Monday, 5 August 2013

Don’t Be Deceived By Okonjo-Iweala; Economic Growth Stopped In 1970s – Dr. Muttaka


Muhammad Usman Muttaka
By Isa Sa’idu, Zaria
Dr. Muhammad Usman Muttaka is the Head of Economics Department of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria. In this interview, he has described the reported growth of Nigeria’s economy as a “paper growth”.
Excerpts:
The economy of Nigeria is said to be growing by eight per cent. What should have been the indicators of this growth?
The issue of growth is something that is not new in the economic literature because the measurement of development in any economy is associated with level of income that is generated, basically within a period of one year. So, if you said growth, you mean how the economy fared within that period.
So, I need to just draw a small caveat here. When you say growth, you are referring to the total aggregate of the output of the economy. Therefore, it needs a lot of measurement; a lot of quantification so as to measure the performance of that economy. And of recent, those indicators were given. One, stabilization of macro economy, that is, the level of income for individuals, level of employment, prices, inflation and a lot of other things that are complimentary.
I need to draw an example here, if you said that my house is growing, does it mean by size? It is either the number of people in the house that has risen or the space for each one that is growing. So, if you say the space of everyone is growing, it means that the house is growing in tandem with the population. In a nutshell, we say growth is used to measure the performance of any country in terms of economic activities.
So, you are saying that Nigerian economy is doing well?
No, not quite. It depends on the type of growth you have. There is new economic literature now that says growth without job is jobless growth and so many others. Because macroeconomic indicators involve level of prices, inflation, unemployment and employment, as well as level of living standard and poverty.
If you take these things, you will find out that in the economic literature it was argued that if your economy is growing; all the aforementioned would be relatively under control. If you take unemployment, for example, it is said in the literature that four per cent of unemployment is acceptable. But is that what we have in Nigeria? Does that growth that is being posted reflective of this? That is the first question to ask.
The second question is that if inflation is contained to certain number; is it inflationary or ineffective demand? When the people do not have income, no matter the prices, they cannot be able to purchase. So, along that line you will also look at your balance of payment, because we are import dependent. You also look at the percentage of agricultural contribution to that growth, because it has the implication of measuring the performance of the economy.
Where would you place this type of Nigerian growth, considering the level of poverty in the country?
I call it paper growth. Paper growth in the sense that the growth that is being peddled out does not reflect what you would find in the country. When you go to the street, you will see that the level of unemployment has increased and level of poverty has increased too.
You should look at other sectors like agriculture; is it working? Manufacturing; is it working? So, it is only minute sector of the economy like the telecommunication sector that is growing and that is what accounts for this growth that they are talking about.
Look at the oil sector; is it growing as a major revenue earner for the country? These are the indicators you should look at.
The debt of the country is said to be growing but it is not making much impact because of its low interest. What implication does that have on the economy?
The issue of debt; one can look at it on the Breton wood politics, which says some debt are harmless. There is no debt that is harmless. It is harmful. The way it is managed may translate to the harmless nature of any debt, anyway. In the case of Nigeria, if for instance, you take loan and invest in reproductive sector. For instance, you invest in agriculture where you open land to produce food and create employment and attain food sufficiency that can be a harmless loan. But what we have now is not even accountable. We don’t know what they are doing with it.
Where the Minister of Finance is coming from, you can easily understand why she says that our debts are harmless. She is from the World Bank. Hence, she has to find market for the World Bank because when she leaves the ministerial office she would look for another office in the World Bank. That means she has to work for them. Many economists believe that where we are going in terms of debt would be tragic.
According to your explanation, can we say that there are some debts that could help the economy of the country?
The only debt that can help the economy is the one that is managed for investment. For instance, you secure a loan and invest in development of human manpower like education. With that, you can produce manpower that can compete and add value to the country. But any debt that is not reproductive, that debt will never be a good debt. And I don’t think Nigeria has any business as it is now to take any loan because the resources they have are so enormous. But the issue is that there is a lot of corruption and therefore that corruption will continue to tie the country down unless we address it. And I don’t see that happening soon.
Let’s look at this issue of petroleum subsidy. It is stopped in 1970s put at one trillion naira. Out of that amount, it is said that N232b is questionable. What effect would that have on the country’s economy?
You see, some of us have already made our points about this fuel subsidy. The first question is that the issue of petroleum or oil sector is an international affair. So, it is an open secret if you want to know the cost of drilling a well and extracting one barrel of crude oil.  You go to Saudi Arabco website you will see the prices. They will also tell you how much it will cost you to refine one barrel of crude oil, and the other products that would be extracted as well. Therefore, for a liter of petrol or PMS as they call it, you would know the price. But it is only in Nigeria that somebody will come and tell you that yes, there is subsidy. How does the subsidy come in? How much did they get the oil? How much did it cost them to refine, how much did they pay in transporting it? How much does it sell as the pump price? And you are not even producing it you are importing it. Where were you importing it from and at how much per liter? Because all these things are supposed to be open.
So, the issue of subsidy is like some people are just part of the corruption that we are talking about. They are trying to justify their inefficiency in curtailing certain leakages that are within the economy. So, as far as we are concerned, in simple elementary economics, there are different sectors of markets. There is what they call perfect competitive markets, there is what they call monopoly; there is what they call oligopoly.

