Tag: The Nation newspaper

  • Running mate crisis: Bayelsa PDP convenes stakeholders’ meeting

    THE leadership of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Bayelsa State  has scheduled an expanded meeting of the  State Caucus of the party and the Elders Advisory Council for today in Yenagoa.

    The state party Chairman, Cleopas Moses, said the meeting would discuss the issue of the preparedness of the party for the election, strategies, approval of the campaign council and team  and other topical issues.

    “The meeting will also receive a brief from the party’s candidate, Senator Douye Diri, on the issue of running mate”, he said.

    There had been misgivings in some quarters about the sincerity of Governor Seriake Dickson to hold a stakeholders’ meeting to resolve the crisis rocking the party following the choice of its running mate for the November 16 governorship election in the state.

    Party members, groups and other stakeholders disagreed vehemently with  on Dickson and the PDP leadership for nominating the  Senator representing Bayelsa West Lawrence Ewrujakpor, as e running mate to, Senator Douye Diri.

    Critics accused Dickson of driving a selfish agenda to replace Ewrujakpor, who hails from his Sagbama Local Government Area, in  the Senate in exchange for the running mate slot.

    Others insisted that the governor was blinded by his ambition, which they said was against his earlier principles of equity, balance and fairness and appealed to the governor to take the slot to Bayelsa East and consider giving it to Ogbia, the local government area of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Following the hullabaloo generated by the decision, Dickson promised to convene a stakeholders’ meeting to review the decision within the timeframe of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for substitution of candidates.

    But party leaders were worried that a day to the expiration of the INEC September 23 deadline for substitution of candidates, the governor had yet to fix a date for the stakeholders’ meeting.

    Read Also: How I will govern Bayelsa, by Lyon

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan was said to have waited for the stakeholders’ meeting and left the state in anger.

    A PDP leader, who spoke in confidence, said there was no possibility of holding the meeting adding that Dickson only made the proposal to douse tension that erupted in the party following his choice of Ewrujakpor.

    He said even if the governor managed to convene a meeting, it would be mere formality as his cronies would be positioned to shoot down any opposition against his chosen running mate.

    He said: “The governor’s proposal for a stakeholders’ meeting was a smart but deceptive move. He discovered that the PDP was having many backlashes following his choice of a running mate. Having observed that the opposition was too loud, he decided to douse the tension by proposing the meeting. But by all indications, he has made up his mind on Erwujakpor.

     

  • I won’t resign, Bayelsa Speaker dares Dickson, others

    Speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly, Tonye Isenah, has vowed not to resign his position contrary to the directive of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders including the state Governor, Seriake Dickson.

    Isenah came under intense pressure to relinquish his office in the House of Assembly to enable his party balance political equations ahead of the November 16 governorship election.

    The speaker was said to have reached an agreement with Dickson and other PDP leaders to vacate his office in the event that Senator Douye Diri, who hails from his Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government Area, emerged the candidate of the PDP for the election.

    Following the emergence of Diri, PDP leaders were said to have asked Isenah to surrender his position to another lawmaker from Southern Ijaw to enable the party garner votes from the council.

    But Isenah was said to have insisted that he would not let go of his position before the governorship poll.

    The speaker in a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media, Aotendeike Boloigha, said he had served the PDP faithfully and had yet to see how his resignation would help the party in the forthcoming poll.

    He also denied the insinuations that Dickson was after him because he failed to carry out the governor’s request to initiate an impeachment proceeding against his Deputy, Rear Admiral John Jonah (retd).

    Isenah was compelled to officially react on the matter following a social media post by his Senior Special Assistant on New Media, Mr. Dickson Didi Opuene, that the speaker was undergoing the travails for refusing the governor’s request.

    Read Also: PDP denies reported romance between Dickson, Petroleum minister

    Opuene in the post that went viral wrote: “First they asked him to impeach the deputy governor for no just reason and he refused, now they want him to resign just to perfect their aim and plan. No way, he will not resign, they should come and impeach him and let’s see.

    “Rt. Hon. Tonye Emmanuel Isenah remains the Speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly and he has not resigned or will ever contemplate of doing so, please disregard any rumour of his resignation”.

    Debunking Opuene’s claims, Isenah described the posts as generated and authored by over-ambitious politicians taking advantage of the present situation in the assembly.

    Isenah said the claims were not only untrue but misleading and aimed at heating up the system.

