Friday, 28 March 2014

One Central Bank, Four Governors


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THE VERDICT By OLUSEGUN ADENIYI; olusegun.adeniyi@thisdaylive.com

Question: Who is the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria? Options: (A) Sarah Alade; (B) Sanusi Lamido Sanusi; (C) Godwin Emefiele (D) Jim Osayande Obazee; (E) None of the above. Please shade the correct answer.

The above is an examination question recently encountered by a friend but please don’t ask me for his name. He said he could not pick “A” because Mrs Alade, the acting CBN Governor in a period of transition, wields little or no authority. He said he could not pick “B” either because, even though President Goodluck Jonathan recently affirmed that Sanusi remains the CBN Governor, he is still on suspension. My friend said he also could not pick “C” because even though Emefiele’s appointment was confirmed by the Senate yesterday, he would still have to wait for Sanusi’s tenure to expire before assuming office. For some minutes, according to my friend, he toyed with the idea of picking “D” because, as he explained, the Executive Secretary of the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRCN) is the man who has been calling all the shots at the CBN in recent weeks. But then he demurred because he could not lay his hands on where Obazee derives his powers from. So at the end, he settled for “E” which means that today, for all practical purposes, Nigeria’s apex bank is without a substantive Governor!  

Given the foregoing, it came as no surprise that Standard and Poor's (S&P), one of those international financial agencies whose ratings the managers of our economy like to flaunt, has put a question mark on Nigeria’s “stable outlook” rating, citing dearth of new information on the country and the uncertainty surrounding monetary policies. While stating that the suspension of the CBN Governor amounted to government interference with monetary policies, S&P said it was placing the country on a credit watch for a period of one week as a result of the appeal by the federal government. “As a result, we are placing our long-term sovereign credit ratings on Nigeria on Credit Watch with negative implications,” S&P stated rather ominously.

Before I proceed, it bears repeating that I have made my position very clear about Sanusi’s gross act of insubordination to President Jonathan, especially considering the reckless manner in which he went about touting some CBN laws which he believes make him untouchable (Sarki Goma, Zamani Goma…). As a student of power politics, I am aware, as British philosopher, John Locke, argued in “The Second Treatise of Government: And, A Letter Concerning Toleration”, that the people sometimes allow “their rulers to do several things of their own free choice, where the law is silent...and their acquiescing in it when so done." Whatever the law cannot provide for, according to Locke, “must necessarily be left to the discretion of him that has the executive power in his hands, to be ordered by him as the public good and advantage shall require...”

Even though I am not a lawyer, to the extent that the CBN Act is silent on suspension, I believe that Sanusi was not well advised to have taken on the presidency in the manner he did. But that is just the opinion of the layman that I am. Notwithstanding my position, I am also worried that some people may unwittingly be destroying a critical institution like the CBN in the attempt to get back at one man who, whatever may be the misgivings about his style, did very well in office.
Against the background that Sanusi became CBN Governor in the middle of a global financial crisis in 2009, his intervention (by removing some bank chief executives who were dancing “Skelewu” with depositors’ funds) helped to restore sanity in the system. It is also on record that under Sanusi’s watch, inflation has been kept below 10 per cent while until recently, there was a measure of stability in the foreign exchange market. The CBN also implemented policies aimed at reducing the excessive use of cash in the system to ensure safety, improve efficiency and curb money laundering.

So, all factors considered, Sanusi has been a good CBN Governor and I refuse to be taken in by the noise emanating from those who fiddled with depositors’ money for which they were entrusted and paid dearly for it. In any case, it is not lost on fair-minded Nigerians that in this obsession to nail Sanusi, the “witnesses” being lined up are some former bank chiefs who abused their trust and were punished by the CBN. Yet it is a serious indictment on our country that the same fat cats who are being tried by the state for economic and financial crimes are also being aided by the same state, in the bid to settle score with the suspended CBN Governor. It is not right.
While I am aware that politics trumps everything in Nigeria today, those who are circumspect should be worried that the head of a small government parastatal under the Ministry of Trade and Investment should have the powers to be conducting a public investigation into the operations of the CBN with all the attendant publicity. Aside the professional breach (audit investigation is never conducted on the pages of newspapers), there is also the issue of a not-so-subtle executive interference into what are clearly operational issues at the apex bank. For those of us who can see beyond the person of Sanusi, that is very troubling and such details are also not lost on S&P and other international credit rating agencies.

Because most Nigerians still wonder how this little-known FRCN crept into our consciousness, a brief story may be necessary here. It started with the Nigerian Accounting Standards Board (NASB), a private sector initiative established in 1982 in collaboration with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN). Ten years later in 1992, the General Ibrahim Babangida administration by military fiat converted the NASB into a government parastatal under the Federal Ministry of Commerce. In 2003, the NASB Act was passed with the primary functions to “develop, publish and update Statements of Accounting Standards to be followed by companies when they prepare their financial statement, and to promote and enforce compliance with the standards”.

