Wednesday, 26 September 2012

Babangida, Otedola, Elumelu Win Bids For Nigeria’s Power Plants


Femi Otedola, Ibrahim Babangida and Tony Elumelu
By Ayorinde Oluokun/Abuja
Amperion Power Distribution Limited, a consortium made up of Israeli-based BSG Resource Limited, State Grid Corporation of China and Forte Oil Plc, in which billionaire businessman, Femi Otedola is the major stakeholder as the local partner has emerged the preferred bidder for 414mw Geregu Power in the financial bids for the power generation companies being sold under the privatisation programme of Federal Government opened today in Abuja.
The Consortium bid $132 million for the power plant located in Kogi State.
Amperion was the sole bidder for the Geregu plant and also submitted bid for Ughelli Power Station.
Femi Otedola with a humongous loan portfolio of $1.2 billion was last week named as Nigeria’s biggest debtor by the Central Bank of Nigeria.
Since CBN has also warned banks to steer clear of advancing further loans to him, questions were being raised on how he is going to pay his share of the bid for the power company.
However, Amperion bid for the Ughelli Power Company was unsuccessful as another consortium made up Transnational Company of Nigeria, Transcorp with offer of $300 million for the plant was declared the winner of the bid.
Transcorp is chaired by former Chief Executive Officer of UBA, Tony Elumelu, as his company Hiers Holdings has the single largest stake in the conglomerate.
Chinese Nigeria Power Consortium was declared winner of Sapele Power Plant with a bid of $201 million.
Mainstream Energy Solutions Limited won the contract to manage the Kainji Power Company with an offer of $50.8 million as fixed annual fees and $237.9 as commencement fees.
Also North-South Power, believed to be backed by former military President Ibrahim by Babangida was declared the preferred bidder for the Shiroro Power Plant with an offer of $111.7 million as fixed annual fees and $236.8 million as commencement fees.
However, the bid for Afam Power Plant, according to Atedo Peterside, Chairman, Technical Committee National Council of Privatisation was not opened as all the three bidders failed to meet the stipulated guidelines for the bids. All the winning bids are subject to the approval of the President.
“This is a milestone in the power privatisation process,” Darius Ishaku, Minister of State for Power, Ishaku, said during the bid opening ceremony in Abuja.
  Saharareporters

Monday, 24 September 2012

ACN Is Fraudulent And It’s National Leader A Shylock — PDP



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PDP PUBLICITY SECRETARY, CHIEF OLISA METUH (L), ACN LEADER, ASIWAJU BOLA TINUBU
SAN FRANCISCO, September 13, (THEWILL) - The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) must rise beyond roadside sophistry and accept that the party and its national leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, were fraudulent to have lied that Tinubu was issued a gold card invitation by the Democratic Party of the United States to attend its recent national convention, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) said on Thursday.

It advised the opposition party to apologise to Nigerians for ridiculing the nation before a foreign political party.

In a statement signed by its national publicity secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, PDP observed that ACN’s penchant for fraud made its image managers artfully focus on deceit, blindly and inaccurately interpreting the diet of lies the party serves the Nigerian public.

“This matter in question explains itself in clear terms. The ACN tried to force its dish of lies down the throat of Nigerians on the imaginary international exposure and connection of its national leader,” part of the statement read.

“This attempt by the party to ingeniously tap from the credibility of an American political institution through a spurious claim backfired. The Democratic Party Convention officials would have none of that and wasted no time in denying the ACN and Bola Tinubu. The implication of this on the image of Nigeria and on the pride of our good people is wantonly damaging.”

PDP recalled ACN’s “deliberate persistence on misinforming the nation” with a statement from its publicity secretary saying that “Tinubu received a gold card, which is prime... and ...  was invited to the Democratic Convention as the leader of the opposition and an influential figure in Nigeria.” 

The ruling party submitted that no matter how hard the ACN tries to water down this statement to suit latter-day whims, even a child understands that it means a special invitation and recognition.

