Saturday, 22 September 2012

HOW THE VASWANIS LOOT NIGERIA

(GET N6 TRILLION WAIVER PRESIDENCY CONNECTION LAGOS METROPOLIS IS NOT NECESSARILY BETTER THAN MUMBAI IN INDIA. BUT THERE IS AN ALLURE IN NIGERIA THAT KEEPS THE VASWANI BROTHERS COMING BACK EVEN WHEN THE COUNTRY FEELS IT HAS HAD ENOUGH OF THEM)
NIGERIA might not agree with India on certain isms in religion, marriage, or politics.  There is, however, a language they both speak and understand in business and politics. That  is bakshish - the Indian word for bribery.
And the Vaswani brothers, the Indian owners of the Stallion Group for the past three decades, have used it so effectively that they are now one force to reckon with among the Asian imperialists said to be controlling about 30 percent of Nigeria's economy -  thanks to globalization. The Vaswani brothers now speak the said language as they face myriads of fresh investigations into their business  activities by several institutions, including a National Assembly Committee, the Police, at the Special Fraud Unit, SFU, of the Force Criminal Investigation Department, FCID, States Security Services, SSS, and the Presidency.
These probes, like others, if sincerely and dutifully carried out, may have a devastating outcome, including, but  not limited to, the likelihood of deportation of the Vaswani brothers, who have been twice lucky. In the event of  this deportation, it will be the third time in eight years. The alleged crime has never changed; its dimension has  only got wider.
Sabotaging Nigeria
New Delhi believes that its nationals, like the Vaswanis and other Indians in Nigeria, are actually strengthening  the economic tie between the two former British colonies.

Mahesh Sachdeva, the Indian High Commissioner to Nigeria, gleefully declared on May 1, 2012, that the bilateral  business relationship between the two third-world nations has grown to $16.4billion. But the slew of sharp  practices - which appear more like sabotage - trailing Sunil, Haresh, and Mahesh Vaswani, has made the partnership  a lopsided one.

Nuhu Ribadu, former chairman of the once dreaded Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, knows how tightly these brothers have gripped the veins of Nigeria's economy. He first ran them out of the country in 2002, but they clawed their way back. ''It is very glaring the nation won't enjoy much prosperity, especially in the domestic economy, as long as the Vaswanis remain in Nigeria,'' the former anti-graft czar once reportedly lamented. Tongues in the presidency are wagging as feelers by way of petitions reaching it allege that between 2002 and 2010, Nigeria lost about N150.8 billion in over-invoicing, waivers abuse, and tax evasion to the group's import business. But for some hunch, they would have strung Nigeria along again in a  N200 billion car importation waiver proposal and N150 billion in the Badeggi, another rice deal production nearly sealed by the Vaswanis and their Thailand collaborators.

Something else that effectively cripples Nigeria's economy in the manner they conduct their business is capital flight, which results from repatriation of profits, in dollars, back to the United Kingdom, Dubai, India and other countries where they have businesses. A 2009 study of the Global Financial Integrity estimated that Africa lost $903 billion that year, and about $800 billion annually. Nigeria, according to the report, topped the losers' list.

NASS Digs in
Maybe the deluge of petitions the seven-man Senate Committee on Privatisation received on the alleged economic crimes of these Indians will be heavy enough to confirm that the brothers hold Nigeria in the jugular. Economic analysts have always argued that it will take some doing for the country to really get industrialized with its current expansionist import policy.  The Stallion Group particularly appears more obsessed with dumping goods on the economy. With its 15 subsidiaries and a conglomerate of fronts in Nigeria, the group imports practically anything from rides to rice. That is one way of keeping Nigeria a perpetual consumerist nation, unlike India that is, to a large extent, known for its booming technology, health exports and manufacturing.

The Vaswani greed may have led to their latest scam in the acquisition of the Volkswagen Nigeria Limited, VON. The Senate is already convinced Nigeria has been short-changed in the sale of the company.

Very revealing are the video clips of the Senate Committee's fact-finding visit to the VON office in Apapa, Lagos, almost six years after sale.

The vast premises of the former German-Nigerian auto plant are now a bonded terminal, one of the three bonded terminals the group owns in Lagos. That conversion of a key driver of an economy into a storage facility is illegal, going by section 1 of the Memorandum of Association of the automobile company.

What further throws more light on the shady deal is the account of a 24-year old business romance gone frosty between Kashim Bukar Shettima, owner of the Barbedos Group. Shettima, in 2006, bought Nigeria's 35 percent in Volkswagen for N612million, shortly after the brothers, who also bid, were deported. Although they were poles apart

after then, the bond remained fairly strong between the Vaswanis and Shettima. “I made every effort to get their return,” he asserted. The brothers had won the bid for N400million in 2003, but a rice importation fraud pitted them against former President Olusegun Obasanjo who had to fling them out of the country. Yet Shettima ensured the Stallion Group was running on autopilot until 2007, when the late President Yar' Adua, after a business luncheon, brokered by their Nigerian beneficiaries during his first visit to the United States, okayed their come-back.

Their Mafian Style
But the Indians came back with a vengeance. They had registered and incorporated a Barbedos Virgin Island (BVI) in the UK, in February, 2005, with which they later partnered with Shettima's Barbedos, Nigeria Ltd, as Overseas Partner, to acquire the remaining 35 percent Federal Government stake in the company.

Petitioning the federal government and the National Assembly, Shettima said the Vaswanis cheated Nigeria by short-circuiting due process, under a company called Avolon, to acquire Germany's 51 percent in Volkswagen. According to presidency sources, it was a breach of the pre-emptive rights of the federal government of Nigeria stated in section 151 of the Companies and Allied Matters Act 1990.

The BVI, however, had their reason. The National Council on Privatisation was aware of the under-hand deal. In a letter dated August 25, 2005, Atiku Abubakar, former vice president and chairman of the NCP, was informed by the Bureau of Public Enterprises, under Irene Chigbue, to waive Nigeria's pre-emptive rights to acquire the 61 percent shares of the German partners.

While Abubakar knew then that the Vaswanis had been banished from the country, he blinked over the BPE request.

Again the debt of about DM 4 million that VON purportedly owed in Germany was another point in favour of the Vaswanis. They claimed to have settled up Germany, thereby making VON indebted to them. Shettima is, however, strongly of the opinion, in some of his representations to the presidency, that the credit arrangement was fraudulent because the auditing firm that investigated VON debt profile, Robert Ade-Odiachi & Co, said that the debt was non-transferable.