Following a critical appraisal of the NASB by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2010, the then Executive Secretary, Mr Godson Nnadi began a process for the establishment of a new body that would set accounting and auditing standards in the country and would be independent of both ICAN and ANAN. At about that same time, Nnadi was appointed Finance and Economic Development commissioner in Enugu State where he hails from. But his protégé and successor, Obazee (who joined the organisation after graduation in the early nineties) saw to the drafting and eventual passage of the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRCN) Bill on May 18, 2011.

The law was gazetted on June 7, 2011 as “an Act to repeal the Nigerian Accounting Standards Board Act, No. 22 of 2003 and enact the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria charged with the responsibility for, among other things, developing and publishing accounting and financial reporting standards to be observed in the preparation of the financial statement of public entities in Nigeria; and for related matters.” Both the chairman and the executive secretary are to be appointed by the president.

Ironically, while Obazee was trying to get the bill passed in the National Assembly, he got support and encouragement from Sanusi who argued that such a law would help to attract foreign direct investment into Nigeria and perhaps for that reason mobilised through the CBN and the Bankers' Committee a whopping sum of N500 million for the construction of its International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Academy. I still wonder how Sanusi came about his theory considering that many countries, including the United States have refused to subscribe to the IFRS, preferring instead the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).

When the bill was finally signed into law by President Jonathan, Trade and Investment Minister, Mr Olusegun Aganga, under whose purview the new parastatal was domiciled said: "More meaningful and decision-enhancing information can now be arrived at from financial statements issued in Nigeria because accounting, actuarial, valuation and auditing standards, used in the preparation of these statements, shall be issued and regulated by this Financial Reporting Council. The FRC is a unified independent regulatory body for accounting, auditing, actuarial, valuation and corporate governance. As such, compliance monitoring in these areas will hence be addressed from the platform of professionalism and legislation.”
What the foregoing suggests is that the FRCN is not another Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) or Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC), its main function is to standardize accounting practice in Nigeria. To therefore read reports of Obazee “grilling” Sanusi, Alade as well as the immediate past Deputy Governor, Operations of the CBN, Mr. Tunde Lemo; Managing Director of the Bank of Industry (BoI), Ms Evelyn Oputu; Deputy Governor, Operations, CBN, Dr. Kingsley Moghalu and Deputy Governor, Corporate Services, CBN, Alhaji Suleiman Barau is beyond ridiculous. Because the FRCN Executive Secretary is arrogating to himself some powers that he does not have and even if he has the authority of the president for his assignment, I don’t think he is approaching it the right way.

Now, I have read all the provisions of the FRCN Act 2011 and its power of investigation is derived from Section 62 which stipulates that “(1) The Council may investigate or cause to be investigated

(a)   Any complaint or dishonest practice, negligence, professional misconduct, malpractice made against any professional; (b) any breach of the Code of Conduct and Ethics by any registered professional; or (c) any material irregularity notified to it”. 

However, it is noteworthy that the section itself falls under Part V11 of the Act which is on “Review and Monitoring of Standards”, which then implies that it is targeted at compliance with standards for accounting practitioners. Even if we concede that the FRCN can investigate statutory institutions, such powers reside in the Council and not the Executive Secretary. And the Council, currently headed by Hajiya Ladi Ibrahim, (now at the National Conference representing Kogi State) has a long list of membership: Two representatives each of both ICAN and ANAN as well as one representative of each of the following: Office of the Accountant General of the Federation, Office of the Auditor General of the Federation; CBN; Chartered Institute of Brokers; Chartered Institute of Taxation; Corporate Affairs Commission; Federal Inland Revenue Service; Federal Ministry of Commerce; Federal Ministry of Finance; NACCIMA; NDIC; SEC; NAICOM; NSE; PENCOM and the National Institute of Estate Surveyors and Valuers. The Executive Secretary who has become the judge and the jury in the so-called CBN investigation is just one member in this big Council!

Now, I must make my position very clear. I am for transparency and accountability so to that extent, I do not subscribe to the position that Sanusi or the CBN which he heads should be above the law. No, both should be held to account. But such should be done within the ambit of the law and with due regard to process. What worries me is that right before our very eyes, we are watching a systematic destruction of perhaps our strongest institution, the Central Bank of Nigeria, that has been built over time, by a Johnny-just-come Federal Reporting Council of Nigeria that has no track record. Audit investigation is not the same thing as criminal investigation, and even at that, only a court of law can pronounce anybody a criminal as Obazee’s FRCN seems to have done with its report.

I have my issues with Sanusi who was disrespectful of the president and attracted to himself too much needless media attention. Indeed, in a moment of introspection in his recent interview with METROPOLE magazine (http://bit.ly/1cPddTz), Sanusi admitted this much: “There was only one thing that I had hoped at the beginning I would achieve which I believed I have not achieved. And this saddens me a bit even though it is also the circumstances. A central bank should, as much as possible, be out of the front pages of newspapers. Apart from on monetary policy days when you announce your rates, you should just work behind the scene.”

That should be a big lesson from which his successor must learn. In the United States, a Fed Chairman (CBN Governor in Nigeria) once spent hours in Congress fielding questions at the end of which one frustrated lawmaker offered a sarcastic compliment: "You would make a very excellent prisoner of war... you wouldn't tell the enemy a thing." Sanusi as a prisoner of war would bring down the whole roof with his mouth! However, that should not diminish his achievements in office.

