Monday, 24 February 2014

Jonathan Surrounded By Incompetent, Fraudulent Aides – Sanusi


The suspend governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, has described President Goodluck Jonathan as a man trying to do well but whose efforts are being undermined by incompetent and fraudulent aides.
In an interview with AFP in Lagos yesterday, Sanusi said many of the people advising Jonathan are sycophants who do not speak frankly about the extent of corruption in his government.
He said, “When you sit with President Jonathan himself, he appears a nice simple person who is trying his best to do his best. His greatest failing obviously is that he is surrounded by people who are extremely incompetent, who are extremely fraudulent and whom he trusts,” Sanusi told AFP.
On why he secured a court order against his arrest, Sanusi said, “I thought taking away my passport was the beginning of infringement on my fundamental human rights.”
Regarding the allegations against him, Sanusi explained that he had written to the president when he heard about a report condemning his performance, asking if an explanation was needed, but received no reply.
He argued it would be too simple to describe his removal as payback for his attacks on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).
“Since 2009 I have been annoying the government… You’ve got people who think I have the wrong friends, people who think maybe I have not distanced myself enough from people who are seen to be opposition figures,” he further stated.
In the short term, he voiced readiness to face any attacks that may be coming from those committed to preserving the status quo, adding: “If I am sacrificed in whatever way, my freedom or my life… if it does lead to better accountability it will be well worth it.
“I think everybody has known that NNPC is rotten. I don’t think it has ever been as bad as this. The so-called kerosene subsidy money in fact pays for private jets…yachts… and expensive property in Beverly Hills and Switzerland,” Sanusi alleged.

Leadership

Saturday, 22 February 2014

CBN: Disquiet over Jonathan’s silence on Deputy Governors


CBN: Disquiet over Jonathan’s silence on Deputy Governors
CBN

 by: Yusuf Alli, Managing Editor, Northern Operation

Barely 24 hours after the suspension of the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, President Goodluck Jonathan’s silence on the fate of the Deputy Governors of the bank was faulted yesterday by some top officials of the administration.
The report of the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria, upon which Sanusi was suspended, had recommended that the CBN Governor and his deputies should leave office.
It was also learnt that the State Security Service (SSS) has returned Sanusi’s passport.
The passport was allegedly seized in what a source described as a “routine” security check at the airport in Lagos.
Investigation by our correspondent revealed that many government officials are wondering why Sanusi was singled out for suspension
A part of the report said the President should “exercise the powers conferred on him by Section 11 (2) (f) of the Central Bank of Nigeria Act, 2007 or invoke Section 11 (2) (c) of the said Act and cause the Governor and the Deputy Governors to cease from holding office in the CBN and also direct the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria to carry out a full investigation of the activities of the CBN…”
A reliable source said: “There has been agitation for the President to implement the report in full instead of isolating Sanusi for sanction.
“The Financial Reporting Council was explicit in its recommendations. Stakeholders even in CBN are worried that the Deputy Governors were spared by the President.
“Going by the workings of the CBN, there was no way Sanusi could have acted alone. What was the role of the management in all these findings by the FRCN?”
Another source said: “I think the government should not give us only a side of the FRCN’ report; it is about indictment of the CBN as a body. Let them tell us what they are doing about others.
“Does it mean Sanusi was in charge of all units, procurements and supplies? Don’t we have Deputy Governors and Directors overseeing some of these contracts or projects awarded by CBN? Could Sanusi alone have initiated all these projects?
“What was the role of the Board of the CBN in all the findings of the FRCN? I think there are many questions unanswered before Sanusi was hastily suspended.”
There were indications yesterday that the State Security Service (SSS) might have returned Sanusi’s passport to him.
A security source said: “I am aware that security operatives only went through his passport and it has been returned to him.”
But a former Minister of Federal Capital Territory, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, tweeted last night that he “just learnt that the SSS has obtained an arrest warrant that discloses no criminal offence to detain and gag Sanusi.
The security source however said: “I do no think we have obtained a warrant to arrest Sanusi. As at 6pm when I left office, I had no knowledge of a warrant.”
El-Rufai has explained why he would stand by the suspended Governor of CBN.
The ex-Minister, who made his position known on Sanusi’s suspension in some tweets, said: “Sanusi Lamido Sanusi is my friend and brother since 1977. An injustice to him is an attack on me as well. I will be on his side through this and beyond.
“First the gangsters illegally removed Justice Isa Ayo Salami. Then they tried to impeach Governor Rotimi Amaechi. Now they unlawfully suspended Sanusi Lamido Sanusi. Who is next?
“The Jonathanians are not bothered about the law or bound by reason; they just want to stay in power at all cost.”
TheNation

