Friday 6 March 2015

VIDEO: Rev. Fr Mbaka Fights Back Against President Jonathan aAnd First Lady Patience Jonathan


Enugu-based Reverend Fr. Ejike Mbaka, has defendend his sermon against President Goodluck Jonathan following massive attacks initiated against him by persons loyal to the first lady and the president. Speaking recently at the Adoration Ministry ground where he gave a scathing presentation denouncing President Jonathan's re-election, Mbaka said he stands by his initial criticism of the president.
Watch Mbaka's earlier video here:
 

We’ll Occupy Aso Rock If Election Is Shifted Again – APC Youths

APC Youth Protesting Election Fraud
Youths under the umbrella of National Youths Wing of the All Progressives Congress (APC), on Thursday, issued a warning that they would go on a nationwide protest should the 2015 general elections get shifted again.
The youths said they will march on and occupy important places and government buildings across the country, including the Aso Rock Presidential Villa, should any further postponement of the elections be announced, as the March 28 date set for the presidential election draws nearer.
The warning was issued on Thursday at the end of a strategic meeting held by the various organs of the youth wing of the APC in Abuja.
The congregation of the APC youth leaders said even though their party has accepted the initial postponement as a party who respect law, order and constitution of the land, they, however, said any further postponement will be openly kicked against, emphasizing that they will take every legal means to stop any further postponement.
Speaking at a meeting with zonal and state leaders of APC youth wing in Abuja on Thursday, National Youth Leader, Alhaji Ibrahim Jalo Dasuki, expressed confidence that his party will be victorious in the coming elections.
His words: “Even though we know that what they have done was based on political reasons because they truly know that if election had held that time they will definitely lose, and we want to tell them that no matter the number of time they shift the election, we will definitely win these elections.
“We want to tell them that we have accepted it as our leaders have accepted, but election will be held on the 28 of March and that 28 remains sacrosanct because we will not tolerate any other shift in election dates.
“As law abiding citizens, we have accepted it but if it comes to a point that the government and INEC does not want to conduct elections, we will definitely have to take the necessary steps legally possible.”

A New Plot To Scuttle Elections Emerges: Reprint Ballot Papers To Accommodate Us Or Postpone Elections – New Party Tells INEC

oung Democratic Party,‎ a new party which a court compelled the Independent National Electoral Commission to recognise, has said the electoral body should either reprint the ballot papers to include it for the coming general elections or postpone the polls.
INEC Chairman, Attahiru Jega The stance of the party may have boosted ongoing efforts to scuttle the forthcoming elections.
A Federal High Court in Abuja, Wednesday, ordered INEC to recognise YDP and accommodate it in the forthcoming elections that are about four weeks away.
Addressing journalists in Abuja on Thursday, the party’s Publicity Secretary, Ugo Nwofor, said INEC “has just two options,” adding that the party was ready for the elections.
The conditions, according to Mr. Nwofor, include reprinting the ballot papers to accommodate the party and its candidates.‎
But if INEC does not have “appropriation for logistics‎” for reprinting the ballot papers, Mr. Nwofor issued the second option which was that, “lNEC should postpone the elections to accommodate our party.”
But ‎INEC has withheld its response to the development, saying it does not have the court document ordering it to recognize YDP yet.
This was stated by both INEC Director of Voter Education, Osaze Uzzi and the Chief Press Secretary to INEC Chairman, Kayode Idowu.

Jonathan’s Dollar Bribe: Arewa Community Split As Bafarawa, Uduaghan’s Aide Are Accused Of Stealing Millions

