Tag: Tunde Bakare

  • Buhari meets Dogara, Bakare in Aso Rock

    Buhari meets Dogara, Bakare in Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday met behind closed-doors with the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and the General Overseer of Later Rain Assembly, Pastor Tunde Bakare, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The meeting with Dogara which took place at the President’s office in the State House lasted about one hour.

    The Speaker was accompanied to the Villa by some lawmakers from the National Assembly including Senator Suleiman Nazif (Bauchi).

    Friday’s meeting between the President and Dogara was the second in two weeks.

    The Speaker snubbed all questions from journalists at the end of the meeting.

    Pastor Bakare was Buhari’s running mate in the 2011 presidential election.

    The meeting was still in progress at the time of filing this report.

  • Buhari needs time – Bakare

    Buhari needs time – Bakare

    President Muhammadu Buhari needs sufficient time to study what he inherited before taking key decisions on ministerial appointments and others, the founder of Save Nigeria Group (SNG), Pastor Tunde Bakare, has said.

    He urged Nigerians to give the President time to assess what he met on ground in order to make sound decisions that will take the nation forward.

    Bakare spoke with our correspondent last Sunday shortly before declaring open the annual convention of the Glory Christian Centre, Lagos.

    The theme of the convention was:  “One thousand times more opened.”

    The senior pastor of Latter Rain Assembly Ogba, Lagos, said: “I think it is good to give the new government time to settle down and time to assess what they have inherited from the Jonathan’s government so that they can sit down and begin to put the Nigerian house in order. And it’s good to give them time.”

    On why key appointments into the new administration were being delayed, he said: “That will take its time. Remember the President told the nation that he did not get the handover note until May 28.

    “So, his transition committee didn’t have anything to work with. Just few days back, it handed over the report in 8,000 pages reduced to about 800 pages.

    “It is when you have studied what was handed over to you that you begin to think of who to put where to help you.

    “And I can assure that behind the scene that a lot is going on in the engine room.”

    He said the new faces of the current administration might start emerging before the end of the month.

    Affirming that Buhari will deliver on his promise to change the nation, the former vice presidential candidate of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), added: “You have heard that we will have a lean, as against an over bloated government. All these things will take time. You don’t do these things in a hurry.”

    Questioned on whether he will accept the offer of a ministerial appointment, the fiery preacher simply said: “I will cross that river when I get to the bridge.”

     

  • Ezekwesili charges Nigerians to vote quality legislators

    Ezekwesili charges Nigerians to vote quality legislators

    Former Minister of Education, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili on Friday advised Nigerians to assess the quality of each candidate before electing members of the House of Assembly.

    Ezekwesili said in view of the nationwide House of Assembly election, which is scheduled for April 11.

    Speaking at a public presentation of the book entitled “Strategic Intervention in Governance” written by Pastor Tunde Bakare in Lagos, she decried the situation where people vote for those they knew little about.

    In her speech entitled “Reflections on Nigeria” the former education minister said no matter how good the President might be he could not develop the country alone.

    She said that legislators were germane to the development of any nation.

    “I am sure many Nigerians voted along party lines for the legislators rather than based on individual merit in the National Assembly election.”

    Ezekwesili said it was time for Nigerians to stand up and make demands of those in power as that was the only way to make a difference.

    Although she applauded Nigerians for trying to consolidate on the nation’s democracy, the former Minister, however, bemoaned the absence of strong institutions in the country.

    “Individuals build the institutions. The quality of the individual determines the quality of institutions.” she said.

    She further added that Bakare’s approach to issues in governance, especially education, was commendable.

    Also speaking, a former Minister of External Affairs, Prof Bolaji Akinyemi, who chaired the occasion, lauded Nigerians for conducting an election that, for the first time, received praise from the world.

    “President Goodluck Jonathan has achieved a legacy with this election” Akinyemi said.

    Presenting the book, Dr. John Ayeni, Chairman Skye Bank Plc, said that Nigeria was very lucky to have people such as Bakare.

    “The book will enrich our knowledge and help us to know more about our society and what our character should be in building the nation.

    In his speech Bakare, the Convener of the Save Nigeria Group and Overseer of the Later Rain Assembly Church, said Nigeria urgently needed men and women of goodwill, who are selfless and determined to make the country great.

