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Nigeria’s Capital Territory Minister Bags Newswatch Magazine’s Best Minister Award

FCT-minister-Bala-Mohammed

Minister of the Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Senator Bala Mohammed has emerged as the overall best Minister of the Federation, 2014 bestowed on him by the Management of Newswatch International Magazine.
The award was presented to the Minister at his Area 11, Garki office, Abuja by the Managing Director and Editor-in-Chief of Newswatch Magazine, Dr. Bolu Folayan who commended Senator Bala for the various innovative programmes, such as the Land Swap programme, the Centenary City and the Abuja City Centre projects which have transformed the Abuja landscape for the better.
Dr. Folayan said that the Minister has performed excellently in project implementation, revenue generation and innovation, adding that the award had to be presented to the minister in his office because he could not attend the main award ceremony on 18 January, 2015 due to the fact that the event coincided with the peak of electioneering campaigns.
The Managing Director described the FCT Minister as a good ambassador of the Fourth Estate of the Realm and that he has justified the confidence reposed on him by the President and Nigerian journalists.
He said that with more leaders of President Jonathan and Senator Bala’s hue, the country is at the verge of overcoming her age long leadership woes.
Responding, Senator Bala Mohammed described the award as one of the most cherished and genuine awards he has received, saying that the gesture has humbled him and proved that this country could appreciate hard work and excellence.
He recalled a similar award on Good Governance which was bestowed on him by the United Nations (UN) two years ago in Bahrain.
The FCT Minister commended Newswatch International magazine for being a unique brand that has straddled Nigeria’s media industry for over three decades. He expressed his gratitude to President Jonathan for giving him the opportunity and necessary support to serve the people even as he dedicated the award to the Federal Capital Territory Administration’s workforce.
“This award is not just for me but for the entire management and public service of the FCTA.”
He thanked them for helping him “to plan, innovate, recreate and execute”. He singled out the Executive Secretary of Federal Capital Dvelopment Authority (FCDA), Engineer Adamu Ismaila and the Coordinator of Abuja Infrastructure Investment Centre (AIIC), Mr. Faruk Sani for special commendation. [myad]

President Jonathan Leads Others In Physical Walk Exercise In Abuja

Jonathan jogs

President Goodluck Jonathan today, led many sports men and women, including top government officials to jog around some parts of Abuja, the nation’s federal capital territory.

Among those who joined the President were Vice President Mohammed Namadi Sambo, First Lady, Dame Patience and others.

Speaking at the rally after the jogging which was also attended by Nigeria’s leading current and former sportsmen and women, President Jonathan promised to create a special intervention fund for sports if re-elected.

He said the fund will cater for special training programmes for sportspeople to help them advance in academics after their sporting careers. It will also help to pay for treatment and rehabilitation for injured sportsmen and women and ensure that anyone who wins medal for Nigeria does not live ‘below average’ after his or career.

President Jonathan said the Fund would be used to reposition and strengthen the National Institute of Sports in Lagos and the Centre of Excellence in Abuja.

“This special fund will be professionally managed and once it’s in place, Nigeria will begin to dominate sports globally.”

The President said he is “passionate about sports because sports is one of the things that unite this country”.

Earlier, the Minister of Sports, Tammy Dagogo-Jack, had asked Nigerians to ignore the “vague, directionless change” the APC is offering, and instead support Mr. Jonathan to continue in office.

Dagogo-Jack said the President has made “personal intellectual commitment and sacrifice for the upliftment of sports in Nigeria”.

He said the country needed a leader like him to concretize the “good work he is doing in the sporting sector”.

“If we want the medals to continue coming in, then, we have to support Mr. President to continue because he is a transformational leader who will launch Nigeria to her great era of change,” the minister said.

Speaking on behalf of the sportsmen and women, a former captain of the Super Eagles, Joseph Yobo, described Mr. Jonathan as an uncommon leader who deserves the support of all Nigerians.

He said it would be difficult to find another uncommon President like him when his tenure expires.

