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APC Governors And Okorocha’s Desperate Survival Moves, By Mayowa Samuel

RochasOkorocha

There is no doubt that things are falling apart for the Imo State Governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha and he knows it. After deceiving the people with mouth watering promises, his inability to deliver has been exposed and he seems to be moving from pillar to post.He is being haunted by his own ineptitude now.

Recently, He has come under intense scrutiny by Imo State citizens, with their viral campaign on social media with the use of the hashtag #ImoFailedMission.The campaign evidently rattled Okorocha and his men who have responded with a more outlandish counter hashtag #ImoRescueMission. Also, a recent THISDAY mid-term report scored Imo state very low, prompting visceral responses from Okorocha’s men.

But it appears the governor’s latest trick did not work.He recently resolved to sack his entire executive council and most of his aides except one or two. Perhaps the governor is feeling the heat of disgruntlement afterall.

In case you have not been following it, the #ImoFailedMission has been exposing the rot and incompetence in Imo under Okorocha. The social media campaign has revealed that Okorocha’s era is full of empty promises: including many failed projects and even abandoned projects. The campaign has chronicled Imo’s governance citing examples and using pictures and videos appropriately.

The campaign clearly also show Rochas as a man with a ravenous ambition for power, even if he knows he is massively incompetent. Afterall, what matters is not his capacity to drive and lead change, but the fact that it is Igbo’s turn.

Since he feels he doesn’t need Imo people any more, he has chosen to abandon some of the seemingly lofty (grandiose) projects he initiated. A certain Bamikole Adeleye touring Eastern Nigeria has spoken to many in Imo. He recounts that Imo today is replete, for instance with abandoned hospital buildings. In his survey of some local governments the feedback from respondents was an appalling verdict: that healthcare services in the General Hospitals have declined, with lack of sophisticated equipment, and expensive out-patient services for citizens. Respondents also added thatthere was“no noticeable improvement in the employment of quality workforce or rapid standardization of general hospitals”

Women, children and households generally bear the brunt of mis-governance. Even many pregnant and feeding mothers have been complaining bitterly about the quality of service and also of expenses incurred during pre-natal check-up and diagnosis. In many cases, these forced them to patronize private sector hospitals, leading to an increase in out-of-pocket expenditure. This is worse when the lack of consistency in salaries of public servants.There are reports of a particular hospital structure that has been converted into a timber factory, the timber factory itself abandoned!

Yet in spite of this glaring evidence of incompetence and failure to connect with the people, the Imo State Governor, Okorocha continues with his ego trip, leaving none in doubt about his big ambition, which is to become President of Nigeria.He has been working his contacts across the country attending major functions to announce himself. He has cemented himself as the chairman of the APC governor’s forum. But has he reallyproven worthy of that office? Those who worked for his emergence as governor are disappointed.

As Chairman, Progressive Governors’ Forum, how effective has he steered the think tank?In fact one is shocked that the governors have not found it necessary yet to strip Okorocha of the position. He has not given dynamic leadership to a forum of progressive governors who were voted into office with thechange mantra. Unless, of course, they are birds of a feather!

For heaven’s sake, given on-the-spot accounts of Okorocha’s failed promises, the Imo State Governor does not  come across  as the great visionary leader he likes to project himself.Whythen  are the progressive governors pretending that they have a leader when he  is actually  running their forum into near oblivion.

It’s worth repeating that Okorocha is a liability to the Progressive Governors as well as the party’s desire to expand beyond the present frontiers in the days and months ahead.

Let me ask: what people-oriented cause has the leadership of the Progressive Governors embarked upon? All we see are public speeches full of sophistry from Okorocha.

Here is my advice for the APC governors:In the South East, Okorocha,and by extension the APC, are no longer takenseriously; and it is common knowledge that APC will assuredly suffer defeat if elections held today in Imo.

There is such a dire urgency for these governors to move quickly to rejig its leadership before such negative perception is extended to other APC states. I have heard it said: how can anyone take progressives governors seriously when they have Okorochaas their leader?

If the real reason for picking Okorocha as the leader of Progressive Governors was to ensure an in-road into the South East, there is clear evidence now that that has failed. Okorocha’s poor performance has led to some palpable revulsion towards the party.

The Progressive Governors need to come up with any of their better performing governors as their leader to inject some life into the activities of their group.A stitch in time saves nine. [myad]

Aisha Buhari Returns From London, Says President Buhari’ll Soon Return

Aisha and Buhari 2

Wife of the President, Mrs. Aisha Muhammadu Buhari, has returned to Nigeria from London where she went to visit her husband, who is on medical leave.

