a clean slate.

    So, he is a force you can’t wish away. He is a credible Anambra son who can be trusted, and who has been trusted in the past because he has never betrayed the confidence Anambra people reposed in him.

    As I keep telling people, my principal agenda in running for the governorship of Anambra State is to restore the confidence of the people in their government. The moment you lost the confidence of the people, just like we have now, you have lost it.

    But, the moment you can gain people’s confidence in their government, administering them becomes a lot easier. They will make every sacrifice and do everything to ensure you succeed. They will see the government as their own and that is talking about acceptability. I know the Anambra electorate is the deciding factor in the election.

    If you sit down with President Tinubu, what will you tell him?

    I don’t actually envy him. I know what he is facing. He is facing a lot of challenges. The challenges before him are quite enormous because things are not just going well. I am praying for him because my Bible tells me to pray for people in authority.

    I pray for him every day and I ask God to give him the grace, and the strength that will help him and others in authority at all levels, up to counsellors, to have the feeling of the people and to have empathy, so that they can do their best putting in their best.

    I agree that the decay before this administration came into the office was also quite enormous. Even the administration before this one also had challenges they inherited. But the truth is that it is like getting a sickness cured, any form of sickness, which takes a little time.

    So, I appeal to people to be patient. To answer your question directly, he should see what can be done to cushion the effect of the difficulties people are going through. As to whether the challenges are enormous, they are on both sides, the side of the governed and the side of the government.

    There is an impression that APC is sponsoring the crisis rocking other political parties. Do you share this view?

    I don’t want to share that impression. I don’t want to believe that because those sponsored must be fools to accept to destroy the houses they built. If the APC is sponsoring you to destroy your house, why allow them to do so? If the APC is sponsoring crises in other parties, why can’t others do the same in the APC?

    So why do you have to allow somebody from outside, whether APC or anywhere, to sponsor you to destroy your party? It doesn’t make sense to me and I don’t want to believe that.

    Who is your godfather in this contest for the Anambra State governorship election?

    I don’t have any godfather. God in Heaven is my father. My godfather is the Anambra people on the street. They are my number one godfather. They are the ones to decide with their votes whether George Moghalu is fit enough to govern them, and once they do that, I am good to go.

    How much foreign investment can you attract to Anambra when you become the governor?

    There are even enough enormous local direct investments from Anambra sons and daughters within Nigeria and the diaspora ready to invest before you talk of attracting foreign investors. These local investors don’t come home again because of insecurity. So, for me, insecurity is a major challenge, and we must address it frontally.

    Youth unemployment and women empowerment must be addressed. We will create an enabling environment for industries to thrive. Our people are very industrious, and they can develop the state. What they need is for the government to create an enabling environment.

    That is the primary responsibility of the government. If we can do that, I can guarantee that there will not be any state to compare with Anambra in one to two years.

  • Soludo insists on N70,000 minimum wage for Anambra workers

    Soludo insists on N70,000 minimum wage for Anambra workers

    Anambra State is sticking to N70,000 minimum wage for workers.

    Governor Chukwuma Soludo said if he allows deductions like union dues, tax and other things, the workers might be receiving between N78,000 to 84,000 every month.

    However, he said he decided not to announce the figure because it would still come down to N70,000  

    He assured the least paid worker in Anambra State is to go home with nothing less than N70,000

    Read Also: LG autonomy: Coalition accuses Soludo of working to subvert Supreme Court’s judgment

    Soludo met with the labour leaders in the State at the Governor’s lodge at Amawbia at the weekend.

    According to Soludo:” We approved the proposal by Organised Labour to ensure that the minimum take-home for a worker (after all deductions, including tax and Union dues) is at least N70,000 per month ( the gross salary could range from N78,000 to N84,000).”

  • Soludo fails to raise minimum wage above N70,000

    Soludo fails to raise minimum wage above N70,000

    The expectations of Anambra state civil servants were dashed at the weekend as Governor Chukwuma Soludo failed to raise the minimum wage above N70, 000.

    While noting that the total amount might get to between N78, 000 to 84,000 every month, he however maintained that after every deductions like union dues, tax, ASHIA among others, it would still come down to N70,000.

    He however assured that the least paid worker in Anambra State is to go home with nothing less than N70,000.

    The former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria instead, announced a monthly cash award of 10,000 naira to all pensioners in the state, until a time the pension salary shall be reviewed.

    Read Also: On Soludo’s search for sustainable Local Govt. administration

    This interim cash award, he said, was necessitated by his goodwill and empathy for the situation of the pensioners who nobody remembers in all the noise about the new minimum wage.

    The meeting between the Governor and labour leaders ( 56 in number), led by Humphrey Nwafor of Nigeria Labour Congress NLC and Chris Ogbonna of Trade Union Congress TUC, ended late Friday night.

    According to Soludo,” We approved the proposal by the organised labour to ensure that the Minimum Take-Home for a worker after all deductions, including tax and union dues is at least N70,000 per month (the gross salary could range from N78,000 to N84,000).

    “We care deeply for the welfare of our workers including the new 8,115 teachers and other 3,300 workers employed since we assumed office barely 30 months ago. In addition, we considered the plight of our pensioners.

    “We also approved a monthly, non-taxable cash award of N10,000 to our pensioners (in addition to their monthly pension.”

    No fewer than eight states had raised the 70,000 approved minimum wage by the federal government to between 75,000 to 85,000 naira.

    Some of these states are, Lagos, Delta, Akwa-Ibom, Enugu, Ogun, Ebonyi among others

    Despite the explanations, the labour leaders applauded Soludo for his magnanimity towards providing land for NLC’s state secretariat in the state and the 10,000 naira for the pensioners

    For the NLC Chairman (Nwafor), the governor made the negotiations easier by the approvals and thanked him for being worker friendly, even as he requested him to always do more for Anambra workers as a father.

    Also, The Nation gathered that the TUC leader in the state, comrade Chris Ogbonna, joined the NLC leader in singing praises of the governor, describing him as a thorough person.

  • Don’t Drag us back to Egypt on council autonomy, Klinsmann tells Soludo

    Don’t Drag us back to Egypt on council autonomy, Klinsmann tells Soludo

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) from Dunukofia Local Government, Pharmacist Chinedu Ikeagwuonwu Klinsmann, has expressed displeasure with Anambra Governor Chukwuma Soludo, for stating that granting full autonomy to Nigeria’s 774 Local Government Areas (LGAs) could lead to “humongous chaos and hinder sustainable development.”

    Soludo made this remark on Tuesday at the Governor’s Lodge in Amawbia, Awka, after signing into law the Anambra Local Government Administration Law 2024 which the Assembly passed last Thursday.

    Justifying the enactment of this law, Soludo had cited Section 7 of the Constitution, which he said empowers state governments to enact laws for local government administration. He also highlighted the importance of state oversight over LGAs.

