Monday, 26 August 2013

General Buhari's Interview - By Eric Osagie

As political gladiators jostle for relevance amid the cacophony over which region should produce the next president in 2011, former Head of State, General Muhammadu Buhari, has sounded a note of warning to Nigerians and the political class: Get your acts together or there will be no country called Nigeria.


Buhari, a two-time presidential candidate of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), and leader of the new party, Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), told Sunday Sun in a no-holds-barred interview that the country is tottering on the brink of collapse except something urgent is done to rescue it.

“How can we be so rich and paradoxically so poor? We are a rich nation, poor people. This worries me about our country. You look at the UNDP index. Nigerians are living on less than a dollar a day. This is a disgrace to the Nigerian leadership.” On the forthcoming 2011 polls, Buhari says: “ 2011 is critical for the country. There may be no Nigeria (if we don’t get it right).”

For one hour, Buhari also spoke on his presidential ambition, generational power shift, the contentious zoning/power rotation debate, Jega and the new INEC, President Jonathan’s alleged ambition, among sundry issues. Excerpts...

General, may we start by asking how has it been this third time around of your foray into the political minefield. You are opening offices of your new party, congress for progressive change, all over the country?
Well, I think people should realise that we are not absolutely new, technically speaking. Right from 2002, when I joined partisan politics, we came out with an organisation called The Buhari Organisation (TBO). TBO is virtually in all the states of the federation. It’s just like what people do when you have somebody’s vanguard, this movement etc. So, The Buhari Organisation tried to articulate my views, what my philosophies are, to promote my interest in politics and what I believe in in partisan politics.

But, unfortunately, there was some kind of conflict between it and the mainstream of the party. And the party said it should fuse into the mainstream, the ANPP (All Nigeria Peoples Party). When we came to 2003, 2007 elections, we had what we called the presidential campaign teams, from the national, states to the ward levels. ANPP, I must admit, came up with innovations.

If you are a state governor, for example, you are the chairman of the presidential campaign team, as well as your own campaign team. So, even if you don’t do it for the presidential candidate, you do it for yourself. So, we said, all these associations and groups: TBO, Yerima Vanguard, Tofa Boys or whatever, they all merged into the presidential campaign team headed by the national chairman of the party. I think that was a very good innovation. If it was pursued vigorously, I think we should have registered better outing.
What you are doing now is to resurrect tbo, which has metamorphosed into cpc?
Exactly! What we did was we had to leave the ANPP. And these are our reasons; we have said it so many times. So, those who are still with us in ANPP and the other organisations, all we did was to change the face of the office and put the flag of the CPC.

In a sense, you are not really ‘new’ as in new. From what you have been saying, the cpc is about the ideals of Gen. Buhari?
Well, this is what we try to reflect!

What we can also understand is that cpc was set up primarily to champion your views and possibly fight for a progressive Nigeria?

Exactly! We found out that...I think I will mention here for the purpose of clarity. I joined ANPP in April 2002. By 2003, the party gave me its presidential ticket. As they say, the rest is history. But really what happened is that the international observer team, the local observer team, they have all seen, over 30,000 people were deployed by one mission alone. Not to talk of the local Nigerian NGOs and other observer teams. They all agreed that the election was not free and fair. For that reason, we went to court for 30 months. That was in 2003.

In 2006, the party again gave me its ticket. And you know what happened in 2007. The rigging in 2007 was worse than 2003. I said, as presidential candidate, I wasn’t going to court, because I know what happened to me in 2003. But the party said I have to go court. You know how serious the rigging in 2007 was, but I said I wasn’t going to court because I spent 30 months in 2003 and didn’t get justice at the end of the day; I still lost. The party said I had to because I contested on its ticket, and technically, they were right. So, I went. They said we should raise two parallel legal teams, one for the party, the other for the presidential candidate. Of course, you know what happened.

When we were in court, they (the party) withdrew the case. But I refused to withdraw mine. Because constitutionally, I had a right to go to court as presidential candidate, whether the party agrees or not. So, I went to court and spent another 20 months. So, between 2003 and 2008, I was in court for 50 months.
So, when I went to address the press at Transcorp Hilton on December 12, 2008, I said I disagree with the judgment, if you could recall.

That the Supreme Court, as the name suggests, is the supreme authority constitutionally, but I disagree with its judgment. After I finished, the press asked several questions. But two questions were outstanding: With what I experienced in 2003 and 2007, wouldn’t I throw in the towel? Give up and say, ‘well, I have tried!’ I said no, I will not stop. Then, they asked me, you are fighting ANPP, it withdrew the case in court, joined the government of national unity (GNU) and took the positions on offer.

They did not work with the party’s constitutional structures, the National Working Committee, the caucus, comprising the governors, chairmen of the party, chairman of the board of trustees and especially, the national executive committee, which has the authority of the party. They did not take these organs into account in the three decisions the party took, that is, withdrawing from the case, joining the government of national unity and putting themselves the party leadership, instead of these party structures making the decision.

I said I will write my supporters, which I did in the first week of February 2009, and I gave them three positions to advice me on. Firstly, whether we should remain in ANPP; secondly, whether we should join any party other than the PDP; and thirdly, if we can go for a new party. They chose the third option after a survey was conducted in virtually all the states of the federation. So, we decided to come up with the CPC.

Looking at how gruesome it must be to start a new party almost from the scratch - you scout for new members, begin to popularise it and then, woo voters. This requires a lot of resources, moving round. How easy has it been?
It is extremely tough. Not that we don’t know what we are doing. We knew it was going to be tough but it was our best option.

We heard you were discussing with the action congress at a point. We also heard you were discussing with this or that party, then no news again. Is it that you found their philosophies not agreeing with yours or you just want to be a lone ranger?

(Laughs) You cannot be a lone ranger in Nigerian politics, unless you don’t want to succeed. But the important thing is that your philosophy must agree somehow with those you are going to get together with. For example, you know there is crisis in the PDP (Peoples Democratic Party) in the centre and virtually every state. There is such crisis in the ANPP where the elected governors just kick the party. So, we wanted to have a party that we can manage, a progressive party with clear ideology and principles.

I am asking why you backed out of your discussion with ac. You were talking with bola Tinubu at some point and you seem to agree ideologically. The party also say they are progressive like the cpc. What happened?