“This is the falsehood that the ACN sold to the Nigerian public about its leader, which unfortunately backfired, thus necessitating a denial,” the statement further read.

“What the ACN has done in respect of  its fraudulent claims on the Democratic Convention and the manner the officials of the party off-handedly dismissed the ACN is big embarrassment to Nigeria as a sovereign nation that has in quantum stock, eminent men and women who have distinguished themselves internationally.

“It is particularly a sludge on the integrity of the Nigerian political class for which we advise the ACN to consider an apology for exposing the nation to an unnecessary shame. 
PDP also criticised ACN for “evangelising on integrity” without being an example of it, saying, “The state of origin of its national leader is still shrouded in controversy and when his academic records, to use the common Nigerian lingo, is traceable to ‘Toronto.’

“The ACN is moralising on integrity when Lagosians are groaning under its leader’s insatiable greed, with his companies in almost every business pie, collecting shylock taxes on mind-bogging commissions, as he is either the owner, buyer or agent of every choice property in Lagos.”

South-West is most marginalised - Investigations

 by Taiwo Adisa and Olawale Rasheed
THE South-West is the most marginalised region in the current administration, followed by the North-East, findings have shown.
According to investigations, the North-East got  its status redeemed with the election of Alhaji Bamanga Tukur as the national chairman of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) while the North-West is the most favoured region.

Investigations also showed that reports of northern marginalisation in the current administration could not stand in the face of evidence as the North-West geopolitical zone strongly dominates the security, finance and education sector appointments under the Goodluck Jonathan presidency.

Key northern leaders had, in recent times, accused the Federal Government of systematically sidelining the northern region both in terms of appointments into critical sectors and in terms of access of the zone to presidential decision-making caucus.

However, checks by the Nigerian Tribune  showed that the North-West has, so far, maintained its hold on decisive positions within the government, despite the fact that the South-South is holding the number one position in the administration. While the president maintains the number one spot in the administration, findings showed that one of the two most influential figures in terms of closeness to the president and his day to day actions and decisions is from the North-West, in the person of the Principal Private Secretary to the President, Mallam Hassan Tukur. The other influential position is the Chief of Staff, which is held by Chief Mike Oghiadomhe, from Edo State.

Tukur and the Chief of Staff to the President, Chief Oghiadomhe, are said to be the most powerful aides of the president who see to the day to day running of the presidency and the Federal Government as a whole.

Apart from the Principal Private Secretary, the North-West also produced the vice-president, who is regarded as one of the most powerful vice-presidents of this era. He oversees the all-important power sector reforms through the oversight on the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) and coordinates the National Economic Council.

The number four citizen in the government hierarchy, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, is also listed as one of the strong holders of levers of power in the administration.

Besides its strong presence on the political turf, the North-West also controls all the three major sources of revenue generation in the economy of the federation, including the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS). The Group Managing Director of the NNPC, the Comptroller General of the Customs service and the acting chairman of the revenue service are all from the North-West zone.
While the three agencies above are said to be the sources of over 90 per cent of national revenue, the North-West further adds to its control of the economy, when it produced the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi. The Minister of State for Finance, who oversees the Federation Account Allocation, is also from the North-West.

Incidentally, a similar situation was obstructed by the Senate under Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, when a Yoruba man from Kogi State was to emerge as the Auditor General of the Federation. The Senate had argued then that it was opposed to concentration of all positions in the economic sector in the hands of the South-West, since the then governor of CBN was from the South-West.

Leaders of the South-West have, however, objected to the marginalisation of the region even while the institution, such as the Senate, refused to stand straight on such issues.  They had argued that while the appointment of a Yoruba from the North was obstructed by the Senate in 2003, the Senate later sanctioned the concentration of all economic positions in the South-East and now North-West.

“The South-West is the most marginalised in all these and the zone cannot continue to keep quiet,” a leader said, adding that some elders from the zone recently met President Goodluck Jonathan on the increasing marginalisation of the zone.