“We cannot allow him to go until his good work is done in 2019,” Mr. Yobo said.

The rally, which is part of President Jonathan’s reelection campaign, was attended by sports stars such as Nwankwo Kanu, Austin Eguavoen, Mary Onyali, Peter Rufai among others. [myad]

APC Supporters March For Buhari In Lagos

March for Buhari

Thousands of All Progressives Congress (APC) members and supporters, today, embarked on a solidarity march in Lagos in support of the party’s Presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari and other candidates at various levels in the March 28 and April 11 elections.

The march, which commenced at 8.20am, began at Maryland via Ikorodu Road to Teslim Balogun Stadium in Surulere, Lagos .

Among notable party members, leading the march, are the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu; the APC governorship candidate in the state, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode; and Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State .

Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker, Mr. Adeyemi Ikuforiji; and others are also on the trail.

The one-million-man march witnessed several civil society groups in Lagos; representatives of the Lagos State Waste Management Authority and the Bus Rapid Transit, who donned their official attires.

Crowd of supporters, including commercial motorcycle riders and traders, lined the streets shouting and singing in solidarity. [myad]

 

We’ll Hold Lai Mohammed, Buhari And APC Responsible If Chibok Girls Are Not Found Soonest – Fani-Kayode

Femi Fani Kayode
Femi Fani Kayode

“Let it be clearly understood that if anything happens to those (Chibok) girls and if they are not produced at the soonest we will hold Lai Mohammed, Buhari and the APC responsible.”
Director of Media and Publicity for Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign Organisation, Femi Fani-Kayode said this in a statement today in Abuja.
Fani-Kayode who said that he responding to Lai Mohammed’s statement on the Chibok girls, said: “the truth is that they do not want those girls to be found and neither do they care about their welfare or their safety.
“We say this because this was a man, and a party that complained and protested at the fact that Boko Haram was proscribed by the Federal Government last year.
“Lai Mohammed proclaimed that the proscription was unjust and unconstitutional.”
He said that ruling party has always believed that Buhari, Lai Mohammed, Governor Shettima and the APC know far more about the whereabouts of the Chibok girls and the activities of Boko Haram than they have cared to admit.
Fani-Kayode said that whilst the majority of Nigerians are overjoyed by the fact that the President has given Them hope by saying that the girls are still alive. Lai Mohammed and the APC are not happy.
“We are all happy with the progress being made by the Federal Government through our armed forces who are overrunning the Boko Haram insurgents and restoring normalcy to some villages in the northeast that were hitherto captured.”
He insisted that President Goodluck Jonathan has performed excellently, adding that the transformation Agenda is a divine message with which Nigeria is being daily developed.
He claimed that the transformation is manifest in all sectors in spite of desperate efforts by APC “and Boko Haram which is the APC’s armed wing, to blight the achievements of our presidential candidate, President Jonathan, with the abduction of Chibok girls, which took place in Borno State under the control of a chief security officer of the State who is an APC governor.” [myad]

I’m A Performer, What I Do On Stage Doesn’t Reflect My Life, Seyi Who Met Jonathan Half-Naked

Jonathan and Seyi

A popular female Singer, Seyi Shay who posed naked as he met with President Goodluck Jonathan in Lagos recently has made it clear that she is a respectable lady and was not planning to seduce the president in any way.

Seyi, who reacted to floury of criticisms over her seductive dressing when she had a handshake with the President insisted that what she does on stage as a performer does not reflect her everyday life.

“I am a very respectable young lady and I was not in any way trying to seduce the President with the outfit I wore. I had two outfits for the event, one was for my performance and the other was worn after I performed. The dress I was pictured in with the President was what I wore during my performance.

“I came on stage and greeted everyone according to their culture and I did the same for Mr. President. He was impressed and he asked where and how I knew how to greet in his native dialect and I said I learnt it. That was what brought about the giggling and smiles in the picture. I’m a performer and what I do on stage doesn’t reflect my everyday life.

