Monday, 8 November 2021

How Technology Destroyed a Place Called Oluwole By Mike Jimoh

(THEWILL) – The story of Dennis: Sometime in 1992, a university hopeful tearfully told his father he was dropping out of his studies in Nigeria. He had set his sights on Europe just like two of his friends had done months before. A beloved and an only son, his father lent a sympathetic ear. A cocoa dealer from an agrarian community in the northern part of what was then Bendel state, money was no problem to the father and so he made provisions for his ward’s long journey away from Africa. Of course, the lad’s starting point was Lagos where he would process the necessary documents needed to travel to Vienna, the Austrian capital where his friends had landed. Dennis O (not his real name) had been briefed where to go in Lagos: A place called Oluwole. That was how Dennis arrived Oluwole and met his ‘helpers,’ those who would facilitate his journey to Vienna. He was more than elated. Of course, his supposed helpers saw through him at first glance: in his new surroundings, Dennis’s rural simplicity shone like a greasy mechanic at a banker’s convention International passport? Dennis had none. Not to worry. Within a week, the helpers had procured an international passport for the chap, complete with the requisite travel documents. Dennis was over the moon. But first, he had to go back to the village to share the good news with his father and also get his blessings. Showing off the documents in his possession, Dennis told his father he literally had one leg in Nigeria and the other in Europe. Prouder than a parent whose son had won a scholarship to an Ivy League institution, his father quickly arranged for a ‘little celebration’ for his departing son. Friends and neighbours were invited to what was a send-off for the lucky lad. There was plenty to eat and drink as some of Dennis peers looked on with undisguised envy. When it was time for Dennis to leave for Austria, he returned to Lagos for the second time and then proceeded to the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja for his long awaited journey. Inside the belly of a giant Austrian Airlines Airbus 320, Dennis finally relaxed and, as the Yorubas say, he could finally prop his feet up on the table, drink water and put the cup down. Not quite. No sooner had he got to the arrivals in Vienna and encountered the country’s immigration officers than he realised that all the documents in his possession were counterfeit – passport, visa and just about anything else. The only genuine items about him were his clothes and luggage. Needless to say a few days later, Dennis was booked on another flight and parceled back from whence he came. Like Moses, Dennis saw the ‘promised land’ but couldn’t step into it. But unlike Moses who was denied by a divine decree, Dennis was done in by master swindlers and forgers at Oluwole, a market area in Central Lagos and operational base of dyed-in-the-wool forgers who made oodles of cash at the expense of gullible Nigerians. Dennis had joined the number. Oluwole was home to ersatz documents of whatever nature. If you wanted to sell your father’s house, you could come to Oluwole, get a forged certificate of death, get a fake notarization and voila! Or imagine that you wanted a glowing WAEC result even though you are a confirmed knucklehead, there was only one place to go to make it happen. Oluwole was also the place to go, if, say, you gained access to a parsimonious parent’s cheque book and wanted a perfect imitation of his signature so you could enrich yourself at his/ her expense. What about obtaining, say, the blue British Passport or even visa to any European country without necessarily following due process? The road led to Oluwole. Marriage, birth and death certificates as well as affidavits of all kinds were easily procured at Oluwole not to mention letters of invitation, bank statements, cheque leaflets, even booklets and tax clearance certificates. Of course, all of them were duds, perfect imitations of the originals. Legend has it that a certain civilian governor of a state in the south west once boasted his signature could not be duplicated to the exact cursive letters and strokes. A week later, one of his aides showed him two identical samples of his signature from the chaps at Oluwole. The governor chose the wrong one as his. One source told THEWILL that as ordinary as it looked, counterfeiters at Oluwole bilked victim after victim of huge sums of money, raking in between $5, 000 to $10, 000 monthly. Business was good for the forgers while the expectations of those who patronized them were never met. Hello, Hello! But Oluwole was not only about forged documents. Long before the advent of GSM, Nigerians of a certain generation who wanted to reach out to relatives and friends abroad hoofed it to discreet corner shops in central Lagos where operators tapped NITEL telephone lines illegally. According to one man-about-town who claims knowledge of the early beginnings of Oluwole, hustlers in those shops often approached people on the street, Broad Street or Marina, say, and whispered “hello, hello,” a coded message implying you could make calls somewhere nearby. Once you agreed, they would lead you to inconspicuous shops where you could, for a fee, talk as long as you wanted with the receiver overseas. It goes without saying that such payments were never remitted to the rightful owners – NITEL. Oluwole was a garden of hope from where many ended up harvesting tubers of disappointments. Man-about-town, Joseph Okoduwa (not real names) recalls instances of hapless deportees like Dennis angrily storming Oluwole to register their displeasure sometimes accompanied by police officers. “They come back dejected,” Okoduwa told THEWILL. “First is the shock and disbelief of what has happened and then anger at the perpetrators.” Continuing, Okoduwa insists the fraudsters/ forgers at Oluwole usually anticipated such confrontations and were more than prepared for the returnees. Questions like “here na embassy, am I an ambassador?” were often thrown at the already hapless victims, that is if they even managed to trace the forgers at all. Those who know describe Oluwole in its halcyon days as a warren of roads and narrow alleys leading to obscure shops and poky offices smack in the middle of a market of the same name in Central Lagos. The byzantine routes and narrow paths made it possible for counterfeiters to escape