AC, maybe they have got their own problems, which we don’t know! We have learnt to be cautious going by our experience. By going into the APP (All Peoples Party) then, I went and inherited all the problems. Subsequently, it became ANPP and virtually now non-existent. They started with nine governors, now virtually one. But they are supposed to have three: Kano, Yobe and Borno. But, technically, I think they have only one state, which is Kano. So, our supporters in TBO, ANPP and other parties, we thought we can realise our objectives through the CPC rather than joining another party, knocking doors and asking for a merger.

Where are you going to get the resources to prosecute elections in a heavily monetised polity like Nigeria?

You are talking of resources. Well, so many people have said, ‘yes you say Buhari has no money, how did he become a presidential candidate twice?’ But I keep on mentioning that I am the only presidential candidate that went round 34 states in 2003 and 33 states in 2007; a number of the states several times over. Those who have resources, how many states have they been to? What is the use of the resources if you cannot get to the people? Local government by local government, I talked to them. I did that, 2003 and 2007.

The bottom line is that we need free and fair election. All that we are doing will come to naught if there are no free and fair elections; and our experience as a nation agree with this. Even if we don’t agree or believe in ourselves, what about the international community? Some of them had overseen elections in 49 countries before Nigeria. And they said they had never seen the kind of fraud perpetrated in Nigeria. Mrs. (Madeline) Albright said ours, in 2007, was her worst experience.

Some people have asked why don’t you just quit running for presidency. In 2003, you came out parading your integrity, discipline and all that, you were rigged out. In 2007, the same thing happened. Why don’t you just forget it? Why don’t you give up on the presidency? What drives you in the Nigerian project?

I refuse to give up! I am not used to giving up as a soldier. And my objective is absolutely clear: It is about our people and our country. Look at the resources we have in this country, look at the human and material resources, look at the quality of people that we have, they have never been fully exploited. And I felt that if am in partisan politics, at least some people will listen to me. At least, this corrupt and undisciplined nation can be reformed somehow. So, we chose a clear objective of bringing this country back from the brink. This is what is driving me.
Some people seem to believe that it is a burning, personal ambition; that Buhari wants desperately to be president.

They ask: what is Buhari’s vision? What is he bringing to the table? Do you agree with this position?
It is absolutely not true. I don’t agree. Like I said, it’s not about me. It’s about our people and our country. When I read my declaration, I identified the problems of Nigeria: corruption, indiscipline, insecurity, Niger-Delta...We have to secure and manage this country. Secure in the sense that Nigerians all over must be able to have 24 hours a day if they like. Not everybody running home like chickens after last light and coming out after first light. No. Nigerians all over the country must be able to move and work 24 hours a day. Insecurity is the number one problem in this country. Number two is social justice. Social justice means those managing public funds must be seen to be competent and trust worthy.

This culture of throwing to the dogs all final instructions and lack of restraint on the part of those managing public institutions must be brought to a stop. They must be transparent and accountable. This is my burning ambition, which people are calling my personal ambition. Because, how can we be so rich and paradoxically so poor? We are a rich nation, poor people.

This worries me about our country. You look at the UNDP index of living. Nigerians are living on less than a dollar a day. This is a disgrace to the Nigerian leadership because they know what we are earning. At least they know the foreign exchange we are earning. Yet, we remain miserably poor.
Is the problem then the leadership or followership? Nigerians only grumble in their bedrooms and do nothing about this ravaging poverty you talk about

Both. The followership should be able to rebel at a certain level. How can they tolerate people stealing their resources and keep quiet? They refuse to give them education, they refuse to give them security, they refuse to give them water to drink, they refuse to give them infrastructure that enables them to work and earn a living themselves. Why do they tolerate this kind of leaders? In every constituency, they know them. Why do they allow them to steal them dry? What I am saying is that we have a docile followership.

You were head of state for 20 months. What this means is that you were also part of the leadership failure of our 50 years as a nation or are you going to isolate your administration?

I cannot dissociate myself from it. But when I had the opportunity to lead this country...You try and follow my antecedents as a governor, as minister of petroleum, as head of state, as chairman of PTF (Petroleum Trust Fund); have I tried as an individual wherever I have managed to be accountable and transparent? I believe you can get the answer from your archives.

Buhari is generally perceived as upright, disciplined and focused. Yet, why won’t people who believe this give you the votes? Is it that Nigerians don’t trust you enough to be president?

If you are telling me about people of this nation, then you are wrong. I told you earlier that the bottom line of our problems is free and fair election. People did not refuse to give me the votes. My votes didn’t count. I will give you an example, which I believe you know more than I do. Anambra elections, four years ago, when the Supreme Court ruled that (Peter) Obi was the governor, INEC, the constitutional body that runs election, had four years notice to run an election in Anambra. And we know that Anambra had 148,000 registered voters, but less than one-third of the votes counted. So, INEC couldn’t get it right in one state even when it had four years notice. You can see that you cannot be talking about credible polls when votes don’t count. How can you then say Nigerians didn’t vote for me?

Do you now have faith in the new inec under Prof Attahiru Jega?

I am developing some kind of confidence by the kind of actions (of Jega).

Why not total confidence?

Total confidence until and unless INEC gets what the Uwais Committee recommended. We need a credible voters’ register. Every Nigerian of voting age knows we cannot call what we have a credible voters’ register. All this nonsense that Michael Jackson and Mike Tyson were seen in Anambra voters’ register, this kind of scandalous nonsense shouldn’t happen again. So, we need an absolute, up-to-date credible voters’ register. Of course, it is possible. If the guy is given the resources he has asked for and the cooperation, the man is capable of doing it.

Do you know Jega personally?

Yes, person to person, but not closely. He got support across the country, from the press. People seem prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.

Do you believe that president Goodluck Jonathan, being a likely candidate in the 2011 polls, will give Nigerians a credible election since incumbents are hardly defeated in a country like ours?

Well, all I can say for now is that I am encouraged by what he said when he met with President Obama, when he gave an interview to the CNN. He promised Obama free and fair elections, which Americans are extremely concerned about. Secondly, security of the nation. All these cases of kidnapping, assassination and so on; thirdly, unemployment, and fourthly, I think power. I think these are the promises he made to the United States.

When he came back, to be fair with President Jonathan, as far as I am concerned, he has been playing the roles he promised. I saw in the papers again where he said he didn’t know Jega from Adam. But people recommended him and he approved it. He did not insist on his friend or somebody else. That means he has got this quality of fair-mindedness.

So, you are willing to also give the president the benefit of the doubt?

I am very willing. And when they started talking about this N72billion for INEC, for (voters) registration and so on, he approved it. So, to be fair, he has to be given benefit of the doubt.