Nigeria Human Rights Commission releases damning report, says INEC, judiciary, police are election criminals


Highlights of Report
*INEC is partisan and falsifies election results
*Judiciary creates the impression that there are separate sets laws for the poor on one hand and the rich on another
*Police perform role of party agents, thumb-prints and stuff ballot boxes
——————————————————–
The National Human Rights Commission, NHRC, has indicted the Nigerian Judiciary, the Nigerian Police Force, NPF, and the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, for perpetrating electoral impunity in Nigeria.
In its report on the investigation of the election petitions filed at the various election petition tribunals across the six geo-political zones, the Commission found the three key organisations in the electoral process culpable of promoting electoral offences, which are a threat to the nation’s democracy.
The report is being released in Abuja Thursday morning but PREMIUM TIMES was able to scoop an advance copy for this story.
The report is titled, “An Independent Review of Evidence of Gross Violations of the Rights to Participate in Government to Public Service and to fair trial through the Election Petition Process in Nigeria — 2007 and 2011.”
The 146-page document was prepared by a seven-member expert Technical Working Group, TWG, constituted by the NHRC and chaired by Nsongurua Udombana. The other members are Mohammed Akanbi, Oluyemisi Bamgbose, Ifeoma Enemo, Muhammed Ladan and Solomon Ukhuegbe.
The report provides evidence of the extensive pattern of judicially sanctioned criminality in the election cycle as part of the continuing narrative of the long history of elections as organised crime in Nigeria.
The investigation covered the six geo-political zones, and considered 84 diverse crimes committed by individuals and institutions during the 2007 and 2011 general elections.
The common crimes identified by the researchers include cases of unlawful substitution of candidates by political parties and INEC, inflation of the numbers of ballots cast, forgery of election returns, and intimidation of voters and election officials at polling centres.
According to the report, the practice of falsifying election results is far from abating. It cited a 2007 case in Kano State where the tribunal there complained that INEC wanted it “to tacitly endorse abracadabra.”
It also referred to a case in a ward in Anambra State during the same 2007 elections where only 2,089 voters registered, but INEC declared 7,226 votes.
“In this case, the tribunal found that INEC had been involved in the “generating of results for an election that did not hold,” the report stated.
“In Ekiti State in south-west Nigeria, the Resident Electoral Commissioner announced as valid returns, results “which she declared as fake.”
“In another Anambra case, the tribunal accused named INEC officials of generating “results for an election that did not hold as proved by Chief Edith Mike Ejezie, which showed clearly  that these results ranging from EC8A (II), EC8E (II) as tendered by the respondents were obviously fabricated.”
The NHRC report also noted that one way in which officials of the electoral body falsifies elections was by manufacturing results long after voting had ended.  It said this occurred in units in which results had not yet been announced and no result forms completed or signed by party agents.
It gave an instance where in Katsina State, an Election Petition Tribunal found that although voting took place, “result (sic) in Form EC8A (I) was not collated and declared”, yet a result was filed from the Polling Unit.”
It further cited another case where the tribunal found that “the results of the election was (sic)declared before the completion of collation in Awka South.”
The document stated that there were other cases where supposedly neutral election INEC officials were criminally partisan.
For example, in Kaduna State, north-west Nigeria, the Election Petition Tribunal in 2008 registered its “dislike of the law on the practice of allowing party members of any one party to function as INEC Supervisor or Returning officer in the conduct of election(s).”
It also listed a case in Edo State where one official, Felix Osaigbovo, who was “INEC presiding officer for Unit 1 Ward 9” in the 2007 elections, signed the result sheets “as (a) PDP agent”.
The report quoted the election tribunal in Adamawa State where such routinely electoral crimes also took place as saying that:
“In more serious and accountable political climes, INEC should have evinced some remorse for the whole problem it has caused and the public money it wasted to organize an election it made inchoate even before it started.
“Its grandstanding is rather unfortunate. As a result of its ineptitude or mischief, a serious disruption will be caused to the governance of Adamawa State.”
Atrocities by the police
The report also regretted the role of the Nigeria police in the elections, saying its officers also routinely commit electoral crimes.
It said that in one case, the Election Petition Tribunal lamented that the evidence on record as per exhibit E showed that a policeman, ASP Christopher Oloyede, signed an election result sheet as party agent on behalf of the PDP.
It quoted the tribunal as saying, “This is an illegality and violation of electoral rules both by INEC and the police. ASP Oloyede behaved disgracefully and abused his position.  Neither INEC nor the police could defend the illegality that ought to have been sanctioned.”
The Commission’s report also cited a case in Edo State during the 2007 governorship election. It said the tribunal found that “the evidence of the witness is that police officers were in fact doing the shooting, the thumb-printing or the ballot-stuffing.”
It noted that violence, including the intimidation of voters, snatching and stuffing of ballot boxes was another mainstay of recent Nigerian elections.
