Thursday, 11 October 2012

Tony Uranta Reveals That Police And JTF Watched Helplessly As ‘Aluu4′ Were Murdered


The revelation by Tony Uranta, a public affairs analyst, today, that two different patrol teams were on hand at the scene where the four UNIPORT undergraduate students were murdered, is a clear indication of complicity and dereliction of duty by Nigeria’s security forces. Mr Uranta confirmed that the location where the incident took place was within five different outposts of police and JTF.
He further said that the Police did not attempt to disperse the crowd before the boys were killed and left to him the DPO and others should be charged to court.
According to Mr. Uranta, who was a guest on Sunrise Daily, “the problem we have in this country is that no government official can be charged to court and if the issue is not properly taken up he will go on a one-man protest”.
Mr. Uranta said he was not pleased with President Goodluck Jonathan for not making a mention of the Mubi or Port Harcourt killings in his address yesterday and he felt the president lacked empathy as the issue of flood was not the biting issue as of the time he addressed the nation and he is sure the so-called fund being disbursed for flood disaster has been penned down for embezzlement.
MizSunshine Gist

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

My Church Is Bigger than Yours

By Femi Aribisala
The popularity of a church is eloquent testimony of failure and not of success.
They contradict the counsel of the Lord without batting their eyelids.  They plant church parishes like supermarkets in every street-corner.  They build cathedrals and church monuments like World Trade Centres, each one striving to be the biggest and most splendiferous in the universe.  They gather thousands, even millions, of “worshippers” in front of television-cameras every so often on the mountains of Kilimanjaro.  They are the new spiritual superstars; the mega-pastors of the mega-churches.
In this conceit, my former church, Redeemed, takes the cake.  While Redeemed’s emphasis on branch-networking and exponential growth might be a wonderful policy for a fast-food chain, as a framework for a Christian organisation, it has tended to produce half-baked pastors who exhibit flagrant disregard for godly propriety.
Carnal growth
In the world today, success in “churchianity” is measured by the size of the congregation and not by changed lives.  Accordingly, highfalutin mega-pastors have fine-tuned church-growth strategies.  It’s all a question of numbers, numbers and more numbers.  Numbers determine how much money is fleeced from the flock.  Numbers determine the extent of pastoral control and captivity of men.  When pastors meet, the unspoken question is “how big is your church?”  The answer determines social status.  Like Mordecai to Haman, the mini-pastors are required to bow down to the mega-pastors.
Men like Pastor Sunday Adelaja of Embassy of God Church, Kiev, Ukraine even maintain God gave them the specific mandate to establish mega-churches.  Adelaja claims God told him: “I am about to raise up a mega-church in Europe, at this end time and I am calling people who will establish those churches. Some people have already responded to my call. Your destiny and that of millions of other people depend on whether or not you will obey me. The primary assignment is to raise up a mega-church.”
However, God does not raise up churches: he has only one church.  He does not ask men to build churches for him.  Jesus says: “I will build my church.” (Matthew 16:18).  Moreover, God despises what men esteem. (Luke 16:15).  Therefore, he generally prefers the mini to the mega.  He says: “Woe to the multitude of many people who make a noise like the roar of the seas.” (Isaiah 17:12).  Jesus identifies God’s flock as little, as opposed to large.  He says: “Do not fear, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.” (Luke 12:32).  Thus, Zechariah asks rhetorically: “Who has despised the day of small things?” (Zechariah 4:10).
Kingdom dynamics
Indeed, according to Jesus’ kingdom dynamics, the popularity of a church is eloquent testimony of failure and not of success.  Jesus told his disciples: “The world would love you if you belonged to it; but you don’t- for I chose you to come out of the world, and so it hates you.” (John 15:19).  However, the world loves today’s mega-pastors.  Nothing rubbished Pastor Adeboye’s ministry more than Newsweek’s declaration that he is one of the world’s most respected men.  Jesus says: “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for so did their fathers to the false prophets.” (Luke 6:26).
The wisdom of God is contrarian, “she calls aloud in the street; she raises her voice in the public squares.” (Proverbs 1:20).  “No king is saved by the multitude of an army; a mighty man is not delivered by great strength.  A horse is a vain hope for safety; neither shall it deliver any by its great strength.” (Psalm 33:16-17).
When applied to our vainglorious mega-churches, this means no man is saved by the size of a church, neither are the wicked delivered by the great charisma of a pastor.  When we play the numbers game in churches, we are guilty of trusting in the multitude of our mighty men. (Hosea 10:13).  “This is the word of the LORD to Zerubbabel: ‘Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,’ says the LORD of hosts.  Who are you, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel you shall become a plain!’” (Zechariah 4:6-7).
One of the great mountains before Zerubbabel was Solomon’s temple.  Those charged with rebuilding it were intimidated that the new temple would not have the splendour and majesty of the old.  But God is not concerned with size and other externalities.  Through Haggai, he notes that, in spite of its physical shortcomings, “the glory of this latter temple shall be greater than the former.” (Haggai 2:9).  Before Zerubbabel, the great mountain of Solomon’s temple would become a plain.
When the disciples extolled the splendour of the Jerusalem temple to Jesus, he replied: “All these buildings will be knocked down, with not one stone left on top of another!” (Matthew 24:2).  The same fate awaits the magnificent cathedrals of today.  However, the real temple of God, the body of Jesus, remains impregnable.  Jesus said: “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” (John 2:19).
God’s verdict
In the kingdom of God, it is the stone the builders reject that becomes the headstone. (Psalm 118:22).  This prophecy is bad news for mega-churches and their mega-pastors because it predicts they will ultimately be rejected.  According to Jesus, the first will become last and the last first. (Mark 10:31).  So today’s “first-class” pastors and their majestic churches will eventually be humbled.
Isaiah says: “every valley shall be exalted and every mountain and hill brought low.” (Isaiah 40:4).  This indicates that, in the day of the Lord, we are likely to discover that the big church is small in the sight of the Lord and the small church is big.  Mega-church “wanna-be’s” readily sacrifice the doctrine of Christ on the altar of the imperatives for a large following.  But we are not called to empire-building but to righteousness.  Indeed, Jesus says to popular mega-churches across the ages: “I know your works, that you have a name that you are alive, but you are dead.” (Revelation 3:1).
David got into trouble with God when he became preoccupied with size.  When pride moved him to conduct a census in Israel in order to glory in the size of his kingdom, God responded by decimating it with pestilence which killed seventy-thousand men. (2 Samuel 24:1-15).  Jesus himself was not the product of a big “church,” but of little Bethlehem Ephrathah. (Micah 5:2).
Why are Christians still so sinful?  Why is so little of the character of Christ evident in the churches?  One major reason is that too much emphasis is placed on numerical growth and too little on spiritual growth.  Indeed, the messages that promote numerical growth often impede spiritual growth.  Everywhere, pastors are engaged in church-planting, for the primary purpose of increasing their dominion and finances.  The outcome is the mushrooming of churches that are impressive to men, but contemptible to God.
Isaiah warns: “Because you have forgotten the God of your salvation, and have not been mindful of the Rock of your stronghold, therefore you will plant pleasant plants and set out foreign seedlings; in the day you will make your plant to grow, and in the morning you will make your seed to flourish; but the harvest will be a heap of ruins in the day of grief and desperate sorrow.” (Isaiah 17:10-11).
Vanguard