The other leg of the question is, since presidents in Africa, including Nigeria, don’t ever want to lose election where they are candidates and umpires, should Jonathan run in 2011?

I think it would only appear that Nigerians haven’t suffered enough if they don’t stand against social injustice. I have the inkling that Nigerians are now getting ready for 2011 electioneering.

2011 is pregnant, only God knows what it will bear. But Nigerians know they are suffering, that if they insist on the government they have chosen, then they can have it. I gave example of Kano in 2003, Bauchi and Lagos in 2007. The electorate insisted on the government they wanted and they got it. So, if the elite of the rest of the country can say go and organise your constituencies and deliver them democratically, it is possible, it can be done. And then if we have a government we chose, we will be prepared to support it. That is the only way we can make progress.

Let’s go to zoning. Where do you stand, for or against?

What I have said since the argument started is that whatever form or agreement a political party takes is its own business. It is for the electorate to have the final decision on who it wants to vote for.

Do you believe power should go to the north in 2011?

That is PDP arrangement. It is a PDP affair. What I believe is free and fair elections. Let us have free and fair elections. As long as you are a Nigerian, if you win, you win, if you lose, you lose. But the elections should be free and fair.
Proponents of zoning say we need zoning or power rotation in a heterogenous society like ours. That it will promote unity in diversity. Some of the governors, elders and party stalwarts insist it is north or nothing. Are there times as a northerner you harbour this sentiment?
Look, I don’t know why you insist on me rationalising or accepting a PDP agenda.

I just want to know your views?

Well, I have told you that the bottom line of our problems is free and fair elections. In my submission earlier, I gave the example of Kano, Bauchi and Lagos, and said if the elite can go out and mobilise the people and deliver their constituencies; educate them and allow them to vote whichever party and whichever candidate, you will be amazed how stable Nigeria will be. But when you start thinking of north/south dichotomy; Christian/ Muslim; Christian/pagan, you have problems. Look at (late MKO) Abiola’s election. Abiola was a Muslim, his running mate was a Muslim. He chose a Muslim/Muslim ticket and nobody raised their fingers against it. So, what we need are good Nigerians whoever and wherever they are.

So, how did we get to this tragic level of zoning, power rotation, balancing etc?

I will ask you; you are the press men. You should tell me.
You should tell me because in 2003 and 2007, you balanced your ticket. You had Christian running mates from South West and South East respectively. Why didn’t you follow the Abiola example?
It’s the party. If my party made the terrible mistake, we will suffer the consequences! In 2007, the party asked me to run with Ume-Ezeoke. It was not my decision. And since I wanted the party’s ticket, I had to abide by their decision.

Nigeria is 50 and we are still bogged down by sentiments of zoning and rotation. Are we ever going to get to a time when a candidate will be judged by what he has to offer rather than where he comes from, his religion and other base considerations?

That is why, I think, for the last 18 months, in a few of my interviews, speeches, comments, I have always hit hard on the Nigerian elite. Not only political elite, but elite across the spectrum. Let them go either physically, morally and, perhaps, materially and deliver their constituencies. It’s really important. It’s now people are getting aware of this. But it is getting too late, because as you said earlier, next year (2011) is critical for the country.

Do you fear for the country, that if we don’t get it right now…

(Cuts in) There may be no Nigeria. I do, because I draw parallel with Somalia so many times. Somalia-sation of Nigeria; I am scared about that. Somalia, they are one ethnic group, one religion, Islam, but for 18 years Somalia has not been a country because the elite became so selfish, so corrupt, so undisciplined, and they have wrecked the country. And Nigeria is much better off.

So, I am passing a message to the Nigerian elite: Let them go and deliver their constituencies. Even Nigerians in Diaspora, Nigerians in Europe, the groups that are supporting us, I discussed with them. Let them connect with their constituencies at home through whichever way. And let them educate their people, persuade them to chose good people from whichever party to represent their constituencies. This is the way we can move Nigeria forward together. We all stand to benefit.

The South South and the north are currently locked in battle over 2011 presidency. While the former says it’s South South presidency or no Nigeria, the latter (north) are insisting that the unity of Nigeria will be threatened if power doesn’t go to the region. What’s your take on this volatile issue?

I have read these statements too. I don’t think there is absolute agreement among the people of these two zones. You can say some vocal people in the South South said if Jonathan is not given the presidency there will be no Nigeria. So, you can say they are holding Nigeria hostage. They will receive the shock of their lives if they think they can hold Nigeria hostage.

You also quoted the North saying power must come there or Nigeria’s unity is threatened. That position is not true. The northern governors if they represent the northern opinion, no matter how they got there, about 50 per cent agree (with zoning) and 50 per cent do not. The breakdown is there in the papers. You see, both the so-called northern governors and the South South governors are wrong.

So, on the average, what comes out is that Nigerians want free and fair election. Let the parties that can afford to field a candidate go and look for votes and let their votes count, not like the Anambra election. Thank goodness, the INEC leadership has been changed. You see, 2011, seems to be our last chance. We have to get our acts together, especially the elite to make sure the election is credible and acceptable. This is the bottom line.
The world over the emphasis is on generational power shift. You also must have been in your forties when you became head of state. In Britain today, you have a 43-year-old man as prime minister, his deputy is less than 40; President Obama of America is less than 50. Some Nigerians say Buhari is a good man, but he has had his chance no matter how brief. Can’t he play elderstatesman and advisory roles to the younger leaders? Must Buhari be president?

But our system accommodates what we are doing. You cannot vote until you are 18, and if you live up to 100, nobody says you cannot vote. So, you can vote and be voted for as long as you are above 18. Now, if our Constitution gives us that right, why should I deny myself, why should I disenfranchise myself? It is for Nigerians to mobilise against old people. If they don’t want ‘old people’ like me, then the youths will say we will vote one of us. So, a party can present a 35-year-old PhD holder, may be in sociology, ok. Others can present other candidates, ok too. That is why votes should count. What I am saying is that it is not for us to disenfranchise ourselves when the Constitution doesn’t say so... Let them (the youths) mobilise against Buhari, Babangida and whoever is 60 and above, for people who are 59 and below. But it is our right to vote and be voted for.

Do you as a person support generational power shift?

I will support whatever the Nigerian voters do, once there is free and fair election.
But you agree that all those period you were governor, goc, minister and head of state, you were young and vibrant. You had a lot of ideas, you were quite young...
Under the military regime, yes, I was quite young. But they are different systems.