According to the document, in one case arising from the contest over the 2007 Osun Central Senatorial seat, the Election Petition Tribunal said “the evidence of violence, voter intimidation, hijacking, illicit thumb-printing, ballot box stuffing is overwhelming and beyond reasonable doubt, conjecture or proposition or presumption.”
Also in Kogi State, it said a tribunal found that petitioners proved beyond reasonable doubt that the 1st Respondent, Clarence Olafemi, a former Speaker of the State House Assembly, led his agents and thugs and committed acts of corrupt practices and non-compliance with the Electoral Act by disrupting the conduct of election, harassing and intimidating eligible voters who were sent away from polling units without voting.
The report lamented the cases of forged credentials and eligibility documents, which were also established. For instance, in Nassarawa State, the tribunal ruled that it was “satisfied that [Umar Sani Ebini and another] have succeeded in proving the allegation of forgery and/or presenting a forged certificate to INEC against [Patrick Ashagu Ebinny] beyond reasonable doubt.”
It added, “In Ibeju-Lekki in Lagos State, south-west Nigeria, Tunde Isiaq, a 2007 candidate for the House of Representatives also presented forged credentials. In yet another case from Nasarawa State, the tribunal found that Yakubu Mohammed Kwarra, a candidate in State legislative elections, presented forged documents with respect to both his age and educational qualifications.”
Judicial excesses
The report lamented thus, “In each of these cases, and many more, the Tribunals, without exception, failed to direct, suggest or order action to ensure accountability for the crimes they identified were committed.
“By doing so, the Nigerian judiciary has created the impression that there is one law for poor people and another for the big men and women who put themselves forward for elections,” it said.
“As a result, the courts not only facilitate the violation of citizens’ rights to effective participation in their government, they also aid the culture of impunity that has become the hallmark of elections in Nigeria.”
It said that out of about 870,000 persons apprehended for offences connected with the 2011 voter registration and general elections, only about 200 persons, or about 0.02 per cent, were successfully prosecuted though INEC Chairman, Attahiru Jega, attributed this abysmal number of prosecutions to lack of funds and personnel.
The report said the evidence from the material it examined “clearly supports the conclusion that the judiciary in Nigeria is unwilling and unable to ensure accountability for electoral crimes. It is also open to the conclusion that the judiciary supports, tolerates or is indifferent to the crimes committed by candidates, parties, and their agents in unlawful pursuit of power and its perquisites.”
The report said the ways tribunals handle election petition cases have fostered a “real perception that the judiciary can be bought or sold, not just in election petitions, but in all cases”.
It adds, “If the judiciary cannot be trusted to resolve disputes fairly and justly, the people may find comfort in violence and vigilante methods.”
The report also said as officers of the court, judges and lawyers were an integral in the effective administration of justice and the legal process, noting that without cooperation from them, the system necessarily collapses.
“So, when judges and lawyers help to break the law, impunity necessarily ensues.  Thus, appellate courts have indicted judges from lower courts for such malfeasance,” the document said.
The NHRC stated that based on the evidence so far reviewed, it was clear that:
-Huge gaps remain in the Constitution, the Electoral Act, and other laws governing elections in Nigeria. Different stakeholders – INEC, political parties, politicians, and other individuals – exploit these gaps to violate the right to participate in government, the right to public service, and the right to fair trial;
-Many of the tribunal decisions have been based on technicalities while ignoring issues of substantive justice; as such, the judiciary has been used routinely to validate clearly unlawful election outcomes, in many cases clearly accompanied or facilitated by crimes;
-Many of the cases reviewed also disclose improper exercise of judicial discretion by election tribunals and courts as well as insufficient evaluation of evidence and some suggest possibilities of judicial misconduct that require investigation. Such acts implicate on the right to fair trial and institutional credibility of the judiciary;
-In cases where petitioners fail to prove allegations of criminality beyond reasonable doubt, courts/tribunals simply dismiss the petitions and ignore the compelling evidence that crimes were committed quite apart from questions of proof;
-Counsel for respondents, in clear collusion with INEC officials, also sometimes use unethical methods to delay cases and defeat the cause of justice without consequences; and
-In all cases where the tribunals/courts found infractions of the (criminal) law, they fail to exercise their inherent powers to recommend prosecutions by the appropriate authorities.
On the way forward, the NHRC said the task of consolidating electoral democracy in Nigeria would require that urgent attention be paid to the elimination of electoral impunity through ensuring accountability for electoral crimes.
While making recommendations to all relevant institutions in the electoral process, it, however, stressed that, “No number of recommendations can replace the need for political will on the part of all concerned branches and agencies of the Nigerian State, as well as the INEC, political leaders, political parties and civic organisations.”
 PremiumTimes