    The Governor stated that the new laws are consequential to the Supreme Court judgment and not intended to undermine it. He said if the State House of Assembly abdicates its constitutional duty, the LGAs will have no law stipulating the use and management of their finances.

    The new law requires the Anambra State Government to maintain a State Joint Local Government Account, into which all federal allocations to LGAs must be deposited. Another section of the law compels each LGA in the state to remit a state-determined percentage to the consolidated account within two working days of receiving their allocations. Yet another section states that when the Anambra State Government receives the LGA’s allocation on their behalf, it must deduct a specified percentage before disbursing the remaining funds to the LGAs.

    Responding to this development, Klinsmann expressed disappointment and utter dismay at the actions of Soludo. 

    He stated that the Federal Government’s effort to grant LGAs full autonomy, which culminated in the Supreme Court’s pronouncement to that effect, was part of a concerted effort to institute policies, programs, and reforms that would address the challenges that came with the removal of fuel subsidies. 

    “Reactivating the LGA system is part of efforts made to cushion the effects of fuel subsidy removal,” Klinsmann said. 

    He stressed that when LGAs are allowed to run their administration without hindrance, they would be able to create jobs, provide much-needed social amenities for their people, and secure their locality, thus allowing farmers to return to their farms. This, he maintained, will boost the local economy, and ameliorate poverty nationwide. 

    Pharm. Klinsmann urged Governors to support the Federal Government to bring the gains of democracy to the people at the grassroots. He admonished them to desist from attempting to drag the nation backwards.

    Soludo, Klinsmann observed, seemed desperate in his attempt to show that the intention behind his administration’s hijack of LGA resources is good.

    “If state governors’ control of LGA resources was done with good intentions when the LGA had no autonomy, why were the governors unable to develop the LGAs? When governors had full control of the resources and administration of LGAs, what did they do to develop them?” Klinsmann pondered. 

    This, he asserted, shows that the Governors do not have the political will to develop LGAs that cater to the needs of the vast majority of our population who reside in rural areas. 

    He urged Soludo o retrace his steps and allow LGA administrations in his state to work.

     “People were elected into office at the local level; they have the mandate of their people, and the law granted them autonomy to enable them to serve their people without let or hindrance.”  He urged Governor Soludo not to impede or emasculate them. 

    Klinsmann urged Governors not to follow Soludo’s lead and try to seize control of LGA finances through the instrumentality of the dubious joint account or joint projects. “They should let the LGAs be fully autonomous,” he said. 

    To allay fears that if left alone, LGA administrations will engage in massive corruption, Klinsmann suggested that anti graft agencies should keep an eagle eye on LGAs. 

    These agencies, he posited, should investigate and diligently prosecute any LG chairman or council member who embezzles council funds.  

    He further emphasised that LGAs must be allowed to work without any conditions attached to their independence. 

    “If there is the need for any critical project that requires the financial contribution of the state government, the two tiers of government can execute the project through a counterpart funding arrangement.

    “Anything beyond that, he declared, will drag Nigeria back to the dark ages of state government suppressing LGAs,” he argued. 

    Responding to Soludo’s assertion that the law he enacted does not contravene the Constitution and the Supreme Court pronouncement that affirmed LGA autonomy did not preclude the Assembly from enacting laws or the State Government engaging in joint ventures with the LGA, Klinsmann stated: “We don’t need the Supreme Court to tell us everything. Before the emergence of civil law and the Constitution, there were natural laws. We do not need to wait for a Supreme Court pronouncement to do the right thing.” 

    He noted that in any case, Soludo’s Anambra State administrative law directly contravenes the Supreme Court’s directive against state interference with local government finances.

    Klinsmann added that the law contradicts the July 11, 2024, Supreme Court judgment affirming the financial autonomy of Nigeria’s 774 local government councils, wherein Justice Emmanuel Agim stated, on behalf of his colleagues, that

     “… justice demands that local governments allocations from the federation account should henceforth be paid directly to the local governments.” It therefore abolished the state-controlled joint accounts which the new Anambra law is enthroning. Klinsmann accused Soludo of trying to appropriate Anambra local governments’ funds. 

    Read Also: Soludo signs controversial LG law amid opposition

    “It is a display of impunity. It is a calculated effort to financially weaken the 21 local government areas of Anambra State and enthrone fiscal irresponsibility and disregard for local government autonomy,” stated Klinsmann. 

    The APC chieftain argued if  the Anambra LG law is allowed to stand, Soludo would have succeeded in creating the ignoble path which other state governors may follow, adding that what the governor is trying to do is an affront and direct assault on the autonomy of the 21 LGAs of the state, and a reversal of the progress achieved by the Supreme Court ruling in Suit No: SC/343/2024.

    He urged the Governors to be just and fair, stating that people are suffering, many are dying, and there are no functional hospitals in many LGAs. “People cannot go to their farms because of the heightened insecurity in rural areas.” This, he reiterated, can be addressed if LGA administrations are given a free hand to perform their constitutional duties. 

    Klinsmann appealed to the Governors to allow the LGAs to run unimpeded from now till the end of President Tinubu’s first term, to see what happens. 

  • Councils can’t be autonomous, says Soludo

    Councils can’t be autonomous, says Soludo

    Governor Chukwuma Soludo yesterday signed the Anambra Local Government Administration Bill 2024 into law despite condemnation of the Bill by many Nigerians and the Senate.

    He insisted that an absolute autonomy for local government would be a recipe for chaos.

    Soludo anchored his action on Section 7 of the 1999 Constitution.

    He argued that the law does not undermine the Supreme Court judgment on council autonomy.

    Section 7 provides: “The system of local government by democratically elected local government councils is under this Constitution guaranteed; and accordingly, the government of every state shall, subject to Section 8 of this Constitution, ensure their existence under a law which provides for the establishment, structure, composition, finance and functions of such councils.”

    The new law provides in Section 13(1) that the state shall maintain a “state joint local government account” into which all federal allocations to local governments in Anambra must be deposited.

    Section 14(3) of the law stipulates that each local government must remit a state-determined percentage to the account within two working days of receiving their allocations from the Federation Account.

    Read Also: Fighting malnutrition

    Section 14(4) maintains that if the state receives the local government allocation on its behalf, it must deduct the specified percentage before disbursing the remaining funds to the local governments.

    The state House of Assembly, led by Somtochukwu Udeze, passed the Bill a week ago.

    Opposition political parties and civil society organisations faulted it for contravening the Supreme Court judgment.

    But, signing the bill into law, Soludo maintained that local governments cannot operate autonomously without some form of safeguards as provided in Section 7 of the Constitution.

    He said the section empowers the state to make such an enabling.

    Soludo said: “This is where Section 7 of the Constitution comes in handy, and the Anambra State House of Assembly has risen to the occasion.

    “Happily, the Supreme Court did not nullify Section 7 of the Constitution.

    “The new laws by Anambra House of Assembly are therefore consequential to give operational life to the Supreme Court judgment and not to undermine it.

