Tag: Transformation

  • Rail transformation on course, says Amaechi

    Rail transformation on course, says Amaechi

    Federal Government’s efforts at transforming the country’s rail transport system are on course, the Minister of Transportation,Rotimi Amaechi, has said

    He stated this during the inspection of newly-acquired executive coaches for the Abuja-Kaduna standard gauge line at the Apapa Ports Terminal in Lagos.

    Amaechi, who was represented by Director Rail, in the Ministry of Transportation Mr Mohammed Babakobi, said government remained resolute in improving the rail transport system in the country.

    He said: “What we have seen here today are the new coaches that have just been brought here, to service our standard gauge line running from Abuja to Kaduna.

    “It is a complete transformation in the rail transportation sector for the populace.

    “The coaches are made with particular focus of the comfort of passengers; they are very safe and have a designed speed of 150km/h.

    “So with that, we can be assured that the passengers will get to their destinations as fast as it can be, and it’s safe.

    “In a very short while, they will be moved to Abuja and installed on the rail tracks, where they are supposed to be servicing, that is between Abuja and Kaduna.”

    He assured Nigerians of the Federal Government’s sustained efforts at acquiring more standard gauge coaches to meet demand.

    “There will be more as we progress on the operation of the line between Abuja and Kaduna; as the demand increases, more coaches will be required,’’ he added.

    Mr Fidet Okhiria, the Acting Managing Director of the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC), said the coaches were designed to run at 150km/h, adding that the corporation was on track to upgrade its operations.

     

  • Why economic philosophy matters: Economic transformation and the  vision thing (1)

    Why economic philosophy matters: Economic transformation and the vision thing (1)

    Professor Kingsley Moghalu, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), teaches International Business and Public Policy at The Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy at Tufts University in Massachusetts, United States, in this first part of a series, argues that those at the helm of affairs must  build a sustainable economic future for the country by looking beyond oil.

    Nothing concentrates the mind of a profligate, commodity-dependent nation like a fine crisis of crashed oil prices and an embattled currency. Even then, given our past record with oil booms and busts in which we get born again when oil prices crash but backslide once they recover, one cannot be certain that we would have learnt our lessons if the price of crude were to ramp up to $70 a barrel, let alone the pipe dream of $100 oil, in the next two years.To build a sustainable economic future beyond oil,Nigeria must now address the aching need for a clear economic vision, situated in a philosophical framework, from which public policy should be derived.

    This is the philosophical self-examination that Nigerian economic policy has not done since the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) was introduced by the government of Gen. Ibrahim Babangida in 1986. Yet, we can see that this tension has continued to shadow economic policy by successive Nigerian governments and public or elite reactions to these policies to this day. This has been especially so since the return of democracy in 1999. Today, this tension is encapsulated in the suspicions, support or criticisms of what has been termed “Buharinomics”.

    To be sure, President Muhammadu Buhari’s government is itself yet to publicly indicate a clear economic philosophy beyond what is evident from the president’s comments and policy actions, which is that he is pro-poor in his inclinations rather than pro-elite. This is important in itself because the real test of success in economic transformation is not just how much the elite or the middle class prosper, but even more importantly for an underdeveloped nation such as ours, how many millions of the poor are transported from poverty into middle class status. This test is what has been adopted in China, South Korea, Brazil, India, United Arab Emirates and Chile in the past 50 years, and is what is at play in Vietnam, Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Rwanda today. So, President Buhari’s pro-poor focus is right because to give the poor a way out of poverty is, to use a turn of phrase from another former military leader, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, “a task that must be done”. The question is: how?

    It is necessary to remind ourselves that the SAP, whether we consider that it was right or wrong, a success or a failure, was a child of circumstance and not of choice. It was an externally induced policy response to a balance of payments crisis that was long in the making. That crisis resulted from cumulative structural and policy missteps that began in the 1970s because of the oil boom, and came to a head in President Shehu Shagari’s government. If we had managed our economy more wisely and not lost our head to a wasting natural resource, Nigeria would not have experienced the kind of wrenching economic crisis that the then Head of State Gen. Buhari inherited when he came to power as a military leader on December 31, 1983. The same scenario, without question, is true today.

    In this four-part series, I intend to open a philosophical inquiry into our national economic vision and aspirations, with the aim of establishing that the key to prospering and mattering as a nation, beyond being a point of global commodity and human extraction for hundreds of years, is the reinvention of our minds to understand what creates the true wealth of nations and how to apply those basic understandings to economic policy and governance.

    The wealth of nations always has philosophical foundations. It is these fundamental understandings and how we share and apply them as a nation, rather than going “upandan” (up and down) with no particular compass or lodestar in view, that makes the difference between success, failure, or a journey that takes longer than should really be necessary. This might surprise those who have placed much stock on the technical equations of economists, which are doubtless also important, but really as a back-up that gives validation toa philosophically grounded economic vision.

    As such, I will address in this series four issues. The first is why a national economic vision is important. Second,I will demonstrate the umbilical cord between the philosophical concept of worldviews and why America and China rule the world and why Nigeria is yet to fly. The third part will examine the importance of the forces of globalization and, even more importantly, understanding their implications for the economic man or woman in Nnewi, Kano, or Lagos and how we should navigate those currents. Finally, I will discuss how all these subjects wrap up in capitalist economics, why capitalism does not automatically create the wealth of nations, and what exactly Nigeria should do to make capitalism actually work for it and its citizens, not just for a few plutocrats.

