Wednesday, 6 November 2013

The Nigerian Police By: Sam Nda-Isaiah



Last week, I started a discussion on the implausibility of giving the imprimatur for the establishment of state police. Most people agreed with me, but there were two dissenting views that, I think, I should respond to. The two differing voices offered the same logic, basically. If states are allowed to have their own policemen, they said, then, the prospect of a mutually assured destruction would keep both the federal government and state governments in check. This deduction is not only wrong, it is dangerous.
The first question I would like to ask the proponents of that course of thought is: why would they want to place the central government and state governments on the same pedestal in terms of possession of the cohesive power of the state? Why would anyone want a state government to be able to challenge the central government with force? To which school of government do these people belong? Simply because we have had an irresponsible federal government in the past does not mean we should lose our own sense of right and wrong as well. This quality of reasoning reminds me of the kind of silly arguments the anti-gun control lobby in the United States offers that has made the United States one of the most dangerous countries to live in. Almost every week – including last week – you hear of one sick person or the other waking up on the wrong side and just feeling like shooting as many people as he can get simply because, legally, anybody can get into a store and buy a gun, pretty much the same way the rest of us walk into a store to buy toiletries.
The NRA, National Rifle Association, the very rich and powerful United States lobby group that forcefully (with all the money in this world of course) insists that there should not be any controls on the sale of assault rifles, has successfully and unreasonably blocked every attempt to legislate against easy access to arms. NRA’s reasoning is that the best way to check indiscriminate killings in America (like the recent killing of 20 children aged between 6 and 7 years in a Connecticut elementary school) is for everyone to own a gun. That kind of very stupid logic is what makes people like Piers Morgan, the host of Piers Morgan Live on CNN, crazy on TV sometimes. I hope that the NRA doesn’t get its way because I don’t know who would want to live in a country where everyone owns a gun and ready to shoot the next person.
The reasoning of a section of Nigeria’s pro-state police group is not different from that of the American NRA, given our current state of affairs. State and county police work in the United States precisely because the rule of law applies to everyone including the president. When we get to that point when the rule of law works (and I hope this would be very soon) – where a commissioner of police can refuse to carry out the instruction of the president because it is an unlawful order, and where the president and governors know their limits and therefore would not give crude and unconstitutional orders – that would be the right time to start talking about state police. I strongly believe that time will come sooner than most of us think.
And those who hold this view also forget that an irresponsible president (and we have had a handful) could get the Nigerian army and the air force to bomb or destroy state police locations in states where he thought he needed to “defeat” his opponent governor. In other words, if Rivers State, for instance, had its own state police, they would certainly have engaged the federal police in Port Harcourt in defence of their principal, and if the federal police were not winning the war fast enough, the president could have deployed the army and air force to rout Amaechi’s state police. As I write this piece, the DPO of Asokoro police station is unlawfully breaking into the meeting of G7 governors at the Kano State governor’s lodge. He said he had been asked by powers from above to stop the meeting. The DPO did not care that a governor has immunity and that he (DPO) doesn’t have the power to disrupt a meeting of several governors. Even if they were not governors, our laws guarantee the right to freedom of political association to all Nigerians. Doesn’t the DPO know that? But the DPO obviously could not refuse an unlawful order from a superior – whoever that was. Democracy is always about the rule of law. As was expected, the ADC to the Kano State governor and a few other ADCs engaged the DPO in a shouting match. The rest is now history.
The only way out is for Nigerians to start ensuring that only responsible people are voted into power. For now, what we really need is to strengthen and modernise our police force. The current police force is not useful to the country. They are useful only to Jonathan. We currently have 370,000 poorly paid policemen and women for a population of 173 million people. This is scandalously inadequate, considering the crime rate in the country. These 370,000 policemen and women are some of the least paid police personnel in the world, ill-equipped with little incentives to do a good job. We recently saw the inner recesses of a typical police training college but, since then, the president has done nothing. In any case, there’s always never going to be any improvement with President Jonathan.
We need to expand the police force in Nigeria to at least one million well-trained officers and men. Many of our unemployed graduates could be pushed to form a new police force that is totally different from what we currently have. Nigeria at the moment suffers about 80 per cent graduate unemployment. It is one of the worst in the world. Police people also need to be properly equipped with modern facilities. The weapons our police officers use today are the same ones they used in the 1960s and the 1970s. This is wonderful. Salaries in the police force must also substantially move up if we want policemen to confront armed robbers, kidnappers and Boko Haram operatives who are always better armed and infinitely better motivated. We also cannot be serious with the current standard of police intelligence resources that we have. It is the same we have had since the 1960s. It is shameful and beyond the pale that the Nigerian police have not been able to unravel any major crime or assassination since the coming of civilian rule in 1999. Not the murder of Bola Ige, Harry Marshal and several others that have happened in the last 13 years. There is no decent country that is run this way. If the current police intelligence capability is not upped, we should forget everything. The world of today is totally different from what we used to know. Today’s world is defined by terrorism and the internet and all nations including Nigeria need new skills to cope with the realities.
In all this, it is corruption that has ensured that our police force remain in its present prostrate state. For a long time, the police have not received up to 20 per cent of their appropriated budgets. And a large chunk of even the little that is received is diverted by the police high command. A former IG of police is currently buying up choice houses in Abuja and London, yet nobody is asking questions. Tafa Balogun, another former IG, had billions of naira in his account. All these former IGs got corrupted by the presidents they served, as the presidents always suborned them into carrying out illegal instructions against their political opponents. It’s usually during elections or when a president like Obasanjo or Jonathan wants to illegally remove a governor with four out of 32 House of Assembly members that such police chiefs get that “lucky”.
 If we really want to have a good police force, the first place to start is with the choice of who becomes president. President Jonathan has nothing to offer in this discussion. That is why 2015 offers the opportunity for a new beginning.