What would be wrong if you give way to younger persons?

It wouldn’t be wrong, but my problem is I don’t want...You see, I have always talked about the elite going to deliver their constituencies. I don’t want my opinion, even if it is for myself or against myself, to dominate seemingly the rest of the constituencies. Let people make enough commitment in their constituencies and cause change. This is the most enduring thing. Everybody is talking about Obama. I watched the scene when Obama was being sworn in. The amount of tears dripping from the eyes of Jesse Jackson reached up to his mouth, because he was overwhelmed. He couldn’t believe what he was seeing.

Obama didn’t become president because it was his birthright. After his qualification, he went straight to the grassroots, he went back to his constituency; he cultivated his constituency and groomed himself up from there. You don’t start talking from top to bottom. It should be from bottom up. That’s how Obama made it. And when Obama was mobilising his campaign resources, he didn’t go to the multinationals or the lobbyists. Again, he went to the ordinary people: 50, 100, 500 dollars...So, Obama owes nobody anything except the people, except the Americans, not the multinationals.

The preponderant view, especially down south, is that Buhari is a religious fundamentalist. I am sure you have heard that
Of course, I have.

How did you get that religious fundamentalist stigma? 

They know they are lying; they know they are! They know they are a fraud. I wrote to most of the Bishops during my campaigns in 2003 and 2007. I visited the Bishops. I told you I visited 34 states in 2003 and 33 states in 2007, during the campaigns. Nigerians know the truth, that I am not what they are saying. You see, some Nigerians think they are being smart.

When they see they have nothing against me about integrity, competence in office or my ability to lead whichever department or state or ministry I have had the opportunity to lead, they say something must stick against Buhari, so that we can drag him down on behalf of our party or candidate. It is the state of our political development, which we cannot absolutely escape, and I assure you that I am facing all that with a lot of courage, because I have written to a lot of church leaders. I visited them, I talked to them and it is up to them to play their role as they see it.
The above interview was published in  Sunday Sun of  August 08, 2010. Used with the permission of the author.

The Contradiction Called President Jonathan

By Majek Adega


Since assuming office as the acting and later president of Nigeria, I have carefully followed the actions, inactions, speeches and silence of President Goodluck Jonathan. After several months of this exercise, I have come to the conclusion that the President is but a bundle of contradictions.
His speeches reflect the ideals that governance should represent while his actions and inactions speak volume to his deep entrenchment in the mess called government in Nigerian and his lack of willingness or ability to take the bold steps necessary to build a modern nation state out of the current criminal outpost where thugs, criminals, vagabonds, looters and pedophiles lord it over tired and worn out citizens.                        
In his speech during the recently concluded 4th National Diaspora conference in Minna, Niger State, President Goodluck Jonathan warned delegates to the conference that the high level of corruption, illegal acquisition of wealth and non-payment of taxes by Nigerians could lead to the collapse of the nation’s entire system.  This same Goodluck Jonathan is the husband of one Patience Jonathan whom the EFCC under charged with the theft of $16.5 million dollars in 2006. The matter is still in court and has not come up for hearing since Goodluck Jonathan became vice-president and later president. Dealing decisively with allegations of corruption against the president’s wife does not appear to be of importance to his government.  This same Goodluck Jonathan it was who could not account  for the N4 billion that disappeared from the coffers  of Bayelsa state between the time he was nominated to be Yar Adua’s vice president to the time he was sworn into office in may 2007. The looted funds allegedly represented his contribution to the Yar Adua/Jonathan presidential campaign fund.
I have stopped counting how many times I have heard President Goodluck Jonathan promise Nigerians and the world that there would be free and fair elections come 2011. I have heard it so many times that it now sounds like a broken record. This President Goodluck Jonathan who is promising free and fair elections is the same Goodluck Jonathan who shamelessly and without regard for the wishes of Nigerians partnered with the late president Musa Yar Adua and the country’s acerbically rotten judiciary to plan and execute the  most heinous electoral heist in the history of Nigeria.  I will not disrespect the president by mentioning the smaller electoral heists himself and Diepreye Alamieyeseigha connived to perpetrate in Bayelsa state in 1999 and 2003.  
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured Nigerians on several occasions that he does not and will not interfere with the work of the law enforcement agencies and the courts. He says he will not  stand in the way of his friends and enemies facing the wrath of the law if they are accused of corruption and other crimes. It is this same President Goodluck Jonathan who as the then vice president and barely a few weeks after being sworn into office, asked the prison authorities to bring his former boss Diepreye Alamieyeseigha who was then serving a jail term for misappropriation of billions of public funds to Dodan Barracks for a meeting with him.  A few weeks after the meeting, Alamieyeseigha was released from jail.  If the witch flew by yesterday and the child died the following morning, you do not need to be a rocket scientist to figure out what happened. The same president Goodluck Jonathan who does not interfere with the work of law enforcement agencies was the same person who ordered the police to fish out those responsible for the death of late Kano politician Abubakar Rimi and Dipo Dina of Ogun state. As well intentioned as the orders maybe, they represent a direct contradiction of his claim of non-interference.
Like a preacher, President Jonathan has seized every opportunity to remind Nigerians of the need for probity, accountability and proper use of scarce resources. It is this same President Goodluck Jonathan who along with his do nothing Federal Executive approved the sum of $156m for the purchase of three new aircrafts for the presidential fleet that reportedly has six planes already. The presidential Fleet probably has more functional aircrafts than Nigeria Airforce. Before I forget, it is the same President Goodluck Jonathan who decided to spend N10billion celebrating the country’s stunted growth since independence. His former boss and convicted looter, Diepreye Alamieyeisegha is reportedly a member of the committee planning the 50th Independence Day celebrations and spending of the N10billion voted for the shenanigans. Hmmmmmmm. The president is making all these decisions in a country where the ordinary citizen is groaning under the yoke of multiple taxes, lack of water, lack of good roads and insecurity. The combined sum above will go a long way in solving the nightmare that the Lagos-Benin road has become. But why should the president care? Only mortals travel by road. Yet, the president says he has a vision for Nigeria and he cares about ordinary Nigerians.    
While late president Yar Adua was sick and ensconced in a Jeddah hospital, then vice-President Goodluck Jonathan played to the gallery and encouraged every manner of demonstrations in support of calls for power to be transferred to him. He even got the Nigeria Police to provide security for the demonstrators and sent Yayale Ahmed, the secretary to the federal government, to collect a letter from some of the protesters who were matching towards Aso Rock. The bad optics of that meeting between Yayale Ahmed and the demonstrators was not lost on those watching it on television as the secretary arrived in a long convoy of glittering black Mercedes Benz cars in a country where there is no electricity and minimum wage is less that $100 a month. Back to the demonstrations. I remember telling a friend that what we were witnessing was not the broadening of the democratic space to the point where any form of peaceful demonstration would be allowed and demonstrators protected. I had the feeling the then vice-president was playing on the intelligence of Nigerians who were sincerely seeking a solution to the political deadlock. Since that time, members of the Nigeria Police and other security agencies have stopped demonstrators who gathered in Kano to protest the president’s possible entry into the 2011 presidential race. Just a few days ago, members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities were prevented from stepping out of the school compound in pursuit of a planned demonstration.
After he was pressured to publicly declare his assets under the late President Yar Adua, the first lesson the president gave Nigerians in accountability after assuming office was to secretly declare supposedly the same assets that he publicly declared a few years earlier. One of the closest people to the President is his chief of Staff, Mike Oghiadomhe, whom he reportedly befriended while both of them were deputy governors of Edo and Bayelsa states respectively. Mike Oghiadomhe who was a hustler and had no real job before he became the deputy governor of Edo state in 1999 has metamorphosed into a multi billionaire in less than a decade. Ogiadomhe who was Lucky Igbinedion’s partner in the looting of Edo state is enjoying the most productive period of his treasury looting career. This man meets with President Goodluck Jonathan on a daily basis when he is in the country. 
The president talks about integrity and hard work but he assembled the most dishonorable set of people in the country and bestowed national awards on them. From the certificate forging Customs and Excise boss to the Police Chief who was presiding over an unprecedented kidnapping spree, and from Farida Waziri who wants Nigerians to believe that investigations has become another word for conviction and imprisonment to the bankers who brought the country’s banking system to its knees, President Goodluck Jonathan lined them up and one after the other, he decorated them with medals and thanked them for the great services they have rendered to the nation. Great services indeed.  
There is nothing new about most of the information detailed above. What is new is the shameless attempt to paint a different picture of the President. The president cannot run away from his antecedents and if he has changed, he must demonstrate such to Nigerians in deeds, not just words. The President Goodluck Jonathan that I have described above is the same person who, despite his refusal to confirm it, will be running for the presidency come January 2011. That is the candidate Nigerians are being called upon to put their faith in. Whatever the voters decide, they cannot say they did not know who they were voting for. If he “wins” the person described above is the person who will be the president. He is the best example of “say one thing and do something else”     
 