Danger looms at Kainji Dam

. Worse floods loom as Kainji dam’s water channels have not been cleared in five years
. Flood victims now drink from untreated water
A disaster that is worse than what has been witnessed in North-Central states could occur if, as the Nigerian Metorological Agency (NIMET) predicted, torrential rains persist. The reason may not necessary be an act of God, but the byproduct of the neglect of the Kainji Dam in Niger State for upward of five years, Sunday Trust can reveal.
Already, more than 200 persons have been killed and property worth billions of naira have been destroyed in massive floods in Kogi, Benue, Nasarawa, Niger, Kaduna, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), down to several South-South states, where the River Niger flows.
A reliable source at Kainji Dam told Sunday Trust at the weekend that the dam is facing a protracted problem, which is capable of causing more harm than has been witnessed in the last few weeks. The reason is that in the last five years, the natural water drainage channels have been neglected.
Our source, who is a top official at the dam, told our reporter that, “Kainji dam is originally designed to generate power. However, it has some natural drainages that have been blocked and require routine river treatment, to enable it discharge water from the dam as at when due. Without this, excess water would accumulate and overflow its channels, thereby destroying communities and farmlands around it. For over five years now, the natural channels have been blocked. We have always reported the blockage to the Ministry of Power because Kainji is under the power ministry, but no action has been taken.”
The official said further, “As I am talking to you now, not even one naira has been earmarked for the river treatment of Kainji dam in the 2012 budget and I am not sure government has made any provision for the river treatment of this dam in the 2013 budget. Government is only interested in the ability of the dam to generate electricity. It is  not interested in maintaining it.”
He added that, “There are two incontrovertible facts about Kainji dam. One, the natural channels are blocked and that is affecting its ability to discharge excess water, thereby threatening the safety and security of the dam. The earlier we commence river treatment for the dam the better. River treatment is very expensive, as much as it is unavoidable. Two, the excess water discharged from this dam account for over 80 percent of the flood being experienced today at the lower River Niger. The blockage of the natural channel is making the situation critical. There is nothing we can do to control the situation. In fact, should the dam receive any additional water within this rainy season, worse disaster will be recorded. The pressure on the dam is at its peak now. Anything could happen.”
When asked if the dam management had sought for expert advice in addition to the reports made to the Ministry of Power, the source said, “We contacted the Ministry of Water Resources, which has all the experts, and a team came here, saw what we were saying and went back to report to government, but nothing has been done so far. The National Assembly committees that could have listened to us and initiate action are not willing to come here because we have nothing to give them. The only remedy for now is, all the riverside communities should be immediately evacuated. With just two more heavy rainfalls or should another dam discharge its water into Kainji dam, what is happening now will be a child’s play,” the source said.
However, in an interview, the Deputy Director in charge of Dams and Reservoir operations in the Federal Ministry of Water Resources, Kabir Moyi, said Kainji dam is structurally in good shape.
The director, who gave the dam a clean bill of health, said he led a team of engineers to the dam at the instance of the federal Ministry of Power that owns the dam.
He added, however, that for Nigeria to avert flood in the future, there is need to open up the blocked natural water channels across the country so that water will stop moving in to farms and houses.
He also said there is need for the construction of more dams for the country, to be able to contain the torrential volume of water that climate change may continue, to generate in order to avert future occurrence of the flood.
Checks in the recent federal budgets proved that government has not spent any money on clearing the natural water channels in Kainji dam since 2008. In the 2008 budget of the Ministry of Power, there was a budget of N340 million for Kainji Auxillary Rehabilitation by Alsthon. This contract is related to power. Other allocations to Kainji Dam were for the extension of Kanji 330 KVA Subs-Station and 132KV DC to New Busa at the rate of N720 million. No other item referred to the rehabilitation of the natural water channel.