Mrs. Buhari, who arrived this morning, conveyed the appreciation of the President to Nigerians over their constant prayers and said he will soon be with them as he is recuperating fast.

Mrs. Buhari called on Nigerians to continue to be strong in the face of challenges and to support the Federal Government in implementing the agenda for which they were elected.

‘Mr. President thanked the acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo for his loyalty and called on Nigerians to continue to support the acting President in his effort to actualize the mandate of the All Progressives’ Congress (APC).’ She said.

Mrs. Buhari traveled London last week to spend some time with the President. [myad]

Osinbajo Laments Claim Of Media War Between Those Fighting Corruption And Treasury Looters

Osinbajo to traditionalrulers

Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has lamented the media war between the people that are genuinely fighting corruption in Nigeria and those who have been stealing the nation’s resources and shipping same to other countries.

The Acting President, who spoke today, Tuesday, at the Conference on Promoting International Co-operation in Combating Illicit Financial Flows and Enhancing Asset Recovery to Foster Sustainable Development, said that he is yet to fully comprehend what the corruption fighting back army call media trial.

Professor Osinbajo said that the anti corruption fight in Nigeria had since faced a major fight back in the media and that there has being a media war between people fighting corruption and those behind the stolen funds.

“If you discover for instance, large sums of money in an air condition room, there is no where it will not make news anywhere in the world.

“So this whole idea of trying to legitimize corruption is definitely being fueled and sponsored by those who have these resources; who have stolen funds.

“Unless we see it as a problem that can bring down our system then we will never be able to fight. I hope we will be able to advance this with other African countries.”

Professor Osinbajo recalled what President Muhammadu had always said repeatedly, “that if we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill it.

“When corrupt monies finds safe havens it will begin to fight back and if government is not careful it can fight back.

“In Nigeria for instance, corruption fights back so eloquently that government itself, if not careful, can be overwhelmed.

Part of the Acting President is reproduced:

This is my first time of attending a conference that talks about recovering assets and the issue of what to do with the stolen assets.

Even though we have been able to convince ourselves that the proceeds from drug trafficking were dirty money but proceeds of corruption are not dirty money.

Many countries have signed treaties that proceeds from drugs, illegal traffic in persons proceeds of money.

Some how proceeds from political corruption has not attracted the same outrage that proceeds from narcotics and trafficking in persons have attracted.

It took years for some people to agree that when somebody loot money where people make decent living that is more criminal than  crime against humanity, more dangerous than trafficking in drugs.

Is a good thing that we are here with our partners who agree that not only are these stolen assets criminalize but that they are returned to their appropriate owners.

There is no way this the transfer of this assets can happen without a handshake between the countries that they are transferred and the international banking institutions in the countries in which they are transferred, there is no way it will happen without some form of connivance.

We have to look at somehow delegitimizing those kind of Financial institutions and criminalizing them, so  that banks and financial institutions that actually engage in this  are be called out and made to face the consequences of engaging in criminal practices. If that isn’t done we are not likely to go very far.

For there to be collaboration there must first be  connivance, in the agreement and conventions we will be signing we must find away and ensure that financial institutions are not given a free run and hold them accountable.

Another point is that African countries and developing countries must realize that  is our responsibility to ensure not only find get these monies  and make sure that there are return. It is not enough to talk about it. Some countries are somehow reluctant about it, many have civil processes that makes it difficult, they say our courts are handling this matter and there is very little we can do about.

We must make it a national call, a call for other developing countries to have the same outrage for drugs, terrorist financing for illicit financial flows. We must emphasis at every point and call out institutions that are not cooperating and ensuring that they recognize that this for us a serious issue.

The Mbaki report shows that most of the illicit funds flow that comes out of Africa are from Nigeria and that shows us very clearly especially the security agencies that we simply have to do more. It is evident that so much money is leaving our shores.

I was arguing with somebody about the fact that they were stopping certain funding, and he kept telling me Nigeria is no longer a poor country but now a mid income earning country so they shouldn’t be giving us those kinds of aids. It was barely a week after that a large sum of money was found at the Kaduna airport and it was roughly about half of the money we were looking for. So he sent me a text telling me that the money has been discovered at the Kaduna. Of course I didn’t reply him but when he persisted and called him and asked if this was his own form of a joke.

But clearly is sometimes  absurd that when we are asking for aid and so much money are being stolen. So we ourselves must take responsibility and ensure we keep talking about this. [myad]

OAS Helicopters, Abu Dhabi Aviation, Team Up To Move Nigeria’s Economy Forward

Helicopter

United Arab Emirates Helicopter company, Abu Dhabi Aviation (ADA) and the Nigerian indigenous aircraft charter operator, OAS Helicopters have formally agreed to join forces to boost the Nigerian economy.  ,

The sealing of the agreement, according to sources, was completed in Lagos, Nigeria, with the arrival of ADA’s 15 seater full offshore equipped helicopter AW-139 with registration number A6-AWH at OAS’ new Terminal  NAFBASE Airport, Port Harcourt last Thursday.