Emmanuel UduaghanEmmanuel Uduaghan
Members of the southern Arewa community in southern Nigeria are in a fighting mood, alleging that former Governor Attahiru Bafarawa and an aide to Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta ran off with some of the funds President Goodluck Jonathan reportedly gave to them last week to secure their endorsement.
Some figures within the community insist that Mr. Bafarawa, who is the chairman of the Arewa Initiative for Peaceful Co-existence in Southern Nigeria, must return the cash he reportedly skimmed off from millions of naira that Mr. Jonathan had given to them during the president’s two-day visit to Delta State last week.
Disaffected members of the group told a correspondent of SaharaReporters that Mr. Jonathan had used the occasion of his visit to Delta to distribute cash to the Arewa community in southern Nigeria as well as members of other ethnic groups in the state.
A prominent member of the Arewa community told SaharaReporters that Mr. Bafarawa duped them by running off with a substantial part of the dollar funds from the president.
According to the source, the funds from the president were meant to win the votes of northern residents of Delta State. “The entire members of the Arewa community in the southern Nigeria are supposed to come out and endorse Mr. President which we did after receiving the money,” said the source. He added: “But surprisingly, Mr. President gave each Arewa community from southern Nigeria N10 million through the chairman of the Arewa Initiative for Peaceful Co-existence in Southern Nigeria, Alhaji Attahiru Bafarawa. The money was given in dollars but instead of releasing the full money the way it was given, Bafarawa cut away N4 million and gave out only N6 million to each of the Arewa community across the 17 states of southern Nigeria.”
Another furious member said he expected Mr. Bafarawa to deny pilfering their funds. “If he denies taking our money, can he also deny that money was given to the Arewa community by President Goodluck Jonathan when he visited Asaba, the Delta state capital on Friday, February 27th 2015 and that the president and his vice were endorsed on Saturday, February, 28th at the Cenotaph, Asaba, Delta State capital?”
He added: “We are using this opportunity to tell Bafarawa to bring for us our balance of N4 million he took from the N10 million given us by Mr. President.”
Members of the Arewa community were bused into Asaba from across 17 states in order to endorse Mr. Jonathan.
In a related development, members of the Arewa community in Delta State accused Auwalu Tukur, a special assistant to Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan on non-indigenes, of pocketing N12 million allegedly given to the group by the state governor to win their endorsement of President Jonathan’s re-election bid.
Last year, members of the Arewa community in Delta State had urged Mr. Uduaghan to fire Mr. Tukur whom they accused of corrupt practices, greed and self-centeredness.
An aggrieved member of the Arewa community claimed that Mr. Tukur always sought to grab anything meant for the larger group, adding that he hardly ever gives anything to the Arewa community.
“We are warning Alhaji Tukur to bring the N12million Governor Uduaghan gave us through him to support President Jonathan. Shortly after the event that day, some of our Muslim brothers from Warri attacked Tukur to get the N12 million, but he was rescued by one of the police area commanders at the cenotaph,” the source asserted.
Mr. Tukur did not answer calls to his mobile line. When a correspondent sent him a text message, he responded, “Please they should leave me alone. Are they not tired of spreading lies? What we did is our [belief] in PDP and the leadership of our great country Nigeria headed by President Goodluck Jonathan.”

Why ruling party is scared’

Joe Igbokwe

THE Lagos State All Progressives Congress has alleged that the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) desperation to use cloned fake voter cards to rig the rescheduled elections “is responsible for its hollow campaign against the use of card readers” for the polls.
The party noted that the desperate manner the PDP was going about “fighting the use of a credible device to stop the use of stolen, fake and cloned voter card,” had exposed the ruling party as a cabal of electoral thieves, who predicate their strength on “farcically manipulating every election in  Nigeria”.
State APC Publicity Secretary Joe Igbokwe, in a statement in Lagos, urged the PDP to stop its opposition to efforts to curb electoral fraud, adding that the ruling party at the centre should face the masses on the strength of its performance in the last 16 years in power.
The party insisted that the time was up “for the PDP and its fraudulent ways of short-changing the country and subjecting it to the type of horrendous wreckage that has marked PDP’s unfortunate years in power”.
“Nigerians should recall that the Directorate of State Security (DSS) invaded the APC Data Centre in Lagos, vandalised the place and arrested some workers. We recall that the DSS was to follow this horrendous act with a specious, outlandish and false claim that the APC was cloning voter cards in the centre.”
The party said it denied the DSS claim and went on to show that the agency was up to some tricks for the PDP.
“Nigerians should recall that recently, Lagos APC revealed a sinister plan by the PDP to mop up voter cards of unsuspecting Lagosians and the card numbers of Lagosians in its wild dream of capturing Lagos for a dying PDP. We also observed that the PDP in Lagos, using a front of mainly traders and Igbo groups, has been boasting lousily of having millions of PVCs to execute its wonky dream.
“With the raging PDP frantic effort to stop the use of card readers to verify the authenticity of voter cards on election day, it is now clear to us that the PDP has been busy cloning voter cards and using voters PIN numbers to hack cards it intends to use to rig the 2015 election.
“It is now clearly obvious that in launching a brazen attack on the APC and raising the false claim that the APC was cloning cards, the DSS was providing covers for the PDP to clone millions of cards with which it hopes to rig the 2015 election, hence such diversionary trick by the PDP’s DSS.
“We challenge PDP to disprove this fact that now dustbins its deadly campaign for the stoppage of the use of card readers, which stands to unearth its rigging strategy this time around. If this is not the case, pray what harm do the card readers stand to inflict solely on the PDP? Why is it frantically trying to stop a device that will detect stolen and cloned voter cards, if it had not stolen enough cards and cloned millions of fake cards all over the country for the purpose of manipulating the 2015 elections?
“PDP is desperate as it continually runs out of dubious schemes to continue remaining in power and as Nigerians continue to suffer irreparably from PDP’s corrupt use of power to dehumanise and traumatise them. No one is deceived by PDP’s latest antics, but Nigerians must insist on free and credible election as an irreducible minimum for leadership selection.
“Card readers must be used in the coming election as a means of stopping such electoral frauds as stealing and cloning of voter cards, which PDP excels in.”