I had two outfits on that day and it was a youth event. Who wouldn’t feel overwhelmed meeting the President? Well, I did and I felt honoured because it is not every day you get to meet the president of your country.”

The picture where the singer, wearing an incredibly short dress, while sitting beside the president, went viral and so many fans and foes have expressed their feelings concerning Seyi’s outfit.

Many people, including celebrities and notable figures such as comedian Wale Gates; social analyst, Omojuwa, took to their social media accounts to express their feelings over her choice of outfit. [myad]

Boko Haram Militants Assemble In Gwoza For Epic Battle With Nigeria Soldiers

Boko Haram gather

There are reports that indicate the gathering of members of the Boko Haram in their stronghold of Gwoza and bringing in reinforcements from other locations for what security observers described as an epic and final battle for supremacy with the Nigerian soldiers and their allies..

An intelligence source who is monitoring the situation told Voice Of America (VOA) today that military forces are getting closer to the town and the militants may be preparing to defend Gwoza, which is one of the last major towns they control in northeastern Nigeria.

The source says Boko Haram reinforcements are traveling to Gwoza from their refuge in the nearby Sambisa forest. Gwoza is located about 135 kilometers south of the Borno state capital, Maiduguri.

The militants are said to have surrounded the town with land mines and warned civilians to flee. It says the fighters have released some young women they have been holding.

VOA’s source says earlier this week, militants in Gwoza killed some civilians who refused to take up arms with Boko Haram to defend the town.

The offensive is being aided by forces from Niger, Cameroon and Chad, all of whom have suffered Boko Haram attacks on their territory.

Earlier this week, Chad said its forces had liberated the town of Dikwa. Chad’s President Idriss Deby called on Boko Haram’s chief Abubakar Shekau to surrender or be killed, saying his forces know Shekau’s location.

On Thursday, it was reported that Boko Haram militants killed at least 68 people in a raid on the Borno state village of Njaba. A survivor of the attack told VOA that gunmen killed all the men and teenage boys in the town, including children as young as 12 years old.

Because of the remoteness of the area, word of the attack took two days to reach the state capital, Maiduguri, about 100 kilometers away.

Meanwhile, report just reaching us indicated that three explosions hit Maiduguri today in the worst attacks there since suspected Islamist militants tried to seize it in January.

There was no immediate official word on casualties. A hospital source said dozens had been killed in the separate explosions and witnesses saw bodies being taken away from different blast sites.

A tricycle rider with a bomb tried to enter a fish market on the Baga road in the west of Maiduguri. The bomb exploded when the tricycle was prevented from going in, Mohammad Ajia, a trader in Baga market, said after fleeing the scene.

A second blast then hit an area known as the Monday market before a car bomb exploded by a bus station near a Department of State Security (DSS) office, according to a civilian member of a joint task force.

“Men from the anti-bomb squad came a few minutes after the blast to comb the scene, then they started evacuating victims. I saw five mangled bodies being put in vehicles,” Aliyu Musa, a resident in the area near the DSS office, said.

Near the Monday market, casualties were loaded onto waiting ambulances.

“I have counted five ambulances that have evacuated victims from the scene. Soldiers are shooting in the air and warding off people at the market,” Salisu Yaya, a member of a civilian task force said.

Suspected Boko Haram militants tried to seize the city at the end of January but were repelled in fighting that killed more than 100 people.