It was learnt that the completion of the take off of ADA and OAS’ operational relationship, was also a climaxed series of technical and legal structuring since 2015.

It was gathered that in the working of relationship, Abu Dhabi Aviation would come with long years of successful oil and gas helicopter support experiences which started back in 1976 and has developed to over 60 aircraft in active operation and over 1,000,000 flight hours supporting oil and gas exploration throughout the countries of the Middle East, Brazil, Spain, Indonesia, Australia and New Zealand.

The Abu Dhabi Aviation’s AFB Contracts manager, Kevin Den Hertog confirmed to our correspondent on phone that ADA had always wanted to invest in Nigeria and had searched and waited to find a reliable and resilient partner which eventually clicked with OAS’ history and ability to remain firm in operation for over ten years despite daunting challenges.

“With the level of implementation on the proposed business plan so far, we are quite confident that OAS and ADA partnership will enrich the Nigeria oil and gas aviation. “Important to our success over the years has been an ever increasing engagement with strategic partners worldwide in the formation of healthy Joint Ventures that support oil and gas exploration in the deepest possible offshore with impeccable safety records.”

The company’s Nigeria operations Lead Pilot, Captain Westwood James, said that ADA and OAS technical partnership was structurally designed to guarantee and deliver credible, safe and stable services in Nigeria oil and gas aviation, and that they are here in Nigeria to drive the design to excellence.

On the OAS part, the managing director and CEO, Captain Evarest Nnaji, said that the practical kick off of the partnership, which is landmarked by the arrival and the physical presence of ADA crew and equipment, is one investment step the Nigeria aviation will enjoy moving forward, especially in the area of oil and gas aircraft support services.

“We looked at ADA’s capacity to play at the highest echelons in the oil and gas aviation support, and their ability and willingness to build and transfer know-how in all the other international environments where they operate, and concluded that not only is ADA valuable to huge business profitability, but that they are equally reputable for reliable and consistent long term business relationship. Their safety record, volume of investment and ability to deliver excellent services even in the most difficult environment speaks for itself.”

Captain Nnaji said that OAS’ huge desire to provide services that meet the best possible international standard for Nigeria oil and gas aviation was the mean driving force in the relationship with Abu Dhabi Aviation.” [myad]

Ex President Jonathan’s Men Form New Political Party

Doyin Okupe

Close political associates of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, the immediate past President of Nigeria, have formed a new political party, known as Advanced Peoples Democratic Alliance (APDA).

Prominent among the movers of the new party are the former senior special assistant to ex President Jonathan, Dr. Doyin Okupe; a prominent campaign figure in the Jonathan’s Presidential campaign organization, Raymond Dokpesi and others.

The interim national chairman of the party, whose slogan is: “Stronger Together,” is Shitu Mohammed. Also in the new party is the former chairman of the Labour Party, Dan Anyanwu.

There has been speculation before now that top members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were planning to establish‎ a new party.

The national executive committee of the new party is yet to be constituted. [myad]

Special University For Soldiers In Nigerian Begins In September – Army Boss

Buratai Tukur

The Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff, Lt.General,. Tukur Buratai has announced that a special university, located in Biu, Borno State, will begin operational in September this year.

General Buratai, who spoke today, Monday, when he received the Certificate of Occupancy and the surveyed site master plan of the university site from Governor Kashim Shettima in Maiduguri, said that the Army had already reached out to the National Universities Commission (NUC) to secure approval for the university.

Buratai said that Army engineers had also commenced construction work at the site and thanked the Borno Government for the allocation of the land.

He said that funding for the university project was captured in the 2017 budget and commended the Federal Government for its commitment to the take off of the institution.

The Army chief said that the university was being designed as a unique and specialized institution that would serve as solutions center especially to specific challenges facing the Army and North East.

Responding, Shettima assured that the state government would provide necessary support towards take off of the institution.

The governor expressed confidence that when fully operational, the university would be a reference point for other universities in Africa.

He noted that the institution would create employment and add to the revenue base of the state. [myad]

Exxon Mobil, Taleveras, Ophir win Equatorial Guinea Oil Blocks.