    Why does an economic vision matter? The “vision thing” matters because it sets out a national ambition for transformation against a canvas of both the long term and a destination. Second, it matters because, if communicated effectively it can, to deploy the Nigerian politician’s ultimate phrase, “carry the people along”. Third, it matters because visioning is the ultimate task of leadership. Managing, which is a different thing, is the necessary next level below,and ensures that visions become reality. Fourth, a national economic vision, which must be anchored on a discernible economic or political philosophy, makes derivative policy more robust by imbuing it with internal consistency. And fifth, clarity of vision matters because there are different and competing economic visions that have delivered prosperity to different parts of the world, so the real mystery of economic transformation is that no one economic vision is the ultimate elixir in every clime or circumstance. Economics is not exactly an exact science!

    Thus, as I have argued in my book Emerging Africa: How the Global Economy’s ‘Last Frontier’ Can Prosper and Matter, this clarity about the basis on which we seek to prosper and matter is a fundamental requirement for economic transformation in Nigeria and other African countries. Anything short of this is a muddle, and we have been in a muddle for some time.  This is the case despite the illusion some have self-interestedly created, that Africa is “rising”, when in fact nothing about the structure of its commodity-dependent economies has changed in any fundamental manner.

    You might be saying, as you read this: “But what about Sani Abacha’s Vision 2010, Yar’Adua’s Vision 2020 and Goodluck Jonathan’s Transformation Agenda?” Good question. Here’s the answer: These documents, worthy efforts though they are, lacked a foundational worldview, which is to say an interpretation of the world and why it is the way it is, the world economy and Nigeria’s place in it as a basis for a clearly articulated quest for economic development and transformation. They lacked a grand, unifying vision for Nigeria that will guide any government in power, regardless of its political leaning. There was subsequently no single strand of narrative that connected every action of governance and economic management to that vision. The vision need not be verbose (Rwanda’s Vision 2020 is just 30 pages). And these “visions” were not embedded in the various structures of governance, and were not executed with consistency, discipline and grand strategy, with targets and milestones measured constantly against implementation. Conversely, Malaysia adopted these approaches, and has already achieved most of its Vision 2020. That vision was articulated in 1991 by Dr. Mahathir Mohammed, the Asian country’s driven, articulate and inspirational Prime Minister at the time.

    Nigeria has veered since 1999 from a capitalist economy accompanied by far-reaching liberalization reforms to one that now appears to be leaning towards a welfare state and a commanding role for the government, all without an interrogation, let alone an articulation of any economic philosophy as a basis on which we hope to attain prosperity in the long term. This approach, by definitionad hoc in nature, of “doing” things before thinking deeply and developing coherent, long-term strategies has not served Nigeria well. It is what has created the reality of running around in circles after 55 years. We cannot carry on this way.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo guided and empowered the private sector but was in the driving seat. The private sector dominated President Goodluck Jonathan’s government, leading to the “subordinate state” in which some business titans became alternate centers of power and “captured” the decision-making process of an elected government. Today, the captains of money and commerce appear unsure of their place under President Muhammadu Buhari. Beyond the seeming mistrust between the president and the “oligarchs”, state-business relations, a process of collaboration between the state and market players such as the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) and the main chambers of commerce, remains necessary. The outcomes of those consultations ought to be evident in public policy.

    Presidents Obasanjo and Jonathan both believed strongly in business as a major driver of the national economy. The liberalization of the telecommunications industry, which the former spearheaded,had a huge and positive economic impact. Thus Nigeria progressively rose to become Africa’s largest economy based on a “rebased” Gross Domestic Product. But the electric power sector remained moribund, with our national wattage embarrassingly one-tenth of South Africa’s. Poverty and unemployment rates have remained high because the trickle-down effect on the common man from the Olympian heights of the neo-liberal economic paradigm has not happened. What’s the point of being Africa’s largest economy if poverty, unemployment and infrastructure deficits have remained high despite the efforts of successive governments?

    Enter President Buhari, from a field apparently left of center, with his government taking on huge welfare obligations at a time of declining fiscal revenues. Let’s be clear: a social safety net of some sort is necessary in every society.  But welfare economics needs careful thinking before jumping into, for the simple reason that the welfare state as an economic model, just like all the others, has its unique, inbuilt problems. The most important of these is sustainability. How will wealth be created before it is shared or redistributed, or are we to simply to borrow and “manage” our resources and “share” from a progressively empty pot?

    Many observers of Nigeria’s economy sighed with relief when, after much debate and controversy, President Buhari did the right thing and walked back from an apparent commitment that his government would pay a monthly stipend of N5,000 to millions of unemployed Nigerians, but rather would focus on investments in infrastructure and other productive aspects of the economy. The relief was not because any genuine patriothates the poor and would not want their progress. It was because even in the best of times such a huge expectation would have been difficult to implement. Moreover, given Nigeria’s present economic distress, it is well-nigh impossibleto do so at this time without severe and negative fiscal, monetary and other long term-consequences.

    The populism of political campaign rhetoric is frequently a different thing from the reality of things when politicians are voted into office, and populist instincts are a problematic basis for sound economic policy.  Not understanding this subtlety has been a bane of governance in Nigeria, and highlights the prevalent short-termism instead of a longer term worldview. On the other hand, the Buhari government’s policy announcement of its intention to spend N60 billion to economically empower 1 million artisans (there should be more participants, with a sum like N60 billion), is doable and would make direct economic impact if well-conceived and implemented effectively.

