Tag: tinubu

  • ‘How Tinubu saved Nigeria from imminent collapse’

    ‘How Tinubu saved Nigeria from imminent collapse’

    Chief Lanre Razak, the Balogun of Epe, former Epe Council Chairman, Transport Commissioner and governorship candidate on the platform of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), spoke with reporters in Lagos on the Buhari and Ambode administrations, the contributions of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu to the sustenance of democracy, the anti-corruption battle and other issues. EMMANUEL OLADESU was there.

    How will you rate Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s performance in the last one year?

    Lagosians and indeed, those of us who are resident in Lagos, are very lucky to have Mr. Ambode as a governor. We have been lucky in the past sixteen or seventeen years in Lagos State. Former Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu came and laid a very solid foundation for governance in Lagos state especially in the areas of revenue generation and solid programmes that meet the needs of the people. As a result, it was not difficult for Mr. Babatunde Fashola, SAN to step into his shoes and continue and now we are lucky that we have a financial expert who is so good in fund management, prudent in handling public resources in charge of Lagos state. He is a man that hit the ground running. Look at all the projects he has been putting in place since he came in. Go to Alimosho, you see bridges and roads; in Ajah, they are working seriously on the terrible traffic situation there constructing an overhead bridge. Even in Epe, you would see road construction going on. Ambode is the only governor out of the governors that did not request for a bail out from the Federal Government; he is paying salaries and pensions as at when due. The civil servants in Lagos State are very happy with him and there has not been any strike by workers in the state since the governor came on board. Ambode is a middle age person with a lot of energy to burn and that is why Lagos is making tremendous progress during his tenure. We are very happy about this progress.

    Why is the state reluctant to conduct local government elections, if indeed, the governor has performed well?

    That is far from being correct. You see, elections require a lot of things before they can be conducted. A state requires time for planning; you must consider security and ensure there is no loss of lives while conducting elections. The new Lagos State Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) has just been put in place and they are working on the logistics needed in conducting the elections. Preparatory to that, the governor has dissolved the 20 local governments and 37 local council development areas, LCDAs and appointed administrators so that those who are there will not take advantage of incumbency to perpetuate themselves in power. He wants a level playing field for the exercise and that he has created. Of course, those who want to be in government at all costs and have nothing to offer and maybe you are talking about members of the People’s Democratic Party, (PDP) who are grumbling. We have seen their antecedents and how they looted the funds of Nigeria at the federal level and these are the same people crying that they want to be in charge of our local governments. We do not need to hurry up because somebody wants to be in government at all costs. We want to conduct election and get it properly done and ensure that due process is followed.

    How would you assess the contribution of Asiwaju Tinubu to the emergence and growth of the APC?

    With all we have seen; with the revelations from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC so far, Nigerian was at the verge of collapse at the time President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration came in. If it had not been the big sacrifice of Asiwaju Tinubu, we will not have the merger of the political parties to form the All Progressives Congress, APC and once we don’t have the merger, the PDP would have continued to govern. I mean you have heard the huge amount of money distributed to Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) officials, Police and to all those who conducted the 2015 general elections. It is unprecedented in the history of this country that somebody would have access to such huge funds and then distribute just to win elections at all cost. That is the situation we were then and if Tinubu had not sacrificed a lot with his colleagues, who supported him; though we agree that a tree cannot make a forest; his contribution to the party is enormous. His sacrifice is enormous and that is why we have tremendous respect for him. He is the father of democracy in this country; he is the man who brought Nigeria out of the woods. He is the man who saved Nigeria from imminent collapse. You can imagine how much was withdrawn from Nigeria’s treasury for the last elections at a time when a lot of pensioners did not have their money, at a time when all our health institutions were in shambles and at a time when most of our roads were in terrible shape. Even some of the military officers who were expected to prosecute the war against Boko Haram were busy sharing the money.  Over N90 billion was allegedly shared by the military officers who are being prosecuted by the EFCC. It is a wonderful achievement for Tinubu who was able to bring in Buhari, who has what it takes to dare these military guys. We have to give credit to the former governor of Lagos state Bola and his colleagues who supported him. It has never happened in the history of Nigeria, a merger has never succeeded in this country before now. It has succeeded now because people took the bull by the horn and made a lot of sacrifice and that is why we have these results.

    Did you notice these attributes in Tinubu when you chaired the committee that screened him as a senatorial aspirant for Lagos West district on the platform of the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP) in the aborted Third Republic?

