Monday 1 October 2012

“Nobody is more qualified to be president of Nigeria than an Igbo man” – Kalu


Former governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu has said that those dismissing Igbo’s dream of becoming president in 2015 are insulting them.
He reiterated his earlier position that the best thing that would ever happen to Nigeria as a nation is for an Igbo man to take over the leadership of the country.
The former governor said this in a reaction to a statement credited to the northern political group, Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) that Igbo should forget about 2015 presidential dream.
He told the zonal leadership of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), in his country home, Igbere, Abia State that it is Igbo or nothing is 2015.
He called on Ndigbo to get ready to spearhead the affairs of the nation in 2015.
Said he: “The country is troubled because the God anointed people are not there yet, until they take over the mantle of leadership, Nigeria will not have a pride of place in the world; we have no pride of place, we go to the United Nations we look like a rat, we go to European Union we look like a rat, we go to comity of the world leaders we look as if Nigeria is not speaking. “Forty eight years after the civil war, it is an insult for somebody to tell you that Igbos cannot be president.
“If all these tribes can be president, who among them is more qualified than an Igbo man. We are the salt of this nation; we are the best things that happened to this nation. Anything good comes from the East and we are the genuine Easterners; unless we rule this country the country will never be okay.”
OUK as followers would call him 52 years after Independence, Nigeria is still yet to get it right.
He said: “It has also been shown that those who boot-lick presidents in Nigeria since independence never do well; they don’t even tar the roads, they don’t give free education, they do nothing to salvage their states because they believed the president is their boss; if the president asks them to go and put their house on fire they will go and do it, which I feel is not in consonance with democratic concept. “We have enough as a country to feed our 200 million people; we have enough in human and material resources to make our roads better. People are not being given what they bargained for because they are not genuinely elected; these results are written, supported by the army and the police, these people are shameless.”
He assured that he’s ready to eliminate election rigging out of the country. “They will never do it again. It is going to be one man, one vote and no army man will carry any ballot box again in Igboland or in Nigeria, we will not accept that. It will not happen again. Even if he is general to heaven, we will fight him and fight his whole family. If they do what is unconstitutional, we will repeat what will be unconstitutional too because that is the only way we are going to check this rubbish.”
He lamented that: “People of our area, leaders of Igbo people have turned to perpetual liars. Government rule now on television, on radio and on propaganda. You cannot say you are good Leave the people who are being governed to say who is good or is right.”
DailyPost

President Jonathan lied in Independence anniversary broadcast


President Jonathan lied that Transparency International has endorsed and commended his administration’s war against corruption.
President Goodluck Jonathan lied to the world in his Independence Day anniversary speech about gains his administration has made in the fight against corruption, a PREMIUM TIMES investigation has revealed.
In what appears to be a major credibility stunt, President Jonathan read a speech in which he scored his government high on all sides.
In order to make his good performance appear holistic, the president included in his speech that global corruption watchdog, Transparency International, has endorsed and praised his administration’s war against corruption.
Mr. Jonathan’s words: “…the fight against the scourge of corruption is a top priority of our administration.
“We are fighting corruption in all facets of our economy, and we are succeeding. We have put an end to several decades of endemic corruption associated with fertilizer and tractor procurement and distribution.  We have exposed decades of scam in the management of pensions and fuel subsidy, and ensured that the culprits are being brought to book,” he added.
To give his claims international credibility, the presidents then said: “In its latest report, Transparency International (TI) noted that Nigeria is the second most improved country in the effort to curb corruption.”
The lie
PREMIUM TIMES contacted Transparency International seeking a copy of its latest report which the President referred to in his speech.
The group replied promptly disowning Mr. Jonathan and saying it had no such report.
“Transparency International does not have a recent rating or report that places Nigeria as the second most improved country in the fight against corruption,” the group said in an email to this newspaper.
The group said its most recent indexing of Nigeria’s corruption activities was in the 2011 Corruption Perceptions Index, which measured perceived level of public sector corruption in the country.
In that index, Nigeria scored 2.4 on a scale where 0 means highly corrupt and 10 means very clean. It was ranked 143 out of 183 countries.
That rating was actually a dip in performance for Nigeria as the country was rated 134 out of 183 countries the previous year, 2010.
The president’s spokesperson would not comment for this story. The Special Adviser on Media, Reuben Abati as well as the Special Assistant on Public Affairs, Doyin Okupe, did not answer or return calls.
They also did not reply text messages sent to their telephones.
Corruption cases Jonathan ignores
Since resuming office in 2010, President Jonathan is believed not to have shown vigour in the fight against corruption – including corruption involving past and current actors in his administration. The tipping point in the president’s profile, regarding reluctance in promoting transparency, came when, in his last media chat, he scoffed at a question on why he had not publicly declared his asset. On live television, the president snapped “I don’t give a damn!”
The petroleum minister, Diezani Madueke, a close ally of the president, has heaps of established corruption allegations against her, but none has been investigated by Mr. Jonathan’s administration; while she still remains in office as one of the favorite ministers.
In August 2011, President Goodluck Jonathan secretly ordered the payment of $155 million to Malabu oil, a firm owned by an ex-convict and former petroleum minister, Dan Etete. Not only was the payment done without the knowledge of the Finance Minister, as revealed by PREMIUM TIMES, Malabu transferred the money into dubious accounts including that owned by a man with links to Mr. Jonathan. Both the Senate and the House of Representatives have agreed to investigate the Malabu scandal.
Two members of the President’s cabinet, Godsday Orubebe and Stella Oduah, illegally registered an NGO, Neighbour to Neighbour, on whose board they sit, and which they then used in campaigning for the President’s election; in contravention of CAC registration guidelines and the CAMA Act. The presidency has kept mum on this.
There have been several cases of visitors to the Presidential Villa being given huge sums of money after their visits. The Save Nigeria Group was offered $30 thousand, and the Northern elders N20 million; both groups rejected the cash gifts given to them by the presidency.
There are also mounts of corruption cases involving government officials, politicians and ‘friends of the government’ that have been lingering for years while perpetrators roam free.
 PremiumTimes