EARSHOT
Jonathan And His Legacies
President Jonathan has lately been speaking about legacies and criticisms. As for criticisms, he has made it clear that he doesn’t care. That is not new anyway as he has consistently told us he doesn’t give a damn. But I am surprised that he is thinking very seriously about leaving good legacies. It’s something of an oxymoron for a president who doesn’t give a damn about corruption to give a damn about his legacies. If Jonathan were really serious in his recent talk of leaving behind credible legacies, it would be either that he doesn’t know the spelling of legacy or he doesn’t know the spelling of corruption. So far, the only legacies he would be leaving behind are corruption, oil theft and a disorderly polity. He would be leaving behind a country begging for reconstruction. He has a chance to change all that if he changes himself today. But does he give a damn?
Leadership

Motion on G-7 govs’ disupted meeting splits Reps

by John Ameh, Abuja

The House of Representatives witnessed a rowdy session on Tuesday as a motion on the right of the seven aggrieved governors of the Peoples Democratic Party to hold meetings split the ranks of lawmakers.
PDP lawmakers in the camp of the G-7 governors and their supporters in the All Progressives Congress wanted the motion to pass, but those in the larger PDP camp vehemently opposed it.
In the heat of the argument, the House summoned the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, “to ascertain the circumstances leading to the invasion of the Kano’s Governor’s Lodge by men and officers of the Nigeria Police Force under the command of a Divisional Police Officer” on Sunday.
This followed the motion sponsored by a member from Niger State, Mr. Idris Kutigi, who argued that it amounted to “impunity” for the police to “storm” the lodge and disrupt the meeting of the governors.
Kutigi, who urged his colleagues, to “condemn” the action of the police, claimed that the G-7 governors and some members of the National Assembly were meeting at the lodge to find solutions to the crisis in the PDP.
He also stated that the police interfered with the right to immunity conferred on the governors by the 1999 Constitution (as amended).
Kutigi spoke further, “The Police authorities have in recent times disrupted several meetings of these governors by ceiling the meeting venues.
“Concerned that a police officer of the rank of Chief Superintendent of Police boldly attempted to arrest and disrupt the meeting of the G-7 Governors in disregard to their constitutional immunity in section 308 of the 1999 constitution.
“Alarmed at the way and manner the Nigeria Police treats elected representatives of Nigerians, amounting to a total disregard to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“Regrets that if the rights and privileges of these governors and members of the National Assembly can be so threatened, then an ordinary man in Nigeria has no hope and confidence in the Nigerian Police Force.”
 