    Thus, we need to return to the basics before we proceed on possibly flawed assumptions. First, we must assume, and affirm, that Nigeria operates a market economy in which the state nevertheless should play an important role. But what exactly should that role be?  Do we or should we have a developmental state, or a “night-watchman” state? This is the critical question. In the night-watchman state the economy is believed to run on the assumption of efficient markets. The role of the state is simply to regulate the playing field, protect individual and property rights, and then get out of the way. This is the neo-liberal paradigm, articulated influentially by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) professor Robert Solow, which argues that growth is created by production and innovation. This creates “rents”, or payments that exceed the opportunity cost of an asset. This is different from rent-seeking, in which wealth is transferred mainly by government actions (such as inflated contracts, import duty waivers for cronies, petroleum products import subsidies, or the discretionary allocation of oil blocks). The neo-liberal paradigm, in its pure form (not the corrupted form we have practiced in Nigeria) actually tries to dislodge rent-seeking by reducing the state’s role in the economy.

    The concept of the developmental state, intellectually championed by thinkers and politicians such as Meles Zenawi, the late President of Ethiopia, challenges the night-watchman or neo-liberal paradigm. Developmental state theory argues that the neo-liberal state idea is a reflection of the historical evolution of western capitalist societies, and that it assumes that all things are equal, which is not the case at all in developing countries. The state must therefore consciously drive development by shaping the economic market-place in pre-determined directions consistent with the needs of development, and not just the idiosyncrasies of the market-place.

    As we will see when we discuss the different kinds of capitalism and their relevance to the Nigerian conundrum, this approach to economic development requires a highly capable state in which public policy is driven by highly competent, knowledgeable and motivatedindividuals. If a country tries this approach and those in the lead are wrong or lack the requisite economic and public policy knowledge, good intentions alone will mean nothing in the end, and the consequence of error can be high. The level of competence and focus of its leadership and bureaucrats, under the brilliant lawyer Lee Kuan Yew, is why Singapore rose from being an Asian backwater to become a prosperous nation.

    Ethiopia and Rwanda, the two main examples in Africa of the developmental state, are in fact pursuing growth with transformation objectives in different ways. In Ethiopia which has a population of 80 million people, the economy remains under significant state control even as the private sector expands, and the financial sector is yet to be fully liberalized. But there is a clear emphasis on and industrial manufacturing economy and the acquisition of technical skills necessary for the viability of this model of development. In Rwanda, President Paul Kagame leads a country with a developmental model that is heavily private-sector driven, but a strong state sets the overall strategic agenda and executes with ruthless discipline. Corruption practically does not exist in Rwanda. One million people have verifiably been moved from poverty into the middle class already. The country of 10 million people is pursuing a Singapore-based development model, is developing an information technology based economy, and aspires to become a middle-income country by 2020, all from ground zero two decades after the Rwandan genocide of 1994. Kagame has been extraordinarily effective at mobilizing the buy-in and participation of Rwandans in the country’s development vision.

    All of this is different from a command economy or a big but unproductive state, in which government controls the levers of economic activity but lacks the ability to produce and allocate efficiently, while impeding the possibility of more efficient outcomes that could be created by market competition. This is especially so when a country has already repositioned to a broadly market economy for many years, after the failure of state controls in the first place.

    What is the path forward for Nigeria? It lies in returning to the drawing board and building the right philosophical foundations for national prosperity. We cannot turn back the hand of the clock and return to the command economies of the pre-SAP era, which also failed partly because of the weakness of their conceptual foundations and our progressive inefficiencies as societal values became eroded, but we can re-position for a better tomorrow. And the place to begin is in the mind.

    •To be continued

  • Training vital to agric transformation

    Training vital to agric transformation

    The Acting  Executive  Director, Agricultural and Rural Management Training Institute, (ARMTI), Mr  Anthony  Njoku,  has said value  chain training is vital to enhancing the quality of human resources in the sector.

    At a workshop on “Training of Trainers for facilitators of value chain development” in Ilorin, Kwara State, he urged practitioners to  focus on integrating more  value  chain  into training for farmers  and increase co-operation to apply more advanced technology in the sector.

    He  said the institute would support farmers and agribusinesses to enhance capacities  that will  cater for the need in the market and production of the sector.

    Njoku  said  between 2010 and 2011 ARMTI trained two of its very senior trainers on “Pro-poor Agricultural Commodity Value Chain Development”. The training was facilitated by the renowned International Institute of Rural Reconstruction in Addis Ababa, 2010, and Kenya, 2011.

    He  said the  Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) of the Federal Government  highlighted commodity value chain development as the main vehicle to drive the  process.

    In the institute’s  budget proposal for 2012,  he  said  capacity building packages were included towards addressing the focus of  the government to make agriculture a business in the country.

    In the budget, he  said  ARMTI amongst others, sought approval to implement the following capacity building projects conduct the first national baseline study on value chain development in Nigeria; and present report in a national seminar and national sensitisation seminar in the six geo-political zones on the product of the national baseline study, and training of trainers for facilitators of value chain.

    To make agriculture profitable to rural populace and as well boost food sufficiency, he  said the institute  did a  baseline study on commodity value chain development.

    The  project, he said, gives the appropriate picture and provides information on value chain development among the agricultural commodities in each geo-political zone with emphasis on the comparative advantage in the production management per zone.

    The ARMTI boss added that the value chain programme has the capacity to unlock this huge potential. Besides, through this study, ARMTI will continue to brainstorm with each geo political zone towards exposing to us how each of us fits into this grand scheme.

    In another development, a team  from the institute, led by the  Public Relations Officer, Mayowa  Gidado, donated sweet potato from its demonstration farm to the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Abuja.

    At the camp in Kaaru District, the team was received by the coordinator, Mr. Sunday Wabba. It donated 12 bags of  sweet potato.