Card reader: PDP’s opposition proved us right, says APC

Lai Mohammed

THE Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) opposition to use of card readers in the rescheduled elections has proved the All Progressives Congress (APC) accusations right that the ruling party is trying to either prevent the polls from holding or to rig it.
APC’s National Publicity Secretary Alhaji Lai Mohammed, who said this in a statement in Lagos yesterday, added that it was curious that the PDP rushed to the media to deny the allegations and then quickly turned around to confirm them.
The statement reads: “At the press conference we addressed on Wednesday, which rattled the PDP and the Jonathan administration so much, we listed the conditionalities of the PDP/Jonathan administration for holding the election: no Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), no card readers, no Prof. Attahiru Jega and the fact that they want the military deployed to harass and intimidate voters.
‘’We mentioned ‘card readers’ at least three times during the press conference, and said they (PDP/Jonathan administration) are doing everything possible to sabotage the machine and prevent its use.
‘’Both the spokesmen for the PDP and the Jonathan Campaign Organisation rushed to the press to deny any such ‘reprehensible’ plan. But a few hours later, the spokesman for the campaign organisation told an incredulous country that they would oppose the use of card reader, apparently after the spokesmen were overruled by their party.
“Obviously, these men are outsiders in their own party and it is now obvious that the opposition knows more about the inner workings of their party than they do.”
APC said in an apparently-choreographed show, some 15 portfolio political parties called a news conference to also announce that they will oppose use of the card reader, vowing to boycott the elections and use a legal process to prevent use of the machine.
The party noted that the syndicated threats were the latest indications of the mortal fear in the corridors of power about the machine that had now become the nemesis of election riggers and manipulators worldwide.
Contrary to the claim by the PDP, the APC noted that Nigerians were ready for free, fair and credible elections to be made possible by the use of the card reader, adding that the citizenry would massively resist any move to dump the machine.
“Nigerians have sacrificed all they can to obtain their PVCs, which are now their most-prized possession. They have also hailed the plan by INEC to use the card reader to give Nigeria credible polls.
“Only dishonest politicians, those who plan to rig, those who have engaged in a massive purchase of PVCs and those who have something to hide are opposed to use of the machine.
“For the avoidance of doubt, our party is ready for any tool, including the card reader, that will ensure that the votes of Nigerians will count in the election. In this regard, we sincerely hope that the nationwide tests of the card reader to be carried out this week by INEC will not be sabotaged by those opposed to the machine.
“The card reader has been demonstrated to work, including at the Senate, and no one must come out to tell Nigerians anything to the contrary.
“The huge investments in providing PVCs for Nigerians will not be worthwhile if the cards would not be authenticated by card readers, which, by the way, have been used in other countries, all of them less endowed than Nigeria, in Africa,” APC said.
It added that it was taking the elections very serious and closely monitoring every move of those who do not want the elections to hold, “or if they must hold at all, only on their terms”.
The statement noted that the APC was aware of an all-night meeting (Wednesday/Thursday) between a Southwest governor and security chiefs on how to rig the rescheduled polls in the geo-political zone. But, the party said it remained convinced that no one was powerful enough to stop an idea, whose time has come.
APC thanked Nigerians, both within and outside the government, for their efforts in keeping a close eye on those planning to sabotage the polls, imploring the citizenry not to relent “since eternal vigilance is the price of freedom”.