Also, in 2009, the only item about Kainji Dam was the “completion of the rehabilitation and repairs of power plants,” which was supposed to cost government N850 million. In the 2012 budget, the neglect continued as of the two items related to Kainji Dam were a World Bank rehabilitation of units of IG5, G6 and IG12 Station counterpart funding to the tune of N350 million. The second was tagged as “plant auxillary spares and annual maintenance,” for which N402,983,150 was set aside.  It is not clear whether these funds were released.
A former military governor of Kano and Benue States, Colonel Aminu Isa Kontagora (rtd), associated the floods in North-Central States with the neglect of Kainji dam. According to him, “Annual floods devastating farmlands with progressive aggression occurs in at least five local government areas of Niger State. They are so common place that people are now used to their yearly losses. Unless steps are taken to conduct routine maintenance of Kainji Dam, it is uncertain when the perennial flooding would end.
However, Engineer Reuben Akinwumi, the Chief Executive Officer of Kainji Power Station, told Sunday Trust that the flooding cannot be blamed on whether or not the water channels were cleared, asking rhetorically, “Would you blame the overflooding in the Upper River Niger from Cameroon on Kainji channels, too? You can come and see things for yourself. You can also seek further clarifications from the Ministry of Water Resources.”

Effects of floods in Niger State
About 50 persons were reported to have lost their lives in 493 coastal communities located along River Niger and Kaduna that were sacked by floods that wreaked havoc on them as a result of high volume of water released from Kaiji, Jebba and Shiroro hydro dams in Niger state.
Speaking to Sunday Trust, the Director-General of the Niger State Emergency Management Agency (NSEMA), Mohammed Shaba, who spoke through his Director of Relief and Rehabilitation, Garba Salihu, said  statistics of provisional assessment put the amount of losses incurred in the floods  at N 2.5 billion.
He said that the affected communities cut across 15 out of the 25 Local Government Areas of the state, adding that provisional assessment also indicated that a landmass of 2. 7 million hectares was also washed away by the flood. Out of the sacked communities, it was reported that 41,125 people were displaced and now taking shelter in 18 Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps spread in eight LGAs, including five camps each, in Mokwa and Lapai, two each in Lavun and Bargu, while Wushishi, Edati, Shiroro and Munya each, has one IDP camp.
However, the DG said two IDP camps had been shut following the receding of water volume in Shiroro and Munya LGAs. He added that when the three hydro dams a warning alert of an imminent danger of  flood along the coastal areas in the state, SEMA went round all the communities considered under serious threat for sensitization with a call on them to relocate to safer areas.
The DG emphasized that his agency embarked on the sensitization with the call for relocation because the flooding disaster along the coastal areas of the state had became a yearly affair, hence the decision of the government to resettle them with a view to having a permanent solution to the problem. But the good news, according to him, is that about 80 communities along the river banks of river Kaduna and Niger have agreed to be relocated to plain lands that are free from flood threat.
Giving the breakdown of statistics of the damages incurred as a result of the flood in the state, the SEMA boss said, Mokwa recorded the highest death toll with 29 lives lost. Borgu and Bosso recorded the death of four persons each, Chanchaga and Wushishi recorded three deaths each while Lavun and Lapai had two cases of death each and one case from Kontogora LGA.
He added that in respective order, Borgu, Lavun, Mokwa 52, 34, 25 communities were affected. In Bosso, Munya and Shiroro LGAs 10 communities in each were equally affected.  Wushishi recorded 13 cases, Chanchaga seven, Edati four, five each in Kontagora and two communities each in Katcha and Agaie.
Niger State started experiencing its own share of the devastating effect of the flood  on September, 4th  and  the situation went out of hand when on the 8th of the same month Kainji and Jebba hydro dams started releasing water and two weeks later the situation further deteriorated when Shiroro hydro dam also followed suit.