Boko Haram seized territory the size of Belgium last year, which Nigeria army has struggled to take back. [myad]

 

Dokubo Campaigns For APC In Rivers, Says PDP’s Days Are Numbered

Peterside
The representative of the Amayanabo of Ido Town, Chief Igbikioyibo Dokubo, has embarked on campaign for the success of All Progressives Congress (APC) in the forthcoming general elections, even as he said that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), PDP will fizzle into history after the elections.
Chief Dokubo who spoke when the governorship candidate of APC,  Dr. Dakuku Peterside, paid him and the Council of Chiefs a courtesy call during his ward congress in the Ido and adjoining communities thanked the candidate for visiting the community.
He said that the visit “shows that you care about us. This is the first time a governorship candidate will be coming to see us. We appreciate and we are also grateful to Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi for supporting a worthy successor.
“Let me use this opportunity to say that we the Riverine people are grateful to Amaechi for fighting for us. Most of Amaechi’s battle is for us in the Riverine, we know it and we appreciate our able governor. He has shown beyond doubt that he is a man who believes in justice and equity.
“Therefore we will vote massively for APC come March 28 and we will ensure that there is no PDP in this area after that date. APC has done a lot for us, so it will amount to ingratitude if we fail to reciprocate. We bless you Your Excellency because God’s favour is on you.”
Similarly, Ibinabo Dawari, former Care Taker Committee Chairman of the local government has also pledged the total support of sons and daughters of Ido, promising to deliver all the wards to the APC.
Peterside responded by thanking the people of Ido for their support and promised to be fair to every part of Rivers State. He told them that government should be for every part of the state irrespective of size or location, adding that his government will serve both the majority and the minority tribes. He also thanked them for appreciating the battles and sacrifices of Governor Amaechi for Riverine people and promised to convey their sentiments to the governor.
This was even as Dr. Dakuku Peterside described widows of Ido community in Asari-Toru Local Government Area as courageous and forward-looking women who have defied all odds to support a progressive party.
He prayed for them and pledged to do everything in his power to alleviate their burden. Dakuku said widowhood is not a curse but an accident of life.
The APC candidate made the statement during the party’s ward rally in Asari-Toru Local Government Area.
He charged the widows to continue to live courageously, adding that “God is the husband of every widow, so you have nothing to fear because God is on your side”. He also commended them for being supportive of APC despite the challenge of everyday living.
Peterside later thanked the people of Ido, describing them as a good community for taking care of their widows. Afterwards, he made presentations to the women and promised to do more in future.
Responding on behalf of the widows, Mrs. Juliana Obutobo expressed gratitude for the gifts and prayed God to continue to bless Peterside for remembering them. He described the APC candidate as a God-fearing person who is more likely to remember the poor and the vulnerable when he assumes office as governor of Rivers State.
The women promised to deploy everything at their disposal for APC‘s door to door and to vote massively for Peterside and the party on election day. They also promised to protect their votes so that their will be reflected in the outcome of the elections. [myad]

Buhari Mourns Abubakar Gimba, Says His literary Contributions Will Remain Indelible

Abubakar Gimba
Presidential candidate of the (APC), General Muhammadu Buhari has described the late Nigerian author, Alhaji Abubakar Gimba as a rare gem, whose vacuum would be difficult to fill.
In a tribute to the late author, General Buhari said he was deeply touched by the death of Abubakar Gimba at a time Nigeria still badly needed his wealth of experience and rich ideas.
Describing the deceased as “an all-rounder, whose versatility was amazing.” the APC presidential candidate said that he personally felt touched by Gimba’s passing.
According to him, the late Gimba was an enthusiastic supporter of his ambition and an ardent fan of the APC, whose platform for change he had identified with.
General Buhari said the late Abubakar Gimba was not only an accomplished public servant, but also a highly successful and respected author in Nigeria and beyond.
As a great writer, he said, the deceased had inspired many young Nigerians to dream big, adding that through his fertile imagination, the literary star had captured the contemporary realities of Nigeria.
While praying for the repose of the deceased and wishing him eternal rest in peace, General Buhari extended his condolence to the family of the late Abubakar Gimba and prayed to God to give them the fortitude to bear his irreplaceable loss. [myad]