easily during unexpected raids by law enforcement agents. In a Vanguard report of August 2, 2011, for instance, Evelyn Usman wrote of a surprise raid at Oluwole on a Sunday morning headlined “Day of Reckoning for Oluwole Fraudsters as Security Agents Raid Hideout.” Usman wrote that “activities at the notorious Oluwole market located in central area of Lagos went on as usual last Sunday when all of a sudden an unprecedented invasion of the area by some security agencies changed the course of the day.” The surprise raid was carried out by a combined team of Nigeria Immigration Service, Nigeria Police and the State Security Service. Recovered from the forgers were fake international e-passports, fake NYSC certificates and vital government documents. According to Usman, fraudsters “operating there usually played on the gullibility of desperate Nigerians who intend travelling out of the country at all cost…those swindled ended up visiting the area with policemen only to discover that the person they transacted with was nowhere to be found.” After the raid, the Comptroller General of Immigration Lagos State Command at the time, Mr. Sule Abass Ahmed, was stunned beyond words. He “marveled at the sophistication with which the fraudsters operated,” insisting that they were “well informed about any change either in signature or documents of any country at their disposal…getting the original visa or passport of any given country, after which they will scan into their system and then photocopy the original for willing buyers.” Another source confirmed to THEWILL how back in the mid to late eighties, “you could get a British Passport, a trifold card board ID or abbreviated form of passport, the old British blue book passport and the red passport to travel from Nigeria to other European countries. If the picture of the Afro or Caribbean person doesn’t look like you, counterfeiters at Oluwole could expertly take apart the passport and replace/ transplant the passport photograph to yours.” Continuing, the source, now safely ensconced in Canada, neither confirmed nor denied if he ever patronized the forgers, but declared that, for a fee, forgers “could provide you with first grade counterfeit visa to many countries in Europe, especially Eastern European countries.” Asked if he knew those who were the criminal masterminds behind such deceptive schemes at Oluwole, the source mentioned one Wella, a tall, huge and fair-complexioned fellow. He may or may not be dead, he went on. Wella seemed to be the number one man of the forgers then, adding that you could distinguish them from others by the very expensive jewelry they wear. The clever rogues they were, the forgers at Oluwole “never saved their money in banks for fear it might be traced to them. They invested in costly necklaces, rings and wristwatches such as Citizen and Seiko watches. They were the Rolex of their time.” To be sure, the counterfeiters operated with a phalanx of collaborators ranging from retired or retrenched staff from ministries, travel agents and even staff of embassies and airlines. There were also the signature experts, sign writers and printers at Shomolu/Bariga. According to Okoduwa, it was not only individuals forgers at Oluwole ruined financially and emotionally. They destroyed businesses as well. In his telling, there was a time when luncheon vouchers were the rave in Lagos, travellers cheques, too, and even fuel coupons. But the counterfeiters at Oluwole put an end to those businesses by cleverly forging them and having the returns come to them instead of the parent companies. 911 and the decline of Oluwole Nothing, they say, lasts forever. Oluwole entered its final decline following the September 11, 2001 twin tower attacks in America. That attack revolutionized travel, especially by plane and replaced perfunctory airport security checks with more specialized ones. Countries also upgraded their passports, employing technology to ensure that the identities of travelers were clearly captured. It was the age of electronic passports, biometric requests at embassies and more advanced requirements for travel. Nigeria soon followed suit as the first African country to issue e-passports which had chips containing the owner’s data embedded in it. The year was 2007 and Shehu Musa Yar ‘Adua was president. But the story of Nigeria’s e-passport began four years earlier in 2003. Olusegun Obasanjo was president and while on a state visit to Malaysia was shown the Malaysian passport. He visited the company that makes it and immediately put in motion a process to upgrade Nigeria’s passport. When the Mint could not deliver, the Ministry of Interior put out a bid. Five companies emerged top contenders – The Mint, Obethur, G&D, De la rue and a Nigerian company called Iris Smart Technologies Limited (ISTL) At the end of the process, ISTL emerged best in technical and commercial and so was awarded the contract with the first passports delivered and launched by President Yar’Adua in 2007. Oluwole was good and tried to play catch up but the technology deployed by ISTL was a lot better and with time as most documents became technologically advanced and linked to biometrics, Oluwole entered its full decline. In fact the ISTL technology is so good that in 2015, according to a source who did not want to be named, when 54 pilgrims died in a stampede in Saudi Arabia during the hajj, the Nigerian government had to rely on ISTL to help identify the dead through their finger prints since they did not have their travel documents on them when they passed. When THEWILL visited the place that used to be called Oluwole with Okoduwa in tow, we met a completely razed expanse of land where counterfeiters used to converge and operate. It had just rained that early October afternoon. There were puddles here and there over which traders and shoppers skipped. There were quite a number of parked yellow LT buses and private cars all of which was dwarfed by the four imposing, gold-coloured minarets atop the nearby Central Mosque. In place of hustling counterfeiters who once held sway in the area, there were now tattooed youngsters with sagging pants and finger-length dreadlocks, most of them smoking weed, cigarette, quaffing drinks from satchet or straight from the bottle. To many, Oluwole had been a place of last resort, a place where, after all else had failed, you were hopeful of finding someone hawking talismans of hope. That garden of hopes is no more.

