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Jonathan Pollutes Air Each Time He Speaks, By Yusuf Ozi-Usman

Jonathan in Ibadan

The immediate past President of Nigeria, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan is a very lucky man. By divine arrangement, he became President of one of the most populous countries in the world almost on a platter of gold. Such divine arrangement must have been so strong to have picked him from the category of those who never have shoes to wear in their younger days to lead over 170 million Nigerians – of different characters and characteristics, manners and mannerism (apology to the orator of our time, Sir Yusuf Maitama Sule).

The more than five years he was on that Presidential hot seat, one thinks, should have moulded Jonathan into a mature politician, and of course, a statesman. I refer to the full meaning and implication of statesmanship.

But, the former President has lately been in the market place, exchanging dirty words with whoever dares to ‘attack’ him.

The latest was with the governor of Kaduna state, Malam Nasiru Ahmed El-Rufai, who dared to accuse him of favouring only the governors of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the distribution of ecological funds during his tenure as President.

El-Rufai, through a committee he heads, and which was set up by the National Economic, Council (NEC), alleged that no money was given to none PDP governors (which was the President Jonathan’s party) throughout his tenure.

Jonathan did not allow the dust raised by El-Rufai’s allegation to settle when he went to town with a denial. In attempting to react, possibly in anger, Jonathan ended up confirming El-Rufai’s allegation. The only new thing he said was that it was not all the PDP governors that benefited from the fund, citing the former governor of Akwa Ibom state, Godswill Akpabio, who is his best friend.

The anger which governor El-Rufai elicited in ex President Jonathan was so palpable that, he (Jonathan) had to, two days later, fire another salvo at the governor, this time around, shooting himself badly in the foot.

Jonathan raised two important issues against his adversary – El-Rufai: that El-Rufai had been attacking him because he refused to grant his request for a ministerial position during his Presidency and that El-Rufai begged him for money to campaign for the governorship of Kaduna state, which he granted by directing the then minister of state for finance, Senator Nenadi Usman to release N200 million to him (El-Rufai) as his (Jonathan’s) contribution.

Now, it appears very clearly that Jonathan has no good advisers around him. If he has, such advisers would have advised him not to make it public that El-Rufai begged him to be made a minister, when the same El-Rufai was already a ranking minister (of the Federal Capital Territory – FCT) in the cabinet of Olusegun Obasanjo, the President long before him.

Co-incidentally, it is on record that Jonathan himself begged Obasanjo to intervene in the controversies that trailed Bayelsa state gubernatorial primaries which sought to edge him out of the contest that time. Obasanjo did not only sympathetically listen to him, but later single-handedly made him running mate to late Umaru Musa Yar’adua who later became the country’s President (with him as Vice President). He subsequently became President at the demise of Yar’adua.

So, if it was proper for him to beg the then President Obasanjo to intervene in the Bayelsa state controversial gubernatorial primaries as a bona-fide citizen of Nigeria, why would it be seen as an abomination or an offence or a crime for another bona-fide Nigerian like El-Rufai to “beg” him for the position of minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria? Why did he make it look like it was a big deal, especially, when El-rufai had been a ranking minister long before he became President?

His advisers ought to have drew his attention to the implication and meaning of opening up a can of corruption that was embedded in his confessed donation of N200 million to the campaign purse of El-Rufai. First and foremost, Jonathan simply confirmed directly that he was actually the one that had been approving the distribution, via various sources, including his former National Security Adviser (NSA), retired Colonel Sambo Dasuki and Nenadi Usman, of our national collective wealth to who he would. Or else, from where did he get the N200 million that he “dashed” El-Rufai and for what purpose?

By this confession, Jonathan might have made the job of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) very easy. All that the Commission needs now is to pick him up and go further to get information from him on who else he donated huge amount of our money to in his desperate attempt to win the 2015 Presidential election.

On political side of the confession is the question of the anti-party activities of the former President, who rode on the back of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to power but preferred to be donating huge sums of money to opposition candidates, including El-Rufai to win vital election to the detriment of the PDP candidates.