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Awolowo, Gowon and Buhari: Rethinking Leadership Imperatives In Nigeria

By Sabella Ogbobode Abidde


History has shown that nations need a combination of factors in order to develop and grow. These include, but are not limited to a measure of natural resources, an educated and healthy workforce, a culture of saving and innovation, an enlightened middle and upper class, viable and evolving public institutions, a national culture and a governing system that is enriching.
Just having a sea of natural resources is not enough.
Some nations have an enviable amount of resources, yet, are unable to transform their societies. This is the case with some African countries, including Nigeria, Gabon, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. There are other societies with fewer human and natural resources but with advanced political and economic system. This is the case with countries like Japan, Singapore and Switzerland. Within the African continent, one can point to countries like Botswana and Cape Verdes as countries on the upward swing.
Whether a country is rich or poor in terms of natural resources -- more so if it is rich -- it needs visionary and purposeful men and women in leadership positions to help put it all together. In other words, a nation without first rate leadership is bound to fail woefully. Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Malaysia and Indonesia were some of the countries on the brink of collapse in the 1950s though the mid-1980 until concerted and prolonged efforts at purposeful leadership helped turn their economies and political systems around.
Such leadership imperative is also true in many other parts of the world, including Brazil, Ghana, China and India. And even in the case of South Africa, if Nelson Mandela had not provided essential leadership, it is possible that post-Apartheid South Africa would have collapsed. Therefore, one cannot overestimate the importance of leadership (which is what Nigeria has been lacking).
Nigeria has not had a good leader since the days of General Muhammadu Buhari (December 31, 1983 – August 27, 1985). Buhari’s mantra was simple: Nation First! He was about performance and accountability. Since his forced departure from office, lesser men have been at the helm of our national affairs. At the time Buhari and his lieutenant (General Tunde Idiagbon: September 14 1942 - March 24, 1999) came to power, Nigeria was already swimming in political and economic cesspool. It was a grim, desperate and depressing time with a cloud of hopelessness enveloping our country.
True, a few of his administrative actions and pronouncements were costly; in totality however, he gave the country a taste of civility, hard work, accountability and good governance. We -- we the people -- remember the spark of hope and possibilities. His actions and pronouncements revealed a man who cared deeply about the soul of our nation. He cared about our collective destiny. He delivered what he promised. These -- all these -- you cannot say about his successors. And of course, long before General Buhari, there was General Yakubu Gowon (August 1 1966 – July 29, 1975).
Unlike most of his contemporaries, Gowon was not a braggart, a brute, or bloodguilt. He spoke and acted like a gentleman. But of course he was! In another time or place, he would have been a monk or a priest safely ensconced in a monastery. But instead he became a soldier. And what a fine soldier he was. This was a man who successfully prosecuted a civil war without bankrupting or undoing the nation. Millions of Nigerians owe their lives and their prosperity to Gowon. One truly gets to appreciate the man if one considers Nigeria’s level of development during his stay in office: human needs were not as scarce as they are today; personal security was not as bad as it is today; and basic infrastructure were not as browned as they are today.
Gowon gave us hope. He gave us meaning. He gave us purpose. More than three decades after his exit from power, Nigeria still functions on some of his ideas and provisions. A sizeable number of the best colleges and universities Nigeria has had was build under his watch. Same can be said of roads and bridges and hospitals and various research centers. That some of the policies and infrastructure he provided are still with us today is a positive testament to his vision and character. I told you earlier that he was a fine soldier and a wonderful human being. Right? But you see: Gowon was not a thief!
Unlike most of his successors who became millionaires while in office -- and multimillionaires once out of office -- he was an honest man who lived within his means.
Taken in totality, General Yakubu Gowon was not what most African head of governments were: corrupt and dangerous. On the hand, he was what most of them could never be: decent and humane. I am not sure if this towering figure ever wrote a book espousing his ideas and leadership philosophy. If he didn’t, he should, as a matter of national urgency, do so. And if he has, I and generations of Nigerians would love to read and imbibe his teachings. What a man, what a soldier! And then there was Awolowo.
Chief Obafemi Awolowo (March 6, 1909- May 9, 1987) was an intellectual and political colossal. Awolowo didn’t get to be the President of Nigeria; but he was the Premier of the Western Region of Nigeria from October 1, 1954 until December 15, 1959. However, his accomplishments dwarf the combined achievements of all head of government since General Ibrahim Babangida. From now until eternity, his contribution to Nigeria’s socioeconomic and political life will be remembered and appreciated by discerning minds. As a federal minister under General Yakubu Gowon from June 12, 1967 to June 30 1971, he helped save Nigeria from self immolation.
General Buhari was not in office long enough to categorically infer what history would have said about him. In the case of Gowon and Awolowo, the records are there for all to see. History and posterity, I am sure, will affirm again and again and again that Gowon -- as military head of state -- had no equal. A few people may of course argue that Awolowo had equals. If he did, then, he was Primus inter pares: first among his peers. In his time, he was Nigeria’s leading figure. Even in death, he continues to inspire and tower above many.
Charles Caleb Colton it was who said that “In life, we shall find many men that are great, and some men that are good, but very few men that are both great and good.” Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Generals Gowon and Buhari, in my estimation, were such men: good, great and extraordinary in very many ways. Their legacies will endure.
  