Curiously, if the North is well placed in the political and financial sectors, the zone is also maintaining its grip on the security sector, as its men dominate key positions across the security establishments.

Until the removal of the Minister of Defence, Dr Haliru Mohammed, who hails from Kebbi State, the region was holding tight to the number one slot in the Defence portfolio. Even at that, the North-West still has the National Security Adviser from Sokoto State, the Inspector General of Police from Kano State and the Chief of Air Staff, also from the zone.

An administration official, who craved anonymity, expressed surprise at the constant accusations of bias against the Jonathan presidency, declaring that “no zone has the level of high-profile presence the North-West enjoys in the present administration.”

“It is unfair to accuse Jonathan of bias against the North. He ceded so much powers and functions to the core North that I see no difference to when (Musa) Yar’Adua was in power,” the official, who is also from the North, said.

He stated that the president had also ensured a spread in the appointment of his personal aides.

But while the president appears to personally maintain a spread in the appointments, the same cannot be said of agencies under his watch. Only recently, the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega was accused of breaching the Federal Character Principle by filling a majority of directorate positions in the commission with northerners.

How North-West rules Jonathan’s government

North-West
•Vice-President
•Speaker, House of Representatives
•CBN Governor
•GMD NNPC
•Acting Chairman, FIRS
•Comptroller-General of Customs
 (Chairman, FCCA)

North-East
•National Chairman, PDP
•Executive Secretary TETFUND
•Executive Secretary UBEC
•Head of Service

North-Central
•President of the Senate
•Attorney-General and Minister of Justice

South-East
•Deputy Senate President
•Secretary to the Government of the Federation
•Deputy Speaker, House of Representatives
•Minister of Finance
•Minister of Aviation
•Minister of Power
•Minister of Labour
•Minister of Health

South-West
•Minister of Agric
•Minister of Police Affairs
•Minister of Trade and Investments
•Minister of Foreign Affairs

South-South
•President, Federal Republic of Nigeria
•Senate Leader
•Minister of Petroleum