As a matter of fact, everyone knew that before the 2015 election, Kaduna state was under the PDP leadership. Everyone knew too that El-Rufai contested the governorship of Kaduna state on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC), against the PDP incumbent. What sense did it make for the then President Jonathan to donate N200 million to El-Rufai to assist him win the election in a state which his party was already leading?

And on the moral side Jonathan’s confession is the question of whether he understands that lives of millions of Nigerians would have been bettered if the N200 million he dashed just one person was invested in some social infrastructures?

Did he really mean it when he said that it is only those who are caught in Ajegunle market stealing pieces of meat that are corrupt?

We need to honestly appeal to Jonathan to do the saner members of this country a favour by keeping quiet so that, at least, the air would be a little bit clear for them to breath.

Enough of this infantile ranting that exposes his erstwhile incompetence on matters which even kindergarten children would handle better. [myad]

Sports Minister Advocates Good Reward System For Journalists In Nigeria

Dalung sports minister

Sports and Youths Minister, Solomon Dalung has advocated laws that will guarantee solid reward system for key actors like Journalists who made great contribution to the nation’s democracy in particular and its development in general.

The minister, who spoke to news men at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, after condoling with the journalists for the loss of Channels Television’s Correspondent in the Presidency, Chukwuma Onuekwusi, said: “I am of the opinion that we must look at our laws and entrench a very solid reward system to guarantee contributions of key actors like journalists.”

Dalung regretted that Nigeria as a country, does not take care of journalists.

“Looking at the role journalists play even in entrenching this democracy, I don’t think and believe that they had actually been accommodated within the structure with which they sought to build.

“I believe that the absence of journalists in the present democratic experiment is also one of the major factors with which we have not appreciated them much.

“Anybody who participated in the struggle for democracy in this country would know the role journalists play. Many lost their lives in the struggle but unfortunately, when democracy finally came, what has actually become of journalism is the Wheel-Biro Theory.”

The minister said that the wheel-biro is a very important tool that has no garage, and that it is kept in the sun and under the rain but when there is the need for bags of garri or rice to be conveyed, “you rush, dust it and use it and return it to where you keep it.

“It is unfortunate! We need to begin to appreciate contributions in this country before we will take our bearing properly. Our reward system is fundamentally faulty.”

Dalung said that what is usually left of journalism is that they build a lot of enemies in terms of trying to file reports.

He said that for a journalist to be objective and report events, he would have to build a profile of enemies in a country where people do not appreciate being truthful.

“At the end of the day, when you phased out as Chukwuma has done, we are only now left with story telling. The State House Press Corps here and the Nigeria Union of Journalists will now be left as the final constituency to be responsible for him, his family and his little kids. How long can they go?”

The sports minister described late Chukwuma Onuekwusi a very great man, gentle man, a friend, somebody whom he personally appreciated so much. He said that the news of his death was a devastating blow to him as he had never exhibited signs or symptoms of sickness. “So, I couldn’t comprehend actually what could have been the circumstances that led to his demise. I was even imagining it could have been accident. But, indeed, it wasn’t. It is a great loss not only to the State House Press Corps but to Nigeria in general.

“We have lost a rear gem and I believe that the vacuum his exit created might not be occupied too easily.

“It is my sincere and honest prayers that the Lord God, the custodian of human destiny and source will grant him paradise.” [myad]

Federal Government Constitutes Industrial Policy Advisory Council

President of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote
President of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote

Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has inaugurated the Nigerian Industrial Policy and Competitiveness Advisory Council (NIPCAC).

The Council, which was inaugurated today, Tuesday, at the Aso Rock Presidential Villa, Abuja, is headed by the acting President himself, while the President of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote heads private sector section of the Council.