    “If the State House of Assembly abdicates this constitutional duty, the Local Government will then have no law on the use and management of its finance which the Constitution has given the State House of Assembly the mandate to legislate on.

    “Indeed, in many states, the House of Assemblies retain the power to suspend or remove chairpersons of local governments.

    “By the way, isn’t the legislative authority exercised by the state Assemblies under Section 7 of the Constitution similar to the powers granted by the Constitution to the National Assembly over the Federal Capital Territory and its Area Councils?”

    The governor acknowledged the opposition to the law.

    He said: “Governors are often accused of seeking to ‘control’ local government funds with insinuations that LG funds are mismanaged.

    “Of course, in a society where public office is seen as ‘dinning table’ and public trust is low, people judge others by their own standards: by what they would do if they were in the position. I often ask: control for what?

    “While I cannot hold brief for every governor, I know that most states are struggling to ensure a solvent local government system.

    “I wish I could be spared the headache, if not for the predictable collateral damage to the system if we abdicate from structured oversight and collective accountability.

    “Without active collaboration and coordination between state and local governments, many LGAs will end up in a huge financial mess, requiring bailouts by state governments, or will FGN directly intervene in every case of insolvency among the 774 LGs?

    “The challenge ahead can be daunting given the quantum rise in wage bills because of the new minimum wage, as well as the consequential rise in future pension/gratuity payments.”

    Soludo said the local governments under his administration have thrived with state support.

    “We inherited a local government system with four-year arrears (2018-2022) of gratuity to retired primary school teachers and other staff of local government.

    “We have restructured their finances back to sustainability.

    “Everyone who retired from the local government and state civil service since my tenure is paid gratuity/pension, and we are on course to clear the outstanding arrears soon.

    “Most of the local government secretariats have been remodelled and equipped, and the LG system is once again alive,” the governor said.

    The Supreme Court had abolished the state/local government joint account system, saying councils with only elected chairmen should be paid directly.

  • What is Soludo up to?

    What is Soludo up to?

    • New Anambra LG law leaves much to be desired

    It is obvious that governors regarded the July 11 Supreme Court judgment on local government autonomy as encroachment on their territory. Hitherto, they had treated the third tier of governance in the country more as appendage to the state governments and had always resisted any attempt to amend the law to strengthen governance at that level. The apex court’s intervention at the instance of the Federal Government was therefore a masterstroke, and those who had thought nothing could be done to ensure that the level of government closest to the people function properly without its money being misappropriated by the states were left bewildered.

    There have been arguments by states and their supporters that the federal structure accommodates only two tiers, while the local governments or counties as called in other jurisdictions, are regulated by the federating units. This could be true going by the classical

    theory by Professor K.C. Where. However, it must be noted that variants have since emerged in many countries owing to differences in sociological make-up. The American variant is surely different from the Russian or Australian model. Neither is any of the three the same as is practised in India or Switzerland.

    Besides, the Nigerian experience dictates that local governance must be weaned from the vice grips of the states if even national development is to be promoted. Whereas funds are distributed from the Federation Account across board, the states have continually pilfered money due to the local councils. This necessitated the Attorney-General of the Federation’s approach to the Supreme Court for interpretation of the relevant sections of the 1999 Constitution, and the intendment by the law drafters. Their lordships held that the essence of distributing funds to all three tiers of government from the federal distributable pool is defeated when states confiscate what is due to the lowest level. Had the governors been fair and just in handling financial matters, there probably would not have been need to approach the highest court of the land. But the local governments have been reduced to departments of the state governments where funds are only shared among the officials. Until the judgment forced them to conduct elections into the councils, many governors have been content with appointing party loyalists into caretaker committees despite the constitutional provision that only elected government is permitted at that level as is the case in the other two tiers.

    Anambra State is about the most notorious where, since 1999, successive governments have largely run that tier with appointees of the governor.

    The Governor Charles Soludo attempt to circumvent that intervention is to the end of ensuring that when money comes directly to the councils, states continue to profit from it by compelling them to remit a percentage to the intermediate government. This attempt at subverting the national structure as defined by the Supreme Court must be resisted by all nationalists and patriots. No one has the right to arrogate so much power to himself or the government under his control, to the detriment of the people at the grassroots.

    We know that other states are likely to follow suit unless Soludo is robustly checked by civil society organisations and professional groups like the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA). This is not about party affiliation but love of the fatherland and preservation of democracy and the rule of law.

    The tendency to conduct charade of elections wherever and whenever they are ever done also deserves scrutiny because financial autonomy without political autonomy is unacceptable.

    A recourse to section 7 of the constitution that grants power to states to “establish structure, finance and regulate local government councils“, is no longer applicable as no section of the law should be interpreted in isolation from others.

    Read Also: Soludo has failed to deliver on his campaign promises – Okonkwo

    It is good that this is taking place at a time when the lawmakers are taking another look at the constitution with a view to amending it. This should be done expeditiously to straighten whatever may lack clarity or is deemed unclear by people who are unwilling to let go of their control.

    We call on the federal authorities to withhold funds due to local governments in any state where they have failed to comply with the law as interpreted by the Supreme Court. It is trite that when that court rules, it is final unless there are new facts that make it to reverse itself. In this case the states, with their cause championed by the Anambra State governor, have not adduced fresh facts that were unknown to their lordships while considering the case, nor has Governor Soludo, a former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria and ex-Economic Adviser to the President, approached the apex court to reverse itself.

    Given the state of the country today, no one should be permitted to impede the quest to pull it out from the quagmire in which it is.

  • Soludo has failed to deliver on his campaign promises – Okonkwo

    Soludo has failed to deliver on his campaign promises – Okonkwo

    In this interview with selected editors, the Chairman of United Nigeria Airlines and Nigeria’s iconic entertainment hub, The Dome Entertainment, Prof. Obiora Okonkwo, bares his mind on the security situation in his home Anambra State. He also speaks on the expectation of the Anambra people from their state governor and gives germane reasons why President Bola Ahmed Tinubu should reshuffle his cabinet and send dead woods packing. Deputy Editor, YOMI ODUNUGA, was there.

    YOU were known to have been critical of the governance structure especially in Anambra State. Lately, you seem to have been quiet. What’s been going on?

    Well, I have not been quiet actually unless you talk about matters concerning Anambra State. But in terms of life, I have more than my share of being busy. As you may have known, I am not a full-time politician and do not believe that politics is a profession. It must be a vocation. When you are into politics and you are willing to offer selfless service to people, then, you come and play. If you find yourself in a political position, you dedicate your time to it and when the season is over you should be facing your daily job; your source of income, as the case may be. So, I have been very active in my area of business. I have been very, very visible, both in the media, each time, discussing the state of the nation.

    I have also been visible in one of the sectors where I play, that is the aviation sector. I have also been very active in the social sphere. But as far as Anambra is concerned, yes, Anambra politics, I haven’t. It was deliberate. Deliberate in the sense that when the campaign for governorship was over, and a new government was put in place, one felt that there was a need to give the government time to stabilise.