How they Bury Car Assembling Finally
Whichever way the sale eventually swung, the BVI outwitted the Federal Government, as always! And in that case, Barbedos Nigeria, to the Vaswanis Shettima has always known, will be no great shakes. The BVI worked it such that Shettima is now left clutching at 17 percent of the share, right in the glare of the BPE, Corporate Affairs Commission, and other regulators. While he is busy alleging sabotage and fraud, the Vaswanis have turned the VON into a bonded terminal. Nearly six years after, the plant still remains a shadow of itself. Some parts, covered in the Senate Committee video, are empty; other sections, 24 of them, warehouse vegetable oil, rice, fertilizers, and nine other products. There are also about 30,000 cars and hundreds of containers bearing imported goods on the premises. Given the necessary incentives, local entrepreneurs could have been producing these goods to further stimulate the economy. But the Stallion Group feels there is faster and bigger buck to make as an import monopoly,
using such facilities for hoarding imports, than just grinding out 'beetles' in Nigeria.

It wasn't always like this in the Nigerian auto industry. There used to be three car assembling plants, and five heavy vehicle plants in the country. And Obasanjo's idea of privatizing the VON, the only one surviving, in the 2000s was to revive the industry, and lower the prices. He made his concern known to the 40 industry stakeholders, led by Ade Ojo, chairman of Elizade Motors, who met in Aso Rock on February 1, 2000. The Honda Place, responsible for the automobile aspect of the Stallion Group, was not part of the meeting because of the Vaswani notoriety in the industry. But at least the President came away with some information: that the Vaswanis had been chiselling Nigeria through under-invoicing, underpayment of duties, VAT, surcharge, mischievous classification, and cargo diversion. Other malpractices of the brothers include use of containers to import vehicles, unspecified description of vehicles, and use of obscure ports. The Senate Committee on Industries that dug into the allegations later stated in a report dated February 16, 2001 that Nigeria lost N10 billion to the Vaswanis in the process. They merely got a slap on the wrist at the end of the probe.

Knowing What to Keep
What gives the Vaswanis this unfair advantage is their ability to arm-twist government for concession. They have been enjoying it over the years, especially during the military era. As tight-fingered as Obasanjo's administration was, it took a lot of resistance for him not to swallow their bait on a rice production proposal. The list of concession the Stallion Group requested include tax holiday, free land, zero duty on agriculture equipment imported, and others. They, however, pushed things too far in 2002 when they colluded with Thailand exporters. In a report ENB/SEC Vol.1, 22 August, 2002, originating from the Nigerian embassy in Thailand, detailed how pre-shipment inspection was used by the Vaswanis to import 1.5 million metric tons of rice, the world highest then, at little return to Nigeria. Shipment, supposedly inspected from Thailand, would come in cleared. According to the Mohammed-Waziri-led probe panel, N800 million was lost to the Vaswani crookedness. They took off, like jack-rabbits, when Ribadu turned on the heat.

When they were allowed back into the country in 2007, they brought along their Thai friends, and coaxed the late President Yar' Adua into accepting a proposal on rice farming. Nigeria was to plonk down N150billion and give them land. They ran out of luck again when they made another criminal move - clearing a vessel that was yet to set sail from Thailand, a practice those who know them too well told this magazine, is their stock-in-trade. Like a cat with nine lives, they bounced back into the country.

And they have been having a swell time in Jonathan's administration since. Waivers and tax exemption are lavish.

Between August and December 2010, Jonathan granted the group two waivers. In a letter referenced BO/B10260/TUB/LA/156, the finance minister, through the director of finance, Daniel Joel Tayelaiye, granted Energy Resources Management Ltd, one of their fronts, waivers of import duty, ETL, CISS, and other port charges' on 250,000 metric tons of imported rice.

Similarly, ERM got a waiver for 250,000 metric tons of vegetable oil in December and another 250,000 of the same commodity by Connotation Concept Nigeria. As at February this year, the Vaswanis secured duty waiver for another 250,000 tons of vegetable oil, enjoying similar concession. To make a kill, ERM has continued to use the waivers all these years when each could only last a year. Investigation shows that they have used the 500,000mt duty waiver which is 20,000; 20 feet containers to import and clear double i.e 1,000,000mt or 40,000; 20 feet containers and most of the cargo and containers are still lying in their various yards in Lagos. Total duty waived was USD 220,500,000 (two hundred and twenty million, five hundred thousand dollars) for the 500,000mt that is N 35.280 billion.

The London Meeting
In their desperation to perpetuate themselves in the VON deal, the Vaswani brothers split themselves to not only monitor but to also trail the movements of some top government functionaries that are close to President Jonathan.

They managed to trail two top Presidency insiders first to Geneva, Switzerland and then London. It was in London that they finally sealed the deal that robbed Shettima's Barbedos Nigeria Ltd of his well deserved stake in VON.

With some other close aides of Mr. President in their pockets, the brothers moved in on full assault of Shettima's business, sealing off his warehouse premises with containers in full glare of the public thus preventing him to take delivery of his goods while they kept their own warehouses busy; loading them with imported items such as rice, fish, iron rods and brand new cars to mention a few.

To seal the fate of Shettima and to prevent the expected backlash from the Senate committee on Privatisation, as regard the VON matter, the brothers with the help of the President's close associates sought the services of a two time former Attorney General and minister of Justices. Kanu Agabi (SAN) to seek relief from a Federal High Court in Abuja. Part of the relief was to restrain the Senate Committee and the EFCC from hindering their illegal operations in the country and also to foil any attempt to rescind their ownership of VON in spite of their non-performance.

Hands in Gloves
These businessmen have all the liberties because when they speak bakshish, people listen.  It will surprise few Nigerians that the Vaswanis are being piggybacked into the country, after every deportation, by those that ought to keep an eye on them. There have been allegations that certain ministers, including a highly placed ex-NAFDAC official, are sympathetic to the family. And Mohammed Adoke, attorney-general of the federation, along with his predecessor, Michael Aondoakaa, isn't exactly exonerated. The two kept the EFCC on a short leash anytime the commission is after the Vaswanis. Adoke, for instance, ensured that the EFCC looks to him for legal direction whenever taking a suspected economic criminal to court. For instance, a summary, with a reference number HAGF/SH/2010/Vol 1/32, was written to and received by the presidency on May 25, 2010. There the Attorney General of the Federation, AGF, recommended that the security agencies should respect court judgement granting the Vaswanis relief against being deported or arrested.

Adoke further counselled that the Federal Government should also honour part of the court judgement which awarded a compensation of N5billion to the Vaswanis. Adhering strictly to this legal advice, President Jonathan reportedly released the said sum which however found its way into the pockets of prominent Nigerians who are business allies of the Vaswanis. National Standard investigation revealed that between 75 and 80 percent of the hefty compensation was shared among these highly respected Nigerians.