  • Nigeria: That agric transformation may be

    I read with dismay on October 12, The Nation article titled: “Importers, traders laud govt for lifting ban on rice.” The decision to lift the ban, we are told, is at the prompting of the Comptroller-General of Customs. The article incredulously informs us that lifting the ban on imported rice was necessary because a minimum of 10,000 bags of rice is smuggled into Nigeria each day. The logic is that opening the floodgates to importation would bolster Customs revenues.

    The following day, another national newspaper carried a similar article titled: “Brazilian investors beg FG to ease barriers on rice importation.” The article goes on to say that in a meeting with the Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission, the Brazilian Ambassador to Nigeria said he was keen on exporting rice to Nigeria.

    First of all, this is the kind of meeting that should never have held in the first place. Sales of agricultural technology, yes! Rice importation, absolutely NOT.

    I am totally scratching my head on this one. Only in Nigeria, does this type of thinking take place and only in Nigeria do we jettison well thought through policies on a whim. No wonder foreign investors tend to be ultra cautious before venturing into the Nigerian market. One would have expected Customs to enforce existing regulations and clamp down on illegal importation in order to safeguard the nation’s food security,  support rural and commercial farmers, and preserve Nigeria’s Foreign Exchange earnings.

    I’m the grandson of a farmer, so I guess my biases are obvious. For the record, between 2011 and 2015, the former Minister of Agriculture, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, and his team, spearheaded a major transformation across Nigeria’s agricultural value chain. Was it perfect? Nothing is. Was it unprecedented and enormously successful? Without a doubt!

    We are a rice-eating nation. We consume approximately six million metric tonnes each year. Consequently, rice is life! In this sector alone, as with many other crops, Adesina provided millions of farmers with new high-yielding seeds at no cost, and fertiliser at 50 per cent subsidy.

    The goal was to create access, empower rural farmers, massively boost productivity, and reduce import dependence. The end result of a highly creative and generous Growth Enhancement Support programme and an electronic wallet system was that under Adesina, Nigeria achieved 80 per cent self-sufficiency in paddy rice production.

    Additionally, Adesina aggressively engaged the organised private sector and state governments, with the goal of up scaling commercial rice production. Kebbi, Nassarawa, Zamfara, Ebonyi, Ekiti and many other states, worked in tandem with the Federal Government to turn Nigeria’s high dependence on imported rice into self-sufficiency. In 2013, under a backward integration programme, investors who were engaged in farming and milling were allowed to import rice at reduced tariffs until 2017, when 100 per cent self-sufficiency was anticipated.

    What do we now tell the millions of farmers who believed the previous Government’s mantra that Agriculture was Nigeria’s new black gold? What message have we just sent to the many young entrepreneurial University graduates who for a moment in time considered agriculture a viable pathway to wealth?

    How do commercial farmers and millers recoup billions of Naira in investments in a market awash with inferior and cheap imported rice? By this singular act, have we not sent powerfully wrong signals to the agriculture sector? That it is a whole lot easier, more convenient, and certainly much more lucrative to import rice rather than engage in full scale production that has the potential to create more jobs than any other sector of the economy. My heart truly goes out to our farming community.

    While I expected some agricultural policy flip flops, as is usually the case in our beloved Nigeria, I just did not expect it this soon. After all, lifting the ban on rice importation should not have been at the insistence of the Comptroller-General of Customs alone, but in concert with the Central Bank Governor, the soon-to-be appointed ministers of Agriculture and Finance, the highly respected Nigerian Agribusiness Group, and the Federal Executive Council. There is no other way to describe what has just happened than as an ‘agricultural coup d’état! But alas this is Nigeria!

     

     – Dr Victor Oladokun is a

    Media Strategist and CEO of 3D Global Consult

  • Be agents of transformation, NYSC DG urges corps members

    Be agents of transformation, NYSC DG urges corps members

    …says kidnapping, raping, not targeted at only corps members

    The Director General of the National Youth Service Corps, Brig Gen. Johnson Olawumi, has also charged corps members to key into the change mantra of government by being agents of transformation in the various communities they find themselves during their service year.

    Speaking at the NYSC Orientation Camp in Iyana-Ipaja, Lagos, the NYSC DG called on the corps members to embrace value re-orientation, while cautioning them against making comments that could put the image of the country in bad light.

    He further disclosed that efforts are being put in place to enlist some financial institutions and establishments, which would enable corps members to access loans worth about N2billion to set up their businesses in a bid to reduce youth unemployment.

    He urged the corps members to take advantage of opportunity which requires only their NYSC discharge certificate as collateral.

    And in another development, Olawumi says the recent kidnapping and raping of corps members in the country are not solely targeted on them, but a coincidence.

    Olawumi stated this during his visit to the Oyo State NYSC orientation camp in Iseyin.

    He said: “Whatever case of kidnapping or rape that people might have heard concerning corps members in the past few months, it did not happen to them because they are corps members but a general type of crime that is happening across the country.

    “We are working hand in hand with states government and security agencies to ensure the safety of corps members. During the last general elections that was very turbulent, no corps members was injured or lost his or her life. That shows that we are concerned about their safety. I pledged that adequate security will be provided for corps members.”

    He assured that the well-being and safety of the corps members would not be compromised in the course of serving the nation.

    The NYSC boss also appealed to the corps members to take full advantage of the Skill Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development (SAED) program in order to become self-employed after their service year.

     

  • Fashola: Transformation all the way

    Fashola: Transformation all the way

    On March 2, 2013, The Economist of London, arguably the world’s most influential magazine, published a special issue on Africa, a follow-up to its “Africa Rising” series run in 2011. In an article entitled “Governance in much of Africa is visibly improving, though progress is uneven”, the magazine cited two Nigerian governors as outstanding. One was Kayode John Fayemi of Ekiti State, regarded as sophisticated and IT savvy. The other was Babatunde Fashola for his stunning work in Lagos State.