Boko Haram Claims ‘Abu Qaqa’ Still Alive; Sect Plans To Attack Wives Of Nigerian Officials



Leader of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, said in a YouTube message today that the sect’s spokesman, Abu Qaqa, is still alive.

In a short video in Hausa language, Shekau claimed that 10 wives of Boko Haram members are currently being detained by Nigerian officials, an action he described as “demeaning,” and threatened a round of reprisals on wives of government officials.

In the video, the Boko Haram leader also threatened violence by the group over a recent anti-Islam video which denigrates Prophet Mohammed.

Two weeks ago, Nigeria troops recently claimed they had killed some senior commanders of Boko Haram near Kano and arrested others.  One of those reportedly killed was Qaqa.

Previously, last February, the JTF also claimed it had arrested Qaqa, but the Boko Haram leadership denied the announcement, insisting that the man under arrest was not Qaqa but Abu Darda, who was identified as the head of the group’s enlightenment committee.

“Qaqa” continued to speak for the group until last month when he was said to have been killed or arrested.  Nothing has been heard from him since then, and his status remains unclear.

Today’s announcement by Shekau is another challenge to the intelligence-management abilities of the Nigerian government and its Joint Task Force, which has been conducting unprecedented operations in some States in the North in the past two weeks.
Saharareporeters

Independence52 Shocker: Bayelsa governor immortalises ex-convict Alamieyeseigha and late dictator Abacha

by Stanley Azuakola

It is this kind of news that one hears, sighs, and concludes that there’s something fundamentally wrong with Nigeria.
Bayelsa’s increasingly controversial governor, Seriake Dickson, announced this morning in a statewide broadcast that he will honour both ex-governor Diepriye Alamieyeseigha and ex-military dictator, Sani Abacha.
Alamieyeseigha, the ex-governor under whom President Jonathan served as deputy is also an ex-convict who has been indicted of corrupt activities in both England and the United States. Under this dispensation of President Jonathan, Alamieyeseigha is being gradually resurrected, especially in the ruling Peoples Democratic Party where he chairs the Elders Council and played an advisory role in the Goodluck 2011 campaign.
Seriake Dickson said in the broadcast that the ex-governor will be honoured for his “commitment to the Ijaw struggle”. The honour for Alamieyeseigha includes the naming of an auditorium in the Ijaw National Congress, INC, secretariat, built by the state, after Alamieyeseigha, who was the first civilian governor of the state.
Bayelsa was created 16 years ago today, when Gen. Sani Abachi in a national broadcast announced its creation from the old Rivers State. For that singular act, the Dickson administration has decided to immortalise the late dictator. Abacha, during whose tenure, Nigeria experienced unprecedented brutality, who has been indicted of looting Nigeria’s treasury and from whom billions of dollar have been recovered.
Abacha would have a 150-duplex housing complex named after him. Also, the state government, in partnership with the INC, also named the main auditorium of the INC secretariat after the dictator. Furthermore, a memorial tree would also be planted in honour of Abacha.
Gov. Dickson is gradually making a name for himself as a controversy loving governor. Shortly after assuming office, he appointed the president’s wife, Dame Patience Jonathan as permanent secretary in the state, a decision which was met by raised eyebrows by most citizens.
Some people have questioned the governor’s Independence announcement, saying it is a ploy to divert attention away from his health situation, which reports say is deteriorating.
He only just returned on Sunday from a foreign trip, ostensibly to “woo foreign investors,” but reports say he travelled for health reasons.
The governor has, however, denied being ill.
YNaija.com