I am not one of those people who subscribe to the conspiracy theory that Sanusi was suspended because of his allegation that the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) failed to remit some billions of Dollars into the Federation Account. However, it is also an open secret that because of the mutual distrust between him and the president, the FRCN report became rather handy. But the report itself reads more like the judgment of a court against a criminal than an audit review of CBN accounting process. That is why it lacks any modicum of credibility.

The elevation of the hitherto unknown FRCN into an inquisition whose first outing is to hang Sanusi clearly reduces what ought to be a serious concern for probity in high public places into a petty political witch-hunt. Nigerians know about the EFCC and its awesome powers in such matters. They also know the ICPC for what it was established to do. But for the Federal Government to stage a kangaroo accounting inquisition into Sanusi's alleged malfeasance, as it is doing, is to further expose the nation's financial system to international ridicule.

The nature of witnesses being called and the status of CBN officials being summoned in this laughable inquisition by perhaps the smallest of the agencies under the Ministry of Trade and Investment make the matter more injurious to the financial system. I believe that the Jonathan administration needs to handle the Sanusi matter with a measure of dexterity. Here is an administration that has repeatedly cited among its 'transformation' miracles some of the fiscal and monetary reforms that Sanusi instituted in the nation's banking and financial system. It is also on record that Sanusi put himself on the firing line of public disaffection when the administration tried, without success, to remove subsidy on PMS early in 2012. Now, because the CBN Governor mismanaged the politics of his high office, the same administration is staging a public hanging of its once favourite man.

In all these, what is forgotten is that Sanusi is no ordinary public officer. He 'is' Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, the custodian of some of our most hallowed financial secrets and the government's accountant of last resort. What that means in effect is that unless the Jonathan administration handles the Sanusi saga with extreme care, it may find out that suspending the CBN Governor is the easier part of this charade as the ever widening international financial and domestic economic disquiet on the matter could hurt the nation very badly.

ThisDay

Rueben Abati Retracts Libelous Invention Linking Buhari With Terror; Compensates General For Damages