Why I Embraced The Man, Buhari, Who Jailed Me For 18 Months, By Adeyemi Adefulu

Adeyemi_adefulu
I found Lola Shoneyin’s piece on Buhari titled, “How My Father’s Jailer Can Offer Nigeria A Fresh Start” very engaging although it dredged up some very painful memories. It took me down memory lane; indeed, it was a vivid reminder of an awful road on which l and others like Audu Ogbeh, now an ardent Buhari backer, travelled.
It was my painful duty as the “Captain” of the detainees, to receive Lola’s father, Engr. Tinuoye Shoneyin into the Abeokuta prison and to make him as comfortable as possible in the extremely difficult prison environment, providing him with clothes, a towel and toiletries.
Engr. Shoneyin had, as a matter of courtesy, responded to the invitation of the government of Ogun State then led by Colonel Oladipo Diya, who later became the deputy to Gen. Sani Abacha, to answer some questions and had expected to be back home that evening. He was not to return home for six months!
Lola’s account dwelt on the torture that she (at such a young age) and her family had to endure and the telling effect of such an experience on the family. Many detainees never recovered from the torture and the injustice that this experience represented. In many cases, mine included, there was no accusation, much less a charge.
One slight misstatement in Lola’s account was that the detention was at the behest of Col. Tunde Idiagbon, the erstwhile deputy to General Buhari. I doubt if that is quite true.
The problem with autocracy is that once the atmosphere has been established or allowed by the leader, many tin gods at the various levels of the strata will for any number of reasons, exploit the situation for the purpose of settling personal and petty scores including disputations over girlfriends!
So in the case of Lola’s father, the local despot at the time was Colonel Oladipo Diya who was mean, brutal and sadistic and locked up as many people as he wanted, for good, bad or sometimes no reason at all. He flogged civil servants for lateness, taxed the people on every imaginable score, and signed for nearly 20 people who had been sentenced to death (none of whom his predecessor permitted to be killed), to be executed by hanging in one day.
He reveled in making people suffer wherewith he was promptly given the name of “Kunya” meaning tormentor which was the direct opposite of what his name “Diya” means in the Yoruba language. He was, indeed, the harbinger of torment and suffering. He it was who saw a ghost in every situation. If the sun was too bright he blamed it on the dethroned politicians. He was a cruel taskmaster who tried irrationally to get water out of stone.
At a stage he rounded up contractors who had done various jobs for the state government and dictated that they should either pay certain arbitrary fines or be locked up in prison.   I was in the gulag for 18 months, 16 of which l spent in the Abeokuta prison. Prior to this time, I had presided over three Ministries in four years and three months. There was never an accusation or a charge of any sort against me. His investigators were surprised at how clean my affairs were and how l could succinctly explain every transaction l was involved in including providing photocopies of cheques that even pre-dated my appointment.
“Were you expecting that this type of thing would happen? Why did you leave a thriving law practice for a job like this?” they asked me repeatedly. Therein lies the dilemma of our country that needs good people to preside over its affairs, yet castigates the few who dare to get in the fray. “The punishment for the wise who refuse to take part in the government of their people,” said a Greek philosopher, “is to be ruled by fools.”
I came to understand that Diya’s grouse with me was that l was so close to the late Chief Olabisi Onabanjo, my governor, and that there was no way of getting Onabanjo without getting Adefulu his political son and confidant! “Onabanjo did nothing Adefulu did not know of,” Diya was reported to have said repeatedly. So l had to be purged! Oluokun the head of state security, himself a dastardly character, was Diya’s hatchet man.
When all efforts at intimidation and harassment failed, they changed tactics and tried to recruit me as an informant against Onabanjo. It soon became clear to them however, that I was not going to be party to their pursuit of crass injustice and motive hunting.  I asked Oluokun pointedly to cock his gun and shoot and kill me because under no circumstances would l be part of such villainy. In any case, unless l wanted to become a liar, such incriminating evidence did not exist except in the figment of Diya’s convoluted imagination.
Onabanjo was the quintessential leader – open, fair minded, as straight as a spoke and a great lover of the people; a man who, to this day, several years after his demise, l still hold in the highest regard.