A ship loads crude oil at Bonga off-shore oil field outside Lagos,  in a file photo.  REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye

Exxon Mobil, in a press statement confirmed it has signed its Production Sharing Contract, with Equitorial Guniea for Oil acreage E.G.-11,  hereby heading the list of acreage winners in Equatorial Guinea’s latest licensing bidding round. All winners were revealed by Equatorial Guinea’s Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons Gabriel Obiag-Lima on Monday in Capetown at a press conference.

UK based Ophir Energy won the block EG 24, whilst Taleveras picked the highly potential EG-07 Oil block and Clonterf Energy landed Block EG-18.

The West African nation’s Ronda 2016 open and competitive bidding round was declared a success by Industry analyst and watchers. [myad]

CBN Boosts Forex Market With $190 Million

bag-of-dollars

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has continued with its determination to achieve a convergence of rates in the interbank and Bureau de Change segments of the foreign exchange market by pumping another $190 million into the inter-bank market.

At Monday’s trading, the Bank offered the sum of $100,000,000 as wholesale interventions and allocated the sum of $50,000,000 to the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) forex window. Customers requiring forex for Business/Personal Travel Allowances, tuition and medical fees, among others, got $40 million.

The Acting Director of the apex bank Isaac Okorafor, confirmed the development, saying that the Bank is pleased at the performance of the naira, which has made tremendous gain against the dollar in recent times.

He said that the forex rates at both the inter-bank and BDC segments had almost converged, prompting even greater optimism that the value of the naira will continue to spike.

Okorafor observed that by ensuring transparency in the market as well as fairness to end-users, the CBN had further exposed speculators and checkmated them. He therefore urged all dealers, particularly licensed BDCs, to continue to play by the rule, adding that the CBN would not hesitate to wield the big stick against any erring bank or dealer.

The naira continued to maintain its strong stand against major currencies around the globe, exchanging for $364/$1 in the BDC segment of the market on Monday, June 5, 2017.

Meanwhile, the CBN, also today, Monday, issued a circular aimed at further developing the foreign exchange market and improving its structure.

According to Okorafor, the new circular, among other provisions, allows authorized dealers to sell their excess foreign currency to other authorized dealers without seeking prior approval from the CBN. [myad]

Encumbered Leadership Of A Disoriented Nation, By Sufuyan Ojeifo

Sufuyan Ojeifo
Sufuyan Ojeifo

Good leadership is not elusive. It isn’t exactly rocket science.  Centuries ago, William Penn established an unusual colony dedicated to the principles of religious tolerance, participatory government, and brotherly love. He believed that “no people can be truly happy if abridged of the freedom of their consciences.”

“Governments, like clocks, go from the motion men give them.  And as governments are made and moved by men, so by them they are ruined, too,” said Penn, a philosopher and beneficent colonizer, in his First Frame of Government, written in 1682.

He, thus, further posited, in his rare fecundity: “Let men be good and the government cannot be bad. If government becomes ill, good men will cure it.” This positive view of human nature formed the structure of Penn’s government in Pennsylvania in the United States of America. Penn governed in a seventeenth-century world inured by violence, religious persecution, and arbitrary authority.

Penn’s exemplary model of leadership is what Nigeria needs at this historical intersection to engineer a rapid process of ethical rebirth, religious tolerance and logical authority as against arbitrary authority that feeds on impunity and whimsical breach of due process of law through the raw exercise of executive power, the kind that has assailed our national psyche since attainment of independence.

In his very robust 2015 presidential electioneering that was sated with all manner of juicy promises, Muhammadu Buhari rekindled hope in a people that had, for long, become forlorn. His promise of change was much more electrifying than Goodluck Jonathan’s renewed promise of a hackneyed transformation agenda that had lost its attractions in the haze of media propaganda and shenanigans that were strategically unleashed on the polity to effectively de-market and weaken his incumbency factor.

Jonathan’s administration was portrayed as massively corrupt.  Therefore, Nigerians voted for Buhari on the basis of his perceived capacity to fight corruption to the finish. They believed that under his presidency, the nation would witness a glorious epoch of transparency, accountability and better leadership.  The nation was somewhat headed in that direction but the bodily frame of Buhari could not withstand the pains and strains of his worsening health condition, which is much of a distraction to a leadership that could have been focused.

Given the complexity of governance and the dialectics of ingrained conservatism that manifests in corrupt and compromised officialdom, Buhari, from the outset, knew he had an uphill task ahead of him.  Even if he were hale and hearty, the single fight against corruption, which is an aspect of his administration’s agenda, would have broken him down, especially in a situation where he and, perhaps, his vice president, Proessor Yemi Osinbajo, appear to be only members of the administration who are, to a reasonable extent, committed to the anti-corruption fight.