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  • Presidential spokesman Rueben Abati settled the case Buhari filed against him and “The Guardian newspaper” out of court
  • Rueben Abati published a retraction of his libelous claim which accused the ex-president of instigating terror.
Mar. 28, 2014
Buhari Vanguard Replies Olisa Metuh On Libel Against Buhari
We had thought of ignoring Olisa Metus allegation against Muhammadu Buhari since we understand that he is a man without a mind of his own, but a vuvuzela that is used at will by his owner the PDP.
However, in the interest of unsuspecting Nigerians who may be deceived by the gimmicks and deceit of the likes of Olisa Metuh and his party, we wish to put the records straight in this response to the recent libel against the person of Gen Muhammadu Buhari (rtd).
You recall that on Saturday, the 22nd of March 2014, Olisa Metuh, the spokesperson of the Peoples Democratic Party PDP attempted once again to link Gen Muhammadu Buhari to the insurgence in Nigerian its usual “blame game” and in a bid to defend the incompetence, confused and underperforming government of the Peoples Democratic Party.
In his words, “When we accused the APC of being behind insurgency, we did not speak in vain and when we summarised the manifesto of the party as a product of Janjaweed ideology, we have verifiable reasons”. He went further and argued that it was not a coincidence that an unprecedented violence broke out after Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.) allegedly beckoned on his supporters to go on lynching spree if he should lose the 2011 presidential election, adding that the Sheik Lemu committee, which investigated the death of hundreds of people in the post-2011 election violence, established Buhari’s culpability.
We were rattled by this dislocated, irrational and weird thinking that is coming from a man who claims to be a lawyer and we wish to set the records straight for discerning Nigerians. First, It would be recalled that Reuben Abati, an aide to President Goodluck Jonathan had on page 51 of the April 22, 2011, edition of The Guardian newspaper, written an article entitled “For the attention of General Buhari,” where he claimed that Buhari made an unguarded statement which stirred the post-election violence that almost tore the nation apart.
The former Military General however, regarded the publication as libelous, aimed at denting his hard earned name and image. Buhari consequently dragged Abati and The Guardian Newspapers to court via suit no. ID/837/2011, demanding N1billion damages from them. The presidency begged the former Head of States General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) to settle out of court the libel suit he filed against the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr Reuben Abati.
In a copy of the Terms of Settlement filed before a Lagos High Court in Ikeja, the ‘warring’ parties have agreed to settle the matter out of court. According to the terms of settlement, dated December 2012 and filed before the administrative judge of Lagos State, Justice Opeyemi Oke, the claimant (Buhari), Mr. Tope Adebayo ( lawyer to Buhari), Abati and Mr. Kunle Sanyaolu (lawyer to The Guardian) signed the terms of settlement.
The terms of settlement reads in part: “The claimant (Buhari) and defendants (Abati and The Guardian) have agreed that the defendants should publish a retraction and an apology to the claimant on the Opinion Page of the newspaper, to be printed in reverse line black (RLB) within seven days of entering the Consent Terms as the judgment of the court in two editions of The Guardian.”
“The claimant and defendants have agreed and resolved that the retraction and apology shall take the following form and contents: ‘Re: For the attention of General Buhari’- On April 22, 2011, The Guardian Newspaper published an article on Page 51 titled ‘For the attention of General Buhari’ where certain allegations were made against General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), GCFR, concerning the 2011 election and General Buhari’s alleged role in the violence emanating from the elections.”
“The publication was based on information which we believed to be reliable at that time. Since the publication, however, we now have reason to believe that certain parts of the story were not verified to be correct before the publication. We assure General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), GCFR, of our highest esteem and regret any distress or embarrassment which the said publication may have caused him.”
“The claimant and defendants agree that on the execution of these Terms of Settlement, the defendants are discharged from all or any liabilities or obligations arising from the said publication.”
In the weird allegation by Olisa Metuh, he erroneously and mischievously quoted the report of the Lemu Panel’s report on the 2011 post election violence and claimed that the panel report indicted Gen Muhammadu Buhari. This is not only wrong and deceitful but mischievous. Metuh forgot that Nigerians are not all illiterates and still have the report of the panel and the exact words of the chairman of the panel.
The Chairman of presidential panel on the pre and post election violence in some parts of the country, Sheikh Ahmed Lemu, said on the 11th of October 2011that the committee did not indict former Head of State Gen Muhammadu Buhari in its report.
Sheikh Lemu told the BBC Hausa service that so many politicians called on their supporters to guard their votes just like Buhari did. When asked whether his committee said Buhari’s comments were responsible for the violence, Sheikh Lemu said: “If you take a look at our report, what we said cleared Buhari of any complicity. Because we showed that he was not the only one who asked the people to protect their votes, there were other prominent politicians, who also asked the people to protect their votes. And we said that statement was misconstrued to mean a call to violence, and they did. It was discovered that the Buhari himself was a victim of the violence and of the destruction of his property, the photographs of which were presented to the panel.
On the cause of the crisis, panel said, “The first and probably most important cause is the failure on the part of the previous successive regimes since the military handover of power in 1999 to implement the recommendations of various committees, commissions and panels that had taken place in our nation. That failure facilitated the wide spread sense of impunity in the culprits and perpetrators of crimes and violence in the Nigerian society”.
It said, “The second major cause of the recent electoral violence was the existing widespread desire for change as a result of frustration and disappointment of many members of the general public regarding the inability of the successive past regimes to solve the problems of electricity power failure nationwide, deplorable state of Federal Government roads throughout the nation, bribery and corruption, which have virtually been legitimised in all affairs of our nation. Obviously, the report indicted the PDP government and till date, they have not been able to implement or act on the report.
It is so amazing that an acclaimed learned fellow like Olisa Metuh does not respect court rulings nor has knowledge of them. We also marvel that the spokesperson of a ruling political party does not know the history of post election violence in Nigeria and their remote causes.
Elections have been a source of violent political, ethnic, religious and communal conflicts in Nigeria since the late 1940s when limited elections were introduced. This problem deteriorated in the elections conducted immediately after independence in the 1960s.
In the Western Region, violent political conflicts, popularly referred to as “operation wetie“, were recorded from 1964 to 1965. The national election conducted in 1983 witnessed massive post-election violence following the declared landslide victory of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) in Oyo and Ondo states considered to be stronghold of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN).
There is substantial similarity between the post-election violence recorded in 1983 and the post-election violence recorded after the presidential election on April 16, 2011 in which hundreds of people were reported killed and property worth billions of naira were destroyed or looted.
We may not have the time to tutor Olisa Metuh, but we urge him to study and improve on his limited knowledge to avoid embarrassing himself again.
Olisa Metuh is a man of questionable and indecent character, a bully that has no respect for others and the law of the land. We have not forgotten that February 19, 2011, Olisa Metuh, a lawyer turned politician, allegedly held Pele by the throat and reportedly ordered an aide to put him in his car boot, saying “No police IG or SSS can secure your release.” The Vice-Principal of British Nigerian Academy, Prince & Princess Estate, Abuja, Mr. Kola Pele, 67, has taught in numerous schools and nurtured many pupils. He was going about his duty at the last BNA visiting day when the National Vice-Chairman (South-East), Peoples Democratic Party, Mr. Olisa Metuh, invaded the school with his wife, policemen as well as aides and allegedly assaulted him and other teachers for confiscating his son’s GSM phone.
The affected teachers had filed a lawsuit seeking N250m for general damages, N10m for punitive damages and N350, 000 for medical bills. The writ was issued by Joseph Dauda (SAN), the Nigeria Bar Association President. Pele told PUNCH METRO on Wednesday that he went to the hostels around 6.30pm to check if the parents had dispersed, when a teacher, Ms. Amuche Igbe, informed him that she saw Metuh’s son, Derrick, a former pupil of the school, giving his GSM phone to pupils to use in violation of the school rules. This is just to mention but a few examples of olisa Metus indecent behaviors and character.
On the other hand, Gen Muhammadu Buhari has held the most juicy and highest offices in Nigeria, but has come out clean and remained the rallying point of discipline and virtues. He has remained the purveyor of anticorruption, anti-materialism and disciple.
His achievement as PTF chairman where he procured free school bused for higher institutions, free drugs for all hospitals, lecture halls and learning materials for students among others is unprecedented. His mild stone as the petroleum Minister where he signed the contracts and supervised the building of the existing Nigerian refineries among others is still enviable.
His restoration of discipline as a head of state and refusal to de-value the naira making it more valuable than the dollar cannot be forgotten, not to mention the fact that he led the army at young age to chase the Chaldeans who intruded into the territory of Nigeria and would have caused what would have been more terrorizing than Boko Harram if allowed to stay, this is not to mention the role he played in the Nigerian civil war to restore peace and defend Nigeria.
We condemn the attempt by men like Olisa Metuh to poke their hands into the mouth of a descent, respected and quintessential gentle man like Muhammadu Buhari who has spent all his life fighting for and defending Nigeria.
Jasper Azuatalam, Chairman Buhari Vanguard