Also zealous about shielding the Stallion Group and its owners are certain sources, mostly chiefs of staff, within the presidency. Major General (rtd) A. Mohammed, former chief of staff to Yar' Adua, used to play the mother-hen whenever the EFCC hawk swooped on the Vaswanis. He nearly pleaded for them in his letter entitled Re: Revocation of Deportation Order to the EFCC, requesting the commission to review “these facts (earlier listed) with a view to attaining justice to all parties”. Similar letters, in an intercessory tone, were sent to the ministry of interior and the office of the president to save their scalps. The current chief of staff, Mike Oghiadomhe, as revealed in some documents available to National Standard, equally watches out for the Vaswani interest in Aso Rock. To pave way for their last return, the big shots at the presidency argued that the return of the Vaswanis would assist the EFCC conclude it's investigations into allegations of gross economic crimes levelled against them. Checks by National Standard at the anti-graft agency showed no sign of any investigation since their return. "That is a no-go area," said a senior operative of the commission who did not want his name in print. He however added that the new leadership of the EFCC can only dare the Vaswanis if Mr. President distances himself from the Indian-born businessmen. Going by some kind of relationship tree, this magazine discovers it is just about six degree, or less, separating Atiku from the Indians. They are familiar strangers. Their path might have crossed when the former vice president was a senior officer with the Nigeria Customs Service. And the familiarity could only get better. Since their interests are always well represented in Aso Villa, they drop in on any President any time. They can flout their orders, too like they did NCP chairman, Vice President Namadi Sambo's.

According to presidency sources, they cut the second citizen of the country dead when he invited the warring VON shareholders for negotiation. And Jonathan can't hammer them either. He's morally bound to give their waivers proposal a favourable nod. The Stallion business was said to be among the deep pockets that bank-rolled Jonathan's campaign last year. That the BPE and CAC overlooked the brazen forgery of seal, an allegation against the BVI in one of the representations to the presidential committee of enquiry is more proof the Vaswanis are omnipresent. It worries Industry watchers. “The report was a confirmation of the earlier letter written to the CAC by the BPE exonerating the Vaswani brothers and BPE of any wrong doing,” says one of the concerned Nigerians watching the development closely.

Security Allies
The biggest fan of the brothers is the Nigeria Customs Service, NCS. The agency has never found any fault in the operations of the group over the years. Even when the House Sub-Committee on Customs, headed by Hon. Gummel Abdullahi, ordered the NCS to probe the company, following a petition from the Automotive Marketers Association of Nigeria, the result, as contained in a report marked NCS/INV/08/00/AB/HQ, gave The Honda Place a clean bill of health. The Customs was also involved in the Thailand importation scam where a shipload of rice yet to leave the exporting country was already cleared in Nigeria. Although the Vaswanis hoard their imported goods in an assembling plant, the NCS still approved of it as a bonded terminal.

National Standard can reveal that the Vaswanis in connivance with some Customs Officers imported 1,000,000mt (40,000 20ft containers) and the duty lost to the country on this transactions amounts to N 70.56 Billion (seventy billion, fifty six million naira). On the various criminal manipulation of the economy, the Indians out of which carry British passports, will be carting out a total income of N6.981 trillion (six trillion, nine hundred and eighty one billion naira). The sales and import were in the name of Masco Agro Allied Industries Ltd (Stallion wholly owned subsidiary).

One can't just dismiss how much the chummy relationship between the NCS and the Vaswanis has cost Nigeria. In 2007, former Finance Minister Esther Nenadi Usman told Nigerians that the NCS was milking the country dry.

The Nigeria Police, which often come under serious attack for their corruption profile, appear not to be willing to miss out of the action. While the case of shareholding dispute is in a Federal High Court in Abuja, the BVI used its influence to purportedly seal-up the VON premises, especially the part that belongs to their rival in the VON ownership battle, with police officers.

The Vaswani controlled warehouses, however, remain a beehive of loading and off-loading. As of May 4, months after the Senate Committee mission, the police were on guard as over 150 cars, out of the several thousand parked on the Apapa bonded terminal were driven out to another of the Stallion Group terminals in Lekki, beside Mercedes Benz, in Lagos. The security agencies are believed to always be their friends.

The Vaswanis, this magazine learnt, used them to cow the DANA Group and other competitors when Tafa Balogun was Inspector General of Police, and also due to overbearing influence by former VP. "So it would be music to the ears if the cops didn't help the Indian business mafia cover their track," another source wondered.

The Senate Committee would have to follow-up on its probe to rescue the economy from the Vaswanis.
Many believe something, hopefully, may give at the end of ongoing investigations as President Jonathan has reportedly warned that if there is any established fact in the allegations of gross economic crimes being perpetrated against the country by the Vaswanis, they may not be third time lucky.

The Senate Committee is already asking for the Share Purchase Agreement to be rescinded and re-advertised for non-performance. The report also ordered the EFCC to examine the sleight of hands used to cheat Nigeria out of its share, and the boardroom war raging among the VON shareholders. While the tone of the committee findings now may sound harsh, Sunil, Haresh, and Mahesh fear no evil.

They'll get justice, and will be safer as soon as the EFCC is liquidated, going by the recommendations of the Orosanye Committee on Public Service Reforms. Or the panel report could also disappear -like thousands of others before. For how long will those who have the responsibility to protect and grow local content (including the Ibrahim Lamorde-led EFCC) in Nigeria's efforts at becoming one of the top 20 industrialised nations of the world by
the year 2020? The British, Indian and UAE authorities and Nigeria's cannot claim ignorance of these economic abracadabras being practiced by the Vaswanis; only time will tell whether they would be brought to justice this time around.

Uncanny savvy
On good authority, National Standard gathered that the brothers have desisted from coordinating their operations from their registered offices. The Indian staff in the Stallion Group, sources revealed, carry the data for importation, supply and sales in their lap tops from where they control the movement and delivery of these items.

The reason behind this change of operation is none other than the need to elude the officials of the EFCC who had a well structured raid on the Vaswanis in 2002. To avoid a repeat performance of the well orchestrated clampdown, the brothers resorted to keep every business detail and operations mobile. The bank details are said to be also stored in these laptops to the extent that no matter the invasion by security agencies no incriminating information will be found. The strategy is also made easy by the fact that they have their main operational bases in their homes to which they hardly allow anybody access. They are again believed to have a highly restricted office.