    He said at no time had the governor imagined anything relating to impeachment of his deputy, whom he constantly described as a dependable ally adding that Dickson had never given such directive to the assembly.

    He said: “My stand on the issue of resignation has been that I have served the party PDP and Governor Seriake Dickson faithfully and with unflinching loyalty and I will not resign as doing so at this time will not in any way help the party succeed in the November 16, governorship elections.

    “I call on my teeming supporters to distance themselves from making unnecessary statements and posts in the social media. When the need arises, I will make official statements on his stand”.

  • Full rehabilitation of refineries begins in January -Kyari

    THE Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Group Managing Director, Malam Mele Kyari, on Saturday revealed that the full rehabilitation of the four national refineries will commence in January next year.

    He gave an assurance that the nation’s refineries, located in Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna, will roar to live to refine crude oil at optimum capacity come 2022.

    According to a statement from the NNPC, he made this known during a facilities tour of the Port-Harcourt Refining and Petrochemical Company (PHRC).

    The statement noted that the NNPC helmsman’s visit to the refinery was part of his strong determination and commitment to ensure that the nation’s refineries deliver real time value and address the petroleum needs of Nigerians.

    Kyari said making the refineries to operate at optimal capacities was a mandate that NNPC as a corporation would leave no stone unturned to actualize, saying a timely delivery of the asset was a priority.

    “We will stick to time, we will deliver this project by 2022. We will commence actual rehabilitation work in January. We will do everything possible between October and December to close out all necessary conditions for us to deliver on that project. I believe that with the support that we have from the shareholders – government of this country, the entire staff of this company and the contractors, I believe it is doable and we will deliver the project”, the GMD said.

    He tasked the contractors on the need to consider their reputation as most critical element in business processes and engagements.

    “It’s no longer about business now, but a reputational issue. For the original builders of the refinery, Tecmmont, Eni/NAOC and NNPC, let us be conscious of the fact that our reputation is at stake as far as this project is concerned. The NNPC leadership has promised this country that our refineries will work, therefore, we must work not to disappoint over 200million Nigerian stakeholders”.

    The NNPC boss challenged the PHRC management to ensure that the nation’s indigenous engineers and other professionals working in the refinery are fully engaged to participate actively during the rehabilitation exercise and own the process.

    According to the GMD, the involvement of the indigenous workers will build capacity, save cost and introduce an era of steady and uninterrupted production curve that will grow the oil and gas industry.

    Read Also: Kyari didn’t influence Oyo-Ita’s investigation, says EFCC 

    In his presentation on the progress and milestones on Phase 1 of the projects, the Tecmmont Project Manager, Mr. La Mattina Carmelo, informed that the Inspection aspect of the project has progressed to 91% and Final Report and EPC Proposal stood at 75%, adding that his company would deliver the first phase of the rehabilitation within three weeks from now.

    He assured that there were no challenges as the project was progressing efficiently, pledging to offer its best services to ensure a timely delivery.

    In the same vein, the project consulting company, Eni/NAOC, represented by the its project manager, Daniele Tamburini, confirmed that the work done so far by the NNPC and Tecmmont complied with global standard.

    Tamburini said his company was ready to receive the full report of the scoping for final assessment and support the corporation to deliver the project in record time, saying that the initiative was a good business for Nigeria.

    Earlier in his address, the Managing Director of the PHRC, Mr. Abba Bukar, expressed appreciation to the GMD for his deep commitment in ensuring that the refinery works for the benefit of Nigerians.

     

  • If APC is to survive

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) cannot pretend not to know that its future and survival are on the line. Like their predecessors, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), they will continue to live in denial until it is perhaps too late. Having won the elections in 2015, obviously against the run of play and in a spectacular fashion, and repeated the feat a second time in 2019 rather very unscrupulously, the APC is throwing caution to the wind, and enacting probably the most undemocratic practices the country has seen since 1999. But somehow, and incredibly, they seem blissfully unaware of the dangers they face, not to talk of being troubled by the contradictions they themselves have managed to trigger when the democrats among them helped them win the elections only for the disbelieving antidemocratic forces waiting in the wings to seize the reins of government.