If Gowon and Buhari didn’t pen books, Awolowo did. He read a lot and wrote volumes. Amongst his many books are Path to Nigerian Greatness, and the essential trilogy: Voice of Reason, Voice of Courage and Voice of Wisdom. The thing about Awo was that if he was an American or a European, the world would have placed him in the same league as Abraham Lincoln, Churchill, Roosevelt, Charles de Gaulle and many others. His books would have been a must-read in our colleges and universities; and his other writings and essays would have been classified as modern philosophy.
In just a few weeks Nigeria will celebrate its fiftieth year as an independent nation. There does not seem to be any cause for celebration. Slavery, colonization, the Cold War, globalization, the insidious interference of many endogenous and exogenous groups aside, Nigeria should have been a radically different country. But it is not! Our biggest problem is not the absence of resources, but as Professor Achebe and others has said, the “absence of real leadership.” And so, we ought to rethink the imperatives of first-rate leadership: look to men and women in the mold of Awolowo, Gowon and Buhari.

Nigeria's Overblown Importance

Princeton N. Lyman, the former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria and South Africa, delivered a very poignant speech on the panel titled "The Nigerian State and U.S. Strategic Interests" at the Achebe Colloquium at Brown University on December 11, 2009. Lyman suggests that rather than continually emphasize Nigeria’s strategic importance, it would behoove us to consider elements that might eventually lead to Nigeria’s irrelevance on the international stage.

Princeton N. Lyman, Former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria and South Africa, speaks on the panel "The Nigerian State and U.S. Strategic Interests" at the Achebe Colloquium at Brown University on December 11, 2009, Providence, Rhode Island.  [See Notes 1 & 2]

TRANSCRIPT OF SPEECH (TAKEN DIRECTLY FROM THE VIDEO SPEECH)


Thank you very much Prof. Keller and thanks to the organizers of this conference.   It is such a privilege to be here in a conference in honor of Prof. Achebe, an inspiration and teacher to all of us.

I have a long connection to Nigeria.  Not only was I Ambassador there, I have travelled to and from Nigeria for a number of years and have a deep and abiding vital emotional attachment to the Nigerian people, their magnificence,  their courage, artistic brilliance, their irony, sense of humor in the face of challenges etc.

And I hope that we  keep that in mind when I  say some things that I think are counter to what we normally say about Nigeria. And  I say that with all due respect to Eric [SILLA, SEE NOTE 3] who is doing a magnificent work at State Department and to  our good friend from the legislature, because I have a feeling that we both Nigerians and Americans may be  doing Nigeria and Nigerians  no favor by stressing Nigeria's strategic importance.

I know all the arguments: it is a major oil producer, it is the most populous country in Africa, it has made major contributions to Africa in peacekeeping, and of course negatively if Nigeria were to fall apart the ripple effects  would be tremendous, etc.. But I wonder if all this emphasis on Nigeria's importance creates a tendency of inflate Nigeria's opinion  of its own invulnerability.

Among much of the elite today, I have the feeling that there is a belief that Nigeria is too big to fail,  too important to be ignored, and that Nigerians can go on ignoring some of the most fundamental  challenges they have many of which we have talked about:  disgraceful lack of infrastructure,  the growing problems  of unemployment, the failure to deal with the underlying problems in the Niger-Delta,  the failure to consolidate  democracy and somehow feel will remain important to everybody because of all those reasons that are  strategically important.

And I am not sure that that is helpful.

Let me sort of deconstruct those elements of Nigeria's importance, and ask whether they are as relevant  as they have been.

We often hear that one in five Africans is a Nigerian. What does it mean? Do we ever say one in five Asians  is a Chinese? Chinese power comes not just for the fact that it has a lot of people   but it has harnessed the enterpreneurial talent  and economic capacity   and all the other talents of China to make her  a major economic force and political force.

What does it mean that one in five Africans is Nigeria?  It does not mean anything to a Namibian or a South African.  It is a kind of conceit.   What makes it important is what is happening to the people of Nigerian. Are their talents being tapped?  Are they  becoming an economic force? Is all that potential being used?

And the answer is "Not really."

And oil, yes, Nigeria is a major oil producer,  but Brazil is now launching a 10-year program that is  going to  make  it one of the major oil producers in the world.  And every other country in Africa is now  beginning to produce oil.

And Angola is rivalling Nigeria in oil production, and the United States has just discovered a huge gas  reserve which is going to  replace some of our dependence  on imported energy.

So if you look ahead ten years,  is Nigeria really going to be that relevant as a major oil producer,  or just another of another of  the many oil producers while the world moves on to alternative sources of energy and other sources of supply.

And what about its influence, its contributions to the continent?  As our representative from the parliament talked about,  there is a great history of those contributions. But that is history.

Is Nigeria really playing a major role today in the crisis in Niger on its border, or in Guinea, or in Darfur,  or after many many promises making any contributions to Somalia?

The answer is no, Nigeria is today NOT making a major impact, on its region, or on the African Union or on the  big problems of Africa that it was making before.

What about its economic influence?