Chinua Achebe: Nigeria is neither my mother nor my father, Nigeria is a child #Indepedence52


But it has occurred to me that Nigeria is neither my mother nor my father. Nigeria is a child. Gifted, enormously talented, prodigiously endowed and incredibly wayward.
Nigerian nationality was for me and my generation an acquired taste – like cheese. Or better still, like ballroom dancing. Not dancing per se, for that came naturally; but this titillating version of slow-slow-quick-quick-slow performed in close body contact with a female against a strange, elusive beat. I found, however, that once I had overcome my initial awkwardness I could do it pretty well.
Perhaps these irreverent analogies would only occur to someone like me, born into a strongly multiethnic, multi lingual, multireligious, somewhat chaotic colonial situation. The first passport I ever carried described me as a “British Protected Person”, an unexciting identity embodied in a phrase that no one was likely to die for. I don’t mean it was entirely devoid of emotive meaning. After all, “British” meant you were located somewhere in the flaming red portion of the world map, a quarter of the entire globe in those days and called “the British Empire, where the sun never sets”. It had a good ring to it in my childhood ears – a magical fraternity, vague but vicariously glorious.
My earliest awareness in the town of Ogidi did not include any of that British stuff, nor indeed the Nigerian stuff. That came with progress in school. Ogidi is one of a thousand or more “towns” that make up the Igbo nation, one of Nigeria’s (indeed Africa’s) largest ethnic groups. But the Igbo, numbering more than 10 million, are a curious “nation”. They have been called names such as “stateless” or “acephalous” by anthropologists; “argumentative” by those sent to administer them. But what the Igbo are is not the negative suggested by such descriptions but strongly, positively, in favour of small-scale political organisation so that (as they would say) every man’s eye would reach where things are happening. So every one of the thousand towns was a mini-state with complete jurisdiction over its affairs. A sense of civic attachment to their numerous towns was more real for precolonial Igbo people than any unitary pan-Igbo feeling. This made them notoriously difficult to govern centrally, as the British discovered but never appreciated nor quite forgave. Their dislike was demonstrated during the Biafran tragedy, when they accused the Igbo of threatening to break up a nation-state they had carefully and laboriously put together.
The paradox of Biafra was that the Igbo themselves had originally championed the Nigerian nation more spiritedly than other Nigerians. One proof of this: the British had thrown more of them into jail for sedition than any others during the two decades or so of pre-independence agitation and troublemaking. So the Igbo were second to none on the nationalist front when Britain finally conceded independence to Nigeria in 1960, a move that, in retrospect, seems like a masterstroke of tactical withdrawal to achieve a supreme strategic advantage.
At the time we were proud of what we had just achieved. True, Ghana had beaten us to it by three years, but then Ghana was a tiny affair, easy to manage, compared to the huge lumbering giant called Nigeria. We did not have to be vociferous like Ghana; just our presence was enough. Indeed, the elephant was our national emblem; our airline’s was the flying elephant! Nigerian troops soon distinguished themselves in a big way in the United Nations peacekeeping efforts in the Congo. Our elephant, defying aerodynamics, was flying.
Travelling as a Nigerian was exciting. People listened to us. Our money was worth more than the dollar. In 1961 when the driver of a bus in the British colony of Northern Rhodesia asked me what I was doing sitting in the front of the bus, I told him nonchalantly that I was going to Victoria Falls. In amazement he stooped lower and asked where I came from. I replied, even more casually: “Nigeria, if you must know; and, by the way, in Nigeria we sit where we like in the bus.”
Back home I took up the rather important position of director of external broadcasting, an entirely new radio service aimed primarily at our African neighbours. I could do it in those days, because our politicians had yet to learn the uses of information control and did not immediately attempt to regiment our output. They were learning fast, though. But before I could get enmeshed in that, something much nastier had seized hold of all of us.
The six-year-old Nigerian federation was falling apart from the severe strain of regional animosity and ineffectual central authority. The transparent failure of the electoral process to translate the will of the electorate into recognisable results at the polls led to mass frustration and violence. While western Nigeria, one of the four regions, was going up literally in flames, the quiet and dignified Nigerian prime minister was hosting a Commonwealth conference to extricate Harold Wilson from a mess he had got himself into in faraway Rhodesia. But so tense was the local situation that the visiting heads of government had to be airlifted by helicopter from the Lagos airport into a secluded suburb to avoid the rampaging crowds.
Nigeria’s first military coup took place even as those dignitaries were flying out of Lagos again at the end of their conference. One of them, Archbishop Makarios of Cyprus, was in fact still in the country.
The prime minister and two regional premiers were killed by the coup-makers. In the bitter, suspicious atmosphere of the time, a naively idealistic coup proved a terrible disaster. It was interpreted with plausibility as a plot by the ambitious Igbo of the east to take control of Nigeria. Six months later, northern officers carried out a revenge coup in which they killed Igbo officers and men in large numbers. If it had ended there, the matter might have been seen as a tragic interlude in nation building, a horrendous tit for tat. But the northerners turned on Igbo civilians living in the north and unleashed waves of brutal massacres, which Colin Legum of the Observer was the first to describe as a pogrom. It was estimated that 30,000 civilian men, women and children died in these massacres. Igbos were fleeing in hundreds of thousands from all parts of Nigeria to their homeland in the east.