    No, it was not always clear that the APC had a critical mass of democrats in their midst, enough to project and sustain their ideals and philosophies, at least the ideals and philosophies they have noisily pretended to. But by some incredible display of political sorcery on their part, Nigerians in 2015 believed the lie that the then opposition party boasted enough democrats in their midst to propel Nigeria to great democratic heights and also possessed the capacity to neutralise and reform the Goodluck Jonathan government’s undisciplined approach to governance. APC leaders and their spokesmen were avid political salesmen, and Muhammadu Buhari, their champion at the time, had been recast as a repentant military autocrat and budding democrat. His natural reticence and his inability to frame his new status in persuasive logic surprisingly worried only a few people.

    But barely five years into their ironclad rule, the APC has begun to feel invincible, careless and conceited. Like their predecessor PDP, they imagine they will be in office for decades, or even for eons. They were never good at translating their manifestos into actions, and had even become expert at repudiating many of their promises, yet they think they have enthroned an unassailable lead to render the opposition party disoriented and discouraged. Projecting power viciously and remorselessly, they are blinded to their own weaknesses and can’t see how anyone or party or group can unseat them. For, in their view, even the very act of trying to unseat them democratically has now been equated with treason. Their first four years ought to be about reframing their core existential logic and redefining the identity and ambitions of their country. Instead, they have redefined their weaknesses as inconsequential and portrayed their strengths as insurmountable.

    More than 90 percent of their leaders are antidemocratic, and their followers have become indistinguishable from the rabble that flattered the PDP into self-destruction. Yet, they have remained unruffled by the chaos around them. In internecine battles and sycophantic dribbles, the party’s leaders and members have also turned intra-party and partisan politics into a needless re-enactment of cultural and sectarian wars and bitter struggles. Right before their eyes, their party, despite the best efforts of their flawed chairman and other patriots, is resembling less and less the party they idealised at their founding in February 2013. They planned to run a more cohesive and disciplined party, far better than the PDP ever contemplated. That ambition has remained unrealised, and may probably be unrealisable. They plotted to disgrace the Jonathan government’s democratic image, describing it as shameful and unbecoming of the country and the largest political party in Africa. Increasingly, they have instead become even more unrepentantly authoritarian.

    So, in effect, there is no adroitness evident in running the ruling party, little adherence to intra-party rules and regulations, no commitment to democratic principles, no idolisation of inspiring philosophies, and not even a scintilla of attachment to the kind of enduring reforms that would stand the country in better stead now and in the future. Apart from its sane early days, a higher degree of charlatanry appears to be taking over the party. Once in office, they have become intolerant of criticism, despise the constitution and the rule of law, and a few of their elected and appointed leaders have elevated themselves above the country and its laws. If the APC is to survive, however, they must imbibe the right values and do things properly and differently. They have ruled for less than five years, but the country has become tired of them because neither the economic lot of the people nor their democratic rights have improved in such a way as to endear them to the party. There is a chance of course that the economy might become less unstable and even more amenable to the laws of economics. In spite of them, however, especially given their sometimes contradictory and desultory policies, the standard of living of Nigerians may improve. But it will not be by the margins they have dreamt of or romanticised in their frequent statements to the media, regardless of the untidy and unprincipled reshuffle of their economic teams in a manner destined both to choke an already ponderous presidency and to mystify a president whose grasp of economic issues are at best rudimentary.

    Despite the complaints against the PDP, Nigerians were reluctant to see the former ruling party suffer the electoral tragedy that befell them. They brought the tragedy on themselves. Equally, it is in the interest of Nigerians that the APC should do well, help remould the country, and establish the solid foundations for democracy which the PDP failed to lay in its inglorious 16 years in office. The APC seems a little distracted by the politics of 2023, given the way the presidency and a few governors have been jostling for influence and power and positioning one another for the near future. If they are capable of eschewing the partisanship that is undermining both their resolve and the modicum of principles they still clutch to, they must find ways of returning themselves to the founding principles they clumsily projected at birth and which many Nigerians unconsciously but too trustingly embraced.

    They imagine that building roads and elongating rail networks, or even growing the economy by a healthy percentage, will help them reposition the party in the minds of the people. This is a futile assumption. Growth may attract accolades in the short run, but it will not entrench the party or even stabilise the country, let alone position it for lasting greatness. No party and no leader in history has achieved the milestones the APC dreams of without engaging the fundamental ideas that conduce to nation or empire building. Without a guiding philosophy, which takes into cognisance the country’s identity and ambitions, no country or empire can achieve greatness — not even the Roman Empire, Greek Empire, Babylonian Empire, Ottoman Empire, and a host of others. They simply must stand for something great, noble and inspiring. And they must possess the discipline to remain faithful to the ideas and philosophies that shape their founding and existence. That is the only way to make a lasting impression. The APC, however, wants to buck that trend despite history’s massive examples. Indeed, more and more, the party seems to be embracing the ignoble principles and distorted ideas that led to the collapse of empires than the noble principles and ideas that led to their rise.