    Said the conservative weekly which often holds critical views on Third World leaders: “Lagos, (Nigeria’s)commercial capital, long a byword for chaos and skullduggery….Already home to 20m people, the city is expected to double in size within a generation. When most of the infrastructure was built in the 1970s, the population was perhaps 2m. But help is on the way. The governor of Lagos State, Babatunde Fashola, has begun an impressive campaign to clean up the city….Now, there is an orderly queue for taxis. The Chinese are building a vast modern rail network. Public buses have been assigned separate lanes. When the governor heard that they were being used by unauthorized vehicles, he strode one morning and made a citizen arrest of a colonel. …the transformation of Lagos is worth trumpeting. Its economy is now bigger than the whole of Kenya’s. Tax revenue has increased from $4m to $97m a month in less than a decade. Tax rates have remained the same, but the amounts being collected have risen dramatically”.

    Interestingly, both Fayemi and Fashola have been nominated to become ministers in the President Muhammadu Buhari administration. It shows that the forthcoming cabinet is most likely to work in a way which will impress not just Nigerians but also the international community. There is a general belief that Fashola will be the next Minister of the Federal Capital territory. If that happens, Buhari will make history by becoming what literary scholars call a mythmaker. No southerner has ever headed the FCT Ministry. Therefore, Buhari will be setting a precedent by appointing Fashola the FCT Minister. He will break a major political taboo in Nigeria, thus casting the president in the image of a true nationalist, a pan Nigerian leader of the finest hue. Yet, it would seem that Buhari’s reason for wanting to send Fashola to the FCT is not so much to break any political taboo as to make Abuja a truly international territory. Fashola is a perfect fit.

    If Fashola is deployed to this ministry, he will go fully prepared, as Professor Chinua Achebe said of Nigeria’s current literary star, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.  I told a correspondent of the Voice of America (VOA) in a recent interview that anyone who could turn Oshodi from a bedlam and eyesore which caused traffic gridlock of epic proportions into an orderly, beautiful spectacle, complete with a garden and recreational facilities, could easily make Abuja an international tourist destination where people go for business, as is the case with Dubai and now Abu Dhabi. No one should be surprised at the transformation Lagos underwent under Fashola’s leadership. Right from the day he took to law practice, Fashola, who had all his life been too playful, decided to turn a new leaf by putting all his mind, heart and soul into everything he set out to do. He thus became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) at almost the callow age of about 40 years. Everyone who ever met or worked with him when he was the Chief of Staff in Lagos State testifies to his clarity of vision, solidity of character, integrity and organizational skills.

    Fashola approached his work as Lagos State governor with unusual fervor; he felt challenged and inspired by the examples of global transformational leaders. He devoured various books on leadership, including Leadership by Rudy Giuliani, New York mayor from 1994 to 2001 who restored competitiveness to the city and displayed greater leadership than even President George Bush W. Bush during the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York. Fashola also studied From Third World To First: The Story of Singapore from 1965 by Lee Kuan Yew. He went on a study tour of these phenomenal cities. He actually took time out during the International Bar Association conference in Singapore in 2008 to have a private meeting with Singapore’s founding prime minister, the legendary Lee Kuan Yew, on leadership. So, when Fashola began the project to turn Lagos into a megacity, he meant business. The result today is out for all to see. His impressive record has attracted the attention of international media like the CNN International, BBC,  Financial Times of London and many others. Daily Telegraph of the United Kingdom described him on October 24, 2014, as the “the man who tamed Nigeria’s most lawless city”. In April, as he was preparing to leave office, the International Crisis Group, one of the world’s most respected research organizations, honoured him as one of the seven outstanding personalities around the world for tackling security, economic and social challenges in a very imaginative way. Earlier on January 1, 2014, another globally influential think tank, Lo Spacio della Political (LSDP), based in Italy and Belgium and composed of natural and social scientists as well as writers, had named him, alongside the economically creative Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe, a Global Thought Leader for 2013. In Nigeria, practically every newspaper and magazine has honoured him with the Man of the Year award. The same goes for other organizations.

    Fashola came into office with concrete ideas about high public office. He never used siren, most unusual of a Nigerian state governor. He never moved in long motorcades, with security detail relating menacingly to the public. He never accepted any chieftaincy title, as he preferred to be known as simply Mr Fashola. He rejected the award of honorary doctorates from different universities and also politely turned down a high national honour from Dr Goodluck Jonathan when the latter was the president. He is convinced that it is not right for public office holders to accept all manner of awards while in office. After all, we have seen high public officers fall from grace for scandalous conduct.

    As has been pointed out several times, Fashola’s stellar performance helped to revive the dying progressive politics of the South-west. He was from 2007 the only Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) governor in the whole country until stolen mandates were recovered in Osun, Ekiti and Oyo states. People in the South-west voted ACN in 2011 because the electorate was promised governance resembling that of Fashola’s Lagos State. Consequently, the considerable number of states under its control made it possible for the ACN to play a decisive role in the emerge of the APC, which made history last March by defeating, for the first time in Nigeria’s history, a ruling national party.

    Mallam el-Rufai, the current governor of Kaduna State, displayed courage and vision while serving as the FCT minister from 2003 to 2007 during the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency. If Fashola assumes leadership of this ministry, Abuja will in not too distant future begin to compete with world cities like Dubai. It will be ceaseless transformation all the way. Mark my word.