    The governor needs time to work to fulfill his promises, or, to start laying the foundations which one can see and say yes, he is on the way to fulfilling his promises.  I remember one of my interviews on television where I was asked to assess the Gov. Chukwuma Soludo administration. That was in his seventh month in office. I made it very clear to the programme anchor that it was probably too early to assess the governor. I said that I would give him one year before making an assessment. The one year has come and gone. But looking back, I do not see anything that would enable me to make a very reasonable assessment. I have waited for two years. The two years are gone and the more I look at things and see that things are going from bad to worse, the more I get worried.

    The elite and the critical stakeholders seem also to have been overwhelmed. And there is this kind of unusual Anambra elite conspiracy of silence which made me think that it could be assumed that we are conspirators in this whole very dangerous situation. So, this is why I feel that I can’t keep quiet any more. I cannot remain silent any more. And, there wouldn’t be a better time to make my voice heard than now.

    When I look around Anambra State, I see that it is becoming a ghost state. This is because of the security situation. We know there is a general security situation in the nation and majorly in some parts of Nigeria. We knew what the security situation in Anambra was when Soludo took over. We also know of the genuine efforts that his predecessor was making to contain the security situation then. Those things were quite heart-warming, but looking at it now, things are not as they ought to be. If there is anything better than worse, I will apply it. And the most unfortunate situation is that there seems not to be anything going on in terms of a visible plan or strategy, or even investment in the security architecture in Anambra State to make things better. That makes me wonder if it is the design that suits Soludo; a design that will keep people away from the state and he thinks that is the cheapest and easiest way for him to have a second term, which now seems to be the only agenda on his table. And this is because he is an intellectual narcissist. He is someone who believes only in his own knowledge and does not think that other people know as much. People like him have never made good leaders. That is why Anambra is in a mess.

    Some stakeholders in Anambra State may disagree with your assessment because, when you go around the state, people still hail him as Soludo is the solution which was his campaign slogan during the election. Don’t you think these people see what the elite like you don’t see or refuse to see?

    Well, this is not about writing Soludo off. There are things he can do. He is a great man, no doubt. And he has done well for himself as an individual. Probably by his assessment, and those of people around him, he has done well. However, I am looking at Anambra from the perspective of the promises that he made by himself. Do you remember the promises that he made? The Dubai, Taiwan, and Hong Kong promise? It is from that perspective that I assess his administration. All of us understood what those promises mean for Anambra state. But, what we are seeing on the ground is far-fetched. And then, again, you see the government doing things, engaging in certain behaviours which may matter to him, but for me, they are not necessarily addressing the problems of the people even in the interim.

    I can only say that he gets high on his dose. That’s what I can see going on. It’s about ego then. This is because when you come to a state where there is no security, where there is no social and economic life, where Mondays have become unconventional, additional weekends, where there is no life beyond five o’clock, where people are going on the street with their hearts in their hands, where the elites are deserting; and nothing tangible is seen to be happening towards addressing these issues, especially where there are daily occurrences of kidnapping and robbery and in very brutal ways. And the government does not even seem to take action. And the government does not also engage with people that matter in the process of finding lasting solutions. Many people who have options have left the state. The people that are left behind are probably there because they don’t have options. And the sad reality is that those who are there now are not only faced with insecurity but also, pummeled by all sorts of taxes and the shenanigans of raising revenue in a most crude way that is known to mankind, in a very dehumanising manner. Living in Anambra state now, from the way I look at it, is quite terrorising and traumatising. For me, therefore, with all these things going on in the state, I cannot just say that I believe in that solution philosophy. Rather, I will say emphatically, without any doubt, that Soludo is the problem and not the solution.

    Looking at the way you’ve painted the picture of insecurity in Anambra State, somebody could argue that governors are not actually in charge of the security apparatus of their states because of the federal command structure of security management organisations of government. Don’t you think you are too harsh in blaming the governor?

    Why do we have different tiers of government? Each tier has its responsibility from the federal to state to local even to the community level, It has remained so. There are security threats that are left in the hands of the federal government. Besides, why do we have that title for a governor who is the Chief Security Officer of the state? In my state, we say that the traditional rulers are the Chief Security Officers of their towns, so we all have the responsibility and each individual is also the chief security officer of his environment.  I think that this is about not having what it takes. Why would somebody like Soludo take home about N2 billion monthly in what is called a security vote and from every information available, does not spend more than N50 million on security? I agree that the state has security apparatchik, from the Police, DSS, military, and paramilitary service, which are federal agencies, but they work in the state to sustain the security and peace of the state; and they report to you as governor. You do not need to be told as a governor that no matter the vision or dream you have for a state if you don’t have an enabling environment, security-wise, you cannot actualise anything.

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    The greatest asset that Anambra has is its human capital.  When these human resources are not able to come around to transact their business, whether they are social or economic, and are not comfortable visiting and enjoying the community of their kith and kin at home, then you are depriving the state of the fabric that propels its growth. It is like depriving someone of oxygen. This is exactly what has happened to Anambra state under the leadership of Soludo. As you know, Anambra is known to have created a social industry where people come home for huge chieftaincy title taking, marriage or funeral ceremonies etc., which have gradually become part of the people’s way of life. But today you see more of our people doing these things outside the territories of Anambra. These ceremonies have helped to develop and grow ancillary businesses in the state through which people make income and pay their taxes to the state.

    However, these businesses are now suffering and dying gradually as a consequence of insecurity. And, to make matters worse, Soludo, in his deliberate programme to stifle the growth of the state for his benefit, is also using some utterances and actions, and then promoting some kind of funny laws from the State Assembly to dissuade people from elaborate burials.

    Seriously, I wonder how someone chooses to bury his deceased parents or family members should bother the government. Look at it this way! If you are going about and saying don’t print posters, banners, or brochures for burials, did you forget that people are living and paying taxes to the state and who are in the business of printing? They also make money from such jobs. Why frustrate them? So, what I am saying in essence is that economic activities are carried out effectively where there is a suitable environment and when people can go around freely. Imagine that at six o’clock, life shuts down in Anambra State. In some parts of the world, and even in a normal situation, you can equate both night and day economy to 40% to 60%. In some places, you could say that the day economy is 60% and the night economy is 40%. In some places it’s 40%. In Anambra, we have lost almost 60 per cent of the economic capacity. I haven’t heard anything from Soludo or his administration, even to express concern about it, even though he’s an economist.

    In spite of this assessment, Anambra will soon be going for another election and Soludo will run. But there seems to be no opposition to challenge him. So there’s a feeling out there that he’s already coasting home to a second term. Could this be the scenario?

    I am not here to speak for the opposition. I am expressing myself as an authentic and eligible stakeholder in Anambra State who is concerned and worried about the situation. I leave voters in Anambra state to decide who wins the next governorship election. More importantly, I leave it to God to give us who will be the next governor. So, this is not necessarily about if he will come back or not. The issue is that he is there for now and so far he is presiding over the affairs of Anambra State, not with his resources or his family resources but with the resources of Anambra State, it is time to call him out to know that he is not doing enough as he promised.