2015 Elections: Let’s republicate June 12


mko abiola
In less than one year from now, Nigerians will elect a new President and members of the Senate and House of Representatives. This is based on the timetable announced recently by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). As expected the various political parties are strategizing and jostling for power and positions. We in LRI are seriously monitoring developments and would play key roles in election observation and civic education campaign.
We hereby urge the Nigerian authorities to provide a level playing field for all contestants. We want INEC to be independent in name and deeds. We want free, fair and credible elections. We want the will of Nigerians to prevail. It is in the light of the above that we are today remembering the Martyr of our democracy, late Chief Moshood Olawale Kashimawo Abiola .
Abiola came from a humble beginning and became very wealthy. He was a good philanthropist who gave liberally to many Nigerians. On the 12th of June 1993, MKO contested and won the Presidential election on the platform of the Social Democratic Party SDP. The June 12th election was adjudged by local and international observers to be the freest and fairest election in the annals of Nigerian history.
Importantly in that election Nigerians made bold statements to remain one indivisible entity under God. MKO Abiola won in all the geo political zones. Even in Kano State the home State of his opponent Bashir Tofa, MKO won a landslide victory. More stunning was the fact that MKO who was a Muslim, also had a Muslim in the person of Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe as running mate.
This did not deter Christians and Muslims and other followers from voting for Muslim/Muslim ticket. So in that election Nigerians buried ethnicity and religious bigotry. Nigerians voted for MKO because they saw him as the best Candidate. Nigerians also buried the South vs North divide, Christians vs Muslims dichotomy and other parochial sentiments. It is unacceptable that some desperate politicians are trying tirelessly to resurrect these negative tendencies that were already buried over two decades ago.
We urge all Nigerians not to be deceived by the antics of these desperate folks. The 2015 elections should not be about North or South, or Christians and Muslims. It should be about issues and track records. We should examine the antecedents of all Candidates before we trust them with our votes. We should vote for the best Candidates based on merits and previous track records.
Nigeria is one indivisible entity, it doesn’t matter where the President comes from, what matters is what each candidate has in stock for the nation. Let us replicate the June 12th election by conducting credible elections. We also want to appeal to the federal government to immortalize the Hero of June 12, MKO Abiola. Without his martyrdom there wouldn’t be this democracy today.
MKO is the Hero of today’s democracy who paid the supreme sacrifice for the democracy we have today. A national Political Institution should be named after him such as the Seat of power or the Parliament. Today, we salute the courage of MKO and the supreme sacrifice he paid. We also want to salute the courage of members of his immediate family who displayed strong determination during the turbulent time.
We want to specially remember MKO’s late wife Kudirat Abiola who also paid the supreme sacrifice for this noble cause. We will never forget them. Let’s immortalize them by conducting free and fair elections where Candidates emerge winners based on merit, not based on parochial and sectional sentiments. RIP MKO