A statement by Laolu Akande, senior special assistant on media and publicity  to Osinbajo gave the details of the names of the membership of the Council as follows:

  1. His Excellency, the Acting President and Chairman of the EMT, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo (Chairman)
  2. Hon. Minister, Industry Trade and Investment, Dr. Okechukwu Enelamah (Vice-Chairman, Public Sector)
  3. Hon. Minister of State, Industry, Trade and Investment, Mrs. Aisha Abubakar (Alternate Vice-Chairman, Public Sector)
  4. President, Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote (Vice-Chairman, Private Sector)

Chairman, ANAP Business Jets Ltd, Mr. Atedo Peterside (Alternate Vice-Chairman, Private Sector)

OTHER PRIVATE SECTOR MEMBERS:

  1. Chairman, Nigerian Breweries and PZ Cussons Chief Kola Jamodu
  2. Chairman, BUA Group Alhaji Abdulsamad Rabiu
  3. Chairman, IVM Innoson Group of Companies Limited Dr. Innocent Ifediaso Chukwuma
  4. GMD, Chi Foods Nigeria Mr. Rahul Savara
  5. Chairman, Flour Mills of Nigeria Plc Mr. John Coumantarous
  6. CEO, Emzor Pharmaceuticals Mrs. Stella Okoli
  7. Country Head, Olam Mr. Mukul Mathur
  8. President/CEO Beloxxi Industries Limited Mr. Obi Ezeude
  9.  MD/CEO Fidson Healthcare Plc Dr. Fidelis Ayebea
  10. Founder, Flutterwave Mr. Iyinoluwa Aboyeji
  11. President & CEO, GE Business Operations Nigeria Mr. Lazarus  Angbazo
  12. CEO, Jumia Mrs. Juliet Anamah
  13. CEO, SecureID Nigeria Ltd Mrs. Kofo Akinkugbe
  14. Chairman/C.E.O, AMMASCO International Limited Alhaji Ado Mustapha
  15. Chairman, KAM Industries Alhaji Kamaldeen Yusuf
  16. Chairman, United Textiles Plc Alhaji Adamu Atta
  17. Chairman Candel Corporation; CEO Swift Networks Mr. Charles  Anudu
  18. Chairman, Rumbu Sacks Nigeria Limited Alhaji Ibrahim Salisu Buhari
  19. Chairman, Tofa Group Mr. Isiaku Tofa
  20. MD/CEO Proforce Limited Mr. Ade Ogundeyin
  21. President, Manufacturers Association of Nigeria Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs

OTHER PUBLIC SECTOR MEMBERS:

  1. Hon. Minister for Budget & National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma
  2. Hon. Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun
  3. Hon. Minister for Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh
  4. Hon. Minister for Power, Works & Housing, Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola
  5. Hon. Minister for Transportation, Chief Rotimi Amaechi
  6. Hon. Minister of State, Petroleum Resources Dr. Ibe Kachikwu
  7. Hon. Minister for Mines and Steel Development, Dr. Kayode Fayemi
  8. Hon. Minister for Science & Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu
  9. Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Godwin Emefiele

TECHNICAL COMMITTEE MEMBERS:

  1. Economic Adviser to the President Dr. Yemi Dipeolu
  2. Trade Adviser/Chief Negotiator Amb. Chiedu Osakwe
  3. MD, Bank of Industry Mr. Waheed Olagunju
  4. Exec. Director/CEO, Nigerian Export Promotion Council, Mr. Olusegun Awolowo
  5. Executive Secretary, Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission Ms. Yewande Sadiku
  6. Statistician-General, National Bureau of Statistics Dr. Yemi Kale
  7. CEO, Economic Associates Dr. Ayo Teriba. [myad]

Osinbajo Announces N100 Billion Vote For Low Income Earner Housing Project

Osinbajo fulfilled

Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has announced a N100 billion Family Home Fund, which he said, is an initiative of the Federal Government’s social housing project that provides inexpensive mortgages to Nigerians who can afford N30, 000 per month.

Professor Osinbajo, who spoke at the Social Investment Programme’s score card presentation, organized as part of activities to mark the 2017 Democracy Day celebration, said that already, the project has started in 11 States of Nigeria.

“There is an aspect of the SIP that has not been mentioned. This is N100 billion set aside for the Family Home Fund of our Social Housing Project.”

The Acting President said that the N100 billion is a yearly contribution to the federal government’s N1 trillion Social Housing Fund which he said is the largest in the history of the country.

“Both the World Bank and AFDB are contributors to the fund from which developers will borrow 80% of cost of project and counter fund with their own 20%.

“The same fund will enable us to provide inexpensive mortgages for hundreds of thousands across the country especially for Nigerians who can afford N30, 000 per month.