    • Audu is chief executive of an indigenous engineering consulting firm
  • Jigawa governor prioritises rural transformation

    Jigawa governor prioritises rural transformation

    The recent visit of African Development Bank (AfDB) officials was another milestone of Governor Badaru Abubakar to tap from the huge resources available at such development institutions as AfDB.  The visit which was at the instance of Governor Abubakar formed part of a broad strategy of building synergy with institutions to pursue the economic diversification promised by his administration.

    During the visit AfDB Country Director, Dr Ousmane Dore who led the team of African Development Bank officials to Government House Dutse, disclosed that their visit was hinged on the desire for the bank to support the new administration to achieve its vision for the state. He said current revenue shortfall occasioned by the dwindling oil revenues from the federation account neccessitated the bank’s readiness to partner Jigawa on strengthening its public finance to boost IGR and reduce over dependence on oil revenues.

    The Director, added it is the bank desire to assist in making Jigawa state economically viable, Dore said, the bank had already begins investing over 2.6 USD on feasibility study under African Water Facility for the Construction of Multi- purpose Dam along Hadejia-Komodougu-Yobe basin that would boost irrigation and electricity generation adding that the total cost of the project is $200m with 2016 completion period.

    He said AfDB also introduced Agricultural Transformation Agenda Support Programme on rice and sorghum production along Hadejia axis that would provide jobs, food security, rural access and infrastructural development for the rural dwellers.

    Under the programme, according to him, the bank would undertake the rehabilitation of  agricultural and ancillary social infrastructure which include rehabilitation of 195km irrigation and water conveyance canals,105 Hydraulic structures 250km of feeder roads, rehabilitation and equipping, Five primary schools, two health centre and Two community markets. Others were provision of nine boreholes and accessories, community sensitization on good nutrition and hygiene practices to reduce child morbidity and mortality, establishment of one demonstration and technology centre, provision of a tractor, Harrow Tine Cultivator, Trailer Boom Sprayer, Pneumatic Planters, power tillers and combined harvester.

    Dore said, the project’s benefits are to encourage all-year round farming, community Development, youth, women and vulnerable training programme under International Institute for Tropical Agriculture  (IITA)’s  outreach programme geared towards making the self- reliant.  The country director maintained that an estimated 45,000 farmers and Rural Entrepreneurs, 200,000 rural youth including existing or potential small, medium and large-scale entrepreneurs, business associates who provided services to rural households would be in business all year round.

    He said the twin programmes under Agricultural transformation programme i.e commodity value chain on Rice and sorghum and Community development programme and infrastructural development, would cost the bank an estimated sum of N2bn which would be  co-financed by Jigawa State and the Bank with the state releasing N43.4 million in the first year. It would also undertake the input support on fertilizers, provision of agro-chemicals, office space and vehicle for the project as well as recruitment of zonal project staff.

    Governor Muhammedd Badaru was explicit, apt and coherent in response to barrage of proposals offered to him by AfDB officials. He told the AfDB officials to specifically assist him in developing agriculture and agric value chain in Jigawa State. He also asked the Bank to support skills acquisition for women, youth and vulnerable groups. Other request of the governor was the training of school teachers and health personnel that would man his proposed policy of establishing a Health Center in the state’s more than 270 wards.

    The governor explained that he was worried by the state of the nation’s Economy. He said:  “Coming from private sector, we see the need to work closely, considering the situation we are in Nigeria. What has been happening today cannot continue, we have to develop an economy for the state that is subsistent; we have to develop businesses that would take care of the state”

    “In most states in Nigeria as you are aware, we are majorly relying on Federal Grants except probably Lagos, Ogun, River and some few states and that is what we intend to change”

    For Governor Badaru, the AfDB visit came at a better time and the state stands ready to discuss options available and where the bank could support the state to achieve its vision.  The governor told AfDB officials that “For years we have looked inward on the best we can do. We have discussed with friends, colleagues, and consultants, we always come back to the issue of Agriculture because, that is only need we have for now. That is our only strength, that, if well developed, we can have a competitive advantage and sustainability needed. For these reason, this administration is focused on human Development, and job creation through agric and agro value chain, that is what we have comparative advantage doing”

    Governor Badaru noted the challenges of skills acquisition centre in Jigawa State which according to him was not made on the market-demand realities. Thus, make it difficult for the trainees to operate in a highly competitive environment. He however pointing out that, his administration had sponsored a survey with the help of DFID- GEMS-3 to identify businesses that favorably accommodate the trainees so government can focus its attention on, saying that, henceforth skills acquisition programmes would be demand-based.

    With this helping hand from AfDB, it is evident that Governor Muhammad Badaru Abubakar’s momentum for the new Jigawa State has started yielding results.  The vigor with which he is pursuing the change he promised the people of Jigawa state is unprecedented. As such, there is no gainsaying the promise ‘change’ is just day away to fulfillment. What is needed for the people to continue supporting the government and a little patience since it is said nothing good comes easy.

    • Suleiman is an Editorial, ICT & Media Relations officer, Government House, Dutse

     

  • Jonathan’s transformation has deformed Nigeria, says Oshiomhole

    Jonathan’s transformation has deformed Nigeria, says Oshiomhole

    EDO State Governor Adams Oshiomhole has said has said President Goodluck Jonathan’s transformation agenda has not made any impact on the country. According to him, President Goodluck Jonathan’s transformation agenda has deformed the country, rather than transform it

    Speaking on Monday, after a road walk, tagged: “March for Buhari”, which started from Oba Ovoranwen Square, and culminated in a mass rally in New Benin, Oshiomhole said Nigerians have the opportunity, on Saturday, to vote out the government, which failed them in 16 years.