The oil industry is in the oligopolistic kind of market. It is like a cartel. The international price now is not determined in Nigeria. It is determined elsewhere. Therefore, you can’t say that oil price in my country would be as competitive as they want us to believe. We would ask them how?
The advocates of competition in Nigeria’s oil market seem to have forgotten the elementary structure of that market. This subsidy is just a gimmick, which has no basis. If they are honest enough, they should come out to tell us how much they import these things. We can then go to the international market and ask how it is sold in the international market and the landing cost of each liter. Then we would see whether there is subsidy or not.
From this analysis, what is the implication of this subsidy that is said to be given to Nigerians on the economy of the country?
Yes, the implication is uncertain. The issue of investment, production and everything is uncertain. And for an economy to grow, there must be stability so that you can plan for ten or twenty years. Our major problem started when we jettisoned our developmental plan. By 1970, if we had followed the developmental plan that was drawn, we would have outweighed our contemporaries. We started planning with Brazil, India and Pakistan and they are still planning. Our problem started in 1986 when we were asked to throw away planning and embrace Structural Adjustment Programme. And from there nobody knows what is going on.
It is said that about 600,000 barrel of crude oil is being lost every day in Nigeria. What effect does this have on the country’s economy?
That is what they are quoting but I bet you even if you go to NNPC and ask them how much crude oil we are producing per day, they can’t even tell you. The country is held hostage by those international oil companies. Because of the nature of our country, we don’t have  the mechanisms to checkmate those companies. As such they declare what they want as what they produce per day.
So, that 600,000 they are quoting is far below what is being lost. The implication is that the money for our crude oil is not coming to the government but to private individuals, and this would affect the capacity of the government to cater for the needs of Nigerians in providing infrastructures and other essentials.
That is one problem. The other problem is that if you quantify the amount of money that is going out of Nigeria in payment of school fees abroad, health tourism; you would be just weeping because it is far above the national budget of those sectors.
There are so many things that one needs to look at. In economics, you don’t look at things in isolation. In economics, it is one thing that triggers the others. So, one has to look at all the issues simultaneously.
Some stakeholders are saying that failure to punish offenders is also detrimental to the country’s economic growth. For example, recently ghost workers were discovered but nobody was punished. What’s your take on that?
I would look at it from the perspective of what brought about ghost workers. For instance, if you take a civil servant to Abuja, you know that lifestyle there is high, and you know his income. On that he has to find another way to live above waters. If he is an accountant, he would say let me add six names so that he would be collecting seven people’s salary to augment his income.
There is also the issue of some obnoxious policies that bring about all these. For example, you take tax payers money to build housing estates to give to civil servants and come back to sell those houses and throw out the civil servants. They would come back to connive with their friends to buy the houses for themselves and raise the rent.
Let me make a comparism. Seventy per cent of houses in Paris now are owned by the government. It is only in Nigeria that you build a massive housing estate like the one in Gwarimpa and sell them out. So, there is ignorance on the part of the policy makers on the economic implication of those things.
Two, some know the implication but because of their corrupt tendencies they would do those things. Three, some people who are not Nigerians. They are just Nigerians by name and by birth. Their allegiance is not for Nigeria. Therefore, they don’t mind if Nigeria collapses today. They are people whose families are not in Nigeria. They are just in Nigeria for certain gains.
So, many things are involved here that include moral and ethics as well as even the essence of human existence.
What do you have to say about SURE-P that has started executing some projects, which are supposed to be under the jurisdiction of some ministries?
Seriously, there is a problem with that arrangement. This has to do with the National Assembly. I feel that the National Assembly should have an independent office that would be investigating certain issues like budget implementation, economy and even politics.
What SURE-P is doing is what ministry of works is doing. Therefore, what happened to the budget meant for that ministry? Nobody knows. But the National Assembly would just say they are going for an oversight but in most cases nothing comes out of it.
PTF that looks like SURE-P came up under military regime but this SURE-P supposed to have been checked by the National Assembly. Lack of that checking makes our economy to suffer. So, all these conceptions were brought to fore by people who are not Nigerians in their allegiance. They compare what is happening at their adopted countries and try to implement them in Nigeria without understanding our economy and what is good for our economy.
Nigerian economy has human resources that are highly competitive anywhere in the world. Two, there are enormous resources, especially land that can turn around the country. Nigeria also witness minimum natural disasters. We also have the market because 160 million people is a large market that everyone needs to respect.  So, we have every opportunity to progress. But there are many impediments, some are out of ignorance while some are out of greed and selfishness. But the future is not gloomy if we may have a rethink because we are far behind where we ought to have been
-SUNDAY TRUST