At the time of my incarceration, my family was at a more delicate stage than the Shoneyins, because it was younger and less endowed. My first son Adeoye, was just under 10 years and our last daughter, Dayo was three months old. I was 37 years old at the time of the coup. My family was subjected to a long and extremely humiliating deprivation. It was the unjust compensation l received for a job to which l gave the very best of my life at a very young age (try as you may, such injustice never leaves you. The wound may heal but the scar is there and sometimes stares you in the face). I tried hard to be strong and for the most part, l was. The knowledge that I had served with the very best of my ability in a job l truly enjoyed, gave me peace of mind and assurance.
The open and vocal agitation of many well-meaning citizens such as Professor Wole Soyinka for my release was an act of grace for which l will forever be grateful. The only time l broke down was the day my son, Adeoye, turned 10. With a smuggled recorder, I had recorded a birthday message for him and his young siblings admonishing them to be strong in the knowledge that God was on our side. After recording the message, l wept profusely. It was terrible!
My co-prisoners, including my Deputy Governor, the late Chief Sesan Soluade, and the present Emir of Suleija, Alhaji Anwal Ibrahim, the erstwhile Governor of Niger State, and the others, tried hard to console me. I had been the strong one, the encourager of the brethren, but l guess the cup had become too full and it ran over. While time heals, the impact of such injustice endures.  It leaves a telling effect which you carry for the rest of your life. Ironically, when l was finally released, l was in hospital where l had just undergone an emergency operation. Liberty had come at last but it met me totally broken and incapacitated. At my release and after, no one offered any apology for this gruesome and very unjust recompense.
Nobody, without due process, should ever have the power to visit such humiliation and injustice on any human being. The irony of dictatorship is that a leader can be so conscientiously wrong in his crusading mission.
The Buhari regime was very wrong in my case as in the case of several others. I, along with many others, had come into office with the purest motive of service. It was what l had always wanted to do. I thought it was my life’s mission and when the opportunity came l did the work as if my life depended on it. I left a lucrative practice to serve my people. I was totally accountable, yet l was unfairly thrown into jail for no just cause for 18 months!
That was many years ago and since l have focused on re-building my life and raising my family.
I have prayed and tried hard to forgive my unjust tormentors but l know that the scar is there and people like Lola Shoneyin stroke that weak point now and again, albeit unwittingly.
Obviously this is not an experience that can be wished away because it evidently affected my being and changed my life fundamentally. It makes me appreciate people like Mandela so much – 26 years on Robben Island (have you been there?) and he came out with no bitterness and no guile! Such men are rare!
Understandably then, it has taken some effort for me to embrace Buhari’s candidacy. I have never voted for him. I did not even like him. But as my friend, Audu Ogbeh said to me once, “so much has gone wrong with our polity, that our emphasis now must not be on ourselves but on the survival of the nation.” I have no doubt he is right. This is a time when the overriding interest must be that of the country.  As a student of history, l know that while constitutions can be copied and adopted, in the end every nation will only learn by its national experience.
The history of many of the democracies we admire today is replete with unimaginable and odious occurrences that characterized their development. It is obvious to me that the trust we reposed in President Jonathan in 2011 has been wantonly squandered. The sobering state of our nation and realpolitik has made me take another look at Buhari. How viable is he for our polity given the available options? Is the General, the devil he is portrayed to be, or a victim of circumstances or a misunderstood individual? To me President Jonathan has been such a disappointment in many critical areas of our national life.
There has been unprecedented violence and blood letting under this administration, which, naively in my view, treated the Boko Haram insurgency with kid gloves and a total lack of resolve. Today, Boko Haram has established a formidable force and has succeeded, before our very eyes, in changing the map of Nigeria.
The President appears to have turned deaf ears to the voices of wisdom and surrounded himself with cronies whose main pre-occupation is to exploit him. Some of his spokesmen have made a virtue of rascality and turned public relations upside down. Miscreants who should be in jail for their past deeds are the ones now threatening that our collective vote must go a particular way or there will be insurrection.
We never heard of  “democracy” at gunpoint till now.
To the discerning, it is clear that the Boko Haram insurgency has been employed as a source of inscrutable abuse, or how else do we explain a Nigerian private plane filled with raw US dollars being impounded abroad?