“We expect that this Family Housing Fund will jumpstart and expand construction exponentially across the country.”

Professor Osinbajo said that some of the houses are estimated to cost as low as N2.5 million, which would be paid for through the monthly mortgages.

He had said in his second anniversary broadcast to the nation that the 2017 budget provides for substantial investment to implement the Social Housing Programme.

“The Family Home Fund of our Social Housing Programme will provide inexpensive mortgages for low-income individuals and families across the country.” [myad]

Buhari Will Prepare Better Future For Youth, Adesina Assures

Femi Adesina
Femi Adesina

Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on media and publicity, Femi Adesina, has assured Nigerian youth that the President will bequeath a better future to them. He therefore sought for the support of all Nigerians to make that happen.

Adesina, who spoke today, Tuesday in Abuja, when he was receiving a Golden Leadership Award from the National Youths Advocacy for Good Governance Initiative, said that President Buhari had remained in politics because of his desire to see a new Nigeria emerge for the upcoming generation.

“One of the reasons President Buhari repeatedly contested for the position of the President of Nigeria was to see the country properly take care of young people.

“He strongly believes there should be a better country for the future generation. Tell your colleagues to team up with a government that envisages a better future for this country because Nigerians deserve a better future and that is what the President is aspiring to bequeath.”

In his remarks, the National Coordinator of the Youth Group, Comrade Alabi Abiodun, while presenting the award, commended Adesina for his exemplary role and service to the nation.

He described the President’s spokesman as a lover of truth, mentor and icon for Nigerian youths. [myad]

Deputy Governor’s Wife Sacks Her Police Orderly Over Alleged Sexual Relation With Husband

Benue deputy governor

Justice Mary Abounu has sent her female police orderly, Inspector Jane Agbo, away on allegation that he husband, who is currently the deputy governor of Benue State, Engineer Benson Abounu, is having sexual relations with her.

Report reaching us indicated that already the Nigeria Police Command in the state had redeployed the officer to Otukpo Division.

It was learnt that Justice Abounu had accused Inspector Jane Agbo, who started working with her as an Orderly since when she was a court judge, of sleeping with her husband, the deputy governor.

Report has it that the deputy governor’s wife had severally asked her orderly to confess if the rumour she was receiving that she was sleeping with her husband was true or not.

Inspector Jane Agbo, a single lady, denied the allegation and tried on several occasions to make her madam believe that there was nothing between her and the deputy governor.

t was gathered that, recently, Justice Abounu asked the orderly to wait behind after their schedules for the day and that while she was waiting, Justice Abounu came to her and threatened to assault her openly if she didn’t confess to the lingering rumour that she was sleeping with her husband secretly.

It was during a heated argument between the two that Justice Abounu slapped Inspector Jane Agbo several times, after which, she ordered her out of the deputy governor’s lodge.

It was gathered that Justice Abounu left an instruction that the female Orderly should not be allowed into the lodge again.

As instructed, the security operatives at the deputy governor’s lodge turned the police orderly back when she arrived at the office to resume her duties the following morning.

Inspector Jane Agbo was then forced to return to Benue Command headquarters in Makurdi where she was told of her immediate redeployment to Otukpo Divisional Police Headquarters.

Meanwhile, the embattled Inspector Agbo had confirmed that she had been redeployed as a result of the heated argument and assault she got from the deputy governor’s wife.

She said that it was sad that a woman she had been serving as police orderly since when she was a high Court Judge could be saying all sorts of “rubbish” about her.

Jane wondered why Justice Abounu could be accusing her of dating her husband who she said is not her type of man.

“I wonder why this woman (Justice Abounu) is saying all sorts of rubbish just to tarnish my image. I have never had any sexual relationship with her husband, and again the man is not even my taste if at all I want to date anyone.

“Although I am a single lady but I can take you or anyone to see my boy friend, and when you see him, you will quickly agree with me that the deputy governor is not my taste.”

She said that she had tolerated Justice Abounu’s excesses right from the time she was serving as her orderly at the high Court, adding that her former boss was just telling lies and making false accusations against her over nothing.