    I believe that it is his destiny and no one should underrate any human being because his was fixed by destiny and that is why he is there. Mark you, leadership is primarily the act of creating confidence. Asiwaju Tinubu had come to those who genuinely knew him and they accepted his leadership. He had come to perform wonders in all areas of leadership and human endeavors. He is not just coming in as a political leader; he is coming in as a patriot, a committed Nigerian, a man who is ready to sacrifice a lot in ensuring the unity and continued survival of Nigeria. It was not difficult to discover the qualities in Bola Tinubu when he was the senatorial candidate for the SDP because whatever he touched, he wanted the best. He is a man who would not sleep, who would not rest on his oars, a man that when he puts his hand on the plough, he never turns back, until the best is gotten and that is why he is getting the job done.

    Are you satisfied with President Buhari’s performance so far?

    I am absolutely satisfied. We are lucky to have him and by the time the complete foundation is laid, we would be a better country; better for you, better for me and better for everybody. So, my appeal is for Nigerians to understand him, have a little patience with him and give him the desired necessary support so that we can have a better Nigeria.

    What do you think has given rise to the suspicion that Buhari may sideline those who helped him to get to power?

    I don’t believe such suspicion. Human beings are so difficult to replace, it is not firewood! You may have the intention of sidelining people, but some factors would make it impossible for you to do so and I don’t see Buhari doing so. He is a man of his words and I do not see him sidelining those who helped him save this nation from imminent collapse. I strongly believe Buhari to be a thorough and godly person.

    But the President has been accused of targeting his opponents in the PDP in the war on corruption

    That is not correct. The President has been asking for those who have sufficient evidence to produce such information. The fact that you accuse a person and you do not have cogent evidence that is beyond any atom of doubt does not mean such a person would just be picked up. In the list of people that got money from the Office of National  Security Adviser (ONSA), who and who in other political parties benefitted that have they left out? Those who participated in the looting of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) fund, let them give a list of those involved who were left out. It is very easy to cry foul and make noise when you are wrong and people are dealing with you. It is just like the issue at the National Assembly now where Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu is writing the world that they want to truncate democracy in Nigeria.

    The question still remains: Did he forge the Standing Order of the Senate without going through the due process? As a leader you are suppose to be a shining example and a role model to the world. If what they have done is indeed what they have done, are they standing up to say because they are in a specific arm of government, the law cannot apply to their actions? People also make noise because they want to create situation for you to leave them for what they have done wrong. They should go ahead and prosecute those who committed offences against this country.

    They should go ahead and deal with those who stole our money and made the people poor. You need to go out at night and see the number of people sleeping under the bridges in Lagos state. You need to conduct social research and know what percentage of Nigeria is in absolute abject poverty. I am not an economist but the money that they alleged some military officers stole is about N90 billion. I am sure that if they distribute N2 million each to every Nigerian, you would know how many Nigerians that money can cover. By the time these Nigerians use this money for their trades, you know how much it would impact on their lives and remove poverty from our lives.

    Do you believe that immunity to governors and deputy governors is hampering the war on graft?

    We include that clause in the 1999 Constitution as amended believing that it would save the governors from unnecessary distractions. But, we have since discovered that some used it against the nation and against the people. We have advocated for immunity to be removed. Look at Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State, look at the public funds they brought together for his election and he is lying that he got the money from Zenith Bank. I cannot imagine that Zenith Bank would use depositors funds as much as that and give it to an individual for election. The BVN number, the tellers, the record of payments; they are all there. Because the money they took to Ekiti was too much for Ekiti, they could not finish it for election.

    There is law in this land and those who committed offences against the nation should face the law.

  • Tinubu greets Muslims

    Tinubu greets Muslims

    The National leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has congratulated Muslims on the successful completion of this year’s Holy month of Ramadan. According to him, the Ramadan period, apart from providing a period of self-examination and deep reflection, has become a necessary tonic for religious commitment and nationalistic revitalisation.

    In his Eid El-Fitr  message, he said: “Nigeria must feel the impact of the fasting and prayers in the new spirit of tolerance, good neighbourliness, patriotism, compassion and forgiveness. Unless we reflect these both in our private and public conducts, the teachings and lessons of Ramadan will be of no effect”.

    Tinubu, who said no nation has progressed and survived the worst of times without prayers, urged all the faithful not to relent in prayers for the leadership of the country and the country itself.