A Day for Nigerians, By Ose Oyamendan


Ose Oyamendan
Last Wednesday was a day to be proud as a Nigerian. That is if you’re a Nigerian who is not a member of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP. And, the five travelling PDP governors do no count because you gotta have a poker face not to laugh at that little circus.
Five governors, four of whom lost the last presidential elections in their states, yet they think they hold their party’s balls in their hands. What’s the worst they can do? Lose the states again! If some members of PDP don’t own most of the banks, they sure would be laughing to them now.
​But you know why these governors are “fronting” in kidspeak? It’s the three words that have the possibility of altering Nigeria’s political landscape. All Progressives Congress (APC).
​I’m proud of and happy for APC and I’m not even a member of the party. You have to be happy because APC sounds and looks like a worthy opposition that may give PDP a fight for the throne. When things like this go down, the winners are the people who can finally look up.
​It’s not an accident that Nigeria has developed at a snail speed because the leaders only feel accountable to their godfathers not the people. The reason is simple – lack of viable opposition. And, the band of the opposition in the past where so worried about survival they were busy consolidating whatever it is they have than to bother with the people who elect them.
​Well, not anymore – we hope. Now, we can watch our leaders sweat inside air-conditioned room. Now, they will know what it means to be in a molue on Eko Bridge where the passengers know that an miscalculated steering of the wheel and the bus may tumble into the ocean. The difference now is, it won’t be the destiny of the country floating away into abyss. It may just be the fortunes of the political lords.
​Ever since I was a kid in Ibadan whose night was incomplete until my friends and I spot Chief Obafemi Awolowo and his fingers flashing the victory sign inside the moon from a galaxy far, far away, I’d nursed the hope of a viable opposition that will make our leaders accountable just like I was the viable opposition to my sister for the last piece of meat on our father’s plate. That meat meant responsibility because I had to behave during the day; something Nigerian politicians often have no clue about.
​In Nigeria’s ego driven politics, the opposition have been something of a mirage. It’s tough to convince a politician to be in the opposition because the juicy contracts are not there and without juicy contracts your pot belly and all the glories that come with it is likely to disappear like a thief in the night. So, what to do? You join the winning party.
​Now, if I was PDP, I won’t sit and pretend APC is just a pesky fly. I would go to court! Yes, I will sue APC. Good thing their leaders – Bola Tinubu and Mohammadu Buhari, are veterans of the Nigerian courtrooms. What would be my grouse? Simple. It’s the word “progressives”. If APC is the All Progressives Congress, what is PDP? The People’s Degenerate (or regressive) Party?
​You can let some things sit or before you know it, they would change the name of the party to Only Progressives Party. A lawsuit would make them sit up. I know it’s not going to be a winning fight but I would have fired the first shot that would be heard from Daura to Bourdillon. Then, I will sit and watch the ego destroy the party.
​Make no mistake about it, APC will rise or fall on one trait: ego.
How does its leaders subsume their egos for the greater good of their new baby. The little matter of national officers almost left a crack on the party. You wonder what elective offices would do to the party whose leaders are rumored to favor selecting rather than electing candidates.
Tinubu is probably going to be a little easy. I do not know a better political strategist in Nigeria. He seems to be a couple of steps ahead of most politicians, definitely anyone in the APC. He has also sacrificed ambitions in the past, like when he reluctantly step aside for Iyorchia Ayu to be Senate President almost twenty years ago, settling for the chairmanship of the banking and finance committee. So, sacrificing the presidency should be easy right? Stop laughing!
​Buhari is a different ball game. He has the fervor of a man whose soothsayer has told would be king again and he doesn’t look like he’s going to allow himself be talked out of it. If he can sacrifice his presidential ambition for the good of the nation then politics in Nigeria is about to get very interesting.
​Whatever happens, the war drums are out now, 2015 is going to be the political war of all wars. Get your cameras ready and buy some earplugs because the airwaves are about to be bombarded. I can see the cards now – in one corner, Goodluck Jonathan. In the other corner, an APC candidate from the north. Let’s get ready to rumble!
PremiumTimes