Kogi flood and victims’ tales of agony
Kogi flood victims who are camped in Enugu State are lamenting. They are at St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Igga in Uzo-Uwani Local Government Area of Enugu State. At the time of filing thus report, the premise are accommodating 119 families, 517 females and 497 males.  They were among the thousands of victims of the ravaging and killing flood that submerged some Ibaji communities of Kogi State. Now, they are being camped as refugees in Uzo-Uwani local government area of Enugu State. And they have all made passionate appeal to the Federal Government and Governor Idris Wada of Kogi State to urgently come to their assistance.
Their living condition is sad to write home about. They are squatting in primary school buildings at Iggah and Ogrugu, two boundary communities in Enugu State. Specifically, they are camped at Iggah, Ojjor and Ogrugu. The people are in pitiable condition. Worse still, the refugees now drink from the flooded Mabolo River, said to be very dangerous for human consumption because of its toxic nature.
However, four persons - a man, his wife and two children reportedly drowned when their canoe capsized as they paddled on their way to the refugee camp in Iggah after their home in Odeke community of Kogi state was overtaken by the massive flood.  Sunday Trust learned that the victims were paddling in a canoe when the goats they were taking along in the canoe began to disturb their movement on the flood. In an attempt to calm the goat down, the canoe capsized while all the occupants got drowned.
Many of the refugees who spoke to our reporter bemoaned the hunger and sufferings which they have had to battle since they fled their Kogi communities to Uzo-Uwani in Enugu state. Mr. Paul Agwuja, from Odeke in Ibaji community of Kogi State, said he was totally wrecked by their misfortune occasioned by the flood. “I am really confused; so confused that I don’t know what to say. But whichever way you can help us, please do. It is something that happened to us accidentally, and we never expected it,” he said.
Another victim, a polygamist, who said he had 10 children, told our reporter that, “I came here five days ago now. The problem is that the flood, which we have never experienced since we were born, came to our place suddenly. It covered all our land and houses. The force of the flood pulled down our houses, and we could not even recover any of our household effects.”
Mrs. Caroline Onoh, also from Odeke community, is a mother of four children. She told our reporter, “We are suffering too much since the flood ravaged our homeland, and turned the entire people of the community into refugees. Since we came here about six days, the natives of Iggah have been giving us shelter, food and water. But we don’t have anything left for us. The flood took all we have laboured for throughout our lives.” She said she came to the camp with only one of her children, while the rest are camped in other places. She said, “I want government to provide for us food, clothes, money.”
Interestingly, the Chairman of Uzo-Uwani Local Government Area of Enugu State, Chief Cornel Onwubuya had donated relief materials worth about N5million to the flood victims who fled their state and are currently camping in communities within Enugu state. The materials donated to the refugees at the three camps on Wednesday included 100 bags of rice, 4 beans, drugs, 500 treated nets, 100 cartons of toilet rolls, 20 gallons of 25 kg groundnut oil, 75 flash-lights with batteries, cartons of disinfectants, sacs of onions, cartons of maggi cubes, 30 bags of salt, cartons of bathing and washing soaps, mats and blankets, trailer load of satchet water, bottled water, among other essential items.
When contacted on why the National Assembly has not insisted on a better funding of Kainji Dam, the chairman of the House Committee on Media and Publicity Rep. Zakari Mohammed (PDP, Kwara), said he was not in Abuja at the moment and as such he can’t confirm or deny the issue.
“When I come back I will interact with the chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, John Enoh, to ascertain the true position of things as far the issue of funding of the Kainji Dam and other dams across the country is concerned. The flooding is affecting everybody, including those in my constituency,” the House spokesman said.
DailyTrust