    He said: “But beyond prayers, we need to roll up our sleeves and get to work. Let us be builders and not destroyers. In our communities, our work places, on our assignments,let us work for this country towards  making it a better place.

    “Religion abhors laziness, it detests poverty, but promotes handwork, compassion and above all love for country. We must as a nation move beyond being religious to practicing what faith demands of us. Nigeria needs every hand to be on the deck because the task at hand demands it.

    “Nigeria is on a journey that cannot be aborted but supported because therein lies our future and the future of our youth and children.”

     

  • Senator Tinubu empowers 250 indigent constituents

    The Senator representing Lagos Central District in the upper legislative chamber, Mrs. Oluremi Tinubu, yesterday handed over 250 General Certificate of Education (GCE) forms worth over N3 million to various leaders in the senatorial district, for onward distribution to indigent students.

    Senator Tinubu made the donation at the 18th Town Hall Meeting with her constituents, held in Apapa, Lagos, which attracted leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at various levels within the district and beyond, party members and members of the various communities within the constituency.

    In her address at the event, which took place under the theme, “Creating Purposeful Partnership”, she implored the party chieftains who constituted channels for distributing the forms to ensure that they hand them over to worthy beneficiaries in their various communities and not members of their families.

    She said: “I need people to get my work done; I cannot identify those in need of it at the grassroots level that is why I am partnering with these people. The partnership for me is purposeful, not only for the reason of empowerment, but to have the multiplier effect of creating more jobs, making the empowered to be employers of labour with the aim of making unemployment a thing of the past.”

    One form each will be given to local government chairmen within the district (13 in all); two forms to each of the leaders of the 92 wards (184); one form each to leaders of the 35 barracks in the district; and one each to leaders in the 18 districts.

    The Lagos State Commissioner for Housing, Chief Gbolahan Lawal, promised to pay for additional 25 forms, to be handed over to traditional rulers in the district, who will in turn give them to indigent students in need of it.

    She disclosed that other empowerment programmes that are on course include a recent collaboration with the National Directorate of Employment (NDE), where 50 nominated constituents from the 13 local councils are acquiring skills. The three-month intensive training programme is covering five different trades including catering and small chops; photography and video; telephone repair; barbing and hairdressing; and smoked fish business.

    Earlier in his welcome address, APC leader in Lagos Central Senatorial District, Prince Tajudeen Olusi, described Senator Tinubu as diligent, devoted and hardworking and enjoined the womenfolk and the younger generation to emulate her.

    Olusi expressed satisfaction that the party leaders took the right decision when they appealed to the National Leader of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, to allow her to represent the constituency once again during the last general elections.

    The Deputy Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Wasiu Eshinlokun Sanni, said Lagos Central is blessed with a senator that has done what is expected of her.

    The event was witnessed by  former Lagos State Commissioner for Finance, Mr. Wale Edun; Hon. Tunde Balogun; Sen. Muniru Muse; members of the House of Representatives; members of the Lagos State House of Assembly; Ahaja Latifat Gbajabiamila; Alhaja Abba Folawiyo and a retinue of traditional rulers within the district.

  • June 12, the Cornerstone of our Democracy-Tinubu

    June 12, the Cornerstone of our Democracy-Tinubu

    June 12, the Cornerstone of our Democracy-Tinubu

    On this 23rd anniversary of June 12, we must not only cast our minds back to the events of that period, but we must never forget our patriots who lost lives and limbs in that epochal struggle. Beyond being a watershed, the June 12 election, the annulment and its aftermath remain the cornerstone of our democracy as a people today.

    Because a few courageous ones across the broad spectrum of the Nigerian society formed a coalition and lead from the front, the military was unable to get away with its constitutional impunity.
    Fired on by patriotism, resistant of years of oppressive military dictatorship and willing to do something about the situation Nigerians pushed the limits of civil disobedience against tyranny. By so doing, Nigerians pushed the military out, demanding for democratic governance and since then, there has been no looking back.