Nigerian Tribune

From university dropout to ICT millionaire

 by DAYO OKETOLA

Wande
Wande Adalemo dropped out of the Olabisi Onabanjo University to actualise his dream of building an Internet service company, which is now worth N1bn. He tells DAYO OKETOLA how it all started and what other young Nigerian entrepreneurs can learn from his journey.
The Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer, Oxygen Broadband Networks, Nigeria’s first metro WiFi network, Mr. Wande Adalemo, is a young man who aspired to be a university graduate and get a job. But an event in 1998 changed the course of his life and he decided to pursue his dream of building an Internet company.
Today, he sits atop a N1bn broadband network company, which has just rolled out a WiFi network at the popular Computer Village in Lagos.
He said his greatest challenge was funding, but the driving force had been the passion to ensure that all Nigerians have access to affordable Internet access through WiFi technology.
From the ground zero in 2005, dropping out of school along the line, Adalemo said he overcome the challenge and was able to attract investors, who believed in his dream and invested in the business.
Adalemo said the company started with a $2m investment and as at today, had invested N1bn with a network infrastructure already in place and duly licensed by the Nigerian Communications Commission.
“As we speak, we are currently at the Computer Village in Lagos, where we have our pilot network. In the last two months since we started, we have had over 20,000 connections sitting on our network,” he said
In view of this, he said the company had laid out an expansion plan, which would see it invest another N200m in rolling out services in six locations across Lagos State before the end of 2012.
“We are doing another N200m investment and we are going to six new locations by December 2012. We are partnering with malls on the Island, Surulere, and high traffic restaurants. We already have agreements with all of these people,” he said.
The expansion, Adalemo said, would see Oxygen Networks expand to 20 locations in March 2013, and 100 locations in Lagos by 2015; and then Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano, thereafter.
“Of  the N200m needed to roll out services by December 2012, we have attained N75m equity investment to date, which means that we are really set to move to these new locations,” he said.
According to him, the company currently operates with 100 per cent private equity fund from the board of directors and “they are putting in more funds to see us expand.”
He said the company had already attracted institutional investors such as Google and Main One Cable Company, which were interested in investing in it and help boost broadband access in the country.
While the start-up appears to be on the right track, the Oxygen Broadband Network boss said the beginning was very rough.
In an interview with our correspondent on how it all started, he said, “I never saw a computer until 1998. I was with my cousin Femi Adalemo, who was the Chairman of the Nigerian Internet Exchange Committee at some points. So, I went to his office and he said he wanted to send a mail to someone in the United States. Five minutes after, the person in the US had responded to the mail and that surprised me.
“I couldn’t sleep that night, and in the morning, I went back to him and asked him to teach me how to develop something that will make Nigerians send and receive e-mails easily.  I told him I wanted to do something that would make it easier for every Nigerian to send email.
“He told me it was networking and that was how it started. So, as I grew in my knowledge of what the Internet access and broadband were, it became more of a passion. Getting the technology was one thing, putting it together was another, and getting funding took a while. Between 2005 and now, you can see it has been seven years, it has not been easy.”
On how he got the first investor, who later became a co-founder of the company, Adalemo, said, “We had spoken with a thousand of individuals to put their money in the business and the answer we kept getting was no. Eventually, we found someone and it was an interesting story. We met the first investor, who later became a co-founder of the company, in 2005. I didn’t have a penny that day and then a friend of mine called and said there was someone that ‘is interested in this crazy idea of yours, let’s go and see him.’
“I had to trek from Iponrin to Ajose Adeogun to meet him. He was the managing director of a bank then. Meanwhile, I had met several potential investors who had discouraged me but I did not give up. So, when I got there, he told me; ‘If you cannot convince me in two minutes, I cannot invest in this because an idea that cannot hit someone in two minutes is no good idea.’ Well, I think I was able to hit him in two minutes and the next question he asked was how do we move?
“The first thing we did was to go around the world to see where WiMax was failing because my own idea was that WiMax will not work but WiFi will. So how do we get WiFi to work? And from there, he got some of his friends involved in the business.”
Adalemo reiterated that the company would continue to expand because he believed WiFi technology would play a major role in boosting Internet access in Nigeria.
He said, “Because we believe that everybody should be on the Internet and we are restricted by regulations as to how to expand (we cannot cover wide area), we decided to take the Internet to where everybody is going?
“Oxygen believes that your Internet should be wherever you are going and instead of carrying your modem or dongle around, if you know that Oxygen is present at the place you are going to such as the cinema, restaurant, clubs and malls, among others; then, it becomes a better option for you.”
According to him, the second phase of the company’s expansion will be the ASPANDA Market at the Lagos International Trade Fair Complex, Alaba and Oke Arin markets.
“For or us at Oxygen, we are taking our WiFi network to a point where we have a hots pot in virtually every major street in Lagos. It begins to tell us where we need to start focusing our attention in Nigeria. It also begins to tell us where we need to start building broadband ecosystems. We need to start looking at solutions that will enable people to just plug and deliver broadband services to everybody,” Adalemo explained.
He disclosed that the company had sealed a partnership with the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System Plc to provide its WiFi network for PoS connectivity at the Computer Village, adding that this was the driving force behind its planned extension into the Oke Arin Market.
“Due to our partnership with NIBSS, we are providing WiFi for the purpose of PoS terminals alone at Oke Arin Market. These are some of the plans that Google is excited about,” he said
Adalemo encouraged young Nigerian entrepreneurs not to be deterred by challenges surrounding them, while assuring them of success if they remained focused.
He said this was what made him drop out of school when he found out that academic works were disturbing his entrepreneurial drive.
“I will say that I am also a proud school dropout because at some point, I realised that pursuing academic excellence was interfering with my passion for this dream. May be Oxygen would have become a dream earlier but for exams in school,” he said
When our correspondent took him up on this, he said, “I am not saying it is good to drop out of school, but I am saying it is good to think outside the box. The emphasis on paper qualification in our society has not helped us. If school will limit you as an entrepreneur, get out; and if it will enhance you, stay with it.”
“I encourage people to go to school, but once you find that dream, that passion that you can pursue and it is a good idea, you will succeed. Once you are dedicated, you will get there. It is not about everyone leaving school, it is about understanding what will work for you.”
The Punch