Punch

APC leaders finally in Port Harcourt to woo Governor Amaechi

 LIVE UPDATES AND BIT
BY BIT SITUATION REPORT ON HOW THE
TRIP TOOK PLACE.
The leaders of the opposition All
Progressives Congress, led by former Head
of State, Muhammadu Buhari, party
Chairman Bisi Akande and former Governor
Bola Tinubu have arrived the Rivers
Government House, Port Harcourt.
An elaborate reception ceremony is being
held for them.
UPDATE 1: Some of the APC leaders in
attendance are Buhari, Akande, Tinubu,
former Speaker of the House of
Representative, Aminu Masari, former
Governor John Oyegun, National Vice
Chairman of the APC for the South South,
Tom Ikimi …
UPDATE 2: Deputy Chairman of the New PDP,
Sam Jaja, is now speaking. The crowd is
massive here. It is a massive political
carnival. There is a lot of dancing and
rejoicing.
UPDATE 3: Mr. Jaja welcomed the visitors
and promised that the leadership of Rivers
state is ready to lay down their lives to
defend the state and its people.
UPDATE 4: APC Chairman, Bisi Akande,
described Governor Amaechi as bundle of
courage, a brilliant man being persecuted.
“He is a leader of the leaders. And we think
we will not go home without asking you,
through him to join the APC. APC is the party
of the progressives and that is where Rivers
state belongs.”
UPDATE 5: Tinubu said amidst cheers: “We
were ready to come yesterday but the
airspace was blocked. We did not want to
offend anybody so we put our visit for
today.
“Amaechi is a progressive. He is a visionary.
He is focused. We know the basis of his
persecution. It is because he fought for the
oil and revenue of Rivers state. He is doing
well. He is giving our children the greatest
weapon against poverty – education.
“I urge you to ask Governor Amaechi to lead
you to the APC. The progressives are offering
the rescue boat. This is a mission to rescue
Nigeria.”
UPDATE 6: Ikimi speaks: “We have seen for
ourself that Rotimi Amaechi is indeed in
charge of Rivers state. This young man is
prepared to pursue his believe to the last,
based on courage and conviction. It is on
these principles that APC was formed. With
APC, there is an alternative platform and
there is a balance of power.
“APC means Aspirin, Panadol, Codeine.
When you have strong headache, you take
these drugs.
“APC also means Armoured Personnel
Carrier. You use it to move forward when
yeye police stop you.”
UPDATE 7: Buhari: “We are here to seek
understanding and support from you
through your leader, Governor Amaechi. I
worked with one of your greatest assets,
Prof Tam David West.
“Nigeria is at a crossroad and that is why we
decided to come together to rescue this
country from destruction. We must get
together and get this country moving again. I
congratulate Gov. Amaechi for providing
education for the people of the state.”
UPDATE 8: It is now time for goodwill
messages from leaders and politicians from
the state. The chairmen of the 23 local govts
have mounted the stage and are dancing.
They are all expected to speak on behalf of
their local governments.
UPDATE 9: A local government chairman and
chairman of ALGON in the state, is speaking.
He says, “We need to move away from the
current cluelessness, visionlessness and
purposefullessness. We need to embrace
patriotism. Wherever our leader (Amaechi)
leads us, we will follow because we have no
reason to doubt his ability to lead us well.”
UPDATE 10: Speaker of Rivers House assures
the visitor that wherever Amaechi goes, they
will go. “We are aware he has been holding
nocturnal meetings with the APC. The House