    The seed of democracy that was sown during the June 12 struggle of which Chief Kashimawo Abiola remains the spirit and the moving force is the fruit we now enjoin. Nigerians sustained the fervour and the patriotic disposition necessary for a new political culture to take root. However, 16 years after that struggle ended and the military departed, a new kind of struggle began. With a government of the people, by the people and for the people, the desire for rapid development and a disciplined and accountable leadership became an agenda item. In the hands of the PDP led government, Nigerians got a raw deal.
    But again desirous of a change, Nigerians were again galvanized into voting the PDP out and voting in the APC with its message and philosophy of change.
    But beyond the historic mandate given to the All Progressives Congress, APC is the urgent need to have every citizen be part of the change we want to see. From the streets and crannies, from the classrooms and boardrooms, from the lecture halls and the corridor of power, from the lawmakers, Ministers and leading politicians this is a season that demands our contribution, requires we make sacrifice and seeks that we work together towards building a critical mass that will see to the processes of the change vision now unfolding.
    Nigerians must exact from its leaders performance and accountability.
    Just like in the moving spirit of June 12, Nigerians must speak up against any form financial recklessness and corruption in high places, in their States or local administration and wherever this is found. Beyond speaking against and exposing corruption, Nigerians must speak for and in support of the on-going concerted efforts being coordinated by President Muhammadu Buhari.
    The lessons of the June 12 struggle abides. To June 12 we must return to rekindle our love and devotion for democracy and Nigeria.
    We Know that no change comes easy and we must be mindful of the fact that the success of the APC led government is the success of all of us.

    On this occasion, I shout out to all my colleagues from the days of the June 12 struggle encompassing the NADECO foot soldiers still alive today, the pro-democracy activists, the civil society and the professionals who stood up to be soldiers in defense of the democratic rights of Nigerians. With the new converts and company that have joined our rank and file, let us again stand guard and be vigilant to ensure that disgruntled elements and the powers of yesterday who we overthrew with our votes do not destroy our democracy.

    Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, National leader, All Progressives Congress and former Lagos State Governor.

  • Keshi was a soccer delight — Bola Tinubu

    Keshi was a soccer delight — Bola Tinubu

    The national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has joined the growing list of prominent Nigerians that have continued to eulogise late Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi.

    “Keshi was a soccer delight on and off the pitch. As a coach, he was a master of the game. He was a soccer icon. Keshi’s sudden death is shocking and numbling. It is a tragic loss. He has left a huge gap in our soccer administration

    “I am deeply saddened by the news of the demise of Stephen Keshi. I mourn with his family and millions of sports lovers.” The former Lagos State governor tweeted.

  • Tinubu urges Muslims to be steadfast

    Tinubu urges Muslims to be steadfast

    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, has enjoined all Muslim faithful to be steadfast and pray for the nation. In his Ramadan message, Tinubu said we cannot leave God out of politics, hence the need to offer prayers for the growth and development of the nation.

    “Nigeria is today challenged on many fronts, but though the storms gather, clear skies are ahead. Nigeria and its people will outlive the current challenges and Nigeria will see a new day. It will be a gradual process that will need all of us to play a part. Without morality and competence, no nation will advance beyond a near state of anarchy, poverty and social discontent.

    “On our part, we have embarked on a journey of ethical revolution and accountable governance. This is the way to go,”’ Tinubu said.

    Tinubu said as Nigerian Muslims join other faithful across the world during the Ramadan period, the desire for better world and a poverty-ridden world will dominate the prayer list.

    He urged that prayers must also be made for peace and peaceful co-existence of all faiths towards making developmental progress achievable.

  • Democracy Day: It’s not time to despair, says Tinubu

    Democracy Day: It’s not time to despair, says Tinubu

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu said yesterday that Nigerians should not despair but should look ahead with hope.

    In a statement to mark Democracy Day, Tinubu  said: “Now is not time to lament, murmur or give into despair. It is time to summon once again the political and social courage that we well know and that well knows us.

    “We need to push forward and to urge government forward to do that which it must to achieve this great generational feat.

    “We stand between success and failure; but we cannot maintain this middling position forever. We must turn one way or the other. To me there is but one option. The other is unspeakable. We must be bold enough not to accept an inferior destiny. We must win.

    “To do so, we must use all the democratic tools at our disposal. I am proud and commend Nigerian people for having carried the nation this far. Don’t faint now. We are almost out of the thicket and so close to home.”

    The statement titled: ‘We must not take our democracy for granted, we must defend it’ added: “A great historic push and effort are mandated. Change takes boldness, perseverance and moral fortitude; profound change requires even more so.

    “The task is hard but I neither fret nor worry. In my heart, I am comforted by the knowledge that we are so much better and stronger than the obstacle before us. We shall and must overcome it because it is in our nature and it is for our best destiny to do so.”