Thursday, 4 November 2021

Why Arewa Youths In The North Plot To Settle For Rotimi Amaechi As The 2023 Presidential Candidate

The 2023 presidential election is fast approaching and some support groups are already mobilizing to ensure that the politicians they support contest the 2023 presidential election and also win.
Photo Credit: Vanguard The South is expected to produce the next President and some Southern politicians like Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Rotimi Amaechi are believed to be interested in the 2023 presidential election. A Northern group known as Arewa Youths have settled for the current Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi as the 2023 presidential candidate they will support. That will form the basis of our discussion in this article. Why did Arewa Youths pledge their support to ensure that Amaechi succeeds Buhari in 2023?
Photo Credit: The Nation To start with, Amaechi is one of the top Ministers in Buhari's government who many believe has performed well. The rail project which his ministry has embarked on excites many Nigerians. According to Leadership newspaper, Arewa Youths believe that Amaechi has the capacity to develop the country. Another reason this group gave was that Amaechi understands the politics of Nigeria. Some Nigerians may differ with Arewa Youths on this but the fact states that Amaechi has been in politics since 1999. He started as the Speaker of Rivers State House of Assembly. He was two-time Governor of Rivers State(2007-2015) and also the Chairman of Nigeria Governors Forum. Above all, he led Buhari's campaign in 2015 and 2019 even when some people in South-South were angry that he worked against the re-election of Goodluck Jonathan in 2015. My understanding is that Arewa Youths believe that there is no better way to thank Amaechi for standing behind President Buhari from 2015 to date other than to mobilize for him in the North to ensure that he contests and wins the 2023 presidential election under APC.
Photo Credit: Sun newspaper However, we wait to see if Amaechi can grab the 2023 presidential ticket of APC should he decide to contest.