Nigerians Holds Anti-Corruption Protests in New York Over Missing $20Billion… (PHOTOS)


Anti-Corruption Protests At Nigerian Embassy New York....Dr Peregrino Brimah Hands Out FlyersThere were wild protests at the Nigerian embassy, New York on Friday February 21st. Peregrino Brimah of ENDS is doing what he considers as fulfilling his civic duty to fight for sense and sanity in Nigeria after 50 years of mostly regression, which has taken a dangerous turn for the worst.
Peregrino Brimah hinted that the protests will continue. Other Protests are also being held at the Nigerian embassy in Germany, and more are expected worldwide.
According to Dr. Peregrino Brimah corruption and tyranny cannot be official government policy of Nigeria.
Anti-Corruption Protests At Nigerian Embassy New York....Dr Peregrino Brimah Hands Out Flyers
Government Tyranny And Economic Terrorism In Nigeria
168 Million Nigerians are under siege. At the mercy of a reckless, fascist government that has made corruption its deadly official policy.
The Nigerian people demand sanctions and travel bans on political officers and global attention to the economic terrorism. There are 100 million destitute Nigerians while government officials loot billions of US Dollars every year. We call for global attention to the crises to the largest African nation and a very important nation in Africa and the world. What affects one man, affects all men.
Anti-Corruption Protests At Nigerian Embassy New York....Dr Peregrino Brimah Hands Out Flyers
In Recent News:
$20 Billion is ‘Missing’ in Nigeria: Nigerian Senate Orders Audit Of Unaccounted $20 Billion In Oil Revenue
http://article.wn.com/view/2014/02/13/Nigerian_Senate_Orders_Audit_of_Unaccounted_20_Billion_in_Oi/
Nigeria: NNPC Silent On U.S.$6.8 Billion Alleged Fraudulent Oil Deals With Swiss Firms (Berne Declaration)
http://allafrica.com/stories/201311080993.html; www.evb.ch/en/p21687.html‎
NNPC Illegally Spends N700 Million ($5 Million) On Kerosene Subsidy Daily – Senate
http://thetrentonline.com/senate-nnpc-spends-n700m-kerosene-subsidy-daily/
Anti-Corruption Protests At Nigerian Embassy New York....Dr Peregrino Brimah Hands Out Flyers
Terror Sponsors Remain Free in Nigeria As Thousands are Killed: FG of Nigeria set to release list of political sponsors of Boko Haram (NEVER RELEASED SINCE 2012)
OsunDefender