Orji Uzo Kalu is Abia’s Greatest Mistake – Gov Orji


Being text of a press statement by Cosmos Ndukwe, cheif of staff to the executive governor of Abia State on the misleading report in SUN Newspaper – May I reiterate my confidence in you to all things be custodians of the truth. You belong to one of the noblest professions in the world. If there are a few persons who are bringing disrepute to the
profession, then it is very unfortunate.
The attention of the State Government has been drawn to a report credited to one OKEY SAMPSON of SUN NEWSPAPER on a purported curse by MASSOB placed on the State Government officials. Without any intention of joining issues with the owner of SUN who is Abia’s greatest mistake; it is important to remind him that we have too much on our hands to attend to owing to the rot he supervised for the eight years he was in office as Governor of Abia State. May be he does not know, statements made by individuals ought not to be credited to the State Government as the State has not issued any official statement regarding Aba; rather we are busy remedying the disaster caused by the same person who was here for 8 years
If the best he could do is to offer his platform for the cursing of Abia State Government, we will therefore say without mincing words that the man who saved Aba from massive flooding and opened up to their roads in the last one year has no business with the curse. The curse should be gladly welcomed by a former Governor who cannot point to one good road in Aba now as his parting gift to Aba people.
SUN NEWSPAPERS have not paid their staff for four months. That is newsworthy. In the history of Abia, we have had a Governor who did eight years and built Abia on the pages of newspaper, who lived in a rented Government House and had civil servants operate from make shift blocks. That is newsworthy.
We are used to the antics of a man in dire need of attention and support. We do not intend to dress him in such borrowed robes. No amount of subterfuge, blackmail or artifice from this propaganda paper and their confusionist owner would deter us from cleaning the heap of rot in Abia State. Aba in particular is still work in progress.
Nnaji Obed Asiegbu
SA e-Governance & Strategy
to the Abia State Governor
OsunDefender