NewsRescue

Monday, 17 March 2014

POSITION PAPER ON THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE BY A COMMITTEE OF CONCERNED BENIN ELDERS



MARCH 11th, 2014
BACKGROUND
The Nigerian State as designed in 1914 presupposed that we would live together in harmony as a nation.  Yes, we could have and still can, if those charged with restructuring our political architecture do so with all sincerity and a complete appreciation of why Nigeria still has a myriad of problems 100 years after.
The primary goal for the National Confab appears to be the devolution of the power at the center and a push for strong federalism and not a push for separatism. We believe the goal is to achieve strength in our diversity based on the unity of Nigeria.  We subscribe to the proviso that “the unity and corporate existence of Nigeria” should be kept sacrosanct as long as there is a complete restructuring of the current governmental system so that more power resides in the regions and States of a new Nigeria.
At independence, Nigeria had 3 regions which were the Federating Units.  In 1963, they became four  with the creation of the Midwestern Region after a national plebiscite, the only region so properly and constitutionally created.
 The regions had autonomy,  their own flags, anthems, constitutions, legal structures, local police forces, etc. Only common services, like customs, immigration, Armed Forces, Foreign affairs, and common currency were handled by the Federal government. Other items like Education, Health, Local government, Land, Mineral resources etc were vested in the regional government. The regions were thus competitive, productive and developed progressively,
This paper represents the views of the Committee of concerned Benin Elders on some of the themes of the impending National Confab.


CONFERENCE THEMES
1.     Restructuring of Nigeria into Regions and States
In 1963, the Midwest region was created as the fourth region in Nigeria by a plebiscite and National referendum after prolonged agitation by our fore fathers, including Oba Akenzua II, Chief Dennis Osadebey, Chief Jereton Mariere,  Chief H. Omo Osagie,  Chief  Festus Okotie- Eboh, among others.   The creation of more states by the military and the creation of six (6) geo-political Zones in 1996 eclipsed the Midwest region as a political entity to the detriment and relegation of the people of the Region in the Nigerian body polity. What was added to Midwest Region to form the South-South zone were actually the minorities of the old Eastern Region – Calabar, Ogoja  and Rivers provinces, which were also agitating for independence from the Eastern Region under the Late Eyo Eta, and others, just as the Middle Belt of the North  wanted their own independence.

As already canvassed by other groups and elder statesmen, such as the Edo Forum and Late  Chief Anthony Enahoro among others,  we the Committee of Benin Elders propose 8 federating regions in a new politically restructured Nigeria with 4 regions in the North and 4 in the South. The 2 new regions in the South are to be made up of the old Midwest Region and a new region made up of Akwa Ibom, Cross Rivers,  Rivers and Bayelsa states. The 2 new regions in the North should evolve from the splitting of the current North Central Zone into the East and West Middle-Belt Regions. Minor boundary adjustments should be resolved at the National Confab or subsequently.

For effective delivery of political and democratic dividends to the masses, there should be 1 President, 8 Vice Presidents or Premiers for the regions with organs of government, while the regions may choose to create any number of States or Provinces.




2.     System of Government
Since the second republic, the Presidential system has been in operation in Nigeria with concentration of power at the centre with the resultant fratricidal struggle for power and election rigging.
There is a huge expenditure on governmental structures with little or nothing left for actual development.  This system has been fraught with corruption, immunity and impunity. We advocate a return to the parliamentary system with its tenets to be practiced and mastered
by the new leaders. The system should be part-time parliamentary with sitting allowances paid to members. This is definitely cheaper and frees resources for other developments.  We advocate a Federal house of Representatives (Parliament) and an advisory Traditional council of Elders, where in addition to traditional rulers and chiefs,  certain  notable distinguished elders with experience in administrative and governmental issues,  can be appointed to advise government.  Such an arrangement should have constitutional provision and should extend to the regions and states.