Confusion in ACN: Lai Mohammed responds to allegations that party collected N16 billion to sell out Ribadu

by Stanley Azuakola
The issue is refusing to go away. That the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the predominant party in the South West, was so badly beaten by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the zone during the presidential elections, was one of the wonders of the 2011 elections. Especially because they had a relatively solid candidate in the person of Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.
At the time, there was a strong possibility that if Ribadu swept the South West as expected, the elections might have been decided by a runoff, which might not have favoured the incumbent.
Some reports then, mentioned how the ACN leader was picked with a presidential jet to Aso Rock where some negotiations were made but were strongly denied of course. Now, over a year after the incident, somebody within the ACN fold is corroborating that story. He is none other than the party’s embattled Kaduna State chairman, Mohammed Soba, who claims that the ACN sold out Ribadu for the presidential sum of $100 million (N16billion)
As expected, the party, through its publicity secretary, Lai Mohammed, has denied Soba’s accusations, describing it as “absolute nonsense.” Mohammed challenged Soba to take his evidence to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), if he had any proof to substantiate his claim.
He said, “The allegation is absolute nonsense. It’s just a reaction of a person who wants to sit-tight on a position from which he has been duly removed. He has not only been removed from being the chairman of ACN in Kaduna State, he has also been suspended from the party.
“Why doesn’t he just approach the EFCC, if he thinks he is sure of what he is saying? Why he came out with this is because I issued a statement that we were going to court to stop the Kaduna State Independent Electoral Commission from conducting local government elections in the state because they are dealing with a faction of the party that has been rejected.”
On his part, Soba claimed that he was being witch-hunted by his party for asking them to explain why they sold the bid for the presidency. It is unclear why he’s only asking them to explain now, more than sixteen months after the elections were concluded and the winner sworn in.
According to Soba: “We challenge Lai Mohammed and the national secretary of the party, Senator Lawal Shuaibu, to tell the whole world why state chapters like Enugu, Ebonyi, Abia, Cross Rivers, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, Nassarawa, Plateau, Bauchi, Gombe, Yobe, Borno, Adamawa, Taraba and Kaduna states are all facing national leadership induced crises.”
Soba also described as empty, the threats by the ACN national leadership to sue the KSIEC for recognising him, insisting that he remains the chairman of the state chapter of the party.