    At the moment, there is nothing in the Buhari presidency and the APC that indicates any hunger for a great and ennobling idea or philosophy. There was a whiff of it when the party was founded; but there was no whiff of it when the Buhari presidency was inaugurated. Between 2015 and now, both the presidency and the ruling party have dealt with the issue of ideas and philosophies contemptuously. They will, however, need to deal with them not with the grossness that pollutes the air in the government and the party but with the finesse and enlightenment that energise and inspire a thinking and farsighted government. It is not clear whether they can; all that is known is that they must find a way to do it, to understand and respect the rule of law no matter how painful or injurious to their interest in the short run, and to obey the constitution unreservedly without the chicaneries and subterfuges that have become their lodestar.

    Indeed, their legacy and reputation are hinged on their ability to appreciate the factors that predispose a country to greatness and long-term stability. Here the structure of the country is paramount. It is hoped that the Buhari presidency possesses the education to know that a building could not stand if the foundation is weak or inappropriate, or if the structure of the building itself is flawed. Can the Buhari presidency boldly say Nigeria’s structure is sound, and that the problem is just the people’s attitude, as it has often argued? Even the Value Added Tax (VAT) controversy must tell a thinking government that it is misguided in its assumptions and destructive in its conclusions. Raising VAT at this point shows lack of depth and purpose. Much more, however, it also shows how iniquitous the country’s so-called federal structure is — that is assuming the APC and the Buhari presidency still believe in federalism — that they force states which produce and therefore pay VAT to underwrite the slothfulness and inefficiency of states which do not produce goods and indeed specialise in erecting strictures inimical to production.

    If the APC and the Buhari presidency can find the discipline and wisdom to get the country’s structure right and learn to obey the laws of the land, they must then find a way to turn their attention to restructuring their party to make it more responsive to the needs of members and the country, away from the grovelling before presidents and governors that shames Nigeria’s democracy. It is a fact that nearly all APC governors are not democrats, as amplified by the atrocious manner they interact with their Houses of Assembly and the judiciary. The president has little interest in democracy and probably can’t even conceptualise it. But they will need to define who they are, what they believe in, and how to find a connection between their identity and beliefs on the one hand and the aspirations and identity of the country on the other hand. The party has always made laws to regulate themselves. But they have often needlessly tinkered with those laws to serve short-term and sometimes nefarious goals. Altogether, increasingly, they have emptied their party of its soul and brutally subordinated its carcass at the federal and state levels to the president and the governors. The APC, like the PDP before it, is now proudly empty of soul and purpose.

    To therefore ask the APC to rediscover itself, assuming it ever had a personality that reflects purpose and ideology, may be asking for too much. But except it embarks on that noble search, it will also flounder like the PDP. Indeed, this is the time for the APC to carry out that exercise of self-examination and rediscovery, a time when antidemocratic politicians and officials have virtually swept the party and the presidency off their feet, a time when the constitution is now held in abeyance and tyranny is knocking at the nation’s door, a time when the sectionalists in government and party think only in terms of private, pecuniary and aggrandizing ideas, not national, altruistic ideas. The Buhari presidency will of course not last beyond its constitutional limits, even if it manages to achieve something. But the party will outlive him, just like the critics whom both the party and the presidency detest will outlive them.

    The tragedy enveloping the APC is the same tragedy that undid the PDP. When the PDP took office in 1999, it had the misfortune of antidemocratic politicians swiftly taking and occupying the commanding heights of government, and with time, swallowing the party too. Lightning has struck twice, alas, unconventionally in the same place. When President Buhari and his APC won the 2015 elections, they immediately turned over the reins of government to antidemocratic players who are doing horrendously with the country as they please, recriminating and criminalising critics who point out the folly of their ways. Neither Chief Olusegun Obasanjo nor Mallam Umaru Yar’Adua nor Goodluck Jonathan is writing the history of Nigeria under the PDP. Critics and historians are doing the writing. No matter how badly they are badmouthed and hauled before judges for treason and other silly crimes, critics and historians will also write the history of Nigeria under the APC. It is up to the APC to reform or die physically and figuratively.