Well, as we have talked about earlier, there is a de-industrializatio n going on in Nigeria a lack of  infrastructure, a lack of power means that with imported goods under globalization, Nigerian factories are closing,    more and more people are becoming unemployed. and Nigeria is becoming a kind of society  that imports and  exports and lives off the oil, which does not make  it a significant economic entity.

Now, of course, on the negative side, the collapse of Nigeria would be enormous, but is that a point  to make Nigeria strategically important?

Years ago, I worked for an Assistant Secretary of State who had the longest tenure in that job in the 1980s and I remember in one meeting a minister from a country not very friendly to the United States came in and was berating the Assistant Secretary on all the evils of the United States and all its dire plots and in things in Africa and was going on and on and finally the Assistant Secretary cut him off and said: "You know, the biggest danger for your relationship with the United States is not  our oppostion but that we will find you irrelevant."


The point is that Nigeria can become much less relevant to the United States.  We have already seen evidence  of it. When President Obama went to Ghana and not to Nigeria, he was  sending a message, that  Ghana  symbolized more of the significant trends, issues and importance that one wants to put on Africa  than Nigeria.


And when I was asked by journalists why President Obama did not go to Nigeria, I said "what would he gain from going? Would Nigeria be a good model for democracy, would it be a model for good governance,  would he obtain new commitments on Darfur or Somalia or strengthen the African Union or in Niger or elsewhere?"

No he would not, so he did not go.

And when Secretary Clinton did go, indeed but she also went to Angola and who would have thought years ago that Angola would be the most stable country in the Gulf of Guinea and establish a binational commission in Angola.

So the handwriting may already be on the wall, and that is a sad commentary.

Because what it means is that Nigeria's most important strategic importance in the end could be that it has failed.

And that is a sad sad conclusion.  It does not have to happen, but I think that we ought to stop talking about  what a great  country it is, and how terribly important it is to us and talk about what it would take for Nigeria to be that important and great.

And that takes an enormous amount of commitment.  And you don't need saints, you don't need leaders like  Nelson Mandela in every state, because you are not going to get them.

I served in South Korea in the middle of the 1960s  and it was time when South Korea was poor and  considered hopeless, but it was becoming to turn around,  later to become to every person's amazement then the  eleventh largest economy in the world.   And I remember the economist in my mission saying,  you know it did  not bother him  that the leading elites in the government of South Korea were taking 15 - 20 percent off the  top of every project, as long as every project was a good one, and  that was the difference. The leadership at  the time was determined to solve the fundamental economic issues of  South Korea economy and turn its economy around.

It has not happened in Nigeria today. You don't need saints.  It needs leaders who say "You know we could be becoming irrelevant,  and we got to do something about it."

Thank you.

APC to split NNPC, end importation of fuel


APC to split NNPC, end importation of fuel
All Progressives Congress (APC)

by: Yusuf Alli 

•Foreign missions scramble for APC manifesto
• Opts for free market economy
The All Progressives Congress (APC) plans to untangle the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) if elected into power in 2015.
It also intends to pursue a free market economy policy and devote 10 per cent of the nation’s annual budget to Education.
Foreign missions, especially those with stake in the oil industry, agriculture, the defence industry and with huge reputation in the promotion of democracy and human rights, are already scrambling for the manifesto of the party.
The party’s plans are contained in the manifesto which was made available to party leaders and elders on Wednesday.
APC pledged to ensure the emergence of modern modular refineries products and reduce importation of petroleum products.
The manifesto says: “APC will make the industry and Nigeria one of the world’s cutting edge degree for clean oil and gas technologies, scientific, mega structure installation drilling, progressing production engineers supported with best services and research facilities.
“Fully develop the sector’s capacity to absorb more of the nation’s new graduates in the labour market. Make the sector produce more home-grown world class engineers and scientists.
“Modernise the NNPC and make it the national energy champion. Consider breaking it up into more efficient, commercially driven unit and strip it of its regulatory powers and enable it tap into international capital market.”
APC also said it would promote economic policy of free market.
The manifesto adds: “Under current circumstances, economic illusions have literally destroyed all growth in the real sector by their failure or refusal to acknowledge that the country will inevitably collapse under the current bank rate regime.
“The APC, while supporting private enterprises and free market economy, will take every step to eradicate predatory capitalism.”
As at press time foreign missions had been scrambling for APC manifesto.
A source, who spoke in confidence, said: “All these missions have been requesting for the manifesto of APC based on the demand of their home countries.
“I think they are interested in whether APC would come up with new policies which are better than that of the ruling party. We have given copies to the embassies who have requested. But we know we are providing alternatives in 2015.”
TheNation

CRUDE OIL THEFT: Doom Looms as govt loses N365bn in July on August 25, 2013 / in Special Report 12:21 am / Comments