I was one of the last to flee from Lagos. I simply could not bring myself quickly enough to accept that I could no longer live in my nation’s capital, although the facts clearly said so. One Sunday morning I was telephoned from Broadcasting House and informed that armed soldiers who appeared drunk had come looking for me to test which was stronger, my pen or their gun.
The offence of my pen was that it had written a novel called A Man of the People, a bitter satire on political corruption in an African country that resembled Nigeria. I wanted the novel to be a denunciation of the kind of independence that people were experiencing in postcolonial Nigeria and many other countries in the 1960s, and I intended it to scare my countrymen into good behaviour with a frightening cautionary tale. The best monster I could come up with was a military coup d’état, which every sane Nigerian at the time knew was rather far-fetched. But life and art had got so entangled that season that the publication of the novel and Nigeria’s first military coup happened within two days of each other.
Critics abroad called me a prophet, but some of my countrymen saw it differently: my novel was proof of my complicity in the first coup.
I was very lucky that Sunday morning. The drunken soldiers, after leaving Broadcasting House, went to a residence I had recently vacated. Meanwhile I was able to take my wife and two small children into hiding, from where I finally sent them to my ancestral home in eastern Nigeria. A week or two later, unknown callers asked for me on the telephone at my hideout. My host denied my presence. It was time then to leave Lagos.
My feeling was one of profound disappointment. Not because mobs were hunting down and killing in the most savage manner innocent civilians in many parts of northern Nigeria, but because the federal government sat by and let it happen. The final consequence of this failure of the state to fulfil its primary obligation to its citizens was the secession of eastern Nigeria as the Republic of Biafra. The demise of Nigeria at that point was averted only by Britain’s spirited diplomatic and military support of its model colony. It was Britain and the Soviet Union that together crushed the upstart Biafran state. At the end of the 30-month war, Biafra was a vast smouldering rubble. The cost in human lives was a staggering two million souls, making it one of the bloodiest civil wars in human history.
I found it difficult to forgive Nigeria and my countrymen and women for the political nonchalance and cruelty that unleashed upon us these terrible events, which set us back a whole generation and robbed us of the chance, clearly within our grasp, to become a medium-rank developed nation in the 20th century.
My immediate response was to leave Nigeria at the end of the war, having honourably, I hoped, stayed around long enough to receive whatever retribution might be due to me for renouncing Nigeria for 30 months. Fortunately the federal government proclaimed a general amnesty, and the only punishment I received was the general financial and emotional indemnity that war losers pay, and some relatively minor personal harassment. I went abroad to New England, to the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and stayed four years and then another year at the University of Connecticut. It was by far my longest exile from Nigeria and it gave me time to reflect and to heal somewhat. Without setting out consciously to do so, I was redefining my relationship to Nigeria. I realised that I could not reject her, but neither could it be business as usual. What was Nigeria to me?
Our 1960 national anthem, given to us as a parting gift by a British housewife in England, had called Nigeria “our sovereign motherland”. The current anthem, put together by a committee of Nigerian intellectuals and actually worse than the first one, invokes the father image. But it has occurred to me that Nigeria is neither my mother nor my father. Nigeria is a child. Gifted, enormously talented, prodigiously endowed and incredibly wayward.
Being a Nigerian is abysmally frustrating and unbelievably exciting. I have said somewhere that in my next reincarnation I want to be a Nigerian again; but I have also, in a rather angry book called The Trouble with Nigeria, dismissed Nigerian travel advertisements with the suggestion that only a tourist with a kinky addiction to self-flagellation would pick Nigeria for a holiday. And I mean both.
Nigeria needs help. Nigerians have their work cut out for them – to coax this unruly child along the path of useful creative development. We are the parents of Nigeria, not vice versa. A generation will come, if we do our work patiently and well – and given luck – a generation that will call Nigeria father or mother. But not yet.
Meanwhile our present work is not entirely without its blessing and reward. This wayward child can show now and again great intimations of affection. I have seen this flow towards me at certain critical moments.
When I was in America after the Biafran war, an army officer who sat on the council of my university in Nigeria as representative of the federal military government pressured the university to call me back home. This officer had fought in the field against my fellow Biafrans during the war and had been seriously wounded. He had every right to be bitter against people like me. I had never met him, but he knew my work and was himself a poet.
More recently, after a motor accident in 2001 that left me with serious injuries, I have witnessed an outflow of affection from Nigerians at every level. I am still dumbfounded by it. The hard words Nigeria and I have said to each other begin to look like words of anxious love, not hate. Nigeria is a country where nobody can wake up in the morning and ask: what can I do now? There is work for all.
YNaija.com