    He is not doing enough as we expected and he is not utilizing our resources, our commonwealth, for what matters more to the people but more of what massages his ego. I am more interested in what matters to the people and that is what he has to do. If you have grown through the daily business process of buying and selling, like those of us who went through the main market, you will know that what you offer is what the people want and not what you want. Offering only what you want is ego-tripping. When you offer what the people want, it means that you are closer to the people and you hear them.

    You don’t just sit down somewhere as a governor and then all you want to do is what will boost your ego by building whatever you want and labeling them solution this and solution that. The people are shouting out against multiple taxes and asking you to stop. These are things that matter to them but you continually take life away from the grassroots meanwhile development should have a bottom-up approach. As you now know, there are no activities at the local government because he has stifled that tier of government and withheld their funds. As you know, I am from Idemili North LGA and my local government area is one of the largest in terms of population size, voters population, and even revenue. My hometown of Ogidi is the capital but there is no single thing I can point to as what the state government has achieved in the area despite the huge local government monthly allocation and IGR from the LGA.

    But Soludo is your friend. Though you belong to different political parties, is it not possible that you could still have called him and offered some words of advice? Why haven’t you done that?

    I have known Soludo for over three decades and he is my friend but this is not about our friendship. It is about making him live up to his promises and give us that Anambra of our dreams, or, the Anambra of his dream. Also, it is because he is my friend that I am worried for him. I am also worried for our people. I am worried because we have dependent people. We have people who are looking up to us. We have our responsibilities in this state. It is even becoming very difficult for me to carry out these responsibilities because of the environment. So, part of the things which are our social responsibility is to go home and be with our people. Listen to them. See what you can do to assist them. I have some calendar programmes. I have been carrying out for over 10 years –Christmas festivities, the New Yam Festival, and other activities that are supposed to warm up the environment, bring joy and happiness, and offer some help to people. Those things are closed because I can’t even go home. Imagine that for the first time in over 50 years I did not spend Christmas in Anambra State. Not that I cannot protect myself. That is far from it. I can protect myself because God is with me. However, the issue is that when you go and you have a social obligation to each other, you invite some of your friends to join you. Some of them must come because it is you. But that puts them in a very difficult situation because they will be in fear and even you won’t be at rest. Recently, I buried my uncle. I know what it took me to secure the environment to ensure the safety of everyone who honoured us with their presence at the funeral ceremonies.  The sad thing is that even community efforts to secure the environment go without support from the state government. I have not had any community say that they are getting support from the state government every month. The people are now forced by the situation to provide for themselves, even for infrastructure development. Communities are getting together, taxing themselves for infrastructure development. So, what is the function of government? And Soludo will proudly tell you that he has redefined the PPP (Public-Private Partnership); to become PPCP (Public Private Community Partnership); what a disgrace! It simply means that he is abdicating his responsibilities as government to the people. He is more interested in commissioning projects developed by the people, not ones developed by his government. And the saddest thing is that what he is doing now appears to be his best because he is still looking for a second term.

    You are one of the elites of Anambra, and from the way you speak, though you don’t speak for the Anambra elite, somebody will say that if all other Anambra elites were as worried as you, perhaps things would have changed. Is this a fair assessment?

    Worrying is not enough. I speak for myself surely. If other Anambra people have a different impression, maybe they are standing in a position that I am not standing in and they are seeing things differently. I will not argue with them. But just take it that speaking is not even enough. That I am worried cannot change any situation. It will take me beyond my worries. But it will take more of letting Soludo know that we, as Anambrarians, have our minimum expectations.

    We know Anambra. We know what Anambra is today. We know what it was. And besides, I cannot, in my real sense, be judging his performance based on what Anambra was, no matter how bad it was. I would rather judge his performance based on what I know is the potential of Anambra State and how much he is moving closer to realising that potential.  So that’s why I can tell you that really, I have nothing to smile for. I have nothing to be happy about. It is a big disappointment and I hope that he hears that. This is for no other reason but to call him out to know that this is the time to review his programmes and focus on things that matter more importantly to the lives of the Anambra people and the state than the craze for going for a second term. Because if he gets all his promises right, his second term will be a walkover.

    Don’t you think that the present government acts the way it is doing because, perhaps it feels that there is no strong opposition to shake it up?

    It has nothing to do with opposition. Even if you have the biggest opposition around them, he cannot offer what he doesn’t have. That’s what I can say.

    He probably doesn’t know better, because if he knows better, he should know that what is at stake is his name, his legacy. He wouldn’t need any opposition to push him. I don’t know which opposition we had during the Dr. Michael Okpara era. Dr. Okpara came with his vision and he was driving it and the legacy lives beyond him. Soludo should be thinking about legacy. It is not just about the opposition. By the way, why should it be the opposition that would drive you? It should be about your vision. Opposition should not determine your legacy and your achievements. It should be a vision and your commitment to realising them, not opposition.

    So, I speak for myself as a critical stakeholder who loves his state. That is the only place I go for holidays and relax and be happy. It is something that I have long ago been doing even while I was a student abroad. I love to visit my hometown and stay with my people. But I am being deprived of that. It is not that I can’t just go and fortify myself, but how about other people? The painful aspect of this whole thing is that it even looks like Governor Soludo himself does not even know that there is this problem because he goes to events, picks the microphone, and tells the people that Anambra is a safe paradise. If you are a foreigner, you might be tempted to believe that because it is coming from a governor.

    However, he drives around the state in multiple Armoured Personnel Carriers and all sorts of security, conventional and unconventional, in their numbers. Why would a governor who tells people that his state is secured be driving around in Armoured Personnel Carriers and security protocols like a warlord driving through enemy territory? Still, he asks people to come for tourism and investment in the state.

    Somebody would say that you contested the election the last time against Soludo and you intend to contest against him and that may be the reason you are calling him out. How do you respond to that?

    This is not what it’s all about. I don’t want to be distracted by that. I would rather want the person to say that probably Soludo has performed very well. If he has done so, I would be very glad. So what we’re talking about is what is not going well and I have been reasonable enough to wait and give time when I believe that there would have been a change.

    Don’t forget that this is a government that came and declared a state of emergency on refuse dumps. Remember his first visit to refuse dumps after swearing-in? Today, refuse heaps have taken over Anambra towns. This is a government that celebrates building a water fountain at Ochanga Square. You made great promises but now celebrating the water fountain, things that a local government should be doing. So, I look at the potential of Anambra State and not the little things they are celebrating. Let’s talk about how we can galvanise the human capital of Anambra State for greater things. It is not about celebrating that you are working without borrowing. I don’t join in the celebration that I am working without borrowing. What does that tell me? I am surprised that somebody of his level, a former CBN governor, is talking about not borrowing as an achievement. Look, the capacity to borrow in any venture, whether private or government, is even a testament to your integrity and your credibility because if you are not found worthy, nobody gives you credit. I don’t see how a business grows, whether it is individual or state business, without borrowing. So if you tell me you don’t need to borrow, then you do not even have any investment that you can fund. It means that you don’t think of the future. Well, I am a businessman, and I know the importance of credit in any business.