North and the battle for 2015 presidency

  • by  Taiwo Adisa
  • Top actors in the bid to return power to the Northern part of the country have increased their activism in recent weeks. Group Politics Editor, Taiwo Adisa, highlights the rising wave of the 2015 battles, genesis of it all and the issues at stake.
    Shortly after Dr. Goodluck Jonathan was sworn-in as President in 2011, top leaders of the North gathered at the Hilton Hotels, Medina, Saudi Arabia to strategise on the way forward for the North in the 2015 general election. That was during the Ramadan/Lesser Hajj season of August 2011. A number of issues were deliberated upon and a blueprint fashioned out. The issues included the need for the North to clinch the 2015 Presidency, need for unity among the political leaders of the region, roles of former heads of state from the North and the Northern governors, and the need to secure the friendship of former President Olusegun Obasanjo for the Northern quest for power.
    Two years after the historic but secret meeting, the North has remained faithful to the implementation of that blueprint. In December 2011, a unity meeting, which was one of the resolutions of the Medina meeting, was held, bringing together all shades of opinion from the region. That was to lay the foundation for further activism by the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) and the Northern Elders Forum (NEF). With that meeting done with, the next on the agenda is fostering unity among the governors of the region. In that respect, the Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF) has been more active than before under the leadership of Niger State governor, Dr. Muazu Babangida Aliyu.
    With the visit of four governors, including Adamawa State governor, Murtala Nyako, Niger State governor, Muazu Babangida Aliyu, Jigawa State governor, Sule Lamido and Kano state governor, Rabiu Musa Kwakwanso, to former President Obasanjo in Abeokuta last week, the North appeared to have kickstarted another phase of the battle for 2015 presidency. The visit confirms the declaration of an emissary of the governor of Adamawa, Nyako to the August 2011 meeting in Medina, Saudi Arabia.
    A source at the meeting had quoted Nyako’s aide as submitting that: “one thing that is common and central to all the Northern states’ governors is that, political power must return to the North in 2015, but that so far, how this is going to be achieved is what he and his governor colleagues are yet to decide upon.”
    The aide was further quoted as saying that: “The trio of governors Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko, Kwakwanso and Nyako who are good friends to former President Obasanjo, have spoken with Obasanjo and advised him not to offer any support to Mr. President should he (Mr. President) be fighting the North.
    “He stated that the afore-mentioned governors had also decided to meet with Obasanjo on the following three issues - the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP); the 2015 Presidency and Security.”
    But that statement was made in 2011, right now, the coast has been widened to include another core friend of Obasanjo in the North, Governor Lamido and the group of governors appeared to be marching forward in the quest for Northern Presidency in 2015.
    After the Abeokuta visit, the governors moved to Minna on Monday, where they had a parley with two former heads of state, Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Abdusalami Abubakar. Though Nyako was not at the meeting, his spirit was with his other colleagues. He also spoke from Yola, where he reinforced the plan being pursued in Minna by his compatriots. At a meeting in Yola, he insisted that the governors would have no choice than to help bury the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) if things continue to go in different directions.
    While the meeting with the former leaders was cloned as a meeting meant to discuss national issues and proffer solutions to the crisis in the polity, utterances of some participants however gave them away as only plotting towards the actualisation of the 2015 Northern agenda.
    “I just want to commend the governors here and some of their colleagues, I was very impressed because they saw the problem of this country as our problem and they have taken the right steps to make the consultation widely, in trying to find solution to some of the leading problems,”
    “They are real patriots. I am very happy and I told them so,” General Babangida had told newsmen after the meeting.
    But Niger State governor, Babangida Aliyu gave an indication that the meeting was all about the crisis rocking the PDP and the governors’ Forum. “Now we are consulting with our elders and leaders to look at some of the problems and proffer solutions to the problems that some of us perceived we are facing,” he said.
    While responding to further questions, Aliyu said: “There is no gathering in Nigeria now that Rivers’ issue will not come up. Our meeting today (Monday) was a larger issue than even the Governors’ Forum. We are discussing on how to solve them.”
    With Aliyu’s submissions, it was apparent that the Minna meeting was more of the 2015 battle. Incidentally, the 2011 meeting which produced the Arewa blueprint for 2015 had indentified the role of former Nigerian leaders of Northern extraction as one of the stumbling blocks to the Northern presidency agenda.
    A participant at the meeting had quoted a governor lamenting the roles played by some former leaders and Northern leaders of thought in scuttling the 2011 aspiration, adding that the governors would not accept the attitude of some former heads of State or President as witnessed during the process leading to the 2011 Presidential election. The governor added that his colleagues are opposed to the gang-up leading to the Northern consensus candidate option.
    Some of the other respected voices in the North were said to have cautioned on the roles played by Babangida and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar in the North’s quest for the number one spot in recent years.