wants him to hurry up. Let the marriage
happens. We are tired of the dating before
someone will have children outside
wedlock.”
UPDATE 11: Everyone here is waiting on
Governor Amaechi to respond to the
invitation by the APC to join them.
UPDATE 12: Members of the National
Assembly from Rivers are now billed to
speak. They are being led by Senator Magnus
Abe, who is dressed in all white.
UPDATE 13: Member of the House of
Representatives, Andrew Uchendu: “We have
heard all the APC said. You have made very
strong case inviting us. We have given our
mandate to Rivers governor to discuss with
you. Of 3 senators, he has 2 backing him. Of
13 members of House of Reps, he has 10. Of
32 members of the state House of Assembly,
27 are backing him.”
UPDATE 14: Magnus Abe: “Rivers people
have elected a leader. We have elected a
governor. His name is Chibuike Rotimi
Amaechi. You have our support. Any party
that is serious about discipline must respect
its own rules. It must allow its members to
hold dissenting views. We are standing by
our sons and will continue to stop him.
Some of those talking today supported
Babangida and Atiku. We did not stone them
because Rivers is home for all.”
UPDATE 15: Master of Ceremony says: “This
person (Amaechi), each time they give him
ginger ginger, they give him swagger
swagger.”
UPDATE 16: Amaechi turns musician, singing
and dancing. He appears extremely happy.
UPDATE 17: Amaechi: “A lot of people are
wondering why I have been dancing since
the burial (of Patience Jonathan’s mum).
When you have God behind you, there is no
one else. We have been hearing ‘we will
remove him, we will remove him’. Have I
been removed? They said they will remove
us on the 11. Eleven is Monday. I will dance.
The second reason I danced at Okrika is that
they said they will stone me at Okrika. I went
and it didn’t happen.”
“Most of the people on the other side are
corrupt. They are thieves. They get contracts
from the NNDC and the Niger Delta ministry
and then go ahead to use the money to
build hotels. One of they got 17 billion
contract to build a road from Eleme to Imo
Rivers. Is there a road there? They have
served and are now hungry.
“They are so desperate that they have gone
to hire Commissioner Mbu as the military
wing of the PDP. One thing you should know
is that the police will come after you. The
only way to stop them is the people’s power.
When you hear of impunity, It’s because you
allow it. When you hear that Amaechi is
courageous, it’s because I take risk. You
must come out when we ask you to do so.
There is no revolution without blood. The
only revolution without blood is reform.
“Anyday they are ready for a debate, I’m
ready. I call them thieves, let them reply me.
“To our APC guests, I like to say we are a
group of seven governors. In that group, I’m
perculiar because the president is from our
zone. So regarding your invitation, I will
consult our leaders, I will consult my party, I
will consult even the president. He is from
our zone. I will consult all the consultables!
“But the day we will take a decision, it will be
at that our new stadium. It has the capacity
to take 40,000 people. Tinubu, and the
president will address 40,000 people. So we
need to go out and continue to grow our
number.
“They have money, they have the police, they
have the army. The only thing we have is our
people.
UPDATE 18: Immediately after his speech,
the governor led his APC guests out of the
venue, drawing the event to a close.
Thank you for following our updates.
-PremiumTimes
.