3.     Decentralization of Police and military formations
A good policing system requires the use of intelligent personnel from the locality who understand the workings, behavior, conduct and terrain of the various localities.  The current police structure cannot be effective operationally with the charge of policing the very large and complex Nigerian communities.  We therefore advocate the decentralization of the police force. We advocate a small effective federal police to take care of the federal laws and inter-regional crimes across the country. We believe a 2- or 3- tier police force would be required.
 As for military formations and locations, while the citing is usually strategic, we believe and advocate that they can and should be organized on the principle of equity and fairness where no particular region or regions enjoy undue advantage over other regions.


4.     Functions of the Major Tiers of Government.
The Federal/Central government shall be charged with common services, which will mainly comprise the Armed Forces, Foreign affairs, Currency and Central Banking, Aviation, Customs, Immigration among others.
The Regions shall be responsible for Education, Health, Agriculture, Science and Technology, Power, Mining of liquid and solid minerals, Industrial Policy, Transportation and Social welfare/Security.
The concurrent list may comprise Transport, Telecoms, Environment and Higher Education.
5.     Fiscal Federalism
The various ethnicities and nationalities own their land and natural resources. For this and other reasons, the Committee recommends that the regions exploit their resources and pay 25% royalties as tax to the federal or central government while retaining 75% .  The Regions on their own must reserve 25% of their share to the areas in the regions which suffer from mineral extractive activities.
It is advisable that new budgets at all levels of governments emphasize the benefits of capital expenditures over recurrent and this ought to forge the basis for speedy development of all parts of Nigeria. To achieve full fiscal responsibility, it will be necessary to pass a Fiscal Responsibility Act with provisions to protect the Nation’s resources from further plunder.
6.     Independence of the Judiciary
The regions should have their own judicial systems and may establish their own highest, supreme or appellate courts. But ultimately, the Nigerian Supreme Court will be the final arbiter. Hence cases heard in various regional highest courts can be appealed to the Nigerian Supreme Court but only on constitutional matters, The Committee further believes that the courts must be truly independent, and this independence must be an entrenched part of the new constitution.

7.     Strong Institutions
Nigerian institutions have been disadvantaged in favour of strong individuals. The Committee feels that this is counter-productive to true nation building. The projection of individuals at the expense of strong institutions partly explains the failures in our society . The Committee strongly recommends that all regulatory institutions be backed up by provisions in the new constitution, especially in the appointment of the Chairmen and members appointed to run these institutions. It is our view that the members should appoint their own chairmen from among them having been appointed.        

8.     Civil Service and Federal Character
The Committee shares the view with other groups that the Civil service should be restructured to emulate its glorious past before 1988 ( a year which marked the politicization of the civil service in Nigeria with the  implementation of the Dotun Phillips report on Civil Service Reforms. ). Professional standards should be reestablished for our civil service, where merit is stressed above all else. Merit first before federal character. Processes must be in place to wipe out all forms of corruption within the civil service. The new civil service should be small, well equipped and made up of highly trained personnel.

9.     National, Regional and State Electoral Commissions
The Committee is of the view that these commissions should draw their powers primarily from the Nigerian constitution. They must enjoy complete independence in their operations; the chairman of the National Commission shall be selected by their peers once the membership of the commissions has been constituted by the Heads of governments.  
An Election Offences Act should be enshrined in the new Constitution to enable prosecution of election-related offences.
10.                          Immunity Clause in the Constitution
All immunity clauses in respect of criminal cases should be expunged from the Nigerian Constitution, and individuals should be held to the highest standards of governance. Being in office should not be an excuse to avoid prosecution  for crimes committed.

11.                         Funding of pilgrimages and political parties.
We advocate that Nigeria being a secular state, there should be no government funding of pilgrimages and also there should be no funding of political parties.

CONCLUSION
The Committee is unimpressed by the delegate spread where all the ethnicities in Nigeria are to be represented by 90 delegates and the governments (Federal and States) will have 240 nominated delegates. This creates room for huge influence from government at the expense of all the ethnic groups in Nigeria. The Committee recommends, as the first order of business by the Conferees, a review of conference guidelines to ensure full acceptance of their deliberations. We believe that the outcomes of the Conference should be subjected to a national referendum and these should then form parts of a new constitution.

Chief (Professor) Emmanuel U. Emovon, CON, FAS, JP (The Obayagbona of Benin Kingdom)
Chairman


Professor Sam Guobadia
General Secretary

For and On Behalf of Committee of Concerned Benin Elders

1.         Hon. Justice Isaac O. Aluyi                                                                         2.         Hon. Justice Joseph Otabor Olubor, OFR                 

3.        Hon. Justice O. Uwaifo, CON                                                                    4.        Mr. Daniel Aiyanyo Omoigui       

5.        Professor David Awanbor                                                                          6.        General Steve E. Asemota (Rtd)  

7.        Professor Eghosa Osagie                                                                            8.        Professor Denise E. Agbonlahor        

9.        General Charles Osa Omoregie(Rtd), JP 

10.      Professor(Senator) Sunday O. Iyahen   

11.      General Ikponmwen Donatus Idada (Rtd)                                                    12.      Professor Augustine Orhue