YNaija.com

Lecture: Mimiko awarded the title of Most Wasteful Governor in Nigeria history


Lecture delivered by Alabi at an ACN meet in Los Angeles
THE story of Ondo State is that of a state with such huge and promising potentials, that has fallen on spells of underdevelopment, underperformance and mismanagement due to mediocre and unimaginative leadership. Ondo State is the fourth largest economy in Nigeria by way of revenue apportionment from the Federal Government. But it is among the poorest states because of the mismanagement of her resources. For instance, between 2009 and 2012, the government of Ondo State received over N600 billion. But there is little or no infrastructure to justify this huge financial allocation.
Site of the abandoned multi-billion naira dome
Site of the abandoned multi-billion naira dome
There are no infrastructure, institutions and government-sponsored programmes to encourage and nurture the creation of wealth, and the building of the middle class. This has resulted in the creation and perpetuation of a consumptive society where there’s no encouragement and support of manufacturing and mass production of goods and services. Unlike Baba Awolowo who fostered the creation of wealth for the Yorubas during his illustrious tenure in office, by investing in education, infrastructure and industries, our past, recent and current leaders have neglected these most important duties of nation and state building. Investing in infrastructure and the creation of a manufacturing base that are so vital to the survival of our state and our people are lacking. As history has shown, any society that only consumes what others have produced, without manufacturing it’s own goods and services, such as Taiwan ,China and India to name a few countries that have recently transitioned to manufacturing economies, would never be economically strong nor politically relevant.
The present economy of Ondo State ails critically. There is rampant poverty and hunger among the people. Most of the citizenry have lost their jobs, homes and dignities. Yet, in the midst of these hard and trying times, the ruling politicians, with their access to the treasuries, continue to display affluence in contempt of the masses they profess to serve. These officials are usually inaccessible and intolerant to advice and opposition. They are not available in their offices, homes, nor could they be reached by phone or SMS.
The Labour party government of Ondo State has the highest number of political appointees in Nigeria. The consequence of a bloated civil service is the high cost of recurrent expenditure for the government. There is a potential for financial trouble and ruin for a state, when the largest part of its budget and revenue goes to the payment of salaries and compensations of government staff and personnel. With so little percentage of total revenue allocated and invested on economic and job generating projects and infrastructure such as roads, healthcare facilities, schools and so on, the future economic and social outlook of the state is bleak.!
These huge operating recurrent expenditures has robbed the people of the state of revenues that could have been invested in laying the foundation of a good infrastructural network across the state, that would have become a catalyst for growth and flourishing economy for generations to come.
Thus the goal of bestowing the leadership of Ondo State to Akeredolu, SAN, is a noble undertaking that all sons and daughters of Ondo should give their utmost considerations. Our efforts will help usher in a better and brighter future for the people of our state. The future of our children and their children would be most assured. This aspiration is about running a government that will be second to none in Nigeria. A government that would be dedicated to the creation of wealth and the building of a solid middle class. It is about moving away from a consumption economy to that of production and manufacturing based economy. Ondo State is blessed with abundance natural resources. We have huge reserves and deposits of crude oil, granite, palm oil, glass, etc.
Ondo State needs peace and stability. This is the time for Mr. Mimiko to truly reflect and consider the consequences of his present and future actions, and how history will judge him.
For those who may not know about this great organisation, AKETI 2013 is a most influential and politically connected organisation whose membership is made up of brothers and sisters from Ondo State who are captains and barons of industries; professionals; academicians and eminent citizens who are resident in Lagos. It is an organisation that is dedicated to the advancement and progress of Ondo State and her people. Over the years, AKETI 2013 has played such vital roles in the political life of Nigeria and in the political life of Ondo State in particular.
These patriots, after so many years of serving and bolstering, are dismayed and disillusioned with the discouraging status of the present economic, social ,and political well being of our state, despite the huge revenues it has received as it’s share of federal revenue over the years. We are dissatisfied with the philosophy, policies and the direction of the current administration of Ondo State.
Furthermore, these distinguished men and women are committed to bring about change by redoubling our efforts; raising our voices; and voting overwhelmingly on October 20, 2012 (election day).
On 28th July 2012, the ACN flag for ‘A Brighter Tomorrow For The Great People of Ondo State’ was bestowed on Oluwarotimi Odunayo Akeredolu, SAN. His political philosophy and economic development plans were released to the public through the press, where his reconstruction and development plans for Ondo State were clearly enunciated. His aims to transform Ondo State to a modern, efficient and technologically advanced and self sufficient state were set out in this most ambitious document that has been lauded as a far-reaching economic and development plans.
According to experts, if faithfully executed, the economic plans would transform Ondo State into a modern and technologically efficient state such as currently exists in the states of the United States, Europe and Asia. The most eloquent tribute to Akeredolu’s candidature has been the enthusiastic reception by the people of Ondo State.
LibertyReporter

Good Luck, Nigeria By Sonala Olumhense


For many years, as a young columnist, I ended my independence anniversary essays with the following words, “Happy Birthday, Nigeria.”