    That death would be inevitable as long as they keep confusing the scaffolding for the building, reshuffling their economic teams in the false hope that brilliant technocrats could atone for the lack of depth and industry assailing the presidency, overlooking the timidity and complicity of the National Assembly as they impotently beg the president to mediate between them and intransigent presidential appointees, and tolerating and refusing to punish bureaucratic perverseness such as was experienced when the secret service invaded the legislature and the executive branch deployed judicial caricatures to overthrow the chief justice. Chief Obasanjo and Dr Jonathan ruled as if there was no future, or that when that future catches up with them they would not be hoist with their own petard. Now the APC and its leaders are displaying the same short-sightedness, believing that the fiefdom they have created will preclude them from paying for the laxity and anarchy they are engendering.

    If the country is too timid to ask the APC and the dispirited and distraught PDP what visions of the country they have, and though Nigerians think they voted their government into office but are too deferential to take the presidency to task on their imperious and angry approach to governance, the ruling party itself must try to assemble men and women who, after studying the histories of great empires and kingdoms, can help the party and country envision tomorrow. The party has less than two or three years to remedy the confusion they have enthroned. Few trust them to do anything imaginative, however, especially seeing the way its leading functionaries have talked about and begun to scheme for 2023; but the country has an obligation to hope that the immense damage they have caused the nation can still be addressed, especially considering the manner the PDP imploded after its deserved loss of the presidency.

  • Oyetola asks varsities to ensure stable academic calendar

    The Osun State governor, Mr. Adegboyega Oyetola, has advised university managements, other stakeholders to ensure there is no disruption in the academic calendar year.

    Speaking at the Osun State University 8th Convocation ceremony yesterday in Osogbo, Oyetola, who is the  visitor to the university,  called for the overhauling of the nation’s education sector, particularly the tertiary education.

    He said the university education system has the capacity to rescue the country from her present socio-economic predicaments.

    Read Also: Oyetola inaugurates governing boards for Osun health insurance agency, primary healthcare

    Assuring that his government would continue to support and invest in education and use the sector as a template and bedrock to impact on the lives of the people and advance the economy of the state, he said that the state government has so far demonstrated its commitment to rebuilding and repositioning education in the state.

    The governor, who harped on merit in the award of academic excellence and accolade, admonished the rank and file in the education sector on the need for them to pursue the lofty ideals of education that emphasise learning and character.

    His words: “As you are all aware, the certificates that you will receive from this university are awarded to you on the basis of character and learning. In the order of importance, character comes before learning. It is character that opened the door to knowledge and kept it open until you completed your courses and earned a degree.”

    Congratulating the graduates, the governor tasked them to pursue things that could help to effect change and bring about positive impacts on the nation’s economy.  He said: “I congratulate the graduands here today for the successful completion of their programmes and graduation.”

  • Rapper commits suicide, says God is unjust

    Fans, friend and family of Nigerian rapper, Olanrewaju Pelepele have been thrown into mourning.

    On Friday, September 20, Pelepele committed suicide by drinking ‘Sniper’, an insecticide, at his apartment in Ikorodu. His neighbours later found his lifeless body and contacted the police.

    “So a close friend committed suicide this morning in Ikorodu, we’ve been waiting for @PoliceNG since morning to come for his body! Olanrewaju Pelepele RIP,” Debbie Mackanaki posted on Twitter.

    The deceased has been posting series of emotional messages and video on the internet with the #mylastmoment to narrate his disgusts for this life.  At exactly 10:46am, on September 11, the rapper explained that despite his 10 years of hard work in the music industry, he has failed to make it to the mainstream. According to him, this has made him sad. He then promised to commit suicide.

    “Its 6days now, if by 12:00am tomorrow, God doesn’t take my life, I will kill myself,” Pelepele said in the viral video.

    Read Also: Rapper, Olamide expects child with ex-lover Maria Okan

    He continued, “10 years ago, I told God to grant my fasting and prayer so that I can be successful as a musician. I told Him to take my life, if I didn’t blow after putting my energy. Here, I am today. God is just unjust and I’m not sorry to say,” he had written.

    The Eshu crooner, further, said that depression is an understatement as he did feel like he belonged to this world anymore.

    “I don’t feel any belonging to this world again because I feel tormented by life. Three years after my 10 years dead with God, Olamide saw the talents in me and signed me to his YBNL Nation record which is like a free ticket to success but everything just crashed. Why e go be me now, wetin I do from the beginning. I got depressed with everything and I don’t think there’s a reason for me to stay in this world.