CDMA operators must adjust technology to survive — Ericsson Nigeria boss


While Code Division Multiple Access operators are currently engaged in merger talks that will produce a new entity to be called CAPCOM with $200m fresh investment, the Country Manager, Ericsson Nigeria, Mr. Kamar Abass, says chances are bright but warns that they must adjust their technology to ensure survival. He spoke with DAYO OKETOLA
Do you think the Nigerian mobile money initiative could be successful?
Of course I do and let us look at the evidence. There are, today, roughly 100 million mobile customers in Nigeria and that level of adoption would have been impossible for anyone to predict 20 years or even may be 10 years ago. I myself did a study here around 2007 when the number of customers in this market was at 60 million and I was thinking at that time, together with the analysts who worked with me, that we were close to saturation point  but the market does keep growing. Really, it’s hard to predict the ways in which technology will evolve and the problem is that  most people look at things in terms of a straight line rather than examine the enablers that will give growth to this market and I think the enablers are: the presence of so many customers, the reality of the banking sector in Nigeria and the way it is changing. There is very strong likelihood that you will see multiple new layers of technology such as fibre, much cheaper smartphones and mobile operators which have got big networks that they wish to fill plus of course, the reality of the unbanked community.
So my sense is that these are all enablers but we still got to do a lot of work. We’ve got to help the operators and the regulators understand the art of what is possible and let, together, bring the Nigerian dimension to it and that means it appeals to the particular needs of the Nigerian people, their particular idiosyncrasies, and the way they like to do business and I think we will begin to see the market take off.