‘Afenifere’s endorsement of Jonathan won’t stand’

Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG)

In this piece, a group – Concerned Yoruba – rejects the endorsement of President Goodluck Jonathan’s second term bid by a faction of the pan-Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere. Spokesmen for the group Felix Adenaike, Adetowo Aderemi,   Tokunbo Ajasin and Kayode Oyediran counsel their kinsmen from the Southwest to vote wisely during the elections. 
On Thursday, 26th February, 2015 a group of persons described in the media as “eminent leaders of thought in Yoruba land” met in lbadan at what they called the second post-national conference summit. It was convened by the Ondo State Governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, who was the convener of the first “summit” in Akure a week earlier. Advertisements of both events in the dailies had indicated that attendance was strictly by invitation, and subsequent reports showed great overlap in the list of those who attended both events.
Dr. Mimiko is reported to have described the lbadan “summit” as” – a pan-Yoruba forum with all political tendencies in attendance”. That claim is clearly false because several groups in Yoruba land have since issued disclaimers as we do now. Moreover it is common knowledge that the All Progressive Congress (APC) – for which we are neither representatives nor spokespersons did not participate in the meetings. Having regard to the fact that the APC currently administers four of the six states in Yoruba land, the description of the meetings as” summit” is very presumptuous, misleading and delusional.
  
The lbadan “summit” is reported to have declared that every Yoruba son and daughter should vote for President Goodluck Jonathan” in the ire lightened self-interest”. In earlier statements some of the participant s had urged the Yoruba to support Jonathan in order to avoid” making a big mistake and digging their own graves”. The Chairman of the “summit” and leader of a faction of the Afenifere, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, said the decision to support President Jonathan was taken to ensure that the report of the 2014 National Conference was implemented, and because Jonathan was committed to the restructuring of the country through the implementation of the confab’s report. Chief Olu Falae, Chairman of the Yoruba delegation at the confab, said: “Throughout the conference, Jonathan did not try to teleguide us. He said he will implement the report of the conference in the first year of his second term of office”. The Minister of State, Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Chief Olajumoke Akinjide said President Jonathan had already started implementing the report of the confab by setting- up an inter- ministerial committee of which she was a member representing the Southwest Region.
Thus, in his sixth year in office as President, Jonathan set-up a national conference, but more than six months after receiving the report of the confab, the only action he has taken on its implementation is to establish an inter – ministerial committee – to do exactly what? He gave Falae and others an assurance that he would implement the report in the first year of his second term – even though the elections are yet to be held and he has not publicly made implementation of the confab report a campaign issue. Clearly, this is selling the Yoruba a dummy (won nfi obo lo Yoruba). It is curious and disappointing that participants at the “summit” have eagerly bought the dummy. We are confident that the vast majority of the Yoruba will not agree to be taken for a ride. The position of the summiteers on this matter is made more curious by Chief Falae’s statement at the meeting that, in 2007, he personally raised N20 million to support Buhari’s Presidential campaign because of Buhari’s promise to convoke a national conference if elected. As it happened,  Gen Buhari did not win that election, but it is instructive that his manifest of or the 2015 election includes a commitment to restructuring of the country and other important issues which are said to feature in the report of the 2014 confab. There is no such commitment in the PDP manifest to. It is obvious that, whereas over the years Buhari has maintained his position on this matter, those who claim to be “consistent and principled” have withdrawn the strong support they gave him in 2007, and have deserted him for a new bride. What could be responsible for this apparent abandonment of a bird in hand in order to chase after two in the forest?
There can be no doubt that restructuring is very important and desirable for the stability and survival of the country as one entity. However there are many other extant problems which are and have been militating against the welfare and development of Nigeria. Prominent among them are widespread endemic and pervasive corruption (which includes, but is not limited to stealing), a culture of impunity, and the debasement of the institutions that undergird the nation (including the police, judiciary, armed forces and so forth). These problems have worsened steadily during this Fourth Republic, particularly under the current administration. Our socio-cultural values have been steadily assaulted and, as it were, thrown out of the window. The best interests of the Yoruba-indeed of all Nigerians – dictate that the rot should be arrested and reversed before it is too late, and the country degenerates in to a banana republic governed by war-lords. This is the imperative change being sought.

Buhari my jailer is now our hope’