APC Moves to Build Grand Coalition of Old, Current Govs Asiwaju Bola Tinubu



Political Adviser to the President Ahmed
Gulak and Deputy National Publicity
Secretary of PDP Abdullahi Jalo, who raised
the concerns, urged the Independent
National Electoral Commission to sanction
APC for breaking the rule on the timing of
election campaigns.
This was, however, as hints emerged from
the National Assembly that the 57 members
of the House of Representatives, who had
identified with the Baraje-led New PDP,
might have concluded plans to defect to APC
any moment. THISDAY learnt that as a
prelude to the imminent defection, the
Progressive Governors’ Forum, which
consists of governors of the 10 APC states,
would be organising a special dinner this
week to interact with the intending converts
to the opposition coalition.
To make room for the G7 governors and
other New PDP supporters, APC has
expressed a willingness to review its
constitution, which currently provides for a
35-member interim management committee,
with each of the three major parties in the
coalition – Action Congress of Nigeria,
Congress for Progress Change, and All
Nigeria Peoples Party – as well as the
factions from All Progressives Grand Alliance
and Democratic Peoples Party contributing a
specified number of officers.
A top APC member told THISDAY yesterday
in Abuja that the party's delegation would
continue its consultations with a visit to
Amaechi on Monday, after which the team
would visit Minna, the Niger State capital,
for a similar discussion with Governor
Babangida Aliyu. He said the APC leaders
planned to round off their tour with another
trip to Sokoto to concretise issues with the
state governor, Aliyu Wamako.
Besides Amaechi, Aliyu, and Wamakko, the
other four governors in the G7 are Kwara
State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed, Adamawa
State Governor Murtala Nyako, Jigawa State
Governor Sule Lamido, and Kano State
Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso.
The APC team had in the last one week
visited Kwankwaso, Lamido, Wamakko, and
Nyako.
“We have carried the battle straight to the
PDP National Chairman's home state in
Adamawa and we are following it up with a
visit to Governor Rotimi Amaechi in Port
Harcourt on Monday,” the APC source said
on condition of anonymity because he was
not authorised to speak on the issue.
He dismissed as insincere an alleged last
minute effort by the PDP and President
Goodluck Jonathan’s men to reach out to
Amaechi.
According to him, “If Amaechi had been the
governor of Bayelsa, the president's home
state, we will still have gone there to woo
him. Being from the president's region is
absolutely irrelevant. What is important is
that Amaechi has consistently cried out that
he was being suffocated by the Presidency.
“If anybody is even more aggrieved, I think it
is Governor Amaechi and we are very
hopeful that he will listen to our sympathetic
request for him to come over and join our
party. Governor Amaechi is a very intelligent
and resourceful man. I think he can take a
decision and know which option is in his
own best interest.”

Contesting Politicians and Nigerian Churches Cannot Fool God

JONATHAN-IN-ISRAEL1



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Nov. 5, 2013
Michael Chima Ekenyerengozi
NewsRescue- Contesting politicians always patronize big churches before elections and PLEASE, a true minister of God should know that they are only coming to curry favour.
Don’t welcome them to your crusades.
If they really want to repent and reconcile with God, they can do so in private consultations with the ministers of God and not public show of piety of eye service and lip service.
NO MAN CAN FOOL GOD.
All these going to Jerusalem to hit heads on the Wailing Wall like a Jew and kneeling down for ministers to pray for you and publishing the photographs is all HYPOCRISY.
Going to hit your heads on the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem has nothing to do with Christianity.
Sponsoring pilgrimages to Jerusalem and Mecca has nothing to do with Christianity.
God is omnipresent.
Going to kneel before GOD at crusades is all public relations for political campaigns.
YOU MAY FOOL THE CHURCH AND THE WHOLE WORLD, BUT YOU CAN NEVER FOOL GOD.
The following is what our Lord and Messiah Jesus Christ said on Prayer and Hypocrites:
5 “And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full. 6 But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you. 7 And when you pray, do not keep on babbling like pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many words. 8 Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.
9 “This, then, is how you should pray:
“‘Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
10 your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
11 Give us today our daily bread.
12 And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
13 And lead us not into temptation,[a]
but deliver us from the evil one.[b]’
14 For if you forgive other people when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. 15 But if you do not forgive others their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.
Fasting
16 “When you fast, do not look somber as the hypocrites do, for they disfigure their faces to show others they are fasting. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full. 17 But when you fast, put oil on your head and wash your face, 18 so that it will not be obvious to others that you are fasting, but only to your Father, who is unseen; and your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.
Treasures in Heaven
19 “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. 20 But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moths and vermin do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. 21 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
22 “The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy,[c] your whole body will be full of light. 23 But if your eyes are unhealthy,[d] your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness!
24 “No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.
Do Not Worry
25 “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? 26 Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? 27 Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life[e]?
28 “And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. 29 Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. 30 If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? 31 So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ 32 For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. 33 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. 34 Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.
~ Matthew 6: 5 – 34.
New International Version (NIV)