This is of course in  the domain of the operators. The operators themselves have got to create the ultimate proposition but what we will do very very well is to bring the knowledge of key success factors. And one of them is the simplicity of the applications, the simplicity of the user interface, the things that customers see and the ability for them to be very friendly and support usage. When we were a partner with Sony in SonyEricsson, one of the very well established facts was that the SonyEricsson firm generated more income than others because of the interface. The interface is really what is required and what we will do is bring our experience and we will also work with operators to get the message out there. We have to entrench  m-commerce and m-payment in Nigeria not only in the area of policy but policy direction.
My sense is that many Nigerians will value the opportunity for a secure method of payment, one that is less vulnerable to cash and one that gives them the ability of access to  a widest range of goods and services possible.  They will value that but we have got to do a lot of work to make sure that it is friendly to the users and its friendly in the regulatory, policy and commercial environment.
CDMA operators have been  struggling financially in the past five years and some of them are on the verge of merging.  What is the survival possibility and what is Ericsson doing to help them in the area of technology?
We have CDMA operator in America where it is working very well. I think the survival possibility for CDMA is very good. The problem,I think, is structure and they are now addressing the structure issue which is the problem with unified licences.  I, myself, was an advocate of the consolidation of the CDMA operators into one entity but the structural problem is that they were never really designed to compete with GSM companies. And therefore structurally, they never could really compete effectively but it seems to me that with Unified Licences, it’s now more possible and more feasible for them but they need to move technologies now. They need to move away from CDMA and move to a technology that gives the ability to meet the needs of consumers today, who are very much trained on the opportunities from wideband CDMA and ultimately LTE.
Are you saying there is a future for CDMA?
There is a future for them but they will need to adjust themselves a little. One is investment.
They are investing $200m, is that enough?
That is a good starting point.
What is Ericsson doing to help mobile operators in Nigeria migrate to Long Term Evolution technology?
We have got an enormous amount of experience with LTE globally. Of course, we are one of the first vendors to sell LTE technology to operators in America more than three years ago. So, we have got the expertise in LTE. LTE gives you the ability to do two things: to cover territories much more efficiently. And secondly, LTE gives you the ability to carry data much more efficiently. The spectra efficiency of LTE is many times that of 2G and that means that for any unit of spectrum, you can use that far  more efficiently and that is important to the operators’ landscape. In terms of number of operators, well, I will tell you this, in the UK, you’ve got a total population of 50 million and you’ve got four operators there. In Nigeria, and you’ve got three times of that in terms of population and twice that in terms of users. There is a significant opportunity for new services to generate a lot more business for these operators.  That is space and profit in the market place for new operators.
Some people are complaining that Ericsson is competing with local ICT companies in areas where they have capacity; which means that you are denying them of what they should benefit from the telecoms industry. What’s your take on this?
I am not sure that is totally true. In our case, we rely enormously on local services. If you look at our spending in this country, it is hundreds of millions of dollars every year. Of course, I am a Nigerian and that is another investment. My objective is to sponsor the development of Nigerians who can ultimately lead the business. We have got experts and the reality is that it’s not efficient for us to use expatriates. Predominantly, even a few experts cost a lot more money than  the locals would cost in terms of the support we have to give them for coming into this country.
Now, they bring valuable knowledge and the plan is to use them for a period for knowledge transfer and I am going to be sponsoring that.  One of the things I must do as well is to give our Ngerian market the opportunity to grow and give more opportunities to Nigerians. That means we must do more business with the operators by helping to transform them into the next generation of networks and the next generation of growth. We want to work with government to build smart cities so that there is the ability for everyone who wishes to communicate to do so without difficulties. We want to see data centres built up in Nigeria so you don’t have to continue to go offshore to host data. We will work with customers to create connections between those data centres. Data centres are just one single store here and there but you need connectivity to connect them. We will ensure that fibre and mobile can work together to exploit and access those data centres. We want to make sure that the experience of customers on mobile phones is acceptable so that you don’t have the drop calls that you have today. So, we’ve got technology that we are working with operators to help build into their networks. There is an opportunity to achieve a step change in the whole mobile networks system in Nigeria and that is what I want to try and foster.
Can LTE help Nigeria meet poor QoS challenges?
Because LTE gives you more spectra efficiency, operators can basically do more with less and I think it will be part of the solutions. The solution about quality of service is really about investment and optimisation of these networks. That is, proper investments and proper operational maintenance of those networks and  we are helping with investments in terms of helping operators with the technology they can invest in and we are providing expert services and resources that can help them.
How much do you think operators need to invest to finally and permanently tackle Qos challenge?
This is a contentious discussion because operators say they invest absolutely the right amount. This is an issue between the operators and their shareholders and we really should not comment on it. But one thing I can say is that there is a coverage deficit in relation to where operators say they want to be and there is a capacity deficit in relation to where operators themselves want to be. So, we are helping to make that journey and that is a significant shortfall but everybody knows that and understands that and are working towards improving the situation.
Nigeria is a very challenging environment to operate in. Even if operators were to have that money and are ready to spend it today, there are logistical challenges which mean that it is slower than what everyone will like.
Ericsson located a regional support centre in Ghana for West Africa last year at the expense of Nigeria. So, what will Nigeria benefit from Ericsson now that you are the boss and you are a Nigerian?
What we are planning for this market is to be able to be the best that we can be to the customers. And the key thing is that the customers do have a lot to say about where the centres are and  as we speak to the customers, we are asking them this question: how can we get you from where you are to the best possible place you want to be? That usually involves doing a lot of work helping them to operate and maintain their networks. The people who maintain these networks need to be based close to where the networks are. So, what we are saying to customers  is: let us work with you, let us do more for you with our expert resources,  let us put those resources together in a way that allow them to be shared and therefore efficiently managed in cost terms and then let us put that in Nigeria. If we can work with our customers, then we can implant those people in Nigeria. They don’t have to go anywhere else. If we are serving customers in Nigeria then they have to be in Nigeria and that is what we are trying to work towards.
BusinessNews