    Oshiomhole said Jonathan’s administration abused the people’s trust and should be voted out.

    He said: “I have seen the huge gap between the promise and the reality. Nigeria today is 16 years into democracy. Governments have come and made promises, they have abused the trust of our people.

    “On Saturday, there will be a referendum; every Nigerian, 18 years and above, who is equipped with his/her Permanent Voter Card (PVC), will have to make a decision that will define the future of our nation and indeed, the future of the black race.

    “NEPA does not give you light for months and yet they ask you, in a democratic country; a free country, to pay fixed charges even when they deliver fixed darkness. Who says we should continue with this condition?

    “The primary purpose of government is to protect its citizen. Even in the days of dictatorship, we were never so ruthlessly exploited.

    “Where is the transformation? They have transformed refineries that were working when Buhari was the minister of Petroleum, to refineries that are not working. This issue is about common sense. When the Warri refinery was working, many of our people were working there, earning good salaries and adding value. When General Buhari was head of state, our refineries were working. He refused to take the IMF loan. N1 was equivalent to $1 but today, $1 is N230.

    “We want to change the story. We want to change from darkness to light so that when you put on your light, it works. We want to remove the fraud that was committed in the name of privatisation.

    “They say Buhari will Islamise Nigeria. General Buhari was a military head of state, with both executive and legislative powers, did he Islamise Nigeria?

    “It is true he sent some people to jail but did he jail innocent people? He jailed corrupt people and he will jail corrupt people again. There is no running away from it. That is why they are afraid, that is the message.

    “So I ask you to stand up. You must be on your feet”.

     

     

  • ‘Uncommon transformation ‘ll continue in Akwa Ibom’

    ‘Uncommon transformation ‘ll continue in Akwa Ibom’

    The Akwa Ibom Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate, Mr. Udom Emmanuel, has promised to continue with the uncommon transformation agenda of Governor Godswill Akpabio.

    Emmanuel, who spoke at Ikot Ekpene Stadium, Ikot-Ekpene, also promised to provide jobs for youths to enable them earn a living.

    He promised to empower women and widows, if elected as the governor.

    Akpabio, who urged the people to support Emmanuel, said: “As a PDP state, we won’t allow propaganda to come into our state through opposition parties.  Marginalisation has been ruled out from Akwa Ibom State. Indeed, the PDP has brought transformation to our state and our country through industrialization. So,  PDP is owned by all of you and not by an individual”.

    The governor said he was impressed by the massive turn out at the rally, urging them to sustain the tempo.

    He urged the people to supprt President Goodluck Jonathan for second term, assuring that he will protect their interest.

    Earlier, Akpabio had paid homage to the paramount ruler of Ikot Ekpene, Edidem Okuku Augustus Assiak at his residence and presented  Emmanuel to him as the candidate.

    The PDP Chairman, Mr. Paul Ekpo, who presented flags to the parliamentary candidates, assured that Ikot Ekpene would vote for the PDP at the polls.

    In their goodwill messages, stakeholders in Ikot Ekpene reaffirmed their support for President Jonathan’s bid for a second term.

    They also promised to elect Akpabio as a senator, saying that he has performed as the governor.

  • National transformation, road map to security

    I possibly will never know greater  honour in my life than to be  invited by my hero and mentor Professor Ben Nwabueze to review the third volume of his autobiography

    As a student of constitutional law, the invitation to review this seminal work is a testament by a master that his student has come of age and this testimonial is more of an endorsement for me than a platform for profound scholarly exposition.

    Prof Ben Nwabueze in my estimation is the greatest Constitutional law Scholar in human history. The depth and breadth of his seminal works in this area put him  in a class of his own. It is manifestly so evident that A.V. Dicey, Wheare, De Smith, Laurence Tribe, Hodd and many other emerging Constitutional Law Scholars did not impact the subject in such a way and manner as Nwabueze did. Simply put, he is a genius.

    What stands out Nwabueze shoulder and head above his peers is his pragmatic approach to constitutional engineering. He not only propounded principles, theories and doctrines, he interrogated the effect and relevance of his postulations in the constitutional evolution and development of many countries of the world. His life and works are therefore totally dedicated to developing a road map for enthronement of constitutionalism and good governance.

    In his preface to this 517 page book, the author stated as follows:

    “This volume of my autobiography (Volume 3) is a continuation of the story of my life and work told in volumes 1 and 2. It enlarges the last part of the story as contained in part III of volume 2, this accounts for some repetition that occurs. The volume might be described as embodying and culminating  1 would not say final­­ thoughts on Nigeria. The volume deals with concepts, principles, political and social issues, and not so much even with individual actors except former President Olusegun Obasanjo, General Sani Abacha and one or two others. It has therefore nothing to do with my private or personal life, a full account of which is contained in volume 1 . The volume may not therefore provide a reading comparable in excitement with volume 1  or even volume 2.”

    It would appear that the author in ranking this volume lower than volumes 1 and 2 in terms of providing exciting reading grossly under estimated the relevance of the issues discussed in this volume with the Nigerian project. Indeed, I dare to mention, none of the 32 seminal works of the author preceding this autobiography ranks in comparison in terms of pragmatic contribution to our national quest for a new better and united Nigeria. In his other books, the author’s brilliance as a leading constitutional lawyer shone ever so brightly. But in his final thoughts on Nigeria, the author assumed his rightful place as an agenda_ setting thinker, an opinion leader and moulder, an influential elder statesman, a courageous patriot, a pan-Nigerian nationalist and Nigeria’s voice of reason amidst the cacophony of self seeking praise singers and sycophantic opportunistic hero worshippers.