NewsRescue

First Cut: Tony Nyiam Resigns From National Dialogue Committee



In a stunning development, Colonel
Tony Nyiam last Sunday abandoned
the Presidential Advisory Committee
on National Dialogue.
In a letter to President Goodluck
Jonathan dated November 3, he
explained that he had taken up the
appointment “with great enthusiasm
and dedication.”
But following “several meetings and
wide consultations with the
progressives, self-determination and
civil society movements and in
order not to [be] cast as a
distraction or be used as an excuse
to destabilize the noble cause” of
Mr. Jonathan, he said he had
decided to withdraw from the
committee.
He traced the background of his
decision to the incident in Benin City
last week in which Governor Adams
Oshiomhole was involved in two
incidents with the committee, in the
second of which he was booed at a
public event.
“What became troubling was the
Governor’s talking down on the
people gathered; amongst who were
former governors, senators, retired
armed forces generals and judges,”
Nyiam wrote. “What was equally
disturbing was the Governor’s
insensitiveness to the ethno-
nationalities yearning for self-
determination,” adding that they
expressed their feelings by openly
boo-ing the Governor.
“Noticing the increasing protests
against the Governor, I stood up and
walked to the chairman, to remind
him of the need to moderate, to
remind the Governor that he has
gone well over the time allowed for
a speaker. I went back to my seat,
which was on the other, far side of
where the Chief Executive of Edo
State was speaking from.”
While the letter does not specifically
say why he has chosen to abandon
the work of the committee, he
apologized to whoever may have
been disappointed by his over-
reaction to the provocation,
presumably the Benin City incident.
The concession suggests he may
have been forced out of the
committee.
“I will be leaving the Committee
believing that equity fairness and
justice will continue to be guiding
principles of its deliberations,” he
said.
Full text of the letter:
Presidential Advisory Committee
On National Dialogue,
International Conference Centre,
Abuja.
3rd November 2013
To: The President and C-in-C
State House, Aso Villa,
Abuja.
Through: The Secretary To
The Federal Government of
Nigeria,
Your Excellency,
Resignation From The Presidential
Advisory Committee
I would like to thank the President
and Commander-in-Chief of our
evolving Federation, His Excellency
President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
GRFR, for giving me the opportunity
to serve my mother land as a
member of the Presidential Advisory
Committee on National Dialogue.
When Mr. President, just like Nehru
of India changed his mind about the
desirability of a National Conference
and announced on Independence
Day that there will be a National
Dialogue, I knew that a new dawn is
around the corner.
Some of us have all our
lives been fighting for the
oppressed people of our mother
land, and to be given an opportunity
to use dialogue to resolve our
myriads of problems was too good
a moment to be ignored. I took up
the appointment with great
enthusiasm and dedication, working
as hard as my colleagues, to give
our very best to our country.
After several meetings and wide
consultations with the progressives,
self-determination and civil society
movements and in order not to cast
as a distraction or be used as an
excuse to destabilize the noble
cause the President has put before
us, I Col. Tony Nyiam rtd has
decided to withdraw from the
Presidential Advisory Committee on
National Dialogue. I will from now
on, work with colleagues from
outside, using all peaceful and
democratic means to bring our
many decades of aspirations to
fruition.
Mr. President, I will like to put the
Benin event in its proper perspective
so that evil propagandists bent on
derailing the dialogue train will not
continue to fabricate falsehood to
confound Nigerians so as to achieve
their devilish intentions.
It all started in the Benin
consultations with us being made to
be twice late for important
appointments. First, we were made
to be over an hour late to the 12-
noon appointment we had the
privilege of getting at short notice,
from the palace of one of Africa’s
most reputable monarchs, the
revered Oba of Benin.
Secondly, we were made to keep
critical South- South stakeholders,
and other people’s representatives,
waiting for over three hours. The
two occasions of lateness to
important appointments which are
against the ethos of our duty, were
caused by the twice, and sudden,