  • We musn’t take our democracy for granted, says Tinubu

    We musn’t take our democracy for granted, says Tinubu

    Text of a remark by All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu on the anniversary of Democracy Day

    The history of mankind is an endless saga of justice, struggling against injustice, compassion against hatred, hope versus despair, prosperity versus poverty and liberty against oppression. Wherever man has resided with fellow man, they have cooperated but also clashed. Where greed and anger have been allowed to loom stronger than their more benign opposites, conflict and the rule of might over right prevail.

    The people suffer a caustic governance that, the more odious it tastes, the more it demands  of the people a blinding obedience that stifles most of what is good in the society. The people own not the deed to their very existence. They become fodder of a ruthless leviathan that would rather crush their humanity than suckle it.

    Where amity and fairness abide, social harmony and the rule of right over might raise a benign standard. The people suffer not to serve their rulers but their leaders suffer to serve them. The welfare of the people becomes the lodestar and not an afterthought of governance.

    In the life of any nation, of any people, good is always sought but never assured. Whatever is worthwhile is never freely given or easily attained in this most human of spaces where both good and evil sell their wares. When good prevails, it is a function of struggle and sweat, true vision followed by truer deed.

    This is why we celebrate democracy. It is neither a gift nor something easily come by. If our democracy was always here and abiding, we would not have cause to celebrate because it would just seem like the natural order of things. But, democracy is with us only because almost all prayed for it; most fought for it; many bled for it; some died for its sake. A thing so hard-won is something we dare not leave unattended to or take for granted. We must keep guard over it and honor it lest something evil comes to snatch it because you fail to stand watch.

    On this day, we affirm our belief that democracy is vital to our wellbeing but also never guaranteed. We must nurture and watch over it for good reason. The more we feed and nourish democracy, the more it feeds and nourishes the people, allowing them the sovereign control over their collective destiny. No other form of government extends such a winsome offer. No other form of government deserves to be consecrated as our national way of life.

    While constructed to guard against yielding absolute power to the wicked and ruthless, democracy is more than a shield against the evil that man at times throws at his brother. Democracy also recognises the basic goodness of people. It seeks to give us just enough power to exercise that goodness without giving any one of us so much power as to be able to confiscate the freedom and the fruits thereof which belong to others. Good begets good, love of freedom begets more freedom just as evil seeks to multiply itself and the acquisition of power begets a decadent appetite for more power. Democracy is the dynamic balancing of freedom and power so that society can be effectively led without the people being unduly suppressed.

    I have devoted the better part of my life to the struggle for Nigerian democracy. I would be more than happy to devote the rest of my days so that democracy can thrive and erase the unjust imbalances that have for too long been a heavy surcharge against the lives of most of our people.

    I believe in democracy for Nigeria because of my unyielding faith in the people. We are not perfect. No people are. But we are a good and decent national family. Our attributes, skills, compassion and generosity as a people are inferior to none. There is no shame in being Nigerian but only pride at how this people have withstood so much for so long yet have neither been broken nor have given themselves over to defeat. In the face of steep odds, you the people have been resilient unto victory.

    We have endured the harsh meter of authoritarian rule. After military rule gave way, we withstood the ambivalent nature of 17 years of civilian rule, not as brutish as the military, but not quite democracy neither. We existed in the twilight between darkness and light. Yet, we refused to get lost or to avert your focus from what was better.

    We lived in a land of elections the results of which were not always the expression of the sovereign will of the people, but of the will of a few people who mistook themselves to be the sovereign. Instead of holding elections, they used a superficially democratic process to coronate themselves as modern royalty. They misbehaved and misgoverned according to this fouled perception.

    The only honor such people could give democracy was to mock it. When they celebrated Democracy Day these past 16 years, it was as thieves and burglars celebrating one of their own becoming the chief security officer of a bank.

    The pall of falsity hung over our democratic process and future.

    However, right may be silenced for a moment but it never tells lies.  The inadequacy of such an arrangement became manifest. The people demanded better because they deserved better.

    By last year, we committed ourselves as a nation to ensuring that democracy was given full expression. No more full tricks or half truths.

    The people voted out the government and the party in office that had bragged they would hold Nigeria captive for six decades.  At that moment, democracy day was turned from a bittersweet irony into a blossoming reality.

    We planted democracy in Nigeria. As long as we exercise prudence and follow wise policy, never shall it depart from us.