I was offered my first column in 1980. In those early days, for me, such occasions as National Day, Children’s Day, Christmas and New Year’s Day offered wonderful opportunities to reflect on the state of the nation.
In those days, I did not know how to spell cynicism. I saw opportunities, not closed doors. I saw vast expressways to development, not torchlights blinking in the dark.
Since then, here are some of the key figures I have seen: Shehu Shagari, Muhammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Babangida, Ernest Shonekan, Sani Abacha, Abdulsalam Abubakar, Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Yar’Adua, and Goodluck Jonathan.
There have also been some pretty remarkable figures among them.
I saw Umaru Dikko, who nearly travelled from London to Lagos in a crate. Dikko did not believe there was true poverty or hunger in Nigeria, because he had never seen anyone eating out of a dustbin.
I saw—and interviewed—Joseph Tarka and Godwin Daboh, two men of Benue State stock who were among the early confronters of the corruption question in the streets.
I saw Buhari and Tunde Idiagbon, who put together something called the War Against Indiscipline to confront the social vices that are now out of control.
I saw Moshood Abiola, who thought that one Ibrahim Babangida was his friend. Babangida had no friends.
Babangida was a stage actor who enjoyed playing the role of President. The original Landlord of Abuja, he was the one who defined and refined Nigeria’s corruption enterprise.
Abacha would become the first Head of State to die in Aso Rock, working under imported Bollywood-style women. He may have developed that taste from watching Indian movies, but Jeremiah Useni, perhaps the only one who knows, has never been asked.
Until the death of Abacha, who was feared from Borno to Bayelsa and back, nobody had ever heard of a man called Abdussalam Abubakar, but his job it became to organize another transition to democracy. Some of the people involved in that exercise paid themselves very well.
Abacha’s natural successor might have been Moshood Abiola, who had won the 1992 election. Denied victory by Babangida, Abiola would die mysteriously under Abacha, leaving Abubakar with the challenge by which Nigeria returned to civil rule in 1999.
That was when an old name became new: Olusegun Obasanjo, who was handing power over to Shagari in 1979 as I was becoming a journalist.
In the years in which I have seen these men, I have learned that absent in almost all of them is that burning patriotic zeal it takes to be a builder. That courage of that zeal is what makes a true leader to deny himself and to sacrifice.
Nigerian leaders usually cannot summon it. These tin-gods love themselves far too much.
They are also often distinguished by their hatred of Nigeria and its people. This is why not one of them can stay awake long enough to ensure that one patriotic thought is completed or one major road constructed.
Oh, they award contracts all year-long, but that is because it is through the contracts and contractors that national wealth is converted into private riches. Other countries want to extend opportunity to their citizens, Nigerian leaders want to extend Nigerian opportunities to themselves.
The inner manoeuvres never end. Babangida had Mamman Vatsa shot by a firing squad. Vatsa had throughout his life mistakenly thought Babangida to be his friend. The same Babangida it was who expunged a historic election that would have brought Abiola, who also called Babangida a friend, to power. Abiola did not survive that perfidy.
Babangida, like his “friend,” Obasanjo, did not walk the path of honour. None of them could permit the development of institutions, such as Nigeria’s medical infrastructure. In the end, each man lost his wife on a foreign hospital bed: there were no hospitals they ruled and ruined.
Hiding behind dark glasses, Abacha wanted to stay in power for life. Actually, he did. His true story then began to unravel as the world found out what a thieving clown he had been.
With our resumption of United States-style democracy in 1999, Nigerians hoped things would change, not simply for the better, but in a hurry. We were getting left behind.
Unfortunately, our fate has only deteriorated. The only business in town is the government. You go there to grow rich, not to serve, and then you retire to a life of hypocrisy, opulence and godfatherism.
Nigeria is simple: When you are rich or powerful enough—an overnight job if you are ruthless—you buy private jets. That way, you do not have to see, or be bothered by, the rot that is below.
That is why Nigeria’s educational system has collapsed and our children are begging for schools in South Africa and Ghana.
That is why former Ministers of Works, having refused to construct roads, travel abroad for treatment when they are in a road accident.
That is why our chiefs of state and their wives choose foreign hospitals in seedy places abroad for anything and everything from beauty treatments and liposuction to Churg Strauss syndrome and dying.
And that is why Nigeria is closing in and choking right before our eyes. Our leaders used to head for the public square to celebrate National Day with the people, shaking hands with them, laughing with them, and dreaming with them.
Not anymore: for his National Day performance for the second year in a row, President Jonathan dressed in a fortified flak jacket and hid in a corner of the presidential villa behind layers of “security” and behind rows of Ministers and columns of Special Advisers and Assistants. Ignoring the crying need for good governance, he ferried in an additional supply of the elite Brigade of Guards.
But then the most shameful thing in 52 years happened on National Day in the once peaceful town of Mubi, in Adamawa State. As though to remind Mr. Jonathan of the true rules of engagement, gunmen walked into a college and took their seats. Methodically, from a prepared list, they called up and murdered student after student: 43 of them. Even for us, this is a new low.
Mubi had been under a blanket cover of the Joint Task Force (JTF) for over one week. Two days before National Day, the JTF had triumphantly reported the surrender to it of 40 suspected terrorists and the recovery of over 100 types of Improvised Explosive Devices.
Mr. Jonathan immediately called for an investigation. As we say in Nigeria: for what? What has he done with all the reports he has received up till now? What has he done about the electoral promises he made last year? What is he doing with Abuja’s army of thieves and looters that is inspiring deep resentment nationwide?
For as long as we lack a leader bold and patriotic enough to see himself as the answer rather than the question; for as long as governance continues to be a power, rather than a performance game; as long as our top-heavy government is sniffing for scandalous “notorious facts” in the press to buttress its game of pretence, this country will continue its steady march to chaos, if not disintegration.
Good luck, Nigeria.
Saharareporters