    “Tomorrow will make it 7days of #mylastmoment note and I have already gotten this (he showed a sniper) to kill myself. God bless you all,” he said.

    Many people thought he was pulling a stunt until his lifeless body video surfaced online. He posted a picture where he was wearing a black shirt and face cap as he held his neck tight with his hands. He also did a free style to say goodbye to the world before taking his life.

  • Prof Akintoye and Yoruba leadership

    Since he was invested with the leadership of the Yoruba by a number of Yoruba self-determination groups, Prof Banji Akintoye, a historian and passionate south-westerner, has drawn flak from the Afenifere and some leaders of the pan-Yoruba socio-cultural and political group. He used to be one of the leaders of the group and probably still is. But having been denounced by leaders like Ayo Adebanjo and Olu Falae for accepting the title and assuming the controversial title, it is no longer clear whether the eminent professor would freely associate with Afenifere anymore.

    Nobody can question Professor Akintoye’s brilliance and commitment. Nor is it unclear to most south-westerners that Afenifere had allowed itself to be so politicised that it no longer served as an umbrella body of the Yoruba of all persuasions. In fact, Afenifere spokesmen’s bitter recriminations and divisiveness made the split inevitable. The person that needs talking to is not the professor. It is Afenifere that must find ways of maturing out of their corrosive politics.

  • Femi Adesina takes on The Punch

    It was nothing more than a storm in a teacup. The Punch of Saturday, September 14, 2019 had reported what seemed like the president eating his words over how he felt while the judicial challenge to his electoral victory lasted, a retraction presidential spokesman Femi Adesina argued did not happen. Having previously indicated through a September 11, 2019 press statement by Mr Adesina that he was ‘unperturbed’ by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) challenge, because he was confident he had won the last presidential election fair and square, the president later told governors who felicitated with him over his judicial victory that he was actually on tenterhooks at a point during the trial. His anxiety, he confessed, was only mitigated by the fact that on September 11, he was presiding over the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting as the tribunal judges read their decision. That FEC meeting, he confessed, saved him from being ‘in trauma’. It is not certain what he meant by trauma.

    But incensed that the Punch reporter had questioned the accuracy of his account of what the president said of his feelings, Mr Adesina stormed the State House press gallery last Tuesday and gave The Punch reporter, John Ameh, author of the September 14 story, a piece of his mind. Said the livid presidential spokesman: “What was that rubbish you people wrote on Saturday? Did you say that Mr President did not approve the statement? Let me tell you, if you want to last here, you had better be careful!” Nothing justifies Mr Adesina’s imperiousness, but he was obviously angry that Mr Ameh seemed to be questioning his capacity to portray the president accurately. The Punch reporter had no chance to respond to the fulminations.

    What is at the root of Mr Adesina’s anger is nothing more than the fact that he believes that Mr Ameh had questioned his proficiency with the English language. Hear him: “Referring specifically to judgment day by the tribunal, which coincided with the maiden meeting of the Federal Executive Council (FEC), President Buhari had said: ‘It was a fabulous coincidence that it came almost the same time the first FEC meeting of this government was taking place. It lasted about the same time with the judgment. I thank God for that because I think I would have gone into trauma or something. So, I was busy trying to concentrate on the memos.’ An elementary understanding of the English language shows that President Buhari was talking specifically of the day and time of the court ruling, not before. Saturday Punch went further to say that the president’s remarks amounted to a retraction of his earlier statement, in which he said he had been unperturbed about the judicial challenge to his electoral victory. I was unperturbed all along… Was that referring to judgment day? A simple comprehension of English language indicates otherwise. It referred to the many months the case lasted in court. To further show malice and evil intent, the newspaper indicated that the president may not have been privy to the earlier statement that emanated from his media office. Who does that, for such a landmark development, without the consent of the principal?… If the Punch reporter and the editor (if he, indeed approved the mischievous story for publication) had so much challenge with the English language, they could have opted to write in their mother tongue. It could have served them better.”