shifting of the time we had earlier
agreed to pay courtesy call to the
Executive Governor of Edo State, His
Excellency, Comrade Adams
Oshiomohle.
Firstly, a few minutes to our 10 am
meeting with His Excellency,
Governor Oshiomohle moved the
appointment to 11:00 am. Secondly,
another few minutes to the newly
agreed time of 11 am, the Comrade
Governor shifted the appointment to
coincide with the 12 noon
appointment we already have with
the one and only, Oba of the
historical Benin Kingdom. The two
unilaterally changes of appointment
times by the Governor, left us
wondering what His Excellency was
up to.
When eventually granted audience,
the Comrade Governor proceeded to
give us a background on why he is
vehemently opposed to the initiative
of any leader daring to convene a
National Conference. The
background story was essentially a
lecture on how the Governor of Edo
State was, ironically, more a
Kaduna- made man than an Edo
indigene.
This was followed by a tutorial on
how we were deluded to see
anything of significance in the
opportunity Nigerians are being
given to dialogue amongst
themselves. One instance of the
Governor only knows, is his self
opinionated, and sarcastic question:
who initiates a process towards a
meeting without a pre-conceived
agenda?
To all his great oratory we (all
members of the Committee) listened
to quietly. As it is the democratic
right of Governor Oshiomohle to
speak to us. Like the late dictator,
Mamman Gaddafi use to tutor for
hours, his cowed Libyan subjects we
respectfully listened to him. After
over forty minutes of the Comrade
Governors’ exercise of his human
right we left the Governor’s office.
We paid homage to the Oba of
Benin who with grace and above all
love received us after the
Committee’s chairman apologized
for our coming over an hour from
what was earlier agreed. We left the
Great Edo Palace with the Oba’s
commendation and prayers for the
initiator of a pre-national
conference committee, such as ours.
We got to the venue of consultations
with the people to find over a
thousand people eagerly waiting. We
then began taking submissions.
Most of the submissions, contrary
to Governor Oshiomohle’s opinion
came from ethnic nationalities.
Later on, the Governor walked in
and ran up dramatically to take his
seat at the high table.
After listening to statesmen and
eminent leaders of the Itsekiri,
Urhobo, Isoko, Ijaw, Benin and
Anioma nations making their
enlightening presentations, the
Governor indicated his interest to
comment before departing. Rather
than a few minutes’ remarks, the
Governor went on, and on, repeating
the lecture we had previously
listened to, for about an hour in his
office.
What became troubling was the
Governor’s talking down on the
people gathered; amongst who were
former governors, senators, retired
armed forces generals and judges.
What was equally disturbing was the
Governor’s insensitiveness to the
ethno-nationalities yearning for self-
determination. This they expressed
by their beginning to openly boo-ing
the Governor.
Noticing the increasing protests
against the Governor, I stood up and
walked to the chairman, to remind
him of the need to moderate, to
remind the Governor that he has
gone well over the time allowed for
a speaker. I went back to my seat,
which was on the other, far side of
where the Chief Executive of Edo
State was speaking from.
The provocation from Governor
Oshiomohle’s derogatory
insinuations, and the casting of
aspersions on eminent personalities
such as were gathered before him,
was just too much. Lest we forget,
the Comrade Governor openly
declared that he was not speaking
as a Governor or on behalf of the
Edo people. Thus he needed to be
reminded that he cannot, in his
personal capacity, usurp the
people’s opportunity to express their
feelings by themselves.
Some of our leaders need to know
that they cannot continue to use the
garb to obfuscate and confuse
citizens and presenting as
patriotism their personal agenda.
An auspicious time will come, when
the obfuscation will unravel and
Nigerians will come to know the
true character of some of these
leaders.
However, my sincere apologies to
whoever may have been
disappointed by my over reaction to
the provocation.
I will be leaving the Committee
believing that equity fairness and
justice will continue to be guiding
principles of its deliberations.
Like all Nigerians, I look forward to
the report and will continue to
believe that a better and greater
Nigeria is possible.
May God bless our evolving Nigeria
and its great people.
With highest regards,
Col. Tony Nyiam rtd