Sources within the banking sector also disclosed to this magazine that about N130billion has been borrowed by the Vaswanis from three banks (names withheld), using VON premises as collateral while original title documents to the properties are with Kashim Shettima, their rival, so how did they get the mortgage and perfect it big? This may just be another case of high level forgery. National Standard Intelligence will continue investigations to establish the authenticity of these fresh allegations.
National Daily

Sultan: Subordinate religion to Nigeria’s unity

The Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammed Sa’ad Abubakar III, wants Nigerians to subordinate their religious beliefs to the nation’s unity.
Alhaji Abubakar  III, who gave the advice when he paid a courtesy visit to Governor Godswill Akpabio at Governor’s Lodge, Uyo, emphasised that unity and peace are panacea for the development of the country.
Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar III
The Sultan, who was in Uyo, Akwa Ibom capital for the third Unity Conference of the South-South and South-East Muslim UMMAH, remarked: ‘’The conference is an important one. Whether we are Christians or Muslims, we must live in peace with one another in whatever part of the country we find ourselves. If we are united, we would contribute better to the development of the country. So, we must put aside our differences and embrace peace and unity’’.
Describing Akwa Ibom as a conference capital of Nigeria, he acknowledged that the governor has positively impacted the lives of people in the state and in the country, stating, ‘’We have seen your handwork in a particular manner and dealings. You are just and fair in what you do and I can see that government is working here. You have stood out to be counted and would continue to be counted’’.
Abubakar described  Akpabio as a strong pillar in building a country known for peace and unity, and enjoined other Nigerians to emulate such exemplary leadership qualities as patience, humility, foresight and perseverance, among others.  The governor called for unity and peace not just across the inter-faith but among the ethnic groups in the country.
Akpabio said unity and peace could be possible when Nigerians learn to work with people outside their faith and ethnic groups, remarking ‘’Intolerance breeds extremism, while the latter breeds conflict’’.
He hinted that his administration has exemplified unity and tolerance through the appointment of his Aide-de-Camp (ADC) from Bauchi State, Chief Security Officer (CSO) from Kogi State and his Orderly from Kaduna State.
Vanguard

North strategizes for 2015

By EMEKA MAMAH & SONI DANIEL.
 Apparently worried over the inevitability of the north losing power in 2015 due to lack of peace and unity among the people in the region, the Arewa Consultative Forum, ACF, has called for political strategies that would put the area in strong position of strength to secure some favourable advantage to negotiate with other regions.
It has therefore, asked politicians in the area who nurse presidential ambition to tarry- a -while, before embarking on their campaigns as such activities could compound the bad situation
Northern Political think tanks
The ACF’s position is coming against the backdrop of opposition against zoning by the Jigawa State Governor, Sule Lamido.
The ACF which is the umbrella association of all socio-political groups in the north, made this known in a communique after an emergency meeting of its National Executive Council, NEC, and the Board of Trustees in
Abuja yesterday, even as they expressed solidarity with Kogi State over its dispute with Anambra and Enugu States over the oil finds along the border areas of the three states.
The meeting was called to receive and consider the Road Map for Peace, Unity and Development of Northern Nigeria, which was the product of resolutions of the Arewa Conference on Peace and Unity held in December last year.
The communique which was signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr Anthony Sani noted that  the divided Northern Nigeria needed peace and unity if it was to compete as an entity in the larger Nigerian federation, adding that the task of uniting the zone needed the support of all its stakeholders.
The communique further read,  “While the Forum supports any political strategies that would put the North in a position which will enable it negotiate with other sections of the country from a position of strength and secure some favourable terms, it was the considered view of the Forum that it is too early to start full-fledged political activities for 2015.
’’This is because such early start is capable of detracting from the task of governance at our collective peril.
”Concerning the controversy on the oil finds among states of Anambra, Enugu and Kogi, the meeting heard a briefing from a delegation from Kogi State.
“The Forum then asked the people of the states concerned not to be agitated unduly, precisely because both the offices of the Surveyor General and the National Boundaries Commission are there to resolve boundary disputes.
“And that the Forum would stand by people of Kogi state for what is legally due and payable to them.”
Meanwhile, the Jigawa State Governor, Dr Lamido, has said that he feels flattered by the story linking him with the 2015 presidential ambition, pointing out that he did not believe in the zoning of the coveted position.
According to Lamido, “Neither zoning nor whatever is the answer. What we really need in this country is for people to believe in themselves and their leaders for things to work well.
“By the time every Nigerian develops confidence in each other, trusts each other and supports one another then who becomes the president or governor would be immaterial. Because we have a rich culture with poor people and because the resources of this country have not been properly applied we think it is the system which is denying us what we really need as a people.’’
Lamido, who is a founding member of the ruling People’s Democratic Party, PDP,  however did not confirm or deny speculations about his alleged presidential ambition.
A section of the media had last month reported that former President Olusegun Obasanjo, had anointed Lamido to run with the Rivers State Governor, Chubuike Amaechi, as the PDP presidential and vice-presidential candidates in 2015; causing ripples in the political circle.
However, Obasanjo promptly denied the report, saying that he had not endorsed anyone for the election. This was even as people in the 27 local government areas of the Jigawa State reportedly went into wild jubilation, over the news report, contending that their governor had done well and needed to replicate his development strides across the country.
But, Lamido told newsmen that he was surprised when the speculation became a public debate in the country.
The governor said, “To be honest with you, I feel flattered that in a country with over 160 million Nigerians, my humble self from a small village in Jigawa State is being talked about. Secondly, the issue of leadership in this country is something which is within the exclusive preserve of God, who gives power to whoever He wants at the time He chooses.”
Those who are here now were not there 10 years ago and those who were there some years ago are no longer here. So no matter what happens someone will be in an office and a Nigerian must be there. And so, to me what matters is: let God give to Nigeria what is best for her and it does not matter who he is. It could be any Nigerian.”
Reacting to claims that opposition parties were already regrouping to oust the PDP in 2015, Lamido dismissed the perceived strength of the other parties are non-existent.
According to him, the PDP would continue to wax stronger since most of the so-called members of the opposition did not have active and committed members across the country like his party.
Scoffing at the opposition, he asked rhetorically, ‘’which are the parties in this country that are threatening ours? I do not see any threat from anywhere. Which of them is really an opposition party? None. In 1999, it was only PDP, APP and AD. Today it is only PDP and other formations. Ten years after it is only PDP and other later inventions. They are all inventions made up of persons who have failed in the PDP and other parties and thrown out as garbage.”
He also said that his administration spent over 65 percent of its monthly allocation of about N3 billion on recurrent services but vowed not  to borrow a dime to execute any project.
He stated that he had so far managed to provide the critical infrastructure that would propel the state towards industrialization and progress with the resources at his disposal.
“I am always conscious of the fact that if I begin to take loans it might be difficult for my successor to grapple with the development of the state. hat is why I have made it a policy that by the time I leave office, I will not leave behind a single kobo as debt. I do not see any justification in borrowing money. Why should I eat into the income of the next governor?” he added.
Vanguard