    Besides, a homily at the start of the meeting had also directed the attention of Northern politicians thus: “If the North is not united, the region will be in a political dilemma in the years to come. The critical issues coming up on the front burner include the 2015 succession, particularly how the North can play a more united role, towards ensuring that political power returns to the region, as well as the issue of stabilising the country.”
    Thus, the meetings in Abeokuta and Minna were not just foretold, they were aimed at strengthening the hands of the North in the 2015 presidential bid.
    Is all set for a coronation of a Northern candidate as President based on the perceived realisation of the emerging united front? That is an issue political actors will keep providing answers to as time draws close to the 2015 dateline. But the facts on ground confirm that a lot more needed to be done if the North will clinch the presidential ticket off the South South which is the incumbent.
    Political observers would hold aloft the belief that the disposition of the five Northern governors who are pushing the peace initiative and the North’s 2015 agenda so far does not cut across all tendencies in the region. For instance, it could be easily said that all the five governors have one thing or the other in common; they are close allies of former President Obasanjo. While Wamakko was helped into PDP by the former President, Lamido was imposed on Jigawa by the Ota farmer. The same scenario happened in Niger, where Aliyu was plucked from the Permanent Secretary job and landed the governorship seat by Obasanjo on a platter. Kwakwanso was Minister of Defence under Obasanjo and he proved a good ally for the former President while the Ota farmer battled the former Speaker of House of Representatives, Ghali Umar Na’Abba between 2001 and 2003. Nyako was also Obasanjo’s strong ally in the battle to take Adamawa off the control of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar. Indeed, the former President used his clout to silence critics of governorship primaries which produced Nyako, which was believed to be flawed.
    Therefore, with all the protagonists of the 2015 agenda having Obasanjo’s baggage to carry, how will the other 14 governors of the North key into the agenda? Would it be far from the truth to say that Obasanjo’s camp is seeking to stop Jonathan in 2015 by installing one of their loyalists? Was it true that Obasanjo actually sent emissaries to Jonathan to persuade him to drop the 2015 ambition, so as to fast track the above agenda?
    These are some of the questions governors like Ibrahim Shema of Katsina State and Isa Yuguda of Bauchi, Gabriel Suswam of Benue and Jonah Jang of Plateau state who have been largely sidelined in the battle will be occupying their minds with. A further question would be now that Jonathan has reached out to Obasanjo with an olive branch, what will be the fate of a Northern struggle anchored on the support of the former President?
    Therein lies the dilemma of the North. Thus notwithstanding the decision to start early enough, the strategic moves towards 2015 is proving to be a tricky issue even for the core political strategists in the North.
    Indeed, one of the undying issues is how the region will take care of the anger of politicians who felt betrayed by key Northern elements in the past. One of such is Attahiru Bafarawa, former Sokoto State governor, who was said to have also voiced out his anger at the 2011 meeting. At the Saudi meetings, Bafarawa was said to have noted that Northerners are their own problems and that until there is genuine reconciliation among Northerners, political unity might continue to elude the zone. A source had quoted him as sounding a note of caution on Obasanjo, saying that the former President betrayed the North, exploiting the lack of unity in the region.
    “He believed that former President Obasanjo would not have been able to betray the North (in 2007), had Northerners not supported him,” a source quoted the former governor as saying.
    “There are a lot of issues on ground that the leaders of the North need to address. For instance, someone like Bafarawa reeled out a long list of issues when he addressed the Saudi meeting; that many also have similar experiences which have not been sorted out as we talk. For instance, he said that Obasanjo betrayed him in 2007, and similarly claimed that Babangida betrayed him during the 2007 elections.
    “He further claimed that both Muhammadu Buhari and Atiku Abubakar betrayed him in 2009/2010. These are personal issues that could affect the unity of purpose as far as realising the Northern agenda is concerned,” another source said.
    But aside the 2015 Northern agenda within the PDP, the opposition parties, especially the emerging coalition under the All Progressives Congress (APC) also has a similar plan which does not include Obasanjo. The fulcrum of that plan however remains the disintegration of the PDP, whose leaders are supposed to give tacit support to the APC in 2015. Incidentally, the opposition coalition has ceded its presidential ticket to the North. Another pillar on that front however remains the planned accord between the North and the South-West. It is believed that the South-West which is currently controlled by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) will translate that control to the emerging APC, which expectedly will feature a Northern Presidential hopeful and that with the break-up of PDP, the new party could take control of the government at the centre.
    But then political observers will recall that such expectations were raised ahead of the 2011 elections and it never came to pass. The bid to ensure a united front within the PDP by its leaders who have set up reconciliatory moves is however said to be upstaging the projection of the opposition once again.
    Will the Obasanjo tendency pull any appreciable string as the battle for 2015 hots up? Will the Jonathan camp provide the needed counterpoise to the Northern push to retain the Presidency? All these are questions whose answers lie in the prognosis of the critical political actors as they queue up on the road to 2015.
    NigerianTribune