King’s College Old Boys At War Over Misappropriation Of Sanusi’s N50m Gift, Others



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HAKEEM BELLO-OSAGIE
…. Allegations Of Corruption Rock Sports Pavilion Project

SAN FRANCISCO, September 20, (THEWILL) – All is apparently not well in the Hakeem Bello-Osagie led elitist King's College Lagos Old Boys Association, THEWILL can report.

Many unsavoury allegations and counter-allegations are currently being bandied about within the Association and aggrieved members are gearing up for a show-down at the Association's next AGM, scheduled to hold this Sunday, September 23, 3012, at which many of them intend to demand for an Independent Audit of the Association’s Finances.

THEWILL gathered exclusively from sources that members are at daggers drawn over several issues relating to finances of the Association amongst other issues, particularly the manner in which a N50 million naira donation from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) courtesy of Governor of the bank, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, towards the construction of a sports pavilion in the Lagos Island secondary school was allegedly misappropriated and siphoned using a shady contractor.

The donation was made around 2009 during the school’s centenary celebration.

Some members of the Association, which consists literally of “who is who” in Nigeria’s socio-economic and political space, are angered by the discovery that bulk of the N50 million naira donation from the CBN was siphoned by some members of the past executive.

THEWILL can report that the sports pavilion project has since been abandoned after the previous executive paid out the entire N50 million of which N43 million was drawn from the Association’s bank account within a space of six weeks.

“The level of corruption and misappropriation perpetrated in the sports pavilion project is disheartening,” one Old Boy told THEWILL. “The project is not even near 20% completion. Where did all the money go?” he asked.

“The issue of one of the VPs who collected money from a contractor and claimed to spend it on the Association without documentation subsists.
This VP (Mr. Lawanson) who admitted to collecting the sum and spending same without documentation (minutes of the meeting where this occurred is available at the Secretariat) and the present treasurer (Mr. Idike who wants to be Gen. Secretary) colluded to make these payments back then. Furthermore, Mr. Idike cannot attest to any audit carried out in his capacity as auditor (which would have discovered the fraudulent disbursement of the said N50m…),” another aggrieved member blogged on a website where members openly made claims and counter claims.

Sources today told THEWILL that members of the Port Harcourt branch of the association alongside some other chapters have signaled their desire to attend the AGM on Sunday where they would submit that all members of the present executive step aside while an independent audit of the association’s financial records are reconciled.

King’s College Lagos was founded on September 20, 1909. It was previously known as King’s School. Some of its prominent alumni include former Vice President Alex Ekwueme, Late Sir Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, Late Chief Anthony Enahoro, Late Sir Adetokumbo Ademola, Late Justice Victor Ovie Whiskey, and Mr. Peterside Atedo, amongst others.

CURRENT KINGS COLLEGE SPORTS PAVILION

Bi-Courtney begins reconstruction on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway


Bi-Courtney begins  reconstruction on  Lagos-Ibadan  Expressway
The company said it has engaged Messrs Borino Prono Construction Company and CCC Construction Nigeria Ltd to embark on the reconstruction, starting from four critical portions on the road.
A statement issued by Bi-Courtney’s spokesman, Dipo Kehinde, said: “The reconstruction will go on simultaneously in four critical portions of the road.”
While envisaging that the work might affect traffic flow on the road, Bi-Courtney said it had taken the precautionary measures of engaging traffic control officers and flaggers who would facilitate the flow of traffic during construction hours.
The statement reads: “We urge motorists to drive with care, observe the rules and obey traffic signs.
“We are working with stakeholders, including the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Ogun State Traffic Compliance and Enforcement Corps (TRACE), Nigeria Police, tanker owners and other road users to minimise the impact of this exercise on motorists.
“Bi-Courtney hails the commitment and vision of President Goodluck Jonathan to infrastructure development through Public Private Partnership (PPP). This vision, being promoted by the Federal Ministry of Works, is worthy of support. We assure Nigerians that the Federal Government and our company are committed to this important road project.”
The Nation

"I Take Money from Oshiomole Because He Is a Good Governor" – Eedris Abdulkareem

Eedris Abdulkareem
By SaharaTV, New York
Prolific Nigerian pop music artiste and ‘Nigeria Jaja-jaga’ crooner, Eedris Abdulkareem, says that he accepts money from the Edo State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomole, because he loves to be identified only with Governors that are popularly acknowledged to be ‘doing well’.
The pop artiste declared this position during last Saturday’s SaharaTV’s Inspiration segment with Omoyele Sowore, in effect saying he could not accept a gift from those politicians who are failing to serve the people.  During the interview, Eedris also talked about his famous feud with Nigeria’s former President, Olusegun Obasanjo; his tussle on a plane with American rapper 50cent; and other controversial issues.
On former President Obasanjo, Eeedris opted to refer to the embattled man as ‘Baba’ throughout the interview.  He insisted that he has never taken money from Obasanjo, nor did he assume a low profile for some time after he
released his famous Jaga-jaga album because he was jittery.
“I have never collected any money from Baba before. Eedris Abdulkareem
is a social crusader and my responsibility is to use music to add values to the lives of common people who can’t speak for themselves”, he declared.
“As a social crusader, back in 2000, I came up with “Mr. Lecturer,” which talked about sexual harassment on our campuses and “Jaga-jaga” came up after millions of youths voted me to represent them at the Olympic Torch Relay, which automatically made me an authority as an Olympic Torchbearer, and my responsibility is to speak for my people.”
Eedris pointed out that the former president became angry at him after he released the Jaga-jaga album.  The title, he told SaharaTV, was adopted from a childhood game and suggests things gone awry.  He further said that the Jaga-jaga album was motivated by his aspiration to reflect the ills in the Nigerian society occasioned by widespread corruption and the selfish activities of the country’s rulers.
Attempting to clarify the stoic silence which followed the threat from the former President after his famous Jaga-jaga album and his subsequent behavior which seemed to have been aimed at reconciling with the Government, Eedris said his album which followed Jaga-jaga was ‘Letter to Mr. President’.
That album, he said was to explain to the Government what he meant by Jaga-jaga in his prior album that had seen him crossing swords with Obasanjo.  He denied that his subsequent meeting with Obasanjo’s successor, Late President Yar’ Adua, was to engineer peace with the Government and to regain his “restricted” freedom into the society.
“What I went to see President Yar’ Adua for was different from Obasanjo and the Nigerian problem. I went to discuss with him to endorse Kora Awards. Also, have this at the back of your mind that President Yar’ Adua was a Chemistry teacher back then when I was in Kano, so I know the Yar’ Adua family very well”, Eedris narrated.  He expressed the opinion that the late President Yar’Adua, with whom he enjoyed presidential cordiality, was the best ever to rule the country.
Asked about his thoughts on a recent musical video by Rick Ross which portrays musical artistes as individuals solely interested in money, Eedris heaped condemnation on Rick Ross, saying he doesn’t watch or give recognition to such artistes.