It is unfortunate that Buhari, the motivational anti-corruption crusader, is sick. This is a major setback in the prosecution of the anti-corruption war.  Those appointed to drive the administrative infrastructure of the anti-corruption war are just helping hands whose minds are battlefields of temptations to compromise when it is safe to do so. The commitment and vigour could have been different under a fit president.

But as much as we can acknowledge the commitment of Buhari and Osinbajo to this anti-corruption cause, we cannot also, in any way, excuse them from some blames. The rot in the system is so endemic that it becomes pretty difficult for them to escape vicarious liability in some omissions and commissions by the administration. For instance, can Buhari be free from the charge of nepotism on account of lopsided appointments into public offices?

Can Buhari, a Fulani man, be free from the charge of ethnic/tribal bigotry in the way and manner Fulani herdsmen are being treated with kid gloves despite wrecking havocs to lives and items of property in parts of the country under the guise of cattle grazing?  Can Buhari be free of the charge of incitement and/or hate speech when he threatened that the baboon and the dog would all be soaked in blood if what happened in 2011 presidential election was repeated in 2015?

What of the perennial religious intolerance that has seen Christians in some northern states killed, maimed and displaced from their homes? Has Buhari been able to change the narrative? Or what has he done to sensitise Islamic fundamentalists in the north on the need for religious tolerance? When Nigerians expected steps to be taken along that line, that expectation evaporated with the predetermined attack in Zaria, on December 14, 2015, on Sheik Ibrahim El-Zakzaky-led Shiite Muslim group in what was interpreted as an attempt by the majority Suni Muslim group to decimate it and halt its growing influence.

It is remarkable that Buhari has tried to fight corruption, even if the method that has been, so far, adopted has been described as selective and targeting opposition figures. Conversely, the president has not acquitted himself from the charges of nepotism, favouritism, tribalism and/or ethnicity, religious bigotry, et al, which are various dimensions of corruption.  These and other variants of corruption are symptomatic of a bad government and any encumbered leader whose heart, rather than being a cathedral of righteousness, has become an arena of debauchery and ungodly compromises.

And these are symptoms that are wont to challenge conscionable and conscientious global leaders, who crave the institutionalisation of enduring legacies in government, to take action. Leaders like Penn, John F. Kennedy, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Lee Kuan Yu, Nelson Mandela, etc., have had their names etched positively in the sands of time. They stepped in the saddle and helped to ensure positive leadership narratives in their domains.

In the absence of visionary leaders who are patriotically committed to the well-being of the nation and its people, there is no way government will not be the way it is in Nigeria today – bad.  A disoriented nation has inextricably crystallised. Our nation is, indeed, in the throes of confusion. How can the vast majority of Nigerians be wallowing in the pool of abject poverty with the stupendous natural resources, apart from crude oil, that are buried underneath her soil?

Why will Nigeria not be disoriented when successive administrations have failed abysmally woefully to galvanise savings and investments from the billions of petro-dollars earned over the years? Why will Nigeria not be disoriented when its leaders, acting in concert with their prefects, embark on mindless looting of the public treasury, turning the nation into a criminal enterprise? What do we expect to see in situations where those elected as presidents, governors and local government chairmen collaborate with contractors to divert the nation’s commonwealth into private pockets?

This is the problematic narrative that the Buhari/Osinbajo presidency was voted into power to rewrite. Nigerians are tired of excuses even though Buhari is understandably weighed down and unable to do the little that he was expected to contribute in the area of anti-corruption war. Osinbajo is holding the forte and doing his limited best in the shadow of his boss. Nevertheless, the administration needs the clear-headedness and single-mindedness of these two men to cure our nation and bring about her re-orientation. Time will tell whether or not they will be able to do this.

  • Mr Ojeifo contributed this piece from Abuja via ojwonderngr@yahoo.com[MYAD]

Osinbajo Describes London Terror Attack As Sickening Atrocity

Osinbajo VP 1

The Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo has described the weekend London terror attack as a sickening atrocity even as he expressed solidarity with the United Kingdom on the attack which he said further reinforced the need for global action against terrorists.

A statement by Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mr. Laolu Akande, quoted the Acting President as saying that those behind the attack are misguided and cowardly group of terrorists.

The Acting President Yemi Osinbajo condemned “the sickening atrocity perpetrated by a misguided and cowardly group of terrorists who attacked innocent persons in the London Bridge area on Saturday night.”

He assured Britain that Nigeria stands with the government and people of the United Kingdom and extend our condolences to the families of the victims.

The Acting President said that the latest attack in the U.K. reinforces the need for the global community to act with greater vigour to overcome the extremist ideologies which underpin terrorism. [myad]

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