Nigeria at 52: Our checkered but significant history in focus


The multifaceted and checkered history of Nigeria is no doubt in question. Our history is obviously a mixture of oil and water; it is a mixture of rice and gravel, and until we are able to identify possible ways to ensure an effective separation of this mixture for a better future, we will remain stagnant like a hopeless pond waiting for the dry season. This is why on the 52nd anniversary of our independence; Dailypost has decided to treat you to a banquette of both the sweat and bitter memories of our history.
The Race for Independence
Chief Anthony Enahoro played a major role in the attainment of what we celebrate today. Apart from the motion he moved for self-actualization in 1953 as against 1959, he will also be remembered for his continuous fight against the then Military Head of states, General Abaja. This was the beginning of a nation’s journey towards independence. Even though the Nothern elders opposed this motion, their eyes were opened to the fact that independence was important. We cannot forget so easily and quickly to commend the fight of the West African Student’s Union ( WASU) which agitated for the independence of Ghana and Nigeria. The role of Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe towards the actualization of Nigerian independence cannot be over-emphasized. The Zikist movement gave Nigeria the needed hope that was going to take it across to the other side of the world (Independence) There would have been no better way to play with the green-white and green colour today without bringing back to memories the selfless struggle of Chief Obafemi Awolowo , and Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe. Of course, the job of the nationalists was never in vain as few years after their endless struggle, Nigeria was granted the right for self-determination.
According to Zik “I fought against British rule, because I honestly believed that it denied me and my people the basic freedoms and fundamental rights. At the material time, I believed, as I still do, that in normal times no man should impose his rule on any people unless he has been elected to do so at a free and fair election. It was an article of faith with me than an African citizen should enjoy individual freedom under the law.”
The Niger Delta Struggle
It is often said that a selfless leader does not live to reap from his own sweat; it’s completely true that most people who struggle for self-emancipation often leave the scene even before their time. This is because they also try to live above their time. Saro Wiwa was a dogged fighter who embarked on a gradual revolution on the pages of newspapers and other books. The late author, journalist, and writer challenged the many injustices done to the Niger Delta people through his pen which he considered was mightier than the sword. He was banned from attending a protest meeting scheduled to discuss the fate of the Niger Delta people in 1994. However, four elders were killed during the meeting. The ‘Right Livelihood Award’ winner was indicted by the then Head of States, General Sani Abacha. He was sentenced to death by hanging alongside eight others. Despite the intervention of the International Community, the late dictator, General Sani Abacha, sent him to his grave. He died a gallant fighter; fighting for the emancipation of the Niger-Delta people. The recent clamour by the Niger-Delta youth was an offshoot of what he started. On this day, and on the 52nd Independence anniversary, the nation’s flag cannot be hoisted better than refreshing your memories with Ken’s astute and dogged figure. His death put Nigeria in the spotlight, as the nation was suspended from the Common wealth in 1994.
Additionally, the struggle continued even after Ken Saro Wiwa had left the scene. Asari Dokubo mounted the podium in another campaign for the survival of the Niger –Delta people. Different anti-government groups emerged and kidnapping of oil workers became the order of the day. When the situation became unbearable for the government, the late Yar’Adua moved for a total reconciliation where the militants accepted to lay down their arms under the amnesty program. The success of the amnesty program of the late Yar’ Adua is something we need to reflect on today.
The Festival that shook the world:
 FESTAC ’77- There would have been no better day for a cultural revolution than on the 15thJanuary 1977 when the great art and cultural ensemble of Africans and African-Americans was held for one month in Nigeria. It was no doubt a classic art and cultural exhibition that brought people of all races and nationalities to what is today known as FESTAC Town in Lagos Nigeria. The festival that took place in the main conference and cinema halls of the National Theatre, Iganmu and other parts of Lagos, justified that Nigeria and indeed Africa is endowed culturally and artistically. In Wole Soyinka’s defence for Nigeria’s African Arts and Culture as an original art form, he said, “There would have been no better justification that Festivals in Nigeria and in Africa are mere drama, after FESTAC 77. FESTAC 77 was arguably one of the biggest events ever hosted by Nigeria. On this 52nd Independence anniversary, the sweet memories of FESTAC cannot be waved aside.
Cleansing the land:
4. June 14, 1999 was another remarkable date in the history of Nigeria. It was on this date that  the then President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo announced a seven-man commission called the Human Rights Violations Investigation Commission (HRVIC) otherwise known as the Oputa Panel. It was a reconciliatory move by the Obsanjo administration to look into the various human rights violations from the military era to May 28, 1999. The Commission Chairman was Justice Chukwudifu Oputa, and assisted by the Commission Secretary, Reverend Father Mathew Kukah. Though many people have held that the Panel did not achieve the purpose with which it was set up, Justice Oputa in a recent interview had argued that the commission was not set up to investigate and penalize, but to investigate and learn from the failures and mistakes of the past.