    There is a schism in the All Progressives Grand Alliance and the speculation is that Soludo may quit the party to join Peoples Democratic Party. Do you think that he will be an asset to a party like the PDP?

    That is not my interest. He has the choice to go where he wants to go. I am not interested in those things. My focus is that as a stakeholder, I can’t keep quiet. So, if people think that it is a conspiracy of silence, I want to say that I am not part of that conspiracy. By the way, if he does, what happens, would that change the present story in Anambra State? My interest is that he does better for Anambra State; create a legacy and for a better Anambra state.

    So within this context of assessment of the Soludo government, how would you assess the federal government, especially within the context of calls for the reshuffling of the cabinet?

    Well, I have given different interviews in the past publicly, and my position on that is clear. It is long overdue to have changed the cabinet. You see, President Bola Tinubu, we know, is one person who has a reputation for identifying talents and choosing people who are capable of delivering results. He has done that effectively in Lagos State. Nobody can take it away from him. There is hardly any governor who has been able to rule and who has been able to do things with the best of talents that has not grown beyond the state and even gone international and has achieved an international reputation. We had expected that to happen here. It is understood that it took a lot for him to run the election.

    He fought a whole lot of battles to get the ticket and surmounted obstacles to win, and there may not have been enough time within the period the ministers were chosen to pick the best for his cabinet. And then within that period, also, there were a whole lot of legal issues going on for the legitimacy and survival of the government. That may have been a thing of concern that one wouldn’t rule out the possibility that it could have influenced the composition of the cabinet. But he has won the Supreme Court case and has been one year in office; I think that at this point, it is time to rejig because he may have enough time to know who is performing and who is not.

    He has been very patient. No person has fought as hard as he has fought to come to this level to become president and will be as patient as President Tinubu has been with his cabinet. And, I had said before that the only thing anybody around Tinubu owes him, if you love him, is to help him to leave a legacy. We have known him as somebody who is stupendously rich, and who knows how to spend money. So, making money can no longer be his focus. Therefore, the only thing I know that should be his desire, and those who think they care about him must do, is to help him leave a great legacy for this country. So I believe that the team that has been with him, surely have not proven that they are a winning team. And so I think he should know it, and they know it. I called for the change of the cabinet on the first anniversary of his inauguration. But if it is going to happen now, it is even overdue. It is highly necessary.

    Do you think that this has something to do with the state of insecurity in Nigeria and the response from the government?

    For over five decades, the world over has classified the economy as part of security issues. I think that was in 1964. Since 1964, it has been known that the state of the economy is part of the security issue. So, if the poor performance of the government is leading, as it is obvious, to very poor economic activities, then obviously, insecurity is not only when the sovereignty of Nigeria is under threat this security could be internalised. It could be self-inflicted. In this case, we have had, before this administration, even before the APC, there has been insecurity across the country. There was a government, economic activities were booming because there were efforts of the government to contain Boko Haram in its domain and all the other such things.

    However, the dynamic of crime has changed. Crimes are now happening inside homes and neighbourhoods. And this is driven by hunger. If you recall, I had raised an alarm during the cabinet screening when one of the critical appointees had gone for screening and said there wouldn’t be any interventions in agriculture.

     I had gone on television to warn about the dangers of the proposal. I had warned that if the agricultural interventions stopped, this country would face the challenge of food scarcity and hunger. It is now playing out. This is because all the gains in agricultural reforms and policies are eroded, and it has started affecting the stomachs of people. Not long ago, we had protests against hunger. That should be a wake-up call. In all of these, however, I still believe in the potential of Nigeria. I still believe that we do not have any problem beyond human comprehension. Our problems are internal and self-inflicted. For instance, Naira has no business to be above 1,000 Naira to the dollar. As a matter of fact, for me, the actual value of naira should be about 850 naira and that was simply because this floating of naira had been partially done even before Tinubu came to power.

    During the Muhammadu Buhari era, we had the official and unofficial rates ran around 300 to 400 naira and the unofficial was 750 naira. So technically, if there was a strategic approach to it, it is just to bring up unofficial and official. So, it hovers around 700 naira. The worst-case scenario is 800 to 900 naira to the dollar. But, by and large, the naira should not be above 1000 naira. That is the real value of the naira; these other ones are speculative. Even countries that are at war, but with the right kind of leadership and focus, and are selfless and think of how it affects their people and their country, do well. Even countries that have survived economic sanctions like Russia have done well. Russia has about 200 sanctions. They are fighting a war in Ukraine but the economy of the state is even better than even economies of those who are pushing war on them. That is the difference leadership can make. Everyone is talking about Rwanda. The man of Rwanda picked a broken nation coming from a genocidal war and today he is the envy of many. I believe that we need not dwell much on the past and use it to keep stigmatising our country. Let us look at how we can make the best out of this situation. I still believe that this government can do that if they focus on what matters and know that we are not in campaign mode. This is time for governance and for them to govern they have to open their hands to all and sundry, open their eyes beyond those who are in the same political party to see those who can make an impact because of the success they will bring to this government will add to your legacy and that will even make your return easier. It should not be all about complaining. As a Political Scientist, I have studied this for four years, two terms tenure issue. Within this period, you can begin 60% to 70% of projects that have to do with enhancing people’s lives and complete them in four years. Look at all the humongous projects that are going on in China, they are completed within eight years. That means that your first tenure of four years is enough to turn things around. If you are lucky to have eight years, it is for you to do wonders. Look at the Euro tunnel, it is one of the wonders of the world; It was done in six years; not even up to eight years. We all see complicated and new projects in China done in three to four years.

    So, when people look at the four years, it looks so short, and yes it is so short because they do not focus on what can be achieved within the period. Our system is such that governors get into office and from the first day are thinking of a second tenure. The only way you can achieve these things is to focus. If that is to be achieved with this government, they must open their hands and bring in patriotic people with focus and vision. That does not mean the president knows it all. That I am a professor does not mean that I know everything. Yes, I have an airline, but I cannot fly an aircraft. Life is about different talents and different capacities.

    Therefore, in a country like ours, where you have numerous talents and capabilities, your job as a leader is to identify them and work with them, put them in the right places and you see things that seem impossible getting done. However, appointees also must be humble enough not to accept assignments that they know they cannot accomplish. There is no need for one to accept a task one  lacks the capacity to accomplish just to be in office and make money. We should be able to also help the leaders by not accepting assignments that we know nothing about rather than accepting the same and then, start going everywhere complaining and wasting time.

    At the United Nations General Assembly, Nigeria made a call for debt forgiveness. What would be your take on Nigeria asking for debt forgiveness while still taking loans?