    Who Will Fill Fela’s Large Shoes?

    040813F.Fela.jpg - 040813F.Fela.jpg

    Fela
    By Yinka Olatunbosun
    Sixteen years ago, when the music legend Fela Anikulapo-Kuti died at a Lagos hospital on August 2, 1997, the question on the lips of art commentators was, “Who will fill Fela’s shoes?”  The search for the feet went typically to the immediate music household of Fela. This search became a huge debate as many took sides with either of his sons, Femi and Seun. The news of Seun’s leadership of the Egypt 80 band was not a surprise to many followers of Afrobeat music, who thought Seun had been groomed to lead the band in his father’s demise. This is coupled with the fact that Femi has his band, The Positive Force, to run. Other strong members of the Egypt 80 Band such as Dede Mabiaku and Baba Ani were under the spotlight as well. In all, the answer to the question was sought in the wrong places.
    Fela, the Abami Eda, occupies a very enormous position not just in the music sphere but in the popular culture of his people. While writing this, it was difficult to use “was” when Fela really “is”. One can say that the Fela influence is felt even more at death which occurred shortly before a democratic government was established in Nigeria and people were no longer entertaining the fear that mimicking Fela in fashion, music and political orientation could be deemed criminal or subversive by the state. Not that it did during Fela’s time, but Fela is a symbol of revolution with fear.  He was a man persecuted by the state because his philosophy was regarded as anti-government.  Some of his songs with revolutionary themes were not aired on the radio or television. Most of his works were released before the advent of privately-owned broadcast stations and as such, the government, who was paying the piper, naturally called the tune.
    It took such selfless spirit to continue to perform his art. Fela had so much popularity in his time yet he was not a face to be seen on commercials. His persona is larger than life and no one dared to think of Fela as his key to selling his products or services. Fela’s “enemies” were growing simultaneously with the growing anger he felt towards the way his people were being ruled. When Fela perceived that the government would not listen to him, he took a swipe at the governed in many songs including, “Sorrow, Tears and Blood” where he sang, “We fear for the tin we no see / we fear for the air around us/ we fear to fight for freedom/ we fear to fight for liberty/ we fear to fight for justice…”. The remarkable attribute of all his lyrics was that they are so apt, as though they have just been composed in the light of present situation in the polity. Fela, as some would describe him was like a prophet who had foreseen that his country lay helplessly in the hands of those who had selfish motives. That was Fela’s position.
    The media celebrated Fela in his life and at death. He was a man whose opinion counted irrespective of the reaction it begets. His songs became the anthem of student union leaders and till date, his songs live in the heart of students who stand against oppression. At the fuel subsidy removal protest in Nigeria in January 2012, Fela’s songs were chorused by a generation, many of whom were born long after Fela had lived. Fela had such impact that it is indeed very unrealistic to expect that a replica of him is anywhere around.
    The thought of filling Fela’s shoes should not be passed off quickly as if one is only seeking to find someone who can fit his role perfectly. Remember when you fit a shoe, especially one that you like, it may not necessarily be a perfect size. But to fit it, you insert a pair of shoe filler or even some other crude items like tissue paper or cotton wool. The point is to wear it to fit. Sometimes, you get a cobbler to trim the shoe to size and then wear it. What lesson do we learn from this shoe exercise? Fela’s shoes are not even being tried let alone fitted to size. Shortly after his death, some artistes, who turned out to be one-hit wonders, arose and swiftly stole his trail to make some popularity. Time tested their ingenuity and authenticity and they failed for the most parts. Others learnt their lessons and left the Fela mimicry game so as not to incur the anger of Fela’s fans many of whom were still licking the wounds of his untimely death.

    Although the Afro pop icon D’banj did not establish himself as a Fela replica, it was not long before his performance styles and vocals were associated with Fela. He had to admit that he had been greatly influenced by Fela. Surely, a lot of artistes had been influenced greatly by Fela. But if only they knew what Fela represents, they would have accepted that they are nowhere close. They should also know that for one to influence another, it is reflected in the beliefs and the attitudes of such person.
    Yes, many artistes today share Fela’s propensity for coital escapades. However, it would be recalled that Fela married his 27 wives who were members of the band on the grounds that the women were being discriminated against because of their chosen profession. Women in performing art at that time and perhaps till date have been victimised by their spouses and many had been forced to dissolve their marriages to continue their career. Whether Fela’s decision on marriage was noble or not is a different argument.
    How many Nigerian artistes in present time have written songs to agitate for national unity, equity and freedom? The queue waiting to wear a different shoe is very long. This other shoe will not only guarantee a daily bread but a lifetime investment. This other shoe is designed to make the artistes dance and gather flying naira notes and foreign currencies. The currencies have a seal-your-lips effect on the artiste, who would rather look the other way than confront the issues affecting his people. The contemporary artistes in Nigeria will not risk or sacrifice their economic returns on the altar of human rights advocacy. For a good number of them, it is better to be “shoeless” than to attempt to wear Fela’s shoe. Today, it is on record that the most expensive and most sought-after posthumous musical works are Fela’s. That is a fine legacy and it may remain a record that will never be beaten.
    ThisDay