By Jide Ajani

N365billion is a lot of money. Worse, N365billion is a lot of money to lose in just one month. In any currency, in any clime, under any circumstance and for any people, that amount is huge. To put it in proper context, consider this: N365billion naira is the equivalent of not less than $2.25bilion.
The now contentious military assistance that the United States of America, USA, provides to the Egyptian military annually is the equivalent of $1.2billion.
cabal-cartoon
This is an assistance that the Egyptian military  eagerly awaits and uses to its fullest.  Just recently, the State Department spokeswoman, Jen Psaki, revealed that Washington still hasn’t delivered some $585 million — almost half the annual military aid package — for fiscal year 2013, to the Egyptian military.
Pray, which country on Earth would have its Minister of State for Finance, announce glibly, that it recorded a revenue loss of N365billion in just one month? From President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, to the Petroleum Resources Minister, Diezani Allison-Madueke, the Finance Minister and co-ordinating minister for the economy, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Presidential Adviser on Amnesty, Kingsley Kuku, the lamentation song that the theft of Nigeria’s crude oil is doing grave damage to the country’s economy, has become all too familiar.
Whereas the military task force that has been bursting illegal refineries continue to do its work; Whereas there has been a number of successes recorded in the attempts to pick up some hoodlums who engage in pipeline vandalisation; Whereas there is an almost weekly bulletin heralding exploits of arrests and display of suspected pipeline vandals; Whereas the Minister of State for Defence, Madam Olusola Obada has been crying that European governments should come to the aid of Nigeria in the fight against crude oil theft by refusing to buy the stolen products; Whereas the International Oil Companies, IOCs, have also been lamenting the loss of crude;
Whereas it has been generally acknowledged that some powerful, very powerful Nigerians are behind the crude oil theft; Whereas government itself has not come out to provide the exact volume of crude exported and produced per day in its strictest sense; Whereas the actual number of barrels lost per day to oil thieves hover between 400,000 and 600,000; Whereas, whereas and whereas…… Now, therefore, it should be admitted that either a paradigm of recklessness or irresponsibility or both has taken over in Nigeria. N365billion loss!  Strange but true!
After three weeks of investigative work, Sunday Vanguard discovered that the only authority that can stop crude oil theft in Nigeria is the authority of anti-corruption. The discoveries went as far up to link friends of those in very senior positions in government and in the IOCs. Firstly, a government that is at pains to give an accurate figure regarding export volume can never be said to be sincere about stopping crude oil theft.
At best, what that tells the oil thieves is that a commodity the volume of which cannot be certified and verified, ab initio, would be difficult to calculate in terms of losses; and at worst create a free-for-all environment for the sustenance of the theft.
The regular stunts about burning and destroying illegal crude refineries are no more than submissions to tokenistic dramatization of a sense of duty because the real crude oil thieves continue to thrive with the active connivance of those making the hundreds of millions from the crime.
Does this administration know that there could be a correlation between a government collapse and crude theft because with such losses, it would find it difficult to run its business and the people could in turn rise against it?
Yet, had the theft been an activity being carried out in states controlled by the opposition, the hired guns who are quick to read-meanings, no matter how warped into anything, would have insisted that opposition parties want to sabotage government.
Mind you, the states where the theft is happening are controlled by the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, including President Jonathan’s own state of Bayelsa.  Had it been happening in Northern Nigeria, it would be interpreted as part of a bigger anti-South agenda. In the final analysis, it should be borne in mind that crude oil theft, in its very pure, undiluted form, also includes the misapplication of revenue accruing from its sale.
The following report is just the first part of the reports from the investigation. N365billion loss in the month of July!  And there is no protest?  And the people and government are going about their normal business as if nothing has happened? Really strange!
Vanguard

WHY THEY ARE SCARED OF BUHARI.

 by Maryam Ahmadu-Suka

The Deputy National Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and a former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Malam Nasir El-Rufa’i, has explained the reason why he said the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) fears General Muhammadu Buhari more than God.

Speaking yesterday as the Guest of the Week on Liberty Radio monitored in Kaduna, the former minister said the PDP which evolved as a party that tried to be democratic in its practices and decent in governance had become a danger to the people of Nigeria.
El-Rufa’i said the only nightmare person which the PDP was scared of is General Buhari, noting that “anytime he (Buhari) utters a statement or does anything, the PDP machine is at work to twist whatever he says in order to destroy his character”.
He said the PDP always tried to give the impression that he is “a tribal or ethnic bigot when there is nothing by way of fact that shows that Buhari is that kind of person”. 
He said, “Buhari has been in politics for a long time. So, if he is a religious bigot, it would have been clear. There is no way a man will rise to the position of a Major General in the Nigerian army without people knowing that he has a preference for his ethnic group or for his religion.
“That never happened. What PDP is scared of is Buhari’s integrity and his track record of doing the right thing and ensuring that people are brought to justice when they break the law.
“That’s what they are afraid of. They are afraid of that day when he will become President. They are scared because they think he will call them and ask them to explain their source of inexplicable wealth.
“They try to do everything possible to paint the man black and they are not even afraid that one day they will stand before God and account for their action. That is why I said they are more scared of him than they are scared of God because somebody that is scared of the day when he will face God, will not do certain things. He will not create a lie and try to make it true. 
“This is why I made that statement and I think people should be very careful and very wary of whatever the PDP and its media says about General Buhari but to look for facts by interrogating them to convince you of what they have said about Buhari,” he said.
While continuing with his explanation, he stated that, “one of Buhari’s biggest defenders is Professor Tam David West from Rivers State. He is not a Muslim. But he will die before he let you say anything bad about Buhari. They normally use his Hausa interview where he uses a proverb or an idiom and they twist it into something else. For example when Buhari said in 2011, there will be ‘kare jini biri jini’, in Hausa it means it will be a march of equals because when a dog and monkey fight there is no winner. But the PDP and its sponsored media said Buhari said in the next election, there will be bloodshed.
“PDP has become a virus that is infecting and destroying the country because they are not doing anything productive. They have changed our politics into that of ethnicity and religion to divert attention from their incompetence, lack of capacity and looting of the treasury. It has become a clear and present danger to the existence of Nigeria as a nation and the prosperity of its people,” he stressed.
On why he thought Nigeria is a time bomb waiting to explode, El-Rufai explained thus: “Nigeria has a population of about 170 million people and every year, Nigerian’s produce 6 million babies. The problem is that, within 20 years, those 6 million babies will need at least 3 million jobs. Out of 6 million, a million will die before the age of five from avoidable illnesses. Some will get married. But at least 3 million out of the original 6 million will need jobs in 20 years.
“Any government should be thinking about these challenges and asking themselves everyday what they are doing that will ensure that in 20 years, there will be this number of jobs for these babies that are born every year. My concern is that, not a lot is being done in this fight. For those 3 million people to have jobs in 20 years, they must remain healthy. They must have a decent education. The environment that has the opportunity to create jobs and allow businesses to thrive must be provided.
“Our infrastructure is dilapidating. Our electricity supply has not been growing. Our industries are dying. Competition from China is killing the little industrial base we have. Our leaders are not thinking about this future. They are not educating our children. They are not making the environment attractive for investment such that jobs could be created. They are making people who are not really educated to feel too big to remain in the farms. They move into urban areas. And they have become a problem.
“All the security challenges we are facing in this country become manifest from this explosion of young people that are not educated. They are not employed. They are feeling hopeless. Whether it is Boko Haram in the North East or kidnapping in the South East or armed robbery in the South West or crude oil theft in the Niger Delta. All these are being perpetrated by young people between the age of 18 and 40 that feel hopeless. This is the bomb that we are sitting on. And it’s already steering us in the face in many parts of the country. Unless we have a responsible government that will begin to create an environment full of opportunity and hope for these people, we are all in danger.
“When the explosion comes, it’s not only the guilty, not only those that are looting the treasury and preventing these people from having education and opportunities that will suffer. All sides, including many of us that are innocent will be victims. As long as you wear nice clothes, live in a nice house and drive a nice car, these young people will consider you the enemy. What we are seeing is just an indication of the likely future problems that we will face if we don’t do something and the time to do it is now,” he lamented.