How many such planeloads escaped without being caught is anybody’s guess, yet our troops are said to be so ill equipped that the insurgents have better arms. All this despite the huge sums that have been voted for defence under this administration; one wonders where all that money went.
Then the massive corruption in every sphere of public office – pension funds stuffed into pillows and mattresses, etc.
The disgusting state pardon for a man who, before an incredulous world, broke the terms to a court order and left Britain dressed as a woman!
This is not how a leader should exercise such hallowed prerogative power. The President’s conduct sent a chilling message down the spine of the polity that corruption and stealing are the way to go. You can add to that the company of shady men wanted abroad for all manner of crimes, including drug offences, who have been installed in positions of leadership in the PDP or have been fielded as Senatorial candidates.
The management or lack of it of our foreign reserves (which have become totally depleted) and reports of billions of missing dollars dominate the air. Everybody who is working hard is in trouble. Joblessness has risen to record levels.  The youths are, justifiably restless because they have no future in the present dispensation. The tales of woe are just endless. Billions of dollars have disappeared into petroleum subsidy yet even the cost of kerosene, the poor man’s fuel, is at an all-time high. It is the oil sheiks that are being subsidized not the ordinary people. To say the ship of state is clearly adrift in Nigeria is an understatement.
A land that should be flowing with milk and honey has become the laughing stock of the international community.
We simply can no longer tolerate this grotesque level of gluttony and of corruption.
There is an urgent need for a change otherwise, we face a huge problem and social dis-location ahead beyond what we already have.
These are the reasons why l have embraced Buhari. If you look at his past, and some of the statements credited to him, he is not an easy man for a person like me to embrace. But 30 years is a long time and l honestly believe he has had enough time to reflect and to change. He is no more a military officer. He has retained a sharp, social conscience for the people.
I am impressed with the hunger with which he has fought for elections. I want to believe that it is out of an earnest desire to work for the people and to do some things right that General Buhari has struggled so hard to win the nation’s leadership through the electoral process.  While he may not be a saint, he is certainly not a villain. His choice of a very good man in Professor Yemi Osinbajo, for a Vice President gave me the assurance that Buhari was listening to the comments on his areas of weakness. There are enough checks and balances in a democratic set up to make fears of a return to dictatorship a joke.  I am also impressed by his modest lifestyle, unlike many of his ilk who live in opulence and indulgence. This says something about the man. I can trust this man with my wallet in a way l cannot do with Jonathan who appears to have forgotten where he came from.
Jonathan has lost the golden opportunity to fundamentally affect the lives of the ordinary folks. I am persuaded that it will be a tragedy for us to continue in this drift for another four years. While Buhari is far from being my ideal candidate and l worry about some of his deficiencies, my perception is that although he may be short on the skills required for the modern management of a state – technology, economic management etc. – his record shows that he has the ability to enlist support. I hope this time he will choose the right people and avoid those who will use his name to do iniquity.
While Buhari may not be the ideal candidate we need, he is, certainly the best we have. There is a time in the history of a nation when an individual is needed to rescue it or perform a historic role. As it was with Winston Churchill who provided Britain with the much needed war-time leadership, General Charles de Gaulle who restored the confidence of France, Madiba, Nelson Mandela of South Africa who championed the cause of majority rule and showed the way to national reconciliation and our own Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo who provided leadership to a country on the brink after the Abacha years, my belief is that this is the hour for Muhammadu Buhari to stop the torment of a hemorrhaging nation and restore its confidence.
Lastly, the General owes me one.  I will still like Buhari to vocalize an apology and offer some succour to people like me whom his government brutalized in the past. It is the least he can do. To do so is not weakness. Indeed, it is strength to admit the mistakes of the past and to promote national reconciliation.  For now, even ahead of the apology, and in the national interest, l have thrown in my hat with Buhari.
So has Lola Shoneyin’s father. Now 87 but still spritely and alert, my big brother and comrade, Engr. Tinuoye Shoneyin, always a big heart, is enthusiastically by my side at political rallies and party support meetings. Our jailer has become our hope. Life is indeed nothing if not an agglomeration of ironies.