    I addressed my concern on this issue in the recent past when we started this economic summersault. Part of the thing that was putting so much pressure on our foreign exchange is debt services. It takes a larger chunk of our earnings. For the government to give itself some relief, there is a need to, as a low-hanging fruit, renegotiate and reschedule these debts, and give themselves some breather. Even if they cut off 50%, that is money going back to the economy, and, after that, you can go back to negotiate for debt forgiveness/pardon. They should not be shy to do that. I support it and believe that it is something that we should have done. But for them to be able to do it, it cannot be done on the platform of UNGA only, it takes much more than diplomacy and politics to achieve such things. It will take a lot of networking and individual engagements. I want to see in the next cabinet, people who are coming from IMF and World Bank families in different critical financial sectors.

    There are Nigerians who are highly respected there and are doing well there. They have to be part of these critical sectors that have the responsibility to do these things. One thing about it is sitting face to face with your colleagues, those you know that can influence certain decisions to negotiate. If that person does not agree with you because you are not making sense, he may be forced to agree with you because you are colleagues and you are the one who asked. The biggest achievements in some of these things are not done publicly. They are done underground. When I look at the financial sector, I don’t see these critical human resources. And these may not be too far from the successes that the Obasanjo administration achieved when his government negotiated debt forgiveness for Nigeria. Recall the role the Okonjo-Iweala played with her team, those of them coming from the World Bank, sitting face to face with her colleagues, and talking to each other. I believe that was why we were able to achieve that under Obasanjo. So, the government should, as a matter of urgency, get this calibre of people and infuse them into the government and give them that assignment. I do not doubt that this is achievable. So far, I can’t see many of these sorts of people in government, especially in the government’s financial ecosystem. For the borrowing thing, you can’t stop borrowing. No government can do without borrowing. But the issue is to borrow and use it very well. I am a businessman and I know what I am talking about.

    However, no country borrows itself to economic greatness. This means that you can only borrow to shot gap and invest in those areas that will enable and crystalise your economic growth and development.

    Finally, local government elections have just taken place in Anambra State and the ruling party had a landslide. How would you assess the conduct and outcome of this election which is the first in Anambra since 2014?

    From the information available to me, APGA has declared themselves winners of the entire local governments and the councillorships in Anambra State with unimaginable numbers. What can I say? I congratulate them. What they have displayed is how the government, or the governor, has used the powers he has in Anambra State; first to change the state electoral laws, within 24 hours, in such a very scandalous way and now has declared the state, both local government and council for APGA.

    He has shown what the power of incumbency can do and I congratulate him. The only thing I will add to that is that he should also be ready to congratulate any other party that might come into Anambra anytime with a bigger power to take every elective position in Anambra State in the same way he has taken them now.

    He should be ready not to complain but to congratulate them because when those powers are used to their favour, then, democracy is at work but when stronger power comes and overwhelms and the result goes differently, there is always tears and wailing about threats to democracy. But for now, the only thing I can say is congratulations to him. He has shown what he does with power and how he understands power.

  • Soludo, Anambra and the disillusionment of intellectualism (2)

    Soludo, Anambra and the disillusionment of intellectualism (2)

    In recent weeks, the conduct of local government elections in Anambra State under the leadership of Governor Charles Chukwuma Soludo has come under intense scrutiny and criticism. What should have been a routine democratic exercise has instead become a focal point of controversy, raising serious questions about the state of grassroots democracy in Anambra.

    The Controversial Anambra Local Government Elections Under Governor Soludo’s Administration further justifies my case. While we all know that LG elections in Nigeria are nominally a sham save for the one conducted in 2020 by former Governor Nasir El Rufai of Kaduna State which saw members of the opposition party winning Chairmanship positions a far cry from what ia obtained in tye so called LG elections. My take remains that even if other governors are playing dirty muat Soludo follow suit? With what language will he be able to speak out should he find himself at the other side of the corner?

    The controversy began with the delayed scheduling of the elections. Soludo, readers had recalled had promiaed to conduct the local government elections in less than 6 months into his administration if he was elected, time reach and our Professor began to sing Shaggy’s ” It wasnt me” hiding under all given shenanigans to maintain the status quo, this is despite the fact that

    constitutional requirements for regular local government polls, and Anambra had not held LGA elections since 2014, long before Soludo took office.  However, as that self-imposed deadline passed, criticisms began to mount over the continued use of caretaker committees to run local governments instead of democratically elected officials.

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    Then came the  epoch making Supreme Court judgement of July 11th 2024 which affirmed the financial autonomy of the 774 local government areas and put  a stop to the nefarious piggybacking of the LG funds.

    However, when  the Anambra State Independent Electoral Commission (ANSIEC) finally announced election dates in July 2023, it stood logic, fairness and common sense on its heads when it fixed the date for elections in less than a month whereas the laid down process as stipulated by Section 103(3) of Electoral Act of 2022, which calls for 150 day notice period and also ought to give all parties a level playing field particularly  in areas such as timing for proper conduct of primaries, appeals from such primaries as well as the purchase of forms for such, Soludo and his leprous members of the ANSIEC, headed by one Mts Genevieve Osakwe conducted the elections even worse than Area Boys would. This prompted the boycott of the elections by major political parties like the APC and Labour reducing whatever credibility the elections were primed to have.

    The opposition parties were not alone in their vehement criticism of the already flawed polls, civil society groups raised alarms. This rushed timeline, they argued, conferred an unfair advantage to the ruling All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) party and undermined the ability of opposition parties to effectively campaign and organize.

    The election day itself was marred by numerous reported irregularities that cast doubt on the integrity of the entire process. Widespread allegations emerged of voter intimidation, no result sheets, ballot box snatching, and the use of thugs   to suppress turnout in opposition strongholds. There were reports of polling stations opening late or not at all in certain areas, while other locations allegedly saw cases of over-voting and result manipulation.

    Perhaps most damning were accusations that the Soludo administration interfered directly in the electoral process to favor APGA candidates. Opposition parties claimed that ANSIEC officials were pressured to declare results favoring the ruling party, even in areas where voting had been disrupted or where opposition candidates appeared to be leading based on initial results.

    The lopsided official results, which saw APGA win chairmanship races in all 21 local government areas, only fueled suspicions of widespread rigging. Such a clean sweep for the ruling party defied political realities on the ground and historical voting patterns in the state. It strained credulity that opposition parties such as the People’s Democratic Party, PDP and Young People’s Party, YPP, which had performed strongly in recent national and state elections could be so thoroughly routed at the local level.

    Even the conduct of his own party’s  primaries would have left Chairman Mao and Stalin grin with envy, as APGA could have been mistaken as a Communist Party, popular candidates were ordered not to be returned while the unpopular and unscrupulous were returned!

    However, Soludo’s dismissive attitude towards the serious allegations leveled against the electoral process has only intensified criticisms of his handling of the situation. Which has cast a shadow over his administration’s commitment to the ideals of intellectualism, fairness and democracy. Soludo has merely demonstrated that the Nigerian academic is no different  from a yahoo-yahoo boy.