If Okadigbo Were Here…

Eddy Odivwri

Okadigbo-2209.jpg - Okadigbo-2209.jpg

I have watched the dance steps of our politicians. And the more I watch, the more I remember our dear    Rt. Hon.  Dr. William Malachy Chinwuba Okikadigboli (Okadigbo, for short). In three days, it would be nine full years that he marched out of the political stage on this side of the divide. But nine years after, Okadigbo remains as valid as unexpired licence. His theories, sound bites, his parliamentary template as well as his enchanting nuances remain the aperture by which politics is yet viewed in the country.
He was the seventh Nigerian to emerge as the Senate president of the Federal Republic. But he remains the one most talked about, even in death. And all of that draws from what he stood for. As the Chairman of the National Assembly, he kept the Presidency on its toes.  Strong-willed as former President Olusegun Obasanjo was, he knew that he could not ride roughshod over Okadigbo. Little wonder that Obasanjo could not stand his guts, his aura and his political capacity. And in a well-rehearsed scheme, he got Okadigbo to step onto the  dreaded banana peel. And he fell. Albeit unjustly. For awarding contracts based on “anticipated approval”, they drew the sword against him. But today, political buccaneers have taken over; they engage in extra-budgetary expenditure with brazen flourish, and it all looks like normal. What is worse, contracts are awarded, they are not executed, but the money flies away. If Okadigbo were here!
But the striking irony is that when in April 2000, Senator Arthur Nzeribe introduced the impeachment motion against Obasanjo, it was Okadigbo’s deft move that stopped Nzeribe  on his tracks , and saved Obasanjo from the thorny politics of Nzeribe. Yet, the same Obasanjo was to plot Okadigbo’s fall, with such a sly finishing.
With him out of the way, Obasanjo had a breather and ease of arbitrariness.
Considered a parliamentary wizard, Okadigbo literally chewed parliamentary procedure with such eclectic ease, so much that he even over-stretched some of his principled beliefs. For instance, he raised a lot of dust when he insisted it is the parliament, and not the Executive , that should declare the nation’s public holidays. Many thus perceived him as “stubborn” and a  “hardliner”. But he does not agree. Hear his counter:   “Lies have short legs which give way to reality and truth after sometime.  Against falsehood and untruth, I am a hardliner. For progress and action I am a soft-liner. ”
But the abiding footnote is that Okadigbo,  in life as in death, remains a core character in the political field of Nigeria.
If Okadigbo were here, the sloppiness that beset us on all fronts in the system would have either been worked on or wacked at. Given his impatience with slow-lane attitudes, Okadigbo  would have stoked the fire on the butts of some people to get them out of inertia.
It is a tribute to his fighting spirit that his widow, Margery, less than three months ago, fought her way into the senate, after one Alphonsus Igbeke had sliced off a chunk of  her tenure in a most crooked and rougish manner by laying claims to a mandate from the courts, not the people. Today, Senator Margery Okadigbo sits pretty cool in the red chambers, representing  the people of Anambra north senatorial district, and  if nothing else, to guard the flame of the Okadigbo aura from flickering or failing.
I can imagine how exultant Chuba will be, perhaps waving his white whisk and nodding his head in approval of his wife’s parliamentary gaits.
It is remarkable that the absence of the likes of Okadigbo from the parliament, and even this planet, seems to have dulled the excitement that comes with lawmaking. Nigerians who surely miss his erudition were doubly punished when Hon Patrick Obahiagbon, the Igodomigodo of Bini Kingdom, was not re-elected to the House of Representatives last year. The latter had offered Nigerians linguistic entertainment as a side attraction to his lawmaking mandate, what with his tons of grandiloquence. Okadigbo’s political eccentric nitch also derived strongly from the electrifying ease with which he spoke the English or Igbo Language. His words and arguments were often on point. His diction was as perfect as excellent. 
If Okadigbo were here, we would have long lengthened our list of quotable quotes, and updated the entries in “words on marble”.  We now seem left to drab talks, that power no nerves.
Although he tried his hand in a few business ventures, Okadigbo always reclined to Politics which was his natural remit.
In capturing this more quaintly, Hank Eso in his writing about Okadigbo (whom he calls ‘Mayor’) said, “The Mayor” could have been a political soothsayer or even politically clairvoyant.  He read politics and political machinations as if he was an Oracle.  In every case he pitched his tent and service with the winning group.  “The Mayor” had a natural flare and nose for what he fondly called “political arithmetic”-- an illustration of the  mental calculations that must govern politics and its practice. He always understood the needed permutations, dwelled on political substance, but also knew the kinetic force of sound bites and frequently put them to good use.  Wherever you encountered him in the classroom, in his living room, at a political forum or holding court either at pepper soup joint or a diplomatic cocktail circuit, he was always voluble, a quick think and savvy analyst of political men, events and dicey situations.  He had a knack of demythologizing seemingly confounding events and personalities”, …. If Okadigbo were here.
All said, Okadigbo  remains in our consciousness, as we deal with every day political issues in Nigeria. I remember him for all that he stood for, for all that he professed, for all that he aspired to see in Nigeria, for all that knew, for all that was in him.   For a long time to come, some of us will hold him as the Bach of political discourse  and the Mozart of Nigerian politics. 
Next year, if we tarry still, I shall do my valedictory piece on this national hero to mark a decade of his departure. And it shall be “The stories the Oyi told Me”

Imagine This...
Is the NCC Still There?
Last May, the National Communications Commission (NCC) announced the imposition of N1.17 billion fine on the various Telecoms companies in the country. The reason was blandly given as poor service. Many subscribers had hailed the action but demanded that the proceed of the fine be given to them (subscribers) since they are the sufferers of the poor services. But the NCC did not balk. It collected the fine and left the subscribers to gnash their teeth. If the essence of the fine was to encourage improved service delivery by the telecoms operators, it failed woefully. But if it was to swell the bank account of the NCC, it succeeded very well.