“It is a greater sin to maliciously lie against someone than to kill him or her. I have handed madam over to God to do the right judgment. I am glad about my redeployment because, I am tired of working with a devilish and wicked person like her.

“Let her continue her lies against me but I know at the right time, God will vindicate me. To God who made me, I didn’t have any secret affair with her husband, the deputy governor.” [myad]

Aisha Goes To London To Join President Buhari

Aisha and Buhari in London 1

The wife of the President, Aisha Buhari, today, Tuesday departed Nigeria for the United Kingdom to join her husband, President Muhammadu Buhari, who is in London for medical treatment.

Mrs. Buhari travelled through the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja on Tuesday morning.

Before her departure, she thanked Nigerians for their support and prayers for Mr. Buhari’s quick recovery.

The president left Nigeria for London on May 7, for another round of treatment following his last trip in February.

(NAN). [myad]

Democracy, Biafra And A Sense Of History, By Reuben Abati

reuben-abati-3

It is sad that many Nigerians today talk glibly about the possibility of a coup or of military intervention in politics.  They make it seem as if this democracy is something we can exchange for something else. We need to be reminded, as we celebrate democracy day 2017, how we got to this very moment, and how precious democracy is to us as a sovereign people.  From 1966 to 1999 (with the short break of civilian rule from 1979 – 1983) the military dominated the political landscape in Nigeria. It was eighteen years ago yesterday when our country returned to civilian rule.

The military practically overstayed their welcome.  The first military coup in Nigeria was in January 1966, followed by the counter-coup of July 1966, and then the civil war of 1967-70 which turned Nigeria into a military theatre more or less as the Federal forces engaged the Biafran secessionists in a fratricidal war that resulted in the loss of more than a million lives, starvation and the tearing apart of the Nigerian fabric.  The military would remain in charge of Nigeria and its affairs for more than 30 years in total, and it is worth remembering that virtually every successful coup was welcome by the people.

It was thought particularly in the 70s that the military had a role to play in many developing countries in Africa to ensure stability and national discipline. The civilians who took over from the colonialists in Nigeria and Ghana, to cite two close examples, proved worse than their predecessors, and hence the usual argument for military intervention was corruption, and the need to keep the country together, and check the excesses of the civilian rulers. Military rule was perhaps closer to what the people had known traditionally and also under the colonialists. Kings or feudalists who did not tolerate any form of opposition, or free expression governed the traditional communities and likewise, the colonial masters were dictators. The military continued in that tradition. In-fighting among the emergent military elite and the competition for power eroded discipline, and resulted over the years in more coups.

To be fair, military intervention in Nigerian politics yielded some positive dividends, and created a leadership cadre, and indeed till date, the influence of the military in Nigerian politics, as seen in the transmutation of many military officers into professional politicians, remains a strong factor in the making and unmaking of Nigeria. But by 1990, with the global wave of democratization, glasnost and perestroika, the collapse of the Berlin wall, and the greater emphasis on human rights, and the rise of civil society,  the Nigerian public began to subject the military to greater scrutiny than was hitherto the case.

After a fashion, every military government presented itself as a corrective regime, with the promise to hand over power in a short while to civilians. By 1986, the Babangida administration after a year in office had launched a political transition programme, beginning with the establishment of a 17-man Political Bureau. In 1989, the ban on political activities was lifted. The military junta would later ban these existing political parties and create its own parties, the Social Democratic Party and the National Republican Convention.

This seemingly endless transition programme and increased civil society activism merely drew more attention to the military and its record in the public sphere. The people began to demand an inevitable return to civilian rule. They complained about the human rights abuses of the military, the apparent domination of power by the Northern elite, the marginalization of other groups in Nigeria, and the spread of injustice and inequities.

When a Presidential election was held on June 12, 1993, and the SDP candidate, Chief MKO Abiola won the election- an election that was adjudged to be free and fair, Nigerians felt that the hour of their liberation from military rule had come. But the Babangida administration refused to announce the final results and subsequently, it annulled the election. It was a disastrous moment for the Nigerian military and the administration. It also marked the beginning of a national crisis that dragged on for six years. The Nigerian people were inconsolable. In the course of the crisis, General Ibrahim Babangida had to “step aside”, handing over power to an Interim national Government (ING), which was soon shoved aside by General Abacha. Between 1993 and 1999, Nigeria had three different leaders: Chief Ernest Shonekan, General Sani Abacha and General Abdusalami Abubakar.