    Now that we have planted democracy, we must move to the next phase. We must clear our system of the malpractices of the past that do not contribute to good governance but only perpetuate extant ills that we now seek to jettison. The people gave conservative elitist government 16 years to drive the nation forward. It drove the nation indeed: right into the ditch we found ourselves.

    The people are due an era of progressive and democratic good governance that augurs durable growth and widely-shared prosperity.

    This phase shall be hard. Those who benefitted from injustices in the past  energetically plot their return. The looters of yesterday to whom we waved farewell in the 2015 elections now try to shimmy through the backdoor to continue their pilfering ways. There is no progressive policy in your benefit that they do not actively seek to undermine and make fail. They hope to use your kindness and patience against you.  They seek to erect barriers to discourage us into believing there is no other way than the backward path they offer.

    We shall forfeit the nation’s future if we give in to their deceit, or if we fall into despondency because progress does not appear to come as fast, or as systematically as we hoped.

    Remember, the quest for democracy is a battle not a banquet. We must stick with it and not give up hope, just when fairness and justice have finally gotten the upper hand. We must persevere not just until the tide of battle seems to have turned in our favour but until the opponents of democracy have been decisively and thorough bested.

    Thus, we do not relent in defending democracy just as we should not relent in expecting the benefits inherent in democratic good governance. This means we must not sit back and merely let government contest with those who would again turn government against the general welfare. All of us must join the fray because the fray is about us and whether we live in a manner than fulfills our national purpose.

    You, the people, must participate in government as never before.  We cannot be passive onlookers when what lies in the balance is the future of our children and their sons and daughters after them. If someone tried to kidnap your child, you would not fold your hands and close your mouth. Then, we should not do so when the vultures and hyenas of yesterday sneak about in an attempt to steal, perhaps not our children, but their very futures.

    Press forward! As a sovereign people, we must be the voice and masters of our collective destiny. We must be more active in expressing what we want government to do in order to better this nation and its governance. The people must articulate their opinions and goals to give government the input and impetus necessary for it to be as responsive and benevolent as possible.

    We have done much and have come a long way. Yet, we must not be tired when we are now so close to our destination. We must force ourselves to press on until pressing on becomes what we do both by reflex and reflection for democracy is never fully achieved. To keep democracy, we must keep perfecting it. Democracy is a fine home that always beckons us to improve it that we may improve our collective lot in the process.

    There are many challenges facing our nation. There are security problems in some areas. But thankfully, the government is making progress, particularly against Boko Haram insurgents.  This brutal terrorist group will soon be a thing of the bleak past. The sense killings and the destruction wrought will be no more.

    There is a problem that cuts all areas equally. If we are not careful, it will afflict us a long time to come. In a cold, swift stroke, the decline in oil prices has turned into a mockery the model upon which we had for so long based our political economy. We either must waste away or construct a new model.

    We should diversify our economy by expanding our infrastructural network, bolstering agricultural and farm incomes, as well as filliping industry and manufacturing to provide jobs for a rapidly expanding urban work force. We must revise how our children are educated and ensure that they are prepared for the 21st century instead of barely being educated to function in the 19th.

    In the spirit of Democracy Day, and of the discourse necessary to enliven the democratic spirit, I would like to share some thoughts on how I think we should address the prevailing economic challenge. For this might be the most perilous of all that confronts us. If we lose this battle, democracy may become so weakened at its core that it transmogrifies into what it ought not to be.

    To accomplish our economic rescue, we need a fiscal policy that stands unrivalled in its range and its objectives. Government must dedicate unprecedented amounts for productive expenditure in our transportation infrastructure, power generation, food security and job creation. We have entered a period of stagflation where recession or shrinkage of the economy is accompanied by higher prices. Unfortunately, if we try to fight both at the same time, we fight neither effectively. Given the rate of joblessness and poverty, it is more fitting to fight recession at this point than to focus on inflation. We can endure a bit more inflation if it means more jobs and greater aggregate demand that can develop the velocity needed to free the economy of recession’s gravitational pull. We must resist recession; it is harder to shake off once it takes grip of an economy.

    Moreover, if we are bold enough not to allow fear to paralyse us, we can start creating employment opportunities; we can modernise our infrastructure which will reduce the cost of living and doing business. We can institute policies that create new industries and businesses as well as improve old ones. These measures will form the foundation of a diversified economy that will become more resistant to inflation because it is less reliant on imports. Also, it will be more recession resistant because the economy will rest on multiple revenue sources instead of a single source that is dependent on foreign consumer preferences over which we have little control.