Buhari and Adefulu

A Lagos lawyer,  Adeyemi Adefulu, who was jailed by Gen. Muhammadu Buhari 30 years ago, says the former Head of State remains the country’s hope for change. Adefulu, a Member of the Federal Republic (MFR), believes Gen. Buhari  is on a rescue mission.
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 the 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, Tinuoye Shoneyin, an engineer, 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. Shoneyin had, as a matter of courtesy, responded to the invitation of the government of Ogun State, then led by Col Oladipo Diya, who later became the deputy to Gen. Sani Abacha(the late Head of State), 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 Gen 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 Col 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 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 task-master, 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.
In jail for 18 months
I was in the gulag for 18 months, 16 of which I 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 I could succinctly explain every transaction I 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 I 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 the late 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 I be part of such villainy. In any case, unless I wanted to become a liar, such incriminating evidence did not exist except in the figment of Diya’s convoluted imagination. The late 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, I still hold in the highest regard.
Time heals
Genevieve Magazine 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 I received for a job to which I 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, I was. The knowledge that I had served with the very best of my ability in a job I truly enjoyed, gave me peace of mind and assurance. The open and vocal agitation of many well-meaning citizens, including Prof Wole Soyinka, for my release was an act of grace for which I will forever be grateful. The only time I 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, I 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 I 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 I was finally released, I was in hospital where I 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 I had always wanted to do. I thought it was my life’s mission and when the opportunity came I did the work as if my life depended on it. I left a lucrative practice to serve my people. I was totally accountable, yet I was unfairly thrown into jail for no just cause for 18 months!
Our nation’s survival first
That was many years ago and since I have focused on re-building my life and raising my family. I have prayed and tried hard to forgive my unjust tormentors but I 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, I 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 characterised 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 real politik has made me take another look at Gen 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?
Jonathan, a disappointment
To me, President Jonathan has been such a disappointment in many critical areas of our national life. There has been unprecedented violence and bloodletting 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 plane-loads 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 among others. 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 subsidised 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 dislocation ahead, beyond what we already have.

Buhari means well

These are the reasons why I 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 I 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 Gen 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 Prof Yemi Osinbajo, for a Vice President gave me the assurance that Gen 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 i 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 I 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 among others – 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, Gen 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 vocalise an apology and offer some succour to people like me whom his government brutalised 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, i have thrown in my hat with Gen. Buhari. So has Lola Shoneyin’s father. Now 87, but still spritely and alert, my big brother and comrade, 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.
 

Boko Haram kills 68 in Borno village

Boko Haram

Suspected Boko Haram gunmen shot dead and slit the throats of 68 people — including children — in an attack on a village in Borno state, according to survivors and vigilante sources, the CNN reported yesterday.
The attackers then burnt down the entire village of Njaba, the sources said.
Dozens of gunmen invaded the remote northeastern village before dawn on Tuesday, singling out boys and girls between the ages of 13 and 19 and killing them alongside their parents, witnesses said.
Njaba village lies about 65 kilometres south of Maiduguri, the Borno State capital. Karimu Lawani, who escaped to Maiduguri after hiding with eight other people behind the barn of a neighbor, said the attackers came into the village at around 5 a.m.
“They shot dead anyone that tried to flee but spared children younger than 13 years old,” Lawani said.
He and other survivors counted the victims of the massacre before leaving the village some hours later.
His account was s

Ex-CDS Agwai to military: stay off partisan politics

Gen. Martin Luther Agwai

From a former Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Gen. Martin Luther Agwai to the military: don’t dabble in partisan politics.
According to him, the military should target an effective way to tackle the security challenges facing the nation.
The military has been at the centre of discussion after some of its officers and men were allegedly used by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to rig the June 2014 governorship election in Ekiti State.
An audio recording of a session where the rigging plans were being fine-tuned by some PDP chieftains with Brig. Gen. Aliyu Momoh was released by Capt. Sagir Koli.
The Court of Appeal has also reled that the military should have no role in the organization of elections after the polls in Osun, Edo, Ondo were militarized.
Gen. Agwai spoke yesterday in a lecture he delivered to mark ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s 78th birthday in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.

It’ll be tougher to win now, says Jonathan

Jonathan AFP

President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday maintained that he deserves the votes of Nigerians as his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP),  has done well in many sectors in the last four years.
Dr. Jonathan was answering questions on an  African Independent Television (AIT) programme, Kaakaki.
Stressing that PDP still has the most formidable structure among the political parties,  he said he was not worried about the possible outcome of the forthcoming presidential electon.
He said: “I believe Nigerians should vote for me and I want Nigerians to vote for me because we have done well. Sometimes, as a government, we are busy working and we don’t advertise what we have done.”
“Sometimes, it appears not much (is done). Nigeria is a very big country…If you assess what we have done in a number of areas, we have done quite well and I believe that if Nigeria is linking up to where we were before and what we have done over these four years of government, they will want us to continue to make sure we at least complete some of the ongoing programmes.”
“We believe that in several areas, we have tried and we are working very well and if encouraged in the next four years, at least Nigeria will be able to stabilise in various sectors.”