Mubi killings: Let us talk

Fifteen Minutes  with Dr Hakeem Baba-Ahmed
It is easier to wake a person who is asleep than a person who pretends to be asleep - Ugandan proverb. It will be dangerous to show too much anger and indignation at the impunity and provocation which was at the heart of the killing of anywhere between 26 and 46 students in Mubi, Adamawa state.
Too many signposts and turning points in the violence against Northerners and Nigerians were ignored in the past, and we have reached a tipping point in this nation at which we must take a stand. Even a brief recall of similar massacres is a painful exercise: massacre at a market in Damaturu, routine slaughter of Christians at their places of worship, unending mayhem in the fast-depleting towns of Damaturu and the ancient city of Borno, high profile bombings and assassinations, a shrinking economy in many parts of the north, and an entire people living in permanent fear. Terror has gradually taken over lives of people in the North, and we are at that dangerous point where people could resign themselves to live (or die) with it.
This should not be allowed to continue. It is time to stand up to this threat, and turn the tide. Which is why we should not stop at being angry, but we should turn our anger into constructive energy. What did the people who woke students up in the middle of the night, and calmly and systematically shot or slaughtered those on their list seek to achieve? Perhaps we may, in due course, get to know what they wanted to achieve, but we can safely conclude that their action was pre-eminently contemptuous of our government and the security agencies, and an act of supreme provocation against the community and all citizens. We may also conclude that they intended to trigger further bitterness and conflict between religious and ethnic groups in the North-east and in the whole of Nigeria. Above all, they may have wanted to send a signal that peace-loving Nigerians have lost the war against terror. The lesson from Mubi, from recent events in Zaria and Kano, from Damaturu and Borno and many other parts of the North is that citizens should be prepared to die. It could be you, your children, your wives, your economy, and your values. But this war you are losing will get you in one way or the other, sooner or later. And there is nothing you or your government; or your community can do about it. You could be Muslim or Christian, civilian or soldier, poor or rich. It will get you when it wants, how and where it wants.
The people are losing this war because the federal government is ill-prepared, ill-equipped or poorly-committed to fight on our behalf. Perhaps, the federal and state governments do not understand the nature of the enemy, in spite of billions of naira invested in logistics, intelligence and equipment. Perhaps, they are using the wrong weapons against the enemy, in spite of countless suggestions that force alone will not defeat it. Perhaps, they are fighting more than one enemy, going by the numerous allegations that rogue elements and other opportunistic interests are hiding behind the Boko Haram franchise to pursue their own objectives, which may include weakening the Nigerian state. Perhaps, there is too much money chasing the insurgency to bring it to an end; and the very forces fighting it are not too keen to see to its end. Perhaps, both those who terrorize the people and those who terrorize them in the process of protecting them recognize the hopelessness and powerlessness of the civilian population. 
Well, it is time to stand up to both. And since it is very obvious that the people in the North are in for a long haul, those who have responsibility to facilitate or find solutions to their problems must act now. The first line of action must be our governors, people who are living at our own expense, and who swore to protect and defend us. They must convene a high-level, all-embracing forum of political, traditional and religious leaders, academics and other citizens with relevant and useful insights and experiences to examine the entire situation of the North, and the options available to it. 
Just in the event the governors say they have in place a Committee on Peace and Security, or a contraption with a similar name, they need to be told it is not what is needed. The North needs to holistically and honestly examine itself under its present circumstances; examine its challenges in relation to its governments, including the federal government; examine its limitations and opportunities; and consider what steps it needs to take to address short and long-term challenges. 
If the governors will not do this, either because they are satisfied with what they are doing, or are afraid that such a forum will indict them for being part of the problem, then a coalition of politicians, elder statesmen, civil society groups, academics and other citizens should convene their own forum to discuss the current situation of the North, and how it can solve its own problems and engage the rest of Nigeria. This forum should examine the genesis, dimensions and manifestations of all security threats, including JASLIWAJ (a.k.a. Boko Haram); its impact on the Northern political economy; the roles of governments and security agencies and the community, and practical steps that need to be taken to arrest the decay and disintegration which is evident in the North and Nigeria respectively.
If our politicians are too busy looking for opportunities to field themselves or surrogates as presidential candidates in 2015, then patriotic citizens from the North and other parts of Nigeria who recognize the manifest danger which Mubi signals for the nation should convene a platform which should dispassionately discuss national security and the survival of the Nigerian state. This would be a forum convened by Nigerians who recognize that the unity and survival of the nation are worth fighting for. They should believe that our current challenges transcend partisan, ethnic and religious divides. They should believe that a failed Nigerian state which is staring us all in the face will be an unmitigated disaster for everyone, and the pathetic barricades being put up against each others' "problems" are parts of the problem. They should be well schooled in the history of our nation, and draw inspiration from past triumphs over serious challenges and threats to our security and unity.
Mubi should be where the people in the North and Nigeria draw the line. There are very likely going to be many more killings, but for every life or limb lost, henceforth, our voices must be heard. It is time to put our heads up from our holes and act. This is one war we should not leave to the government and security agents to fight. We need to get more involved. The young people shot and killed, with such impunity and callousness, in Mubi are our children. Not to do anything anymore will consign more of them to a similar fate. 
 PeoplesDaily