"Worry as govt officials shift focus from economy"

John Omachonu

The Nigerian state today seems to be grinding to a halt, with political gladiators taking over the stage at the expense of the economy. Accordingly, the fortunes of the country are gradually nose-diving, a cross section of economy watchers told BusinessDay.

Continued oil theft, incessant budget delays, rising insecurity, continued university teachers’ strike and political diatribe amongst the leadership are, according to them, forcing the nation on its knees.

The analysts specifically say that the 2.38 million barrels daily oil production estimate, as contained in the Federal Government’s Medium Term Economic Framework (MTEF) for the 2014 budget, may be unrealistic due to oil theft and pipeline vandalism, just as the current crisis in the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) may delay the budget presentation as well as implementation.

“At a time of heightened political stress and shortfalls in oil revenue, finding a compromise that works for all will not be easy,” said Razia Khan, analyst with Standard Bank, London.

Commenting further on the implications of the crisis in the ruling PDP, Khan said there is now less certainty associated with election outcomes, and the months ahead are likely to see politics move to centre stage, potentially at a cost to other reforms, adding that if PDP eventually loses majority membership at the National Assembly, there could be complications on the passage of any legislation.

According to her, “Given current circumstances, it is highly unlikely that Nigeria’s long-deliberated Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) will be passed soon. An end to regulatory uncertainty is thought necessary to unlock new investment in the upstream oil sector. Even passage of the 2014 Budget, expected to be read at the end of October, may become more difficult, further complicating the economic outlook.”

She said that although the MTEF planned moderation in total spending in 2014 to N4.5tn, from N5tn in 2013, there are some worrying concerns.

“From a growth perspective, the share of recurrent spending would rise to 73.8 percent of total spending, up from 64 percent in the current FY (increasing c.4 percent in nominal terms, to N3.32tn in 2014 from N3.2tn in 2013, but squeezing capital expenditure. Given the current political backdrop, budget assumptions for 2014 appear overly ambitious,” she added.

Bismarck Rewane, foremost economist and chief executive, Financial Derivatives Company, in his recent publication, said the Nigerian oil and gas sector remains a challenging environment to operate in. “In order to improve the outlook for this sector, the government has to ensure consistency in policies, address security issues and double down on initiatives to improve innovation for increased efficiency in the sector,” he said, adding that Nigeria remains a net importer of innovation and so must make the necessary investments in training institutions to provide capable human capital and innovation to meet the needs of the sector.

Samir Gadio, emerging markets strategist at Standard Bank, London, expressed similar pessimism, saying that spending by politicians would affect the fiscal consolidation of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). He warned, however, that savings made in the past had not improved the lot of the Nigerian citizens.

“In reality, one should be a bit cautious about the assumptions of the MTEF and their implication for effective fiscal policy. What really matters in Nigeria is the federally-consolidated fiscal position rather than the budget of the Federal Government,” he said.

“Besides, the proposed spending terms of the FG budget are consistently adjusted upwards by the National Assembly, a situation that we see persisting in coming years,” he added.

FBN Capital Researchers, in their October 28, 2013 note on ‘Some fallout from the election build-up’, said the momentum of the FGN’s transformation agenda has slowed, adding that its execution depends on the strength of the vested interests in opposition. “Progress tends to be greater where those interests are weaker (such as agriculture and power), and slower where they are stronger (such as the PIB and the sovereign wealth fund),” they said.

Vested interests and unnecessary politicking which have visited the passage of the PIB have slowed down exploration activities in an industry that government earns almost 90 percent of its revenue. As if this situation is not grim enough, the leadership of the nation has enmeshed itself in political acrimony ahead of the 2015 general elections.

With governance practically being abandoned for political jobbery, Nigerians have been left at the mercy of armed robbers, militants and kidnappers, as growing insecurity now pervades the land.

The acrimony within the ruling party and between the opposition parties is deep. Already, governors of the All Progressives Congress (APC), the major opposition party, are threatening to take the Federal Government (FG) to court over what they term illegal deductions of 40 percent from their monthly allocations, a development that analysts say will further slow down the economy.

The opposition governors are also faulting the FG over the creation of the sovereign wealth fund (SWF), saying next generation would fare better by the level of investments made rather than by the amount of money saved.

In the midst of all this, there is spending spree at the centre occasioned by corruption and incessant trips of government officials overseas, threatening the CBN’s fiscal consolidation.

BusinessDay