NNPC: The Death of a Dream

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Simon Kolawole Live!: By Simon Kolawole, Emailsimon.kolawole@thisdaylive.com
Heartbreaking. That is the story of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). Awfully heartbreaking. Norway’s Statoil, Malaysia’s Petronas and our own NNPC were all set up as state-owned companies in the 1970s with a similar dream: to conquer the world of oil and gas. Today, the Norwegian company, now named Statoil ASA, has operations in 36 countries. It is ranked by Forbes as the world’s 11th largest oil and gas company and the world’s 36th largest company by profit. Petronas, founded in 1974 – two years after Statoil – is ranked by Fortune as the 68th largest company in the world and the 12th most profitable company in the world. It is Asia’s most profitable company and has business interests in 35 countries.
Where is our own NNPC? It is the typical Nigerian story – stunted, scam-ridden and downtrodden. A cesspool of decay. Veteran joint venture partners. All dressed up and nowhere to go. NNPC could have been up there competing with Statoil ASA and Petronas. It was established in 1971 as the Nigerian National Oil Company (NNOC). The military government, under Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, restructured and renamed it NNPC in 1977, having merged NNOC with Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel. The aim was to step up the game and recover lost grounds. Just think about it: NNPC could have been all over Africa exploring oil and gas today. NNPC could have been ranked Africa’s most profitable company. NNPC could be featuring in Fortune 500. What a misfortune.
Imagine: NNPC’s operations could have been very transparent, meeting every standard of global best practice. NNPC could have been the pride of Nigeria, a jewel in the crown. It could have been a Shell, not the empty shell it is today, fully content with being a plaything. That we are discussing NNPC in these terms today is a modern tragedy. It could be worse. It is even to the credit of the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke, that an NNPC subsidiary, the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), is finally exploring oil – about 130,000 barrels per day – but, again, some aspects of the deal are shrouded in sleaze. Nigeria, O Nigeria!
That brings us to the current face-off between the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Malam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, and NNPC. You would conclude that Sanusi is having problems with his mathematics. You would think that he is looking for scandals by any means in NNPC. So he writes a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan, raising the alarm that $49.8 billion is “missing”. A few days later, he says “I am sorry” and reduces the figure to $12 billion. And then, shortly after, he jacks it up to $20 billion. The onlooker is forced to ask: what exactly is going on? What is the actual figure? Why is Sanusi going back and forth? Didn’t he do his homework very well?
A careful look at Sanusi’s letter would reveal that the CBN governor has not made an outright allegation that the money was “stolen”. He said it was yet to be accounted for. The fact that something has not been “accounted for” does not mean it is “missing” or has been “stolen” – no matter the sensation we try to create around it. It is a normal process in audit to query figures. What Sanusi has said is: “Hey, dear NNPC, in our records, this is what you sold but this is how much you remitted to the Federation Account. What’s the matter, guys?” But Sanusi’s letter was ignored by those who should have taken action immediately in the interest of accountability.
It took the leaking of the letter for the concerned authorities to rush together a defence – ranging from accusations of political mischief to incoherent explanations that still left a gap of $10.8 billion or $12 billion. Sanusi actually reduced his figure to $12 billion, still leaving us with a significant difference of $1.2 billion, which is by no means chicken feed (to appreciate the figure, if you give me $1.2 billion today, I will not go to work tomorrow). NNPC tried to explain the $10.8 billion away as having been spent on the usual suspects – subsidies, pipeline repairs and what have you. But Sanusi took them on again: even with all the reconciliation, $20 billion remained unaccounted for.
Ladies and gentlemen, let’s stop kidding ourselves: something is pathologically wrong with the NNPC. The accounting process is a shambles. If the CBN governor, who keeps government accounts, is getting his figures in bits and pieces, that says a lot. But I query NNPC’s accountability as much as I query Sanusi’s statistics. This has apparently been going on for decades. It is easy to treat Sanusi as the fly in the ointment and a pawn in the political game, but if the previous CBN governors had looked out for the national interest, we would possibly not be where we are today. That is why no matter our suspicion of Sanusi’s motive, history will favour him if we manage to sort out this NNPC quandary once and for all.
Somehow, I find it very gratifying that the NNPC is finally trying to explain things to us. This is unbelievable. I never thought that in my life time, I would hear the NNPC explain how it spends our money. They have always been above the law. But even in their latest explanations, you could sniff a stench. Some dots are not just connecting. There is a notion that the NNPC can be spending Nigeria’s money without appropriation. NNPC’s account has been serving as “imprest” for presidents for decades. Anytime they needed money for unbudgeted expenses, as Olusegun Adeniyi pointed out recently, the way out was to call the NNPC chief executive. This created a cover for the NNPC guys to take care of themselves too.
Imagine what must have happened under the military whom we could not even question because everything was treated as state secret. Imagine what must have transpired under President Olusegun Obasanjo, who did not bother to have a petroleum minister for seven years. The ongoing controversy again puts into perspective the trend in our democratic experience: we can now ask questions. Can you imagine a CBN governor writing to Obasanjo over “missing” money in NNPC? And imagine Obasanjo asking the CBN governor to resign and that one telling him to his face: “No, I won’t!” EFCC would have arrested and handcuffed him as he stepped out of Obasanjo’s office.  We need to be thankful, therefore, that the atmosphere is now more liberal. I see a lot of things happening today that would have been impossible under Obasanjo.
My conclusion, after my lamentations, is that rebuilding the NNPC ruin is not impossible. The dream of the founders may be dead but NNPC is not a completely lost case. The Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) – which has been stalled by all sorts of ethnic and political considerations – holds the possibility of setting the corporation free from its demons. The lawmakers must expedite action on the PIB. Let NNPC run as a proper, world-class business. It is possible.
• Follow me on twitter @simonkolawole


And Four Other Things...

INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Buoyed by Nigeria’s new status as a net exporter of cement, the Jonathan administration is dreaming big. Rice is next in line, while Alhaji Aliko Dangote has promised that in another four years, we will be exporting sugar. Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, while unveiling the Nigeria Industrial Revolution Plan (NIRP) in Abuja last week, said the plan would cover auto assembly, oil and gas, agriculture, textile, etc, create jobs and enhance skills. President Jonathan described NIRP as the most ambitious and comprehensive roadmap for transforming the nation’s industrial landscape. The talk raised my hopes. Action please...

KEROSENE SUBSIDY
I disagree with the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke, over the so-called kerosene subsidy. Trying to justify the non-implementation of a presidential directive stopping the subsidy, she said the poor would suffer if they had to buy kerosene at N150 per litre instead of the subsidised tariff of N50. But when was the last time the “masses” bought kerosene at N50? The product is hardly available at the stations. It is diverted to the black market and sold at N150. These guys are callously feeding on the suffering of the masses. There must be hell, for goodness sake!

BOKO WATCH
When will our military chiefs learn to talk less and do more? Just a few days after the new Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshall Alex Badeh, promised that Boko Haram would be out of circulation by April (they called it “motivational speech”), the insurgents launched several attacks, killing civilians and soldiers. They kidnapped girls. Some schools are now deserted following threats of attack. If indeed Badeh wanted to motivate the soldiers, he ended up motivating Boko Haram. In the classic movie, The Good, The Bad and the Ugly, Tuco memorably said: “When you have to shoot, shoot. Don’t talk.”

DIZZYING WEEKS
What a week. What a few weeks. Joseph Mbu removed as Commissioner of Police in Rivers State. Mike Ogiadhome sacked or resigned as Chief of Staff to the President. Four ministers left – or were sacked. Gen. Aliyu Gusau is back in President Goodluck Jonathan’s cabinet. I must confess that the spate of activities in Aso Rock in recent times has been frenetic and dizzying. That is to say nothing about the PDP regaining its majority in the House of Representatives. A lot of people say Jonathan is getting ready for 2015. All too obvious. Do not adjust your set...
ThisDay