Adeyemi Adefulu MFR , is a Lagos-based lawyer. [myad]

PDP Trapped In Labyrinth Of Confusion And Madness, By Ikechukwu Orji

Ikechukwu
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will never cease to amuse me. The party is trapped in a labyrinth of confusion and madness. It is difficult to work up any optimism about this party. The tale of this party is a typically dispiriting take on Nigeria political dysfunction. History is littered with all sorts of anarchy. The Cultural Revolution in Peoples Republic of China is definitely one. Another one is Julius Nyerere’s ill-faded Ujamaa program in Tanzania. PDP is inflicted with this same kind of madness. This party has failed in every imaginable way to lift Nigeria from the quagmire of economic deprivation. The latest exhibition of madness by this self-deluded party is the manner in which the shabbily organized some Nigerians to protest at the Chatham House last week.
Public funds were wasted on some Protesters who were not even aware of why they were protesting. It took a BENTV reporter to reveal the fact that those Protesters were a rented crowd. They were hurriedly put together to embarrass General Mohammadu Buhari in London. It is interesting to note the level of paranoid exhibited by the PDP lately. It all goes to show that the game is up for the so-called largest party in Africa. The cloud is gathering for the day of the jackal. There is no stopping Hurricane Buhari and the PDP knows it. So we are actually watching the last dance of desperation by a sinking party; a party doomed to speedy disappearance.
Buhari’s presentation at the Royal Institute for International Affairs (better known as Chatham House) was one of a kind and over the top. It was a masterpiece in every material particular. Obi Nwakanma, a Columnist with the Vanguard Newspaper, has this to say: “He (Buhari) carried himself with a lot of dignity and there is no inkling either of physical or mental malfunctioning. At 73, the man looks quite good; lean and agile, and seems to be in ruddy good health. His speech at Chatham House was also apt, eloquent, enlightened and well delivered, and ought to put finally to shame those who continue to Fani Kayak about his High School education.” The Will Editorial also attested to the fact that Buhari demonstrated a good command of facts and addressed concerns about both his age and the insinuations that he intends to impose Sharia Law on Nigeria. “Buhari struck me as a charming and well-informed and down to earth candidate, comfortable in the role of leader. While he made a statement reassuring people that his leadership and tackling of corruption would not be witch hunt, it remains unclear whether the leap of faith he is asking Nigerians to make is achievable.”
Nigeria has no cause to worry about this slow-talking, yet irrepressibly exuberant Buhari. Nigeria will overcome corruption partly exclusively on the strength of Buhari’s personality. His off duty persona is much like his on-duty one, the same mixture of great calm and boundless energy. His unique combination of intelligence, toughness and often startling humanity has always been a wonderful advertisement. While Buhari has a lot of accomplishments to his credit, the signature trait that he is known for is confidence. He will provide real leadership under pressure and has what it takes to tackle the corrupt political class who are among the most troglodytic and reactionary hacks.
The key issue that Buhari emphasized on In Chatham House is the fact that prosperity has not reached 99% of Nigerians. Wealth has not circulated outside the elites who constitute about 1% of the population. He expressly stated that his government will encourage free enterprise and that there will be government wholesome intervention to make sure that prosperity will spread abroad. The General said that in reforming the economy, “we will use savings that arise from blocking these leakages and proceeds recovered from corruption to fund APC social investments programs in education, health, and safety nets such as free school meals for children, emergency public works for unemployed youth and pension for the elderly.”

Orji is a Journalist and Media Consultant
ikechukwuorji@yahoo.com. [mad]

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