In the last one week, everybody seems to have suddenly acquired a new buzz word: network. Even my mother in the village now knows how to blame “netiwork” for cut calls, undelivered messages, delay in connection, inability to connect and all such vexatious  vices that have become the signature malaise in the provision of telecoms services in the country. You hardly can sustain a 3-minute telephone  conversation without glitches.  None of the networks is exempted.
From phone calls, to sms service through to Black Berry services, as well as browsing, the malaise is sickening. There are BB messages that have been hanging undelivered since previous Friday. Text messages report delivered, but recipients never see them, yet we are faithfully charged for undelivered messages, as if we are dealing with NIPOST and missing letters. What is worse, even the monies in our phones are stolen by the networks. Last Good Friday, I woke to see my freshly-loaded phone empty. I was alarmed. My wife’s phone suffered same fate. We were yelling, until they sent a text to my wife’s phone admitting “system error” in wiping off people’s credit. They promised to remit whatever that was “stolen”. My wife was luckier, as hours later, they restituted the “stolen worth”. Till date, I got neither a confession nor a restitution. And I gave up after three fruitless visits to an MTN service centre to complain. Is this the quality of service MTN renders in South Africa? Or are we being punished for the hugest market we have offered them?
My colleague, Yemi Ajayi, has literally ran from pillar to post by changing BB networks in search of better and reliable service, only to realize that they are all the same “ten and ten pence”. And it cannot be that they are not making money; after all, one of the networks is presently running a doubted campaign of aeroplane bonanza for recharging with just N200! And the parvenu hope is sending the gullible into a crashing   top-up frenzy . Why can’t they upgrade their equipment and facilities, seeing the huge patronage they enjoy? And if they fail to do so, why hasn’t the NCC flogged them into line? Or what else do they exist for, if not to regulate their practices? Or are they merely waiting for the passage of two more quarters for them to impose and collect more fines?
This same NCC collected a needless N6.1 billion to undertake a dubious subscribers’ registration exercise that ended September 28 last year. Till today, there is nothing to show for it. The subscribers’ base of NCC and that of the various networks remain as disparate as Jews and Gentiles. Nothing synchronized!
Many times, I wonder if the NCC is ever there for the people. I can’t see them, even with my binoculars!
Canticles...
Jonathan and the Politics of N5,000 Note
This is truly a continuation of the Yar’Adua government in both form and content
How do you mean?
In terms of policy inconsistency. It s a hallmark of  back-and-fro movement
I don’t think so. The Jonathan administration has been fairly consistent in his policy patterns.
So what do you say about the reversal of his approval on the introduction of the N5000 bank note?
Oh, that one, I guess Mr President’s new position should be commended and not lampooned?
Why?
Because it means he is listening to the voice of the people. You know that almost every critical segment of the society has expressed reservation on the needfulness of the currency restructuring. And so if he defers to public opinion, he should be hailed for being a listening president.
Indeed! Did he not speak with such conviction about the necessity of the N5000 Bill? Did he not tell the NBA that it will not cause inflation? Did his economic team not speak so glibly about the plan and even declared that the President’s approval for it is final? Did you not hear them vaunting? Why does Mr President allow Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi to always bamboozle him, just as Mallam El Rufai did President Obasanjo? 
So what are you implying from all of these references?
I am not implying anything. It is just to say that the old bottle of palm oil, does not surrender all its content unless it is placed on fire
You have come with your ancient proverbs. So who is the fire now and who is the old bottle of palm oil?
You can fill in the gaps
So which fire was the President placed?
… Oh now you know who is who? Anyway, you must always realise that nothing happens by chance in government. If the President reversed himself, it must have been prompted by something. And for your information, the leadership of the National Assembly had told the President to choose between introducing the controversial N5000 note and the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB). The senate is billed to debate the PIB issue at resumption. And given the avalanche of criticisms from virtually every sector, the President had to sacrifice the N5000 bill, so he can have the PIB sail through. That is the politics behind the reversal
Hmmm! Mr Insider!  So you are saying the President  doesn’t have a mind of his own? That he is held and dictated to by the National Assembly? And what is even the guarantee that having killed the N5000 note project that the PIB will survive? Or don’t you know many of the lawmakers from the north are suspicious of the impact of the PIB on their own economy and so are hesitant to support it?
This is politics. Democracy thrives on give-and-take. As for whether the lawmakers will co-operate or not, that will be taken care of. Don’t forget that the leaders of both chambers of the National Assembly are both from the northern region of the country.
You mean David Mark is a northerner?
Yes, a peripheral one.
But are you sure the coming storm in the House of Reps won’t lead to a change of guard and then obstruct the deal?
What storm? What deal?
Didn’t you hear of rumours of impeachment in the Lower House?
But you just called it rumour. So why should I take that serious?
Behind every smoke, there is fire, remember?
Never mind some of those legislative rascals. Whenever they are broke, they try to kick up some dust so they can be settled. Don’t forget they just returned from a long vacation, they may be as broke as crushed bones.
In that chamber, when rumour starts spreading, the clouds begin to gather. We can only invite the rainmaker who must come with a bag of quid to clear the cloud.