The man Femi Osibona By Tajudeen Adebanjo

Olufemi Adegoke Osibona, otherwise called Femi Fourscore, is a native of Ikenne in Ogun State, who was born in 1966. He had his primary school education in Lagos before moving to Mayflower School in Ikenne. From Mayflower, he proceeded to Croydon University in the United Kingdom (UK), where he studied Business and Finance. His shoes and suits business in 1991 Osibona started shoes and suits business in 1991 before venturing into real estate development in 1997. In 1998, he stopped clothing and shoe business after nurturing a property he purchased in the UK in 1997 to a profitable venture. How he started building construction From that, Osibona started building construction business. The Ogun State-born businessman was quoted to have said: “I noticed that many Nigerians at that time were reluctant to go into construction, but I believed anything was possible with God.” Osibona’s real estate development firm Fourscore Homes is a member of the National Home Builders Registration Council (NHBRC) in South Africa and Zurich Building Guarantee in Europe. The company exhibited its expertise in property development in the UK, South Africa, the United States (U.S.) and Nigeria. Osibona is said to be the first African developer to construct a seven-storey building at the highbrow Albion Drive, London Fields in East London. After that, he moved to South Africa in 2009, where he built six luxury units of houses called Fourscore Mansions in Waterkloof, Pretoria. In an interview, Osibona said: “I was one of the people whose real estate developments led to the growth of East London. I bought a house on New Cross Road and renovated it. I also bought a piece of land behind it and built two flats there, and that is what I will call my first real estate project. That was how I started building houses for sale.” He had before last Monday explained that the ill-fated building, known as 360 Degrees Towers, was designed to be the first of its kind in Nigeria. Osibona, a member of the Celestial Church of Christ (CCC), also told a television station that in all Fourscore projects abroad, they bought “land and developed.” He had said: “I am the builder, I don’t engage any builder. I was in Atlanta for only four months before I decided to buy land. It is the same procedure in housing development and if you have done it in one country, then you can do it in another because it is the same principle.” How four of his 24 flats collapsed in Atlanta The collapse of the Ikoyi building was not the first time his structures will suffer damage. In a chat with CelestialOvation Talk Show, Osibona narrated how four of his 24 flats in Atlanta, Georgia in the U.S. were razed. He revealed that the U.S. inferno turned out to be a blessing for him because the money paid him by an insurance firm was more than what he expended on the purchase of the entire flats. Ashimolowo’s encounter with Osibona In a viral video recorded on July 4, 2021, Matthew Ashimolowo of the Kingsway International Christian Centre (KICC), narrated his encounter with Osibona. Ashimolowo said: “After listening to my tapes, he built 12 apartments in London, sold eight, kept four. Then he came to me again and said, ‘pastor Matthew, lay hands on me; where should I go again?’ “After I had laid hands on him the first time, he said, ‘where should I go again? I want to go to South Africa; please pray for me.’ I prayed for him. “He went to South Africa and built 125 houses in the highbrow area of Centurion, next door to Johannesburg. He broke through exponentially.” The cleric added that when he was ministering in Ghana, Osibona flew in to meet him again for guidance. Ashimolowo said: “He (Osibona) comes and says ‘where should I go again?’ I said, ‘look, I’m not your financial adviser. Go and meet your financial adviser. He said ‘you’re doing better than them.’ So, I laid hands on him, prayed for him and I said ‘go to Nigeria, your country’. “They call him Femi Fourscore. Femi comes to Lagos, boom, he buys land in Ikoyi and builds 40 apartments and sold each one for like a million dollars. “As I am talking to you right now, in fact, this morning, Femi sent me a video. He’s building I think three towers together. We know Ikoyi. One is 14 floors, one is 16 floors, and one is 21 floors. “This guy used to sell shirts and ties in Abuja. He didn’t even have the shirt and tie I wanted from him so he went to others to get them for me during that crisis journey. Now, he has three towers.”

Fed Govt: implementation of Orosanye Report will cut cost of governance By Bolaji Ogundele

• Ex-HoCSF Aji, Amal Pepple head sub-committees on MDAs The Federal Government has decried the delay in the implementation of the report of former Head of Civil Service of the Federation (HoCSF), Stephen Osagiede Oransanye, on restructuring and rationalisation of its agencies and departments. Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Boss Mustapha, expressed government’s concerns yesterday during the inauguration of two sub-committees on the report in Abuja. One of the committees is on the implementation of government’s White Paper on restructuring and rationalisation of Federal corporations, agencies and commissions. The other is on the review of new corporations, agencies and commissions created after the submission of the report on restructuring. The SGF, who was represented by the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (HCSF), Dr. Folashade Yemi-Esan, noted that the failure to implement the Orosanye Report had continued to put high governance cost on the Federal Government. Mustapha said the White Paper on the Oransanye Report was issued and published in March 2014 and was followed by a White Paper Implementation Committee inaugurated in May of the same year. The SGF said for several reasons, most of which were anchored on political expediency, the White Paper had not only rejected a large number of the recommendations but also noted an equally greater number of others. He added that even those accepted were not implemented. Mustapha said Nigeria has been suffering from daily increase in high cost of governance underpinned by high personnel and overhead costs to the detriment of having adequate resources for development projects. Stressing that the need for cutting down the cost of governance cannot be more compelling than now, especially in the face of the nation’s dwindling revenue, the SGF said there is need to unburden Federal Government as a cost centre and as a revenue generator. He said: “For a long time now, the country has been struggling to make sure that at least 30 per cent of its annual budget goes into capital projects. “You would all agree with me that the inability to implement the report of the Committee on Restructuring and Rationalisation of Federal Government Parastatals, Agencies and Commissions are costing government highly. “This cost grows higher for every delay that the implementation suffers. This is further worsened by the fact that immediately after the report was released, parastatals and agencies billed for mergers or scrapping began developing means of further entrenching themselves as a major expenditure source to the government. “Furthermore, new agencies were also created to compound the situation.” “At this juncture, permit me to say that besides the impropriety of Government funding professional associations, the underlying principles for restructuring and rationalising these government agencies remain more urgent now than when the initial committee was constituted in 2011.” He said the committee should proffer time-based recommendations, not exceeding one year, on restructuring and rationalisation, if deemed appropriate of the new agencies.