The return of Biafra
Chief Ralf Owazurike: The formation of MASSOB on September 13, 1999 by its leader, Chief Ralph Uwazurike was with the sole aim of using nonviolent method to emancipate the people of southeast and parts of south South geo-political zone from their long years of political seclusion. This movement championed by chief Ralf Owazurike had challenged the Federal government on different remarkable occasions to allow for a confederal constitution which will allow the igbos to secede.  For the first time since the Civil war, Owazurike and his fellow fighters had raised the flag of the Republic of Biafra. Till date, the group are yet to give up on their struggle for change. However, one key area of weakness of the group is that it’s members are scattered across other countries, even as it enjoys little patronage by great politicians from the east.
A country on the verge of Anarchy
Removal of Fuel Subsidy Protest: For the first time in the history of the nation since 1999, when civilian administration took up the mantle of leadership from the military, Nigerians had embarked on a nationwide protest that paralyzed the nation’s economy for more than one week. The protest that hit the nation through different channels described Jonathan’s government as insensitive and incapable of handling the nation. However, for the timely intervention of the leaders of the National Assembly, the protest was suspended after much deliberation. The protest has redefined the rights of Nigerian citizens whom the government has realized are key in the formulation of any new economic policy.
The day our brothers left us
ICJ’s judgment on Bakasi: Recently, the Bakasi people have accused the Nigerian government of throwing them away to foreign land and have threatened to make a violent move if the government of Nigeria does not do anything to return them from the hands of those they have considered their enemies. However, it all started on that terrible day, October 10, 2002 when a judgment was passed by the International Court of Justice (World Court), The Hague,  that the rich oil peninsula had been ceded to Cameroon. This judgment has not only affected the geopolitical history of the country, but has also affected the economy of Nigeria, in fact in the most negative way. 52 years ago, the people of Bakasi had not thought that a day would come when they will become strangers in their own land.
 When Religion threatened our existence
Sharia Law; The introduction of Sharia law did not only create some internal disputes in Nigeria, but had also threatened the unity of the country. The application of Sharia law in the administration of different states in Nigeria was far off the hook as Christian in most Muslim states were seen leaving the North because of the fusion of religious law into government.  One of the exponents of Sharia law, Ahmed Sani Yerima had threatened to deal with both Christian and Muslim defaulters. The saga continued until 2002 when Amina Lawal, a 30-year-old divorced Muslim woman who had a child out of wedlock, faced charges of adultery in a Sharia court. The public protest over the death sentence passed on Amina drew the attention of the international community that ordered that Amina be released. It was after then that the Nigerian judges devised a way of separating the law of the state from religious law.
The twisted History
June 12, 1993 was the most awkward day in the history of our country. It was a day of twisted fate, hope, and expectation as the election considered to be the fairest ever conducted in the country was annulled by the then Head of State and Political Maradona, General Ibrahim Babangida. If Abiola who emerged victorious in the election had taken over power, the other long era of dictatorship in the unfriendly hands of General Sani Abacha would not have taken effect. However, the annulment was greeted with a mass rally across the country as mobilized by the late Kudirat Abiola  in defence of her imprisoned husband.  In support of Kudirat and her family, Nigerian rose against the cruelty meted on Abiola. The elimination of Abiola and Kudirat by the heartless military truncated the envisioned new Nigeria that Abiola had promised during his manifesto.  Everything worked against the future of Nigeria as it plunged into yet another long military era. Today, we celebrate independence with every available freedom granted us by our democracy. The lost hope and the twisted future have been found today. But, are we going to forget people like Abiola who gave up their lives for the nation even as we celebrate our independence today?
Middle East in Nigeria
When we began to heave some sigh of relief for holding unto our precious and invaluable democracy, we were again confronted by some beasts from within. The insurgence of Boko Haram has put  Jonathan’s government through a terrible trying moment as different Nigerians who live in the North have paid dearly for the fight they know little or nothing about. The group that are yet to make any particular demands from the government , have intensified their campaign since  their leader, Yusuf was killed.  Recently, the Joint Military Task Force had claimed that it had recorded tremendous success in its campaign against the dreaded Boko Haram, as its spokesman and their hideous have been ransacked.   There will be no better Independence anniversary without our understanding that we are indivisible people regardless of our ethnic backgrounds, and this senseless man inhumanity to man must stop.
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