NNPC to repair refineries with $550m

Dr. Tim Okon

The Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) of the nation’s refineries will cost $550million, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said yesterday.
The corporation blamed the TAM’s delay on the refusal of the original builders of the  four refineries to handle the maintenance contracts.
There are two refineries in Port Harcourt, one in Kaduna and another in Warri. They are all working below capacity, unable to meet the consumption demands of Nigerians.
The Coordinator,  Corporate Planning, and Strategy of the NNPC,  Dr. Tim Okon, told the Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream), in Abuja while defending the budget proposal of the corporation, that the NNPC had worked out an alternative local arrangement that  would enable it refine about 400,000 barrels of crude oil daily after the completion of ongoing rehabilitation.
Okon, in company with the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mr. Joseph Dawah, told the Senators that the corporation could not afford the exorbitant bills for their TAM from the original builders.
Okon said when the

‘Boko Haram using Chibok girls as Shekau’s shield’

Alex Badeh

Troops have not carried out aerial bombardment of Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau’s hideout because the sect is using the Chibok girls as shield, it was learnt yesterday.
Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh, on Wednesday visited Chad to seek clarifications on some issues and map out plans with multi-national force on what a source described as the final onslaught against Boko Haram.
The military source, who spoke in confidence with our correspondent, said Shekau and some members of his Shura Committee – the sect’s highest policy making body -  had been shuttling between  Sambisa Forest and strategic locations, such as Gwoza and Bama.
The Chadian President, Idris Deby said Shekau’s convoy was sighted in Dikwa on Tuesday.
But the military source explained that Shekau has a strong base in Gwoza with a special armoured tank.

The leader Nigeria needs now, by Obasanjo

Olusegun Obasanjo

Why is Nigeria so troubled? How do we resolve this country’s problems?
These were some of the questions yesterday at an intellectual exercise to mark former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s 78th birthday.
Two distinguished citizens  – former Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Martin Luther Agwai and National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion Director-General Dr. Umar Bindiri – tackled the topics of the day.
But it was Obasanjo himself who summed it all up. The problem, according to him, is leadership.
The lectures were delivered at his Presidential Library in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.
The former president, who praised his guests for coming to honour him, reiterated that his loyalty to the country comes first and cannot be undermined.

We shall pay Keshi N5m per month – Minister, NFF

Minister of Sports and Youth Development, Dr. Tamuno Danagogo, and the President of the Nigerian Football Federation,  Mr. Amadju Pinnick, said in Abuja on Friday that  arrangement had been concluded to re-engage Mr. Stephen Keshi as the Super Eagles coach.
They said the contracts details, which included his N5m monthly salary and other mouth watery incentives, had been communicated to him.
The duo,  who stated this when they appeared before the Senate Committee on Sports to defend their 2015 budget, expressed optimism that Keshi would get back to the sports ministry within the next two weeks to resume work.

Sports get N6.7bn allocation for 2015

The Federal Government has allocated N6.7bn to the Sports sector for the 2015 fiscal year.
This information was obtained by the News Agency of Nigeria in Abuja on Friday during the budget defence for 2015 at the Senate Sports Committee.
NAN reports that this followed a downward review of N11bn proposal for the sports sector. It showed that the National Sports Commission got a separate allocation of N4.94bn.
Chairman, Senate Committee on Sports, Senator Adamu Gumba, urged the NSC and its affiliates, to work according to the envelope given to them by the Federal Government.
“For 2015, you have received a new envelop and we want you to go back and rework your budget according to this allocation and submit it to us tomorrow,” Gumba said.
He noted that the downward review of the 2015 budget was due to the fall of crude oil at the international market, which had affected the country.

S’Sudan peace talks suspended indefinitely

Peace talks between the two warring parties in South Sudan have been suspended indefinitely.
President Salva Kiir and his rival, rebel leader and former vice president, Riek Machar, had been meeting in Ethiopia since Tuesday, but the talks were adjourned on Friday with no peace agreement in place.
No further meetings have been scheduled.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said in a statement on Friday that he regretted “the talks did not produce the necessary breakthrough”, adding that the failure was disappointing for mediators and observers who had tried their best to urge the warring factions to make concessions for peace.
“The consequences of inaction are the continued suffering of you, the people of South Sudan, and the prolonging of a senseless war in your country,” the statement said. “This is unacceptable, both morally and politically.”
Fighting erupted in December 2013 after a political dispute in which Kiir sacked Machar. 
The fighting has killed more than 10,000 people and driven more than 1.5 million from their homes. The conflict runs along ethnic rifts that pre-date independence.