The ensuing struggle for democracy was long and momentous. Progressive Nigerians and the civil society turned against the military. The South West declared that it had been robbed. MKO Abiola fought for his mandate. The international community ostracized the Abacha government. Nigeria became a pariah nation. The media was in the forefront of the struggle, and many journalists were jailed, hounded into exile, publishing houses were set ablaze. Anyone who criticized the soldiers was framed for one offence or the other and thrown behind bars.

The progressive forces insisted that the military must go. “Never Again”, the people chorused. There had been no other moment like that in contemporary Nigeria.  The martyrs of that people’s revolution were the ones that died, including Chief MKO Abiola who died in Abacha’s detention camp, the many innocent persons who were shot by the military, and every one who suffered one major loss or the other.  The heroes were the valiant men and women who stood up for democracy and justice and opposed military tyranny. The villains were the soldiers who trampled upon the people’s rights, and their opportunistic agents in civil society.  On May 29, 1999, Nigeria returned to civilian rule. It was the day of our country’s second liberation, liberation from the “years that the locusts ate.”

In the month of June, there would be another historic date for Nigerians, that is June 12, a definite milestone in Nigerian democracy even if the Federal Government has been largely in denial since 1999.  MKO Abiola deserves to be honoured post-humously not just selectively by states in the South-West but by the Nigerian Government as a kind of restitution, and by this, I mean a formal declaration, for record purposes, that he was indeed the winner of that June 12, 1993 election.

This brief excursion to the recent past is important because it is so easy to forget. I have met young Nigerians who have never heard of Chief MKO Abiola. In a country where history is no longer taught in schools, that should not be surprising.  The Nigerians who were born in 1993 are today out of university, and many of them may never have experienced military rule. They were still children when their parents fought for this democracy.  Whoever makes the mistake of even remotely suggesting any form of return to military rule is an enemy of the Nigerian people.  Such persons would be taking this country back to 18 years ago and beyond.

Whatever may be the shortcomings of our democracy, this system of government has served the Nigerian people well. We may worry about the form or the shape, or the character of our democracy, the opportunism and imperfections of the professional political class, or the weakness of certain institutions but all told, this is a much better country. The best place for the military is to function under a constitutional order and to discharge its duties as the protector of national sovereignty. Any soldier who is interested in politics should resign his commission, and join a political party, politics being an open field for all categories of persons, including ex-convicts, prostitutes and armed robbers.  I find the auto-suggestion of military intervention gross and odious. It is regrettable that those whose duty should never in any shape include scare-mongering were the ones who started that nonsensical discussion in the first place.

For the benefit of those who do not know or who may have forgotten, we once lived in a certain country called Nigeria, ruled by the military, where the rights of citizens meant nothing.  The soldiers were our rulers. They were above the laws of the land. The people were their subordinates. They called us “bloody civilians.” The media was not free.  Your insistence on free speech could land you in jail.  Under the guise of enforcing discipline, the military treated the people as if they were slaves. Everything was done “with immediate effect!”, including the suspension of human rights.

Today, democracy has given the Nigerian people, voice. There is a greater consciousness of the power of the people, as well as the need to hold persons in power accountable. The electoral process is still imperfect, but the people are now supremely confident of their right to choose.  But not all our problems have been solved. For example, exactly 50 years ago today, the late Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, hero of the Biafran Revolution, led the people of the Bight of Biafra on a secession move out of Nigeria.