    Atiku protests mistreatment by PDP, says he’s being ostracized

    Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar
    Former Vice President Atiku also wants to attend BoT meetings and August special convention.
    A former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, has protested to the national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, about the manner he is being treated by the ruling party since he revalidated his membership about three years ago.
    In a letter dated July 11 to the National Chairman of the PDP, Bamanga Tukur, Atiku specifically complained about the exclusion of his name from the list of statutory delegates to the August 31 Special National Convention of the party.
    He also complained about the systematic withdrawal of the respects and privileges accorded to him as a former vice president, in line with the PDP Constitution and sought the rectification of the mistake.
    Mr Abubakar served as vice president in the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo between 1999 and 2007.
    He however defected to the defunct Action Congress (AC) where he contested the 2007 presidential election, but lost to the late President Umaru Yar’Adua.
    The former vice president, who is from Adamawa State as Mr Tukur, returned to the party after securing a waiver which was granted him by the party’s National Executive Committee, NEC, at its September 2010 meeting.
    In the letter, made available to PREMIUM TIMES, Atiku recounted that he read a news report in a national daily which contained the list of delegates from Adamawa State, his home state, to the convention but that his name was omitted.
    He added that his inquiries at the PDP national secretariat confirmed the omission and that after waiting in vain for a response from the party to correct or refute the publication, he decided to write the national chairman to draw his attention to what he regarded a “mistake.”
    “In the said report, the delegate list for the Special National Convention submitted by the Adamawa state Chapter did not contain my name and further inquiries at the PDP National Secretariat also confirmed same,” Atiku said.
    “After waiting for a public statement for the party, correcting and refuting the abnormally in vain, I decided to draw your attention to this mistake.
    Mr Abubakar recalled that NEC, at its meeting of September 15, 2010, approved his application for a waiver to return to the PDP, alongside similar applications from Imo, Abia, Edo, Anambra and Kogi, which enabled him to participate in the party’s activities, including contesting its 2011 presidential primaries.
    He reminded the national chairman that his return predated the amendment of the party’s constitution in 2012 and therefore his name should have been on the list.
    He stressed, “It is in this regard, that I consider the omission of my name as a mistake since it contradicts Section 32 subsection 1 (a) of our party constitution which states that Board of Trustees members of the party shall consists of all past and serving Presidents and Vice Presidents of the Federal Republic of Nigeria who held or hold the respective posts as members of the party and who are still members of the party.”
    Atiku requested the party to restore the respects and privileges conferred on occupants of the office of the Vice president and founding members of PDP.
    “As a bonafide member of our party, I look forward to the respect and privileges conferred on the Office of the Vice President and founding fathers of the party by our party constitution.
    “I therefore request for a correction and restoration of my right to attend the forthcoming Special National Convention of our great party and also membership of the Board of Trustees.
    “While looking forward to a public statement in this matter, may I assure the National Chairman of my highest esteem and regards for our great party and all its leaders.”
    It was learnt that Mr Abubakar, who contested against President Goodluck Jonathan at the 2011 presidential primaries, is feeling that he is being tactfully de-registered so that he does not realize his full rights as a member of the ruling party.
    A source close to the former vice president told PREMIUM TIMES, “His suspicion is that attempts are being made to capture him retroactively so as to deny him his full rights or even push him out of the party as happened before.
    “Atiku recalls that prior to the 2007 general elections, the PDP, which he and like-minds formed in order to push the military out and provide a formidable platform for a viable democracy was hijacked and in place of its elected leaders, a set of spineless and zombie-like leadership was imposed on the party.
    “Following this, a dubious process of re-registration was invented, through which many bonafide members including the former Vice President were de-registered. Atiku was denied re-registration when he presented himself at his ward in Adamawa State.”
    PremiumTimes

    Emulate James Ibori – Pastor Tells Nigerians


    ibori jamesEven in former Governor James Onanefe Ibori’s absence, his home town, Oghara, Delta state, was agog all through Sunday as his admirers, political followers and associates gathered to mark his 55th birthday in grand style. The celebration began with a Thanksgiving Church service at the Baptist Church,
    Oghara, where the Pastor, Rev Iweh Godspower, challenged the congregation, to emulate Ibori, who though was not in the church, had attracted the large crowd to both the church and the Oghara town to celebrate his birthday in his absence because of the sheer force of his personality.
    What is that aspect of Ibori’s personality that could attract such a mammoth crowed which filled the church and overflowed outside, he asked. He answered his own question: “It is a given that Ibori is a huge success, but that is not why all of you left your homes and different towns to be in Oghara today – even though the man you have come to celebrate may never know the individuals that have come to do him honour. You have come to Oghara today because Ibori is a man who after climbing high in the social, political and economic ladders of Nigeria, did not seize and throw away the ladders in the way most Nigerian big men usually do; he made the ladders available for others to climb up too. And even when some people are too weak to make good use of that ladders, he helped pull them up. That is why you are here today – never forget that and you go and do likewise, help others to climb up the ladders of life and love”. And the crowd applauded, while some others bellowed Ibori’s sobriquet: “Odidigboigbo of Africa”
    Immediately after the Thanksgiving church service, the crowd which included seven first class traditional rulers, Independent Oil Marketers, key professionals, and top politicians from all the six geo-political zones, were joined by a bigger crowd in Ibori’s sprawling Oghara home, built before he became Governor, to begin the social celebrations. Several musicians, comedians, various women groups struggled for chance on the two podiums available to entertain the audience while politicians outdid each other in extolling Ibori.
    The Oghara town wore a festive look as it was specially decorated for the event; while bill boards graced strategic positions of Asaba, Agbor, Oghara and other towns of Delta state – celebrating their former Governor whom they have not physically seen for several years now.
    The three day celebration ends on Tuesday with a topflight novelty football match at the Oghara Township Stadium.
    OsunDefender