Stella Oduah; so much for native intelligence


Stella Oduah; so much for native intelligence
• Oduah
Those who are saying I should be removed are wasting their time, it is just beer parlour talk; this minister is here today, tomorrow and day after—Stella Oduah, Sunday 26 January, 2014.
That was a boastful former Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah at a recent “Aviation Masterplan Workers’ Buy in” programme held at the Grand Ballroom of Lagos Oriental Hotel, Lekki.
The 3-day event had in attendance top management staff of the main parastatals in the ministry as well as a few others drawn mainly from her committee of friends carried over from the infamous “Neighbour-to-Neighbour” campaign group. Remember; the faceless group at the fore front of the campaign for Jonathan presidency the first time?
Some of those in attendance even quoted her to have added; “yes, I may not have gone to school, but I have native intelligence.” Hmmmm!
The sack last week of arguably one of the most powerful members of President Goodluck Jonathan’s government came as a huge surprise to not just a few Nigerians. The way and manner Madam Stella was conducting herself and the affairs of the Ministry of Aviation with near total impunity without even a mere rebuke from the presidency in spite of public outcry, gave little room to doubt that nothing, absolutely nothing, could touch her as long as Jonathan remains Nigeria’s president.
Unlike that Ghanaian former female cabinet Minister that boasted that her mission in government was to make a few millions of dollars, a comment she was later to regret as she was promptly fired by the Ghanaian president, (for even harbouring the thought) Stella Oduah had reportedly said and done worse than that and nothing happened to her until last week.
If truly she “may not have gone to school but have native intelligence”, little wonder then that she could not comprehend the enormity of the assignment given to her by the president, hence she ran the Ministry of Aviation based on how far her native intelligence could take her. Like a market woman put in charge of a hi-tech industry, Madam Stella did not know her right from left and presided over Nigeria’s aviation industry in the typical Oyingbo market woman style.
Before I am crucified for saying this, let me make it clear that I am not a novice in aviation and count myself as one of those Nigerian journalists well informed about aviation matters worldwide, especially the Nigerian aviation industry, having spend over a decade actively covering aviation as a correspondent and still involved in the industry somehow.
We’ve never had it so bad in the industry in Nigeria. Forget about the so called airport remodeling projects of Stella Oduah, those are just cosmetics, which only a market woman awash with cash and obsessed with ‘show off’, the ‘Sisi Eko’ mentality would readily indulge in. The tendency, when you have so much cash and not accountable to anybody, to build houses all over the place and acquire properties, without any thought of how to adequately equip and maintain them to make them continually functional. That in summary is the mentality behind the airport remodeling projects as far as I am concerned.
Of what use is a ‘beautiful’ terminal building where the conveniences are not working or in constant good order; where uninterrupted power cannot be guaranteed; where pilfering goes on unabated? By the way an airport is not just the terminal building, it is more than that. What is the state of the navigational equipments at these remodeled airports? If the terminal building is the most beautiful and most modern in the world but the airfield is 19th century technology, you have done nothing but build a modern palace equipped with pit latrine.
Well, the jury is still out on Stella’s airports.
What is most disturbing is the financial management style of Madam Stella and the source or sources of the funds used for her airport projects in particular. It is alleged that not less than N150 million is taken by the Ministry of Aviation under Madam Stella’s watch, every month from the account of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), one of the agencies under the ministry. This is a serious allegation that requires urgent investigation by all the anti graft agencies of the Federal Government to confirm or disprove.
Nothing is proven yet and Madam Stella is not guilty, cannot be guilty until proven guilty. It is a good thing that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) says the matter of the N225 million bullet proof limousine scandal involving NCAA and linking the former Minister is still being investigated.
You remember the BMW cars, two of them, allegedly bought by the NCAA for the exclusive use of Madam Oduah? Why the former Minister made spirited efforts to distance herself from the scandal insisting she directed the parastatal in question to do the needful, the House of Representatives found out that her hands were not clean in the matter while a presidential panel equally indicted her.
That President Goodluck Jonathan found the courage to kick Madam Stella out, or forced her to resign is commendable, even though belated. But having gone this far, the president must take the next step and ensure that she is investigated by the relevant agencies of government and prosecuted for whatever offence she might have committed while in government, especially financial crimes as being alleged.
It might not be a bad idea to conduct a forensic examination of the financial dealings and records of the Ministry of Aviation and its parastatals under Madam Stella Oduah, just to put the records straight. Apart from the NCAA, the accounts of the other parastatals were equally raided by the Ministry under her watch, such that most, if not all were left with nothing other than enough to pay salaries. Even training allowances for staff on mandatory local and/or international training programmes, especially at NCAA could not be met became money had been sent to Abuja.
Trusting the EFCC to do a thorough job here is a bit risky. As the Senate has ordered in the case of the alleged missing money in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), forensic experts should be called in to look into Madam Stella’s book. A lot could be revealed. For instance there is this allegation that the former minister had squandered the funds realized under the Bilateral Air Services Agreement (BASA) Nigeria has with so many foreign countries. Some have said part of the money for her airport projects came from the BASA fund which under the law she had no power to spend. But some have equally alleged that the former Minister used her closeness to the President to cunningly get Dr Jonathan to sign a blank cheque for to spend BASA money. These are just allegations.
As Madam Stella is kicked out of office, she would be remembered not so much by her accomplishments/achievements, (if any, think there is a few) but by the politics of her action (the Rivers State aircraft issue), the arrogance of power she exhibited and the native intelligence that reflected in all her actions. But above all, she would be remembered as a round peg in a square hole. GOOD RIDDANCE Madam and over to you President Jonathan, let the needful be done in her case.
Leadership