“I don’t watch people like that because they don’t add value to my life, my country and my people,” he said.  “People like Rick Ross who act songs that talk about champagne, illuminati, money and all that are not adding values to our lives. So, I don’t recognize people like that and I don’t listen to their kind of songs. I am a social crusader and I love songs that will add values to the lives of my people.  You should not come to Africa and say because you see people are poor you are throwing money at people. That is stupid; it is disrespect to my people,” he said.
Eedris suggested a realistic way to show interest in helping our poor people.  “If they want to add value to people, what I expect them to do is to come down and put up a non-governmental organization that will take care of anything that has to do with food shortage that the United Nations and the World Bank are talking about,” he said.
“Most of the American Artistes that come over to Nigeria should have this at the back of their minds that they are also Africans: that 500 years ago, their great grandfathers were taken away from Badagry.  So, they are slaves and whenever they are coming to Africa, they should come and add values and not take the huge money we pay them to come and teach us sex, drugs and how many gunshots they had in their body”, he also said.
On the spat with 50cent, he narrated how, on a flight, he resisted a discriminatory attempt by 50cent and his group of about 22 bodyguards who ordered him out of First Class and he fought them and refused to be humiliated.  Eedris said he had insisted to the face of 50cent that the latter wasn’t superior to him.  He posited that the Nigerian Breweries company who organized the show that paired him with 50cent was responsible for the situation.
After the battle on the plane, Eedris said, “When we got to the airport and he [50cent] saw the way I was received, he asked me to come and have a handshake but I told him I’m a student of history and I know how their forefathers were slave-traded in Badagry 500 years ago. You know what? 50cent had to go back to America,” Eedris narrated.
He however admitted that few months after he took a stern stand against that behavior in the air by 50cent, he went on his knees to beg 50cent few months after that in South Africa. Eedris said that he apologized to 50cent because he wanted to remain at peace with him.
“I wasn’t apologizing because of what popped up. I was apologizing knowing the fact that he came through a wrong politics, he didn’t know anything. I had to do that to give him another opportunity because we Africans are good people and we are hospitable. I had to apologize to him because every action I took the other time was on Nigerian breweries, not against 50cent”, said Eedris.
The pop artiste also reacted to a recent statement by President Goodluck Jonathan in which he alleged that the January Occupy Nigeria protest rally was stage-managed.  Eedris, as an activist, was also part of the Occupy Nigeria movement in Lagos which shut down major activities in the country. He dismissed the President’s statement as mere political propaganda, stressing that the stretch of the duration of the Occupy Nigeria protest, which was longer than the usual two-days that was expected by the Federal Government, was a clear indication that the people were fed up with the situation in the country and were willing to protest for as long as possible.
But on what borders on Eedris Abdulkareem’s controversial moral stand, Eedris confirmed on the show that he takes money from Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomole. Even though Eedris had criticized the likes of D’banj for taking money from President Goodluck Jonathan, the admission seemed to have cast him as operating different standards.
Obviously miffed by the unexpected question, Eedris argued that he collected money from Adams Oshiomole of Edo State because the later was a Comrade and a good Governor. Eedris reiterated that he would love to identify with Fashola, Tinubu, Rochas and Oshiomole because they fixed roads and improved education in their States, and he would therefore be free to collect money from them.  After all, “it is our money,” he said.
The segment anchor, Omoyele Sowore asked Eedris whether taking money from Governor Adams Oshiomole has no effect on his moral stand as he had accused D’Banj of the same practice.  An angered Eedris said his own was justifiable because his own benefactor was doing well.  “When Oshiomole won, he said, ‘Eedris come, we have won.’ We fought it together,” the activist said.
Continuing, he told his interviewer, “It is very justifiable because Oshiomole is a good Governor, so what are you going to say about it? He is doing very well and that is my service that I’m rendering. And also, to put it straight to you,
Goodluck Jonathan and his so-called ex-president have not done what
these Governors have been able to do in less than two years. So, what
are you saying about that?  If you don’t like it, eat it.”
As his segment of the show rounded off, Eedris chanted: “I love Fashola, New Nigeria; I love Oshiomole, New Nigeria; I love Rochas, New Nigeria; Sahara, Odabo o!”