 13.     Princess Adesuwa C. Emovon, JP  

Saturday, 8 March 2014

Stolen Passports Prompt Terror Concerns in Missing Jet, Officials Say


The officials said that they had found no clear link to terrorism, and that there are other criminal reasons, for example drug smuggling, that stolen passports might be used to board a plane.
But the revelations, hours after the jet disappeared over the South China Sea without sending a distress signal, significantly changed how U.S. officials looked at the disaster. U.S. officials said they were checking into passenger manifests and going back through intelligence.
“We are aware of the reporting on the two stolen passports,” one senior official said. “We have not determined a nexus to terrorism yet, although it’s still very early, and that’s by no means definitive.”
Both passports were stolen in Thailand, sources told NBC News.
An Italian man who had his passport stolen a year ago was on the passenger manifest for the jet, but his father told NBC News on Saturday that he was safe and on vacation in Thailand.
In Austria, the foreign ministry confirmed to NBC News that police had made contact with a citizen who was also on the passenger list, and who reported his passport stolen two years ago while traveling in Asia.
“We believe that the name and passport were used by an unidentified person to board the plane,” a spokesman for the ministry said.

Desperate wait for families in Beijing after jet vanishes

It is unusual for one person to board a plane with a stolen passport and very rare for two to do it, terrorism analysts say.
The Italian on the passenger list was Luigi Maraldi, 37. His father, Walter Maraldi, told NBC News from Cesena, Italy: “Luigi called us early this morning to reassure us he was fine, but we didn’t know about the accident. Thank God he heard about it before us.”
Malaysia has not seen significant terrorist activity, and airport security there has tended to be exemplary.
Asked earlier whether terrorism was suspected in the disappearance of the jet, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said authorities were “looking at all possibilities,” The Associated Press reported.
Earlier in the day, U.S. officials told NBC News that “all we know is something quick and catastrophic” happened to the plane.
The investigation will probably take some time, partly because authorities would have to find wreckage and perform forensics test. A full day after the plane disappeared, there were no signs of the aircraft, although the Vietnamese air force spotted two oil slicks consistent with jet fuel off the coast of Vietnam.
In the crash of TWA Flight 800, in 1996, it took more than a year to rule out terrorism.
Andy Eckardt, Claudio Lavanga, Erin McClam and Michele Neubert of NBC News contributed to this report.

Dear Son, It Was An Honor To Hold You

Dear Son,
I held you on Friday night for the first and last time ever. It was one of the saddest, proudest, most heartbreaking, and beautiful moments of my life. It was an honor to hold you.
I'm proud of you, son. Even though you only made it halfway through the pregnancy, you have left a mark on our family that will last forever. Because of you, I love my wife more than ever. Because of you, I feel a stronger connection with my kids then ever. When I hug them, I feel your presence.
Sadly, I'll always remember the phone call last week from your mom when she told me that we lost you. I was home with your brother and sister, and I was in shock. Your pregnancy seemed to be the smoothest and most healthy one that your mom had ever had. I did my best to comfort her on the phone, and then we grieved together when you both got home. Our kids didn't let us cry too much, though, because they kept requesting snacks, more snacks, and more snacks after that.
Usually Friday is a day that I look forward to, but not last Friday. I never shave on Fridays, but this time I did. This was the only day that I would ever hold you... I had to look my best. When we checked into the hospital at 8 a.m., it was a dark, dreary, and rainy day, just like the feeling in our hearts.
Your mom took medication to start the labor process, and over the next 10 hours, she showed her love and devotion to you as we neared your birth. By the way, your mom is the most incredible and beautiful person I have ever met. I'm so lucky to be with her and call her my wife.
At 8:35 p.m. on Friday, February 28th, you were born. Even though there was no life in your beautiful body, you were full of love, heart, and courage.
Your mom held you, and then it was my turn. I felt both happy and devastated to be holding my second son in the palm of my hands. We cried. We told you about your brother and sister. We visualized you running through open fields somewhere, free, happy, and full of life. We sang to you. After singing the final line of "Silent Night" to you... "Sleep in heavenly peace..." we knew that it was time to say goodbye.
You were with us for way too short of a time, but you will be remembered forever. We named you Scotland Bansley Riles, and your mom and I will bring your ashes with us someday when we travel to Scotland. Usually we don't travel with our kids (they're a little too crazy), but we want to show you the world.
Our precious Scotty... I miss you more than I've ever missed anything. We love you. We will honor you. We will be better parents and people because of you. Thank you.
Love,
Dad
tommy riles baby hands

For anybody that is going through a situation like this, know that you are not alone.
tommy riles older brother
Scotty, that is your older brother, Tommy, blowing out a candle celebrating your life.
This piece was originally posted on Life of Dad.
Follow Tom Riles on Twitter: www.twitter.com/LifeofDadShow 

HuffingtonPost 

Malaysian Boeing 777 Airliner With 239 Passengers On Board Still Missing, But Mishap Certain