    Many observers have expressed disappointment that a leader who came into office promising transformative governance has instead presided over an election that represents a step backwards for Anambra’s democracy.

    The controversy surrounding the local government elections threatens to undermine Soludo’s broader reform agenda and erode public trust in his administration. It has provided ammunition to his political opponents and disappointed many of his erstwhile supporters who expected better from the professor-turned-politician.

    Moreover, the disputed elections raise troubling questions about the health of Nigeria’s democracy at the grassroots level. Local governments are meant to be the tier of government closest to the people, providing essential services and fostering political participation. When LGA elections are compromised, it weakens the entire democratic system and alienates citizens from the political process.

    As the legal challenges to the Anambra LGA elections play out, the Soludo administration faces a critical test. How it responds to the controversy will shape perceptions of the governor’s commitment to democratic principles and good governance. A willingness to acknowledge shortcomings in the process and work towards a more transparent and inclusive electoral system could help rebuild trust. Conversely, a stubborn insistence on the legitimacy of the flawed elections risks further erosion of public confidence.This i much doubt.

    For the people of Anambra, the consequences of this electoral controversy extend beyond mere politics. Functional and accountable local governments are essential for addressing the everyday concerns of citizens – from maintaining local infrastructure to providing basic social services. The installation of leaders through a tainted electoral process undermines the ability of LGAs to effectively serve their communities.

    As Anambra grapples with the fallout from these contentious elections and the disillusionment  of intellectualism, such an episode erodes the confidence of the average Nigerian in the academia, one should then wonder what fate awaits Nigeria if the academia can wobble and fumble as witnessed here, where will our hope then come from?  Soludo’s misadventures in power serves as a stark reminder of the ongoing challenges facing Nigeria’s democratic evolution. It underscores the need for continued vigilance and advocacy to protect the integrity of governance and the credibility of the Nigerian academic or intellectual. A sad tale it really is.

  • Soludo, Anambra and the Disillusionment of Intellectualism (1)

    Soludo, Anambra and the Disillusionment of Intellectualism (1)

    When Professor Charles Chukwuma Soludo was elected governor of Anambra State in November 2021, there was indeed a palpable sense of excitement and optimism among intellectuals and progressives both within and outside the state. Professor Chukwuma Soludo, a renowned economist and former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria CBN, seemed to represent a departure from what Anambra had been stuck with, you know from the gangsters and the cowboys to the traders and then the hedonistic, while Anambra, save for the Mbadinuju era had never had it as bad as her sister state, Abia, before the emergence of Alex Otti, yet the state still lacked that leadership ethos in which the Academia would leave their theory dreaming,  ideas brimming classrooms and join the fray with their “uniformed” counterparts  leading from the front and paving the way for the state to emerge as one of the top four states in Nigeria, becoming a hub for excellence as well as the exegesis of the Igbo Nation.

    The home state of Zik, Alex Ekwueme, Ajie Ukpabi Asika, Pius Okigbo, Kenneth Dike, Chu Okongwu, Emeka Ojukwu(An Intellectual in every sense), Chuba Okadigbo, should like James Aggrey’s Eagle not be clucking with chickens and though i never supported Soludo, i would in private gatherings, devoid of sentiment and whatsoever bias i held against him and his party placed him as a good man to steer the ship. Readers will recall that in a number of writings,  i have always advocated for some form of synergy between the Academia in Nigeria and the political class, such clarion call seemed to have been answered by Soludo’s  emergence- one with the intellectual heft and the technocratic experience to potentially transform governance and development in Anambra or so we thought.

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    Many saw Soludo’s election as a watershed moment and a chance to demonstrate how an academically accomplished leader could leverage evidence-based policymaking to drive rapid socioeconomic progress. There were high hopes that Soludo would be able to harness Anambra’s human capital and entrepreneurial spirit to create an innovation-driven economy and position the state as a model of good governance in Nigeria.

    However, as Soludo’s tenure has unfolded, a growing sense of disappointment and disillusionment has set in among many of the intellectuals who initially championed his candidacy, including those of us who didnt support him but felt comfortable that an intellectual would be in the forefront for the state’s  manifest destiny. Now, while many may argue that it is premature to render a definitive verdict on Soludo’s tenure, there is a  perception and growing one, that he has thus far failed to live up to the lofty expectations that accompanied his election.

    A number of factors have contributed to this sense of disappointment among intellectuals, and these are not factors  manufactured from the blues; they are direct and stare coldly at the hopes of firing Anambra from where Soludo met the state  to a point where it breaks the holds on its total development.

    Take the state of insecurity, Anambra has never had it this bad, on a weekly basis, either  the state is reporting killings and unknown gunmen attacks or a number  of persons have been reportedly kidnapped , with many ending up dead in captivity while Governor Soludo takes up the new fad of dancing Mike Ejeagha’s  ‘gwogwogwomgwo’ with the panache of Nigeria’s  foremost content creator,  Brain Jotter.  One would have expected Soludo to hit the ground running with bold, transformative policies aimed at addressing Anambra’s most pressing challenge of insecurity, if possibke declaring a state of emergency, somewhat, the situation however seems to project the Soludo administration as clueless in terms of security.

    Likewise in terms of unemployment, the result is there for all to see and that is the fact that his  administration has been marked more by continuity than by the type of disruptive change that we had  anticipated. Promises made by the governor to tackle these social issues such as unemployment, touting which were blazoned in his manifesto and was trumpeted at every camapaign gathering. Save for the employment of  near 9000 teachers, critical areas in which the teeming youths ought to have been absorbed into in order to take their minds away from the devil’s workshop franchising are a shadow of themselves, rather the Soludo administration has employed more of these able bodied youths to harass the likes of bus and keke drivers as well as petty traders. Ndi Anambra have been made viewers of such gory scenes where these touts harass and manhandle these persons, acting like they are above the law and below the culture of decency, even newspaper vendors seem not to be spared this nauseating display of machismo, same has been the lot of petty traders who cannot afford to pay for shops in a number of areas within the state. If the problem is revenue then, the simple thing for a development economist in Soludo would have been to establish a number of mini markets across the state rather than the brazen destruction of such goods, particularly when these women can barely eke out a living from such trade.  

    If the administration with an intellectual as its helmsman in Soludo can unleash its stormtroopers against the poor in society that should likely speak volumes of the depth of authoritarianism as his style of governance, yes I must concede that Soludo is a.man of ideas but his arrogance and contempt for the slightest of opposition to even the basset of his whims and caprices should make the average intellectual shudder whilst the rest may have only God to be their guide. A number of examples are there to lap in, such as the resignation of his Commissioner for Finance, Ifeatu Onejeme, the recent sack of his Commissioner for Information, Paul Nwosu and the shameful suspension of the traditional ruler of of Neni, Igwe Damian Ezeani for conferring a title on Soludo’s then political nemesis, the late Senator Ifeanyi Ubah.