    Restructuring our economy is the most complex challenge before us. On this so much depends. We all must contribute if we are to win.

    Now is not the time to lament, murmur or give in to despair. It is time to summon once again the political and social courage that we well know and that well knows us. We need to push forward and to urge government forward to do that which it must to achieve this great generational feat. We stand between success and failure; but we cannot maintain this middling position forever. We must turn one way or the other. To me there is but one option. The other is unspeakable. We must be bold enough not accept an inferior destiny. We must win.

    To do so, we must use all the democratic tools at our disposal. I am proud and commend the Nigerian people for having carried the nation this far. Don’t faint now. We are almost out of the thicket and so close to home.

    A great historic push and effort are mandated. Change takes boldness, perseverance and moral fortitude; profound change requires even more so. The task is hard but I neither fret nor worry. In my heart, I am comforted by the knowledge that we are so much better and stronger than the obstacle before us. We shall, and must overcome it because it is in our nature and it is for our best destiny to do so.

  • Tinubu to NLC leaders: return to negotiation table

    Tinubu to NLC leaders: return to negotiation table

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, yesterday stepped into the face-off between the Federal Government and the Ayuba Wabba-led Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) over the new petrol price, calling for an immediate truce.

    Tinubu, at a meeting with the NLC leadership in Abuja, offered to accompany them to the negotiation table with the Federal Government for the purpose of resolving the issue.

    The NLC had commenced an indefinite strike action on Wednesday in a bid to force the federal government to reverse the new pump price of fuel.

    The strike action entered its third day yesterday with minimum impact in most parts of the country.

    Tinubu, with whom were Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State; former NLC President, Abdulwahid Omar; former Director General of the National Orientation Agency, Alhaji Idi Farouk; Senators Kabiru Marafa, Othman Hunkuyi and Abdulkarim Daiyabu at the meeting, appealed to the labour leaders to adopt negotiation in the interest of the suffering masses.

    He attributed the face-off to communication gap between government and labour, saying: “We are aware of a seeming division. But conflicts and conflict resolution mechanisms are there in every polity.

    “If there are no conflicts and conflict resolution system, then there is no politics.

    “The history of democracy cannot be written without those conflicts and institutionalised mechanism to resolve them. Today, we came to appeal to you and go back to history.”

    Tinubu said Nigeria has reached a point in its history when things have to be done differently. Otherwise, he said, they would stagnate.

    “We must try new things. I am here to appeal to you to understand that whatever you are doing now and whatever this government is doing, led by Buhari’s administration, which involves myself and yourself, you brought this government about.

    “Without you and your support, without your participation, we couldn’t have won the election. Now, we have won the election and we now ask ourselves, can we manage the victory? Can we use the success to make those changes?

    “If change is our slogan, are we collaborating and cooperating to make those changes for the benefits of the people, the positive change that we believe in, the progressive change that can work?

    “We will cross this bridge because we put this bridge together for the progressives and not on tribe but because we have a common vision to make progress in this country.

    “Yes, suddenly, there was little or no communication to really change the old policy of oil price. But in good conscience, many of you who are part and parcel of genuine labour movement know that it is not about cheap oil but about progress and disposable income that will ameliorate the suffering of the people.

    “If that is the case, year after year, they speak the language of subsidy, but who are the beneficiaries of petroleum products for our vehicles?”

    Continuing, he said: “My mission here is for peace. My mission here is for us to return to the negotiation table. In war, what will end it?

    “After destruction and devastation, they still will end up with discussions and having an understanding to build their country back. Let us build Nigeria.

    “Initially, it is always difficult. But when the market is opened up to competition, some marketers will depend on volume and bring their prices down because they want to bring in their inventory very quickly.

    “They will not want the petrol to remain in tank farms because they are owing their creditors.

    “But to say that we must continue to allocate when you have lost 70 per cent of your revenue. Oil was 100 dollars and above per barrel, and it is now above 30 dollars.

    “Check your pocket, Mr. President. If you were getting N100,000 every week and suddenly you start getting N30,000, how would you react? That is my mission here.

    “My guarantee is that this government is a government of honesty and integrity. Whatever is the anger, we must apply anger management.

    “Whatever is the difference, I appeal to you, let us go back to the negotiation table. Let us call off this strike. It is not done on the street.

    “It is good to voice out your differences because we are in a democracy and in freedom. We will end up negotiating and agreeing with one another.