    The controversy was not so serious and confrontational that Mr Adesina could not have laughed the insinuations off. But he chose to be testy and unsparing over a matter that called for perhaps a few witty remarks to disarm everybody. By bristling at the audacious report and believing that his language proficiency had been questioned, though there is no evidence of this at all, the presidential spokesman poured spoonfuls of boiling oil on the head of the Punch reporter. Yet, the president himself speaks and possibly writes mystical English, sometimes so imprecise and convoluted that it is hard to understand him. When for instance the president told the governors in the story under reference that he would “have been in trauma or something of that sort”, who could ever understand what on earth he was talking about? Was mere anxiety capable of eliciting trauma? Trauma over what? Is it any wonder then that certain heavy words are flung about so casually in the Villa, words like ‘treason’, for instance?

    Mr Adesina works in an environment at the Villa that has become decidedly illiberal and caustic. Even when nobody questioned him, he had become so schizoid that harmless words that contain no innuendos had, for him, become laced with arsenic. It was clear to the public that the problem with those reports was the president himself, whose widely fluctuating moods and glacial indifference to the politics of inclusiveness often led him to articulate widely fluctuating and misleading tenses and words. Surely Mr Adesina knows this. But having perhaps become immersed in the stentorian language that lathers Aso Villa, instead of making graceful and liberal  statements, Mr Adesina now sees himself more than before in that same offensive military mould that permeates and suffocates the corridors of power in Nigeria today. Even if Mr Ameh had been malicious, it was the job of Mr Adesina as a presidential spokesman to speak peace. He needs to be guarded in his words and moderate in his temper, speaking grace to everyone he interacts with. It will not make him less effective or less firm. He should apologise to Mr Ameh.

  • Kano/Jigawa customs impounds donkey skin, contraband worth N150.4m

    The Kano/Jigawa Area Customs Command has impounded large donkey skin and assorted contraband goods worth over N150, 462, 709.00, along Babura and Daura routes leading to Kano through Katsina State within one month of its operations.

    Giving an update on the seizures made by the command to reporters at his headquarters in Bompai, Kano, yesterday, the Customs Area Comptroller of the Command, Nasiru Ahmed, said his men and officers were able to intercept 678 packages of 25 kilogrammes of unfinished leather of donkey skin with a duty paid value of N70.1 million, which were prepared and labelled to be exported to China.

    Also, over 4, 114 jerry cans of foreign 25-litre vegetable oil were seized, valued at N56.5 million; 490 bags of foreign rice were also intercepted which value was put at N11 million.

    Read Also: Customs impound N501.6m worth of contraband

    Ahmed said his men were able to impound 19 units of assorted smuggled vehicles valued at N7.7 million, adding that 223 compressed blocks and a bag of Indian hemp estimated at N3.3 million, concealed inside a black Jeep heading towards Kano, was also intercepted.

    According to him, “This cannabis sativa which is called Indian hemp is part of the hard drugs our children are taking and it will be easy for them to engage in kidnapping and banditry. It is valued at N3 million; and we have concluded arrangements to hand it over to NDLEA.”

    Other items impounded include 110 cartons of foreign soap valued at N802, 340; 16 bags of 50 kilogrammes foreign sugar worth N328, 560; and 132 cartons of foreign spaghetti put at N570, 145.

    Ahmed said six suspects were arrested in connection with the smuggled goods and have been granted administrative bail.

    The Customs had earlier had a stakeholders meeting with the leadership of Kano marketers, where it urged them to stop patronising smuggled goods, pointing out that such action is detrimental to the economic development of the country.

  • NUJ to partner police in fight against fake journalists

    The Kano State Council of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) is ready to partner with the Nigeria Police in the fight against fake journalists.

    Chairman of the council, Comrade Abbas Ibrahim, expressed the need for the collaboration, when he led other executive members of the union on a courtesy visit to the state Commissioner of Police,  Ahmed Iliyasu, in his office.

    Ibrahim, who expressed disgust at threats being posed by fake journalists ridiculing the profession, noted that journalism is a noble  profession of ethics and decorum.

    Read Also: NUJ President urges FG to tackle insecurity

    He called on the commissioner to enforce the relevant sections of cyber Act 2015 in curtailing hate speeches and fake news that are capable of causing chaos in the society.

    He hailed the commissioner for his track record in fighting crime and criminality in the state.

    In his remarks, Iliyasu noted that journalists are significant forces in making sure society remained in peace.

    He said: “Society will not develop in chaos and disorder,” noting that most conflicts emanate from hate speeches.

    He said the police will do everything possible to support Nigeria Union of Journalists in discharging its responsibilities, stressing that “Communication is integral part of society, it needs to be propagated according to the ethics.”