He said: “…you, the people of Eastern Nigeria, Conscious of the Supreme Authority of Almighty God over all mankind, of your duty to yourselves and prosperity; Aware that you can no longer be protected in your lives and in your property by any Government based outside Eastern Nigeria/Believing that you are born free and have certain inalienable rights which can best be protected by yourselves. Unwilling to be unfree partners in any association of a political or economic nature… Now, therefore, I, Lieutenant-Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, by virtue of the authority and pursuant to the principles recited above, do hereby solemnly proclaim that the territory and region known as and called Eastern Nigeria together with her Continental Shelf and territorial waters shall henceforth be an independent sovereign state of the name and title of The Republic of Biafra…”

In other words, the people of Eastern Nigeria no longer felt free or protected or respected inside Nigeria.  They opted out. In the Ahiara Declaration of 1969, Ojukwu summed it all up as follows: “When the Nigerians violated our basic human rights and liberties, we decided reluctantly but bravely to found our own state, to exercise our inalienable right to self-determination as our only remaining hope for survival as a people.”

The civil war ended on January 12, 1970 but 50 years since the declaration of secession by the people of Eastern Nigeria, Igbos are still protesting about their relationship with the rest of Nigeria. But significantly, they are not the only ones complaining.  Farmers are complaining about pastoralists, indigenes about settlers, Christians about Muslims and vice versa, women about men, men about women, youths about the older generation, the people of Southern Kaduna are unhappy, other Northern minorities too, the people of the Niger Delta have been unhappy since the Willink Commission of 1957/58, the other over 400 ethnic nationalities that are not recognized in Section 55 of the 1999 Constitution are also wondering whether they are truly part of this union…Basic human rights and liberties are still being violated.

Nigeria remains a yet unanswered question. Democratic rule may have opened up the space, but our country still suffers from a kind of hang-over. The people are free, but they are today everywhere in chains: politically, economically and ethnically. This is the sad part of our democracy, but the best part are the many lessons that the people are learning about the meaning, the nature and the cost of the choices that they make or that they have made. [myad]

 

 

 

 

Again CBN Pumps $482.6 Million, To Guard Naira Value

CBN-Office-Abuja
CBN-Office-Abuja

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has again intervened in the inter-bank market to the tune of $482.6 million which underlined its determination to guard the international value of the naira.

A breakdown of the interventions which were carried out today, Tuesday, indicates that the Retail SMIS was allocated the sum of $285,779,350 while the $100 million was offered in the Wholesale SMIS auction window.

The Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) window got an allocation of $52 million, while the invisibles segment, comprising Basic Travel Allowance (BTA), Personal Travel Allowance, medicals and tuition fees, among others, was allocated the sum of $45 million.

The Acting Director, Corporate Communications at the apex bank, Isaac Okorafor, confirmed that the interventions are in line with the Bank’s resolve, echoed by the Governor, Godwin Emefiele, at last week’s briefing of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting.

He expressed pleasure that the intervention of the Bank had ensured stability across all segments of the forex market, saying that the Bank’s objective of exchange rate convergence would be achieved soon.

Okorafor reiterated his call to all stakeholders to play their respective roles in ensuring a smooth running of the foreign exchange market for the overall benefit of the economy.

Meanwhile, surveys in Abuja, Lagos, Kano and Port-Harcourt on Tuesday, May 30, 2017, indicated that the dollar traded to the Naira at an average rate of N375/$1. [myad]

I Gave El-Rufai N200 Million For His 2015 Gubar Campaign, Goodluck Jonathan Alleges

El Rufai Jonathan

Former Nigeria President, Goodluck Jonathan has said that he gave Mallam Nasiru Ahmed El-Rufai the sum of N200 million as part of his contribution to his campaign for the governorship of Kaduna state which he eventually won.

The former President, who is still bitter about alleged disparaging remarks which Governor El-Rufai made about his government on the issue of ecological fund, insisted that the governor is just being hypocrite.

“He benefited from me when he asked me for money as part of my contribution for his Campaign funds.

“I gave Nasir El-Rufai a whopping sum of N200 million through Nenadi Usman, he should swear by Quran that he never collected money through Mrs. Usman.

“He sent one of his aide whom I learnt is now his political adviser to collect the money.

“If he continues with his LIES against me. I will instruct more about him to be exposed.

Jonathan said that El-Rufai is bitter with him “because I refused to appoint him as a Minister when I took over the Government.

“I still have all his CV & Email correspondence when he was begging me for an appointment and at the same time blasting President Muhammadu Buhari at the tail end of my Government.” [myad]

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