Dele Momodu: The bully called Sanusi


Sanusi appears to be a poor student of Nigerian history; otherwise, he would have known that whenever Nigerians are hailing the disciplinarian father of a recalcitrant child, the same people always turn around to ask if he wants to kill his own baby.
Fellow Nigerians, please permit me to borrow the cliché that “whatever has a beginning must have an end.” This is the only way I can describe what seems to be an end to Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s reign of recklessness and authoritarianism at the Central Bank of Nigeria. Even if he remains in office till 2014 when his tenure mandatorily expires, he has already waltzed his way into a cul-de-sac. The reason is very simple. Sanusi appears to be a poor student of Nigerian history; otherwise, he would have known that whenever Nigerians are hailing the disciplinarian father of a recalcitrant child, the same people always turn around to ask if he wants to kill his own baby. The attention span of an average Nigerian is short and limited. Nigerians are a people perpetually in search of new heroes. We are a people so confused about what we want, whether democracy or militocracy. Many years of debilitating military interventions and interregnum have turned us into victims of acute psychological impairment.
That must be the reason many of us often deify those we believe can help us punish, or even kill, our enemies. But our romance with kill-and-go administrations is always short-lived. A good example was when the Shehu Shagari government was terminated in 1983 by Mohammadu Buhari and Babatunde Idiagbon, Nigerians spilled into the streets like locusts to celebrate their victory over a most profligate ruling party known then as the National Party of Nigeria. Many prominent members of NPN were hounded into prison, house arrest and exile. Jubilant Nigerians even saw nothing wrong with the despicable attempt to crate Alhaji Umaru Dikko alive and the abortive “mission impossible” to smuggle him back to Nigeria. We tend to love and promote selective justice and injustice. We support whichever is more convenient at any particular time.
You must give it to him, Sanusi  is a princely and charming man. He’s the type that most ladies would see and curtsey. He loves attention and attracts it almost effortlessly. He would have done so well as a Nollywood actor or a music superstar.
The same Nigerians flooded the streets when the man with the toothy smile, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida did his own coup and sent Buhari and Idiagbon into premature retirement. Yet Babangida did the exact opposite of what Buhari did by giving a human face to dictatorship and inviting prominent Nigerians to serve in his government. He garnished his solid team with a few social critics and freed the Buhari captives from arbitrary incarceration. Babangida did not end it there, he forced open the dreaded cells of the then National Security Organisation where political detainees were tied down and lived like animals. Sympathetic Nigerians thanked the new benevolent ruler and embraced him warts and all. Buhari and Idiagbon simply melted into oblivion.
Sooner than later, Babangada started his transition games and started dribbling Nigerians with the dexterity and foxiness of the legendary Maradona and his infamous ‘hand of God’. He shifted the goal posts several times while the game was on. He even transfigured, without the benefit of elections or any referendum, into a civilian President and held the whole nation spellbound. He banned and unbanned potential candidates at will in a classic case of chess whilst keeping a straight poker face all the time. Nigerians watched in utter amazement, helplessness and befuddlement as someone played them like Ping-Pong.  Meanwhile, it was alleged that under Babangida, corruption stank to high heavens. The chief critic at the time was General Olusegun Matthew Okikiola Aremu Obasanjo who called IBB all manner of unprintable names.
To cut a bad story short, an election was conducted on June 12, 1993, and the presidency was won by Chief Moshood Abiola but was annulled by General Babangida for reasons yet to be disclosed till this day. In the middle of this higgledy-piggledy, a contraption called the Interim National Government was hurriedly packaged and Chief Ernest ‘Degunle Shonekan was made its Head. That government lasted only a few months when the maximum ruler with dark goggles, General Sani Abacha arrived on the scene and sacked the ING with automatic alacrity, and everyone scampered into safety without as much as a whimper.
Sanusi had managed to capitalise on the kill-and-go mentality of most Nigerians to win sympathy for his dangerous annihilation of his enemies without caring for the stray bullets that may hit innocent bystanders. In other to catch a few rats, Sanusi chose to set fire to the whole village.
If IBB loved to smile like a beautiful bride, Abacha was the exact opposite as a gloomy groom. His mien was something else and everyone feared him with utter trepidation. He took over the liability of June 12 and appropriated the mandate to himself. Those who challenged him soon found their ways into prisons or on the road to Golgotha. Two of Nigeria’s most powerful army Generals of all times, General Obasanjo and Major General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua who tried to monkey with Abacha were both roasted like chicken in Abacha’s gulag. While Obasanjo was lucky to stay alive and live to tell the tale, Yar’Adua was very unfortunate, as he died in prison and was silenced forever. The winner of the election MKO Abiola and his wife Kudirat died under different circumstances. Other pro-democracy activists suffered various collateral damages, including death.
Is it not strange that the powers-that-be in their wisdom sooner than later thought it fit to invite General Obasanjo to take over the mandate that should have been that of Abiola? The man who made it all happen was Babangida who had been publicly scandalised many times by the same Obasanjo. It is also interesting that Obasanjo would later block the same Babangida who helped him back to power when the man wanted to stage a comeback. The drama also became a theatre of the absurd when General Mohammed Buhari also came back on the scene after quitting power since 1985. He’s been contesting permanently since 2003 and he’s yet to give up. The same Nigerians who called him the wicked tyrant are the same people saying he’s the best man for the task of changing Nigeria for the better no matter how old and weak he may have become since leaving power 27 years ago.
This is my summary of Nigeria’s history that Sanusi failed to read or possibly chose to ignore. A good student of Nigerian history would always try to check when the market is over and the traders must close shop and go home. Sanusi did not understand this and behaved as if he was the de facto President of Nigerian. He had cashed in on the weakness of the Jonathan administration to run his own parallel government and haul insults at anyone who dared to challenge him. He neither spared the executive nor the legislative arms of government. He went meandering from one controversial policy to the other and bullied everyone into submission. If he didn’t know other things, he understood the magnitude of our docility and took full advantage of it. It was always obvious to discerning minds that Sanusi is a man of tall ambitions who was willing to do anything to achieve his aims and goals. He spent money on outlandish projects and anything that caught his fancy and ran a personal fiefdom.
I must confess that when Mallam Sanusi started his highly-controversial tenure at CBN, on June 4, 2009, I saw through the smokescreen of his vengeful mission very early in the day, and warned many of those jumping up like frogs thinking a Messiah had finally landed on our shores to take caution. While acknowledging his academic brilliance, I was duly worried about his unbridled radicalism. He did everything in the extreme and lacked the tolerance to persuade others. In the process, he stepped on too many toes and acted like he was beyond control. He fought for total autonomy for the CBN and campaigned vociferously against any form of audit by anyone of his actions as CBN Governor. He thus became a loose cannon and a sword of Damocles against his foes. His word was law as everyone feared his tempestuous outbursts.
I must confess that when Mallam Sanusi started his highly-controversial tenure at CBN, on June 4, 2009, I saw through the smokescreen of his vengeful mission very early in the day, and warned many of those jumping up like frogs thinking a Messiah had finally landed on our shores to take caution.
You must give it to him, Sanusi  is a princely and charming man. He’s the type that most ladies would see and curtsey. He loves attention and attracts it almost effortlessly. He would have done so well as a Nollywood actor or a music superstar. It is strange how a man of such sartorial tastes ended up in banking and not showbiz. The profession he chose was traditionally reserved for taciturn and conservative characters and not for vainglorious and adventurous rabble-rousers. His major weakness was his sharp tongue. He could almost raise the dead with it.
Sanusi had managed to capitalise on the kill-and-go mentality of most Nigerians to win sympathy for his dangerous annihilation of his enemies without caring for the stray bullets that may hit innocent bystanders. In other to catch a few rats, Sanusi chose to set fire to the whole village. He needed to disguise his real intentions and motives by taking on an entire institution and sacking otherwise brilliant bankers in the process. Some innocent people had their eventful careers terminated by a rampaging bull that was goaded on by a neurotic society and a vindictive population. It was so tragic that the warnings of a few of us fell on the deaf ears of those who were more interested in the extra-judicial crucifixion of those perceived as rogue bankers. Nigerians allowed themselves to be mesmerised and hypnotised and hoodwinked by a quintessential bully in search of victims to devour.
Sanusi’s eloquence and debonair presence made it possible for many of his unwary admirers to get carried away by his sophistry. But they didn’t need to look too far to realise that his combative approach would soon go up in smoke like others before him. Perhaps, he would have fared better as a military dictator than as a sanitary inspector in the cesspool of banking mess. The game he played was too hot to handle and for too long. He should have known that one way or the other anyway, the chicken must come home to roost. And bullies always have their terminal dates.  This is because, according to Wikipedia, “a bully is a constant harasser of the weak.” A bully argues his victims into submission through intimidation and name calling.
Wikipedia explains further that a bully is usually arrogant and narcissistic and by bullying others, he feels empowered. He suffers from “personality disorders, quickness to anger, use of force, addiction to aggressive behaviours, engaging in obsessive or rigid actions…well-planned and orchestrated attempts at character-assassination…” It explains that a bully cannot exist or thrive without the active connivance “of a large group of relatively uninvolved bystanders.” It is the ability of the bully to create the illusion of a support base from the majority that propels him to instil the fear of God into people and prevent them from speaking out against him. This is palpable in Sanusi’s case as no member of the economic team or the Institute of Bankers could openly speak up against the excesses of this man. Even our President appeared to have been clearly subdued; the reason he quickly assented to a foolish experiment. Bullies exert and expand their power when they see the unwillingness of anyone to challenging or taking them on because they depend largely on mob action.
Wikipedia puts it succinctly: “When the bully encounters no negative response from observers, it provides social approval for the bullying and encourages continuation of the behaviour.” Most people ignore bullies because they are not in any present danger themselves, or may feel that there’s no point becoming the next victim, so better to keep mute. But there is never a guarantee that anyone can escape the bully, as General Obasanjo must have discovered when Sanusi referred to him as “a poor economist.”
I believe three things ended Sanusi’s regime of fear. The first is that he did not gauge the mood of his ubiquitous mob who did not subscribe to his N5,000 note misadventure. If he read their lips, he would have known he was on his own and would have avoided the risk of dancing naked in the market place. And the second was his attempt to stylishly rubbish a former President and Commander-in-Chief, Olusegun Obasanjo. No matter the degree of the seeming cold war between Obasanjo and his estranged godson, President Goodluck Jonathan, no one would allow Sanusi get away with such sauciness while he’s still a public servant.
The last straw is the rumour of Sanusi’s Presidential ambition which he has since denied. But denial or not, the Jonathan crew would never close their two eyes again where Sanusi is concerned, and he has become a potential enemy and a marked man whose wings must be clipped.
He should have realised that a child who buys a pair of shoes for his limping father must be ready to listen to the dark tales of his lineage.
By his own feathers, Sanusi is now smitten! That is how the cookies always crumble.
 YNaija