The Malaysian Airlines plane conveying 239 people has still not been found, but several experts say a tragedy has occurred someway, after an official of the airline confirmed that the plane was carrying 7.5 hours of fuel as at its disappearance before it disappeared 2:40 am on Friday.
It is now 18 hours since the Beijing-bound plane lost touch with the Malaysia air traffic control in Subang two hours into its take-off from Kuala Lumpur, meaning the aircraft must have run out of fuel at about 10:10 am Chinese time, which is more than 10 hours ago.
Relying on Vietnam’s military, Vietnamese and Chinese state media had initially claimed that the plane crashed off the southern coast of Vietnam but acting Malaysian Minister of Transport, Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein has described the claim has incorrect, saying: “The CA (Civil Aviation Authority) says that is not true, and our foreign office says it is not true”.
Malaysia Airlines Vice President of Operations Control, Fuad Sharuji told CNN last night that the airline has “no idea where this aircraft is right now”.
The breakdown of nationalities on the plane is as follows: China (includes Taiwan) 154, 38 Malaysian, 5 Indians, 7 Indonesians, 6 Australians, 3 Americans, 4 French nationals, 2 from New Zealand, 2 Ukrainian, 2 Canadians, 1 each from Russia and Italy, Netherlands and Austria.
The United States and Chinese contingents include an infant each. In all the Boeing 777 plane was carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew members.
China, Vietnam, Singapore, and Malaysia are still conducting search-and-rescue operations south of Tho Chu Island in the South China Sea, using ships, helicopters and military airplanes.
The Boeing 777-200 airliner departed Kuala Lumpur International Airport at 12:41 a.m. and was expected to land in Beijing at 6:30 a.m., a 2,300-mile (3,700km) trip, but it never arrived the mainland before vanishing from the radar.
 Saharareporters

Pride of Africa: Kenya celebrates Lupita Nyong’o's Oscar

Lupita Nyong'o, winner of the award for best actress in a supporting role for "12 Years a Slave", right, and her brother Peter attend the Governors Ball after the Oscars on Sunday, March 2, 2014, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/A
Lupita Nyong'o, winner of the award for best actress in a supporting role for "12 Years a Slave", right, and her brother Peter attend the Governors Ball after the Oscars on Sunday, March 2, 2014, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/A
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — “You are the pride of Africa,” Kenya’s president exclaimed on Twitter as he celebrated Kenya’s first major Oscar win by actress Lupita Nyong’o.
Nyong’o was the topic of the day on Kenya’s radio and TV stations Monday, the day after her Oscar win for Best Supporting Actress in the movie “12 Years A Slave.”
At a conference at the United Nations headquarters in Nairobi, more than 300 people broke out into applause after Wanjira Maathai — the daughter of the late Kenyan Nobel Prize winner Wangari Maathai — mentioned her mother and Nyong’o in the same sentence.
“We all had hoped of course that she would win. Everybody feels a sudden attachment to her, she’s a Kenyan woman,” Maathai said in an interview later. “A lot of her work, a lot of her experience in film started in Kenya.”
Nyong’o, 31, was born in Mexico to Kenyan parents but was mostly raised in Kenya. A graduate of the Yale School of Drama, Nyong’o had starred in several productions in Kenya before landing her breakout role alongside Brad Pitt.
Nyong’o had been considered a front-runner in a category that included Jennifer Lawrence and Julia Roberts. When her name was called Sunday, she bent over in her seat as the audience erupted.
Just before her win, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta issued a statement saying Nyong’o's accomplishments testify to her talent and the determination to go the extra mile that success demands.
At the end of her Oscar speech, Nyong’o asked that her win remind “every little child that no matter where you’re from your dreams are valid.”
Maathai spoke Monday, which is Wangari Maathai Day in Africa, to honor the Nobel prize winner’s dedication to the environment. She said that like her mother, Nyong’o is another Kenyan who has reached great heights.
“She (Nyong’o) attributes to her success to a lot of other black actresses who made her believe she could be something and that she could make it in film,” Maathai said. “And I think it’s so important to have role models, so important to have people who you can say, ‘Ah, if she made it, maybe I can too.’”
While celebrating the win, Kenyan film critic Ogova Ondego criticized Kenya for not supporting the arts. Nyong’o, whose father is a Kenyan senator, did not get any support from the government while developing her talent, Ondego said.
Kenyatta in Sunday’s statement said the government has made the promotion of arts a key pledge that must be delivered. He said many young Kenyans will have access to funding for artistic projects.
“It is our intention that Lupita becomes the first of an endless line of Oscar nominees and winners from Africa and Kenya,” he said.
David Opondoe, the managing director of Phoenix Players, a Kenya-based theater company where Nyong’o performed earlier in her career, said Nyongo’s success will encourage many in in Kenya to embrace the arts.
“It shows that there is so much talent, only that the opportunities are not there,” he said. “It’s time for parents and government to see that this is not a pastime. It’s something you can do professionally and bring glory.”
More than 1,000 people have auditioned at the Phoenix Players this year, he said, whereas before they had to actively hunt actors for parts. Opondoe said he first saw Nyongo on stage in the play “There Goes The Bride” in 2002, which he also starred in.
“At that time she was viewed as an amateur and she gave us, some of the professionals, a run for our money. She had her lines and was on point and I knew this person is passionate about acting,” he said.
“We are going to celebrate this for a very long time,” Opondoe said.
AP