    “I want to appeal to you. I have come to beg, not as a pride. I come on behalf of my party.

    “I come on behalf of our government because it is our collective government. APC is for progress; it is for change; those positive changes that will channel the economy and our country on the path of greatness.

    “This is the largest economy in Africa and we can compete much better than India.

    “Let us look at a new mechanism. Money is tangible. It does not evaporate, but moves from one pocket to the other.

    “All the money that you are looking at is migrating. Let us open up the opportunities and create a level playing ground for all investors to build refineries in this country.

    “If you are under the price control regime, there is no way any investor will come and establish refineries.

    “Let us look at Venezuela who sell their oil at the same price. Today, to buy frozen chicken there is a problem. We cannot copy bad things.

    “When Britain was in trouble, they looked up to their retired General, Winston Churchill, to bring that change and he did and turned Britain around. So, Nigeria has that problem since 2003 and we saw Buhari who is straightforward, honest and everything.

    “We did not say we will not have problem with him once in a while. But we know one thing that he has—integrity, a character that is reliable.

    “I know when we were together on the last price increase, we sat with that government. They promised to do certain things in transportation and agriculture and stop leakages and we said ok and we had SURE-P. Where is that SURE-P? What is sure about it is corruption.

    “The only item that was sure in that name was waste and corruption. Where is the impact on the people? We came and started studying things away from the past.

    “All of us, including the National Assembly, should sit down and look at the options and see how the other option, which I don’t want to disclose here, will work for the betterment of Nigeria, and I can take a bet with you that it will work.

    “Buhari will listen to us because we will work together in making changes

    Responding, Wabba said labour was always ready for negotiation, but was irked by the divide and rule tactic of government.

    He wondered why government should be talking to the Joe Ajaero faction of the NLC which, according to him, controls only six of the 43 affiliates of the union.

    He said the NLC’s action was not about personal interest.

    His words: “Let me put it on record that this action is not about personal interest but about engaging policies which over time, the NLC has actually led the vanguard and have collaborated with a lot of civil society organisations even in the fight to bring about democracy.

    “These are some of the traditions that we cherish so much to actually continue to fight for policy engagement and ensure that there is development to address the issue of poverty and bring about social Justice.

    “There is no much difference between what we are saying; the difference is only the approach.

    “We have taken note of the plea you have made and I assure you that this will be discussed and communicated to the appropriate organs of the NLC.

    “I want to assure you that we have never at any time refused discussion or negotiation. What actually happened was that when we reached a deadlock, government said we should excuse them and they started playing this issue of divide and rule.

    “NLC has 43 affiliates. As I am talking to you, we have 37 affiliates. So, if somebody controls six and government on record has it that the Ayuba Wabba led NLC is what they recognise, I don’t think it will augur well in a dispensation that all of us fought for to bring about change that can make meaningful life for Nigerians to play divide and rule.”

    He thanked Tinubu for “finding time and thinking it apt to visit the secretariat of the working class. This alone has demonstrated the fact that you are concerned about the issues of development in our country.

    “We must put on record our appreciation of that, despite the fact that you know the situation we are in and the action that we are in.”

  • Tinubu to NLC: Let’s return to negotiation table

    Tinubu to NLC: Let’s return to negotiation table

    The National Leader of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has appealed to the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to suspend the ongoing nationwide strike called by the union to protest the fuel price hike and return to the negotiation table with government.

    But the president of the NLC, Ayuba Wabba, said it was unfortunate that the government decided to play the divide and rule tactics, negotiating simultaneously with the NLC and the Joe Ajaero- led faction which he said control only six of the 43 affiliates groups in the congress.

    The former Lagos State governor was accompanied on the visit by Osun State governor, Rauf Aregbesola, former NLC president, Abdulwahid Omar, former Director -General of the National Orientation Agency, Alhaji Idi Farouk, Senators Kabiru Marafa and Suleiman Othman Hunkuyk and Abdulkarjm Daiyabu.

    Tinubu, who spoke at a meeting with the leadership of the NLC, promised to lead the congress delegation to the government with a view to addressing the contending issues that led to the strike.

    He told the NLC leadership that organised labour was not the enemy of the Muhammadu Buhari’s administration and will never be the enemy of government saying, “I have come to appeal to you to suspend the action you have embarked upon and return to the negotiating table.”

    He told the labour leaders that as the largest economy in Africa, Nigeria can compete with other countries across the globe only if the right policies are put in place to drive the economy.