PHCN is broke, Lagos & Abuja headquarters up for sale


Prior to the unbundling and total privatization of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), the Federal Government has put its total liabilities at N392.722 billion. This was disclosed on Monday by the Managing Director of the Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Limited (NELMCO), Dr. Samuel Agbogun, during a media chat, in Abuja.
Agbogun also disclosed that the PHCN, as a way of shedding excess weight and making its financial commitments lighter and easier, has resolved to dispose of its non-core assets. He described the non-core assets as those items the agency, or any of the bodies inheriting them, would not need for power generation and distribution. Prime among such assets that have been put up for sale include the Marina, Lagos head office of the old National Electric Power Authority (NEPA) that PHCN later inherited at its name change.
Also for sale is the present head office of the PHCN at Zone 4, Wuse, Abuja. Agbogun said the values of the two properties and some others that would also go in the weight shedding are yet to be ascertained as NELMCO will soon engage property valuers who would assess and determine what the market price of the properties would be. He gave assurance that the sale would be handled in an open and competitive bid and there would be no shady deal about the transaction.
A breakdown of the bulk liability of the power holding agency shows that it has a burden of N75 billion on litigations all over the nation, N42 billion on pollution and environmental hazard and related issues, N5 billion as outstanding gratuities to retired workers and N1.8 billion as local and foreign loans. NELMCO noted that what constitutes the bulk of the debts is what it tagged “PPA and Gas Indebtedness” which is a bill of N150 billion, and that its foreign financial liabilities have been transferred to the Debt Management Office (DMO) to handle.
He explained that the federal government in the current fiscal year allocated N12 billion to the body for the payment of workers pensions of N1 billion each month. “So far, NELMCO has received the allocation for six months amounting to N6 billion and the money is deposited with the Central Bank of Nigeria for safekeeping pending when it would be made use of.
“It is out of this amount that NELMCO has paid the August pensions. This payment is to those locations that forwarded their records and information required for the processing, and that amounts to N762 million.” The NELMCO boss also noted that instead of over 140 pension pay points operated nationwide, from where pensioners got their payments, the new e-pay point would be centralized in Abuja for easier handling from a common point.
Agbogun stated that the new procedure would not pose any problems for the office and pensioners as it is easier and faster to handle since the pensioners have bank accounts where the payment are forwarded and with the electronic system of banking, there are no hitches to the operation.
“The implementation of the Electricity Power Sector Reform Act, 2005 required that a special purpose entity be created, into which will be domiciled all of the huge PHCN liabilities that cannot be settled from the eventual proceeds of the sale of the PHCN successor companies.” He promised that the body would not fail in accomplishing the task and ensuring that the society and those directly affected would not have cause to regret the setting up of the agency.
 BusinessNews

OPINION: WHOSE TURN TO LEAD? – by Mark Amaza @amasonic


Three years away from the next general elections, political alignments and calculations have already begun in earnest. In the past few weeks, one governor is rumoured to have declared for the presidency while two more have been endorsed by a former president as the ‘ideal team’ of President and Vice President for 2015. This is besides the fact that there are speculations that President Goodluck Jonathan will run for a second term.
Sadly, the declarations of desiring to have the number one job in this country is being followed by the same old talk of power rotation and whose turn it will be to lead. The potential candidates from the North are clamouring for power shift. When President Jonathan formally declares, we can expect to see his promoters saying that the Niger-Delta deserves 8 years, especially as the ‘geese that lays the golden egg’.
This is all too reminiscent of the 2011 General Elections, where of all the abundant issues that confront Nigerians on a daily basis, zoning and power rotation were the most crucial issues to the election. It is amazing how Nigerian politicians can tap into the sentiments of religion, ethnicity and regions to make us forget the more crucial issues of life that we deal with, such as poverty, insecurity and lack of infrastructure.
So what type of leader do we as Nigerians desire in 2015?
We want to see a man or woman who shall rise to the mantle and inspire us with his words and actions; a man who shall not just tell us what is sweet to our ears, but also what the hard and bitter truth is; someone who shall seek to win the hearts and souls of the electorate.
We need a candidate who shall seek to unite us as Nigerians of different ethnic backgrounds and religious persuasions; contrary to what politicians tell us about our differences, we are more alike than we think. We are Nigerians; though we might be from 400-plus different ethnic groups and come from places as unalike as the desert in the North East is from the creeks of the Niger Delta, a common Nigerian heritage unites us. We desire someone whose campaign shall emphasize our similarities, so that Nigerians can come to see in him or her the meaning of being united in diversity.
We are searching for a man who shall earn the seat of the President by articulating a vision for the country, and specify the actions he shall take to actualise that vision. We are sick and tired of candidates playing the regional/religious/ethnic card to win elections. Nigerians are not as petty as these politicians think. We all celebrate performers, whether or not they are ‘our people’. We need someone who will give us a good name to live up to – a country of different faiths and ethnicities, united under God. Let our nationhood be strengthened by his/her campaign, and not made weak every passing election.
I was conversing with a friend recently, and I mentioned that the population of blacks in the United States was merely 13%. His expression was that of shock. He then asked me, ‘how then did Barack Obama become president?’ To his Nigerian mind, how can you win an election when your race/faith/ethnic group is outnumbered? It is sad that this is what our politicians have led us to believe, as they always emphasize our differences in order to benefit their political aims. This is definitely not what we need in the years approaching the next elections.
Lastly, we need a man who shall be humble in victory and magnanimous in defeat. We need a man who shall be honest enough to admit he lost an election, and not seek to overheat the polity by alleging rigging if there was none. We need a man who shall genuinely respect his opponents in the heat of campaigning, and not seek to denigrate his person in order to get ahead.
This is the type of leader we need. Not one of a particular religious faith, ethnic group or part of the country. Rather, we need a leader whom all Nigerians can look up to with admiration and respect, even those who had not voted for him.
It is time we make a clean break from the past, especially that of the 2011 General Elections with its still fresh memories of the bloodshed that accompanied the Presidential Elections in parts of the North.
Nigerians just cannot take that anymore.
 Omojuwa.com