  • Bakare calls for transition govt

    Bakare calls for transition govt

    Latter Rain Assembly Senior Pastor Tunde Bakare has called for a two-year transition government to midwife the transfer of power from the President Goodluck Jonathan administration to another government. He said people of high capability, integrity and character should be summoned to come together to proffer solutions to the nation’s problems.

    The cleric said elections under the present circumstance would put too much pressure on the military, which was trying to overcome insurgency in the Northeast.

    Bakare, who spoke yesterday at a thanksgiving ceremony to mark his 60th birthday, at the premises of the church in Lagos, said under the present situation, no genuine elections would be successfully conducted.  In a paper entitled: “The Nigeria of My Dreams,” the cleric said Nigeria has been fragmented along ethnic and religious lines, adding that the North/South divide was more visible under the present dispensation. According to him, the nation now faces threat of insecurity and divisions in social lives than it had ever witnessed.

  • Bakare, others tackle corruption

    Prominent Nigerians and opinion leaders, including Pastor Tunde Bakare of Latter Rain Assembly, Lagos, have called for measures to reduce corruption in every facet of the nation’s life, especially the economy.

    They spoke in Lagos at this year’s annual summit of HR Guide, tagged: The Role of the Organised Private Sector in the Quest for a Corrupt-Free Nation.

    A public affairs analyst and consultant Alhaji Mahmood Othman said corruption is a by-product of indiscipline.

    He said: “Once you are a leader, who is infallible, everything will fall into place.”

    The consultant decried the high level of corruption in the private and public organisations, saying it was a clog in the wheel of the nation’s progress.

    Othman, however, said the nation could reduce acts of malfeasance and corruption, even if it could not be eliminated altogether.

    The President of the Lagos Chambers of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Dr. Goodie Ibru, who was represented by the Director-General of the chamber, Mr. Muda Yusuf, identified corruption as the agent suffocating private sector’s activities and entrepreneurship.

    Ibru said corruption was also perpetuating the dominance of an inefficient public sector and undermining economic diversification and structural transformation.

    A lawyer, Dr. Babatunde Ajibade (SAN), corruption compounded the nation’s problems.

    He noted that “corruption has become a disease” in the country because it appeared to be infectious among the people.

    The lawyer noted that several people envied Nigerians riding flashy cars without caring to know the sources of their wealth.

    Ajibade said: “Why should you envy a man in a convoy?”

     

     

     

    The senior advocate said the Judiciary was the least funded arm of government.

    He said self-examination and cleansing should be the beginning of the solution to the national malaise.

    The guest speaker, Pastor Bakare, who was represented by Idoreyen Enang, noted that until every Nigerian was respected for being a Nigerian and not on the basis of his or her state of origin, corruption would remain intractable.

     

     

    Bakare said: “The private sector should be under check and hotlines connected to anti-graft agencies, such as the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Matters Commission (ICPC) or the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    “Until the people inside are given the opportunity to speak to the people outside, corruption can’t be checked. When you lose your voice, you’ve compromised. There should be a reason for joint and personal accountability.

    “Leadership is a reflection of self; you have to mirror it. Let there be a law or hotline through which complaints can be made from an establishment to the regulatory and anti-corruption agencies. This will reduce corrupt tendencies.”

    The Managing Director of HR Derivatives, the organisers of the summit, Mr. Napoleon Omomila, said the second annual summit was dwelling on corruption because it affected the foundation of employment generation, organisational profitability/productivity, national growth and development.

    He said: “I have heard in some quarters that corruption is now fully entrenched in Nigerians; that discussing it is more or less a waste of time. Some have also said that organisations have found ways to incorporate corrupt practices into their system as part of their strategy to ensure survival in this very tough business environment. But I beg to disagree, because there still exist some well-meaning Nigerians and organisations that have not been compromised, that have maintained their integrity and still are making significant progress in their endeavour.

    “In fact, it’s most definitely certain that whatever you acquire through corruption, either as an individual/or organisation cannot endure. So, if we all know that those things we acquire by corrupt means do not endure, then is it not better for all of us to find ways to ensure we leave enduring and lasting legacies in the sands of time through corrupt-free business practices? Most people and organisations find it very easy to point fingers at government. They forget that it takes two to tango; except for a few cases of individual’s direct stealing or theft.”