    In part 1 of the book, the author extensively addressed National transformation as the road map to security, progress and nation building. Whilst the author accepts the transformation agenda nation building of Government as crucial for national growth and development, he questions its limitation to economic policies only.

    In his words,  “social and ethical transformation implies the creation of a new society and the creation  of such a new society would entail  changes of two types a radical transformation of the material conditions of society and what has been called an inner mutation” ie a spiritual or mental  transformation in the attitudes and behavioral patterns of the individuals member of society”.

    The defining aspect of the book is the exposition on transforming Nigeria through a national conference.

    Here the originality of the author as the finest constitutional Lawyer is well displayed. In a breathtaking and gripping argument for National Conference, the author highlighted the following as the basis for national conference. They are as follows

    (a) Transforming Nigeria with its vast diversity of ethnic nationalities into a nation.

    (b) Federalism as a constitutional device for facilitating the creation of a nation in a territorially extensive and socially diverse country like Nigeria.

    (c) The unity in diversity approach in Nigeria’s constitution marked by over concentration of powers and financial resources at the centre but without entirely sacrificing ethnic diversity.

    (d)  Legal framework for the convening and holding of a national conference and for the approval of a people’s constitution.

    The author undoubtedly secured his place in our national history  by not only pushing for a national conference but by comprehensively addressing the question posed in chapter 14 of this book, which is “ will the national conference as now convoked and constituted by President Jonathan, be effective in realizing our aspirations for a new, better and united Nigeria?

    In part II of this autobiography, the reader easily connects with the author’s exposition on the many problems of Nigeria standing in the way of the search for peace, progress and nation building. Here reference is made to

    (a) The North -South Divide.

    (b)        forces militating against democracy in Nigeria eg Elite ruling  class; the political class; the after effects of Prolonged Military  Rule; human rights violators of  a nature, dimension or scale repugnant to the whole essence or ethos of human rights in a democratic society; wholesale election riggings and other electoral malpractices; corruption and other corrupt practices and abuse; pervasive culture of impunity in governance; lingering mass illiteracy; ignorance and poverty, structure of the Nigerian society; the weakness of civil society; absence of the spirit of liberty and democracy; absence of the spirit or habit of respect for the rule of law and of the habit of order; the phenomenon of democracy  without democrats.

    In his characteristic candour, the author brilliantly interrogated these forces militating against democracy and proffered solutions to the problems.

    Flowing from this is a well researched treatise by the author on Militancy and Insurgency. The reader is invited to note the depth of scholarship deployed by the author in distinguishing between militancy and Insurgency, his views on the call for amnesty for the Boko Haram Insurgents and his support for dialogue as the appropriate approach for addressing the insurgency challenge .

    Anyone reading this exciting autobiography will undoubtedly be sucked in by the authors answers  to the question he posed in chapter 14 of the book _ to wit_ “ is Nigeria a failed State or on the way to becoming one “Though the indices  used by the author may be considered as veritable tools of neoliberalism, it is still not in dispute that the author raised sufficient alarm that serious minded citizens cannot afford to gloss over. The book is enriched by inclusion by the author of suggestions by the patriots as to the things to be done to halt the slide into the ultimate stage of failure  of the state.

    The concluding part of this autobiography highlights basically institutional and other means available or that may be devised in the search for solutions to Nigeria’s problems. This part of the book is extremely insightful and thought provoking. Again the reader is invited by the author to personally evaluate efforts made by the Patriots (of which he is a prominent member) to proffer solution to Nigeria’s problems. Students of history and political science will definitely find this part of the book most illuminating especially with reference to invitation to fathers of the nation to intercede in order to save our nation. The author’s final thoughts in this volume finds expression in his analysis of state ceremonies marking certain significant ideas or events as a means of creating in the people a feeling of belonging  and of patriotism. His views on significance of Independence and justification for its celebration; celebrating the end of military rule and not regarding it as democracy day; the significance of the 1914 amalgamation and whether its gains overwhelmingly outweigh its deleterious consequences to justify celebrating its centenary are all forcefully and logically canvassed. Even if one is not inclined to agree with him on some of his views on the matter, one cannot ignore the intellectual depth of is postulations.

    Comments

    For a life that inspires debate on thorny issues of national importance, Prof Ben Nwabueze remains a national treasure. For his capacity to reduce very intricate legal issues to simple and readable prose, Prof Nwabueze is an academic icon. For being able to chronicle his autobiography in 3 large volumes, Prof Nwabueze is a gift to humanity.

    One will always wonder how the author over the years has been able to gather together newspaper cuttings and file documents that have proved handy for this seminal work. Prof Ben Nwabueze will always remain an enigma to those who are not close to him but to those who are privileged to read his works, he is nothing but a genius. This superlative quality again is well demonstrated in this volume 3 of his autobiography titled Ben Nwabueze: My life and work in the search for a new, better and united Nigeria.

    Is this likely to be his final thoughts on issues concerning Nigeria? Definitely not! I have no doubt that as God gives him life and good health, we certainly will be reading more of the exciting contributions of Ben Nwabueze to national discourse. Will there be a volume 4 of the autobiography?.This again cannot be ruled out. The author has the intimidating credentials as a five star researcher to put together another volume of his autobiography. Indeed many Nigerians are looking forward to his comments and commentaries on the 2015 election. I am definitely not an exception.

    It is therefore my honour and privilege to warmly recommend this well-packaged, well researched and exciting autobiography (volume 3) of Prof Ben Nwabueze to students and practitioners of Law, Politics, constitutionalism, constitutional engineering, the Nigerian public and the global community at large.