Body of collapsed Lagos building owner retrieved By Precious Igbonwelundu, Tajudeen Adebanjo, Oyebola Owolabi, Chimaobim Ihedi-Obi, Halimah Balogun, Faidat Ahmed And Meimunat Fasasi

•Death toll rises to 33 •Families register 19 missing persons The recovery yesterday of the body of Mr. Femi Osibona, the investor in the collapsed 21-storey building in Ikoyi, Lagos has laid to rest questions over his whereabouts. There has been controversy over whether he was trapped in the rubble. The building under contsruction collapsed on Monday. The recovery of Osibona’s body brings to 33 the death toll. Osibona, a businessman and Chief Executive of Fourscore Heights Limited, was 55. Families have documented 19 names on the register of missing persons open at the site of the crisis by the Lagos State Government. Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu announced a three-day mourning period beginning from today for the victims. Flags at both public and private buildings are to fly at half mast. Also yesterday, the governor inaugurated the panel of independent experts that will probe the incident. During his visit to the site yesterday, the governor put the figure of bodies recovered as 32. Osibona’s body was recovered after the governor spoke. The body was last night identified by officials of Lagos State Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development. Read Also: ‘We want to see our loved ones dead or alive’ Families of trapped artisans were still on site yesterday, keeping the hope of seeing their loved ones alive. So far, it has been established that more than 61 persons might have been trapped in the collapsed building. There were also reports that some people escaped at the nick of time when the building was coming down. Sanwo-Olu said structural integrity tests will begin on the two other structures from today. There were three structures under construction. Sanwo-Olu reiterated the need for rescue workers to be safe on site, saying the structural integrity of the other buildings must be ascertained. The governor said he visited the six survivors on admission at the Lagos Island General Hospital. He said one of them was transferred to the Lagos State University Teaching (LASUTH) in Ikeja, for further treatment, “while the remaining five are in good spirits”. Sanwo-Olu added: “I have been to the Island General Hospital to encourage the living. I listened to their experiences on how God saved their lives. Life is something we all need to cherish because we can lose it at the shortest possible time. “Six of them, but one was moved this morning to LASUTH for additional investigative treatment because of the specialist healthcare we have there. “Yesterday, we opened the register for missing persons so that people who have missing loved ones whom they believe or imagine must have been in this location on Monday, and for whatever reason they haven’t contacted them, can provide their details. As I speak now, only 19 names have been provided, some with pictures and some without. “This will help us to begin to design the possibilities of a manifest coming out from the responses we have so far.”

Ikoyi building collapse: COREN, NSE silent, property linked to ‘Lagos topshot in Abuja’ By Wale Odunsi

The Council for Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN), Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE) and others are keeping mute on Monday’s Ikoyi building collapse. Named Gerrard Terraces, it was to be completed in 2022. Each unit sells for between $1.2million and $5million. The last promotional flyer seen by DAILY POST confirmed it was “65 per cent sold”. The developer is billionaire Olufemi Adegoke Osibona, Managing Director of Fourscore Heights Limited (FHL). The structural engineers are Beyond Designs, the architects are Voltron Design Studio. M&E Consultants are in charge of the construction. A February 20, 2020 letter by the former consultants, Prowess Engineering Limited, is circulating. The company withdrew its services, explaining that the management no longer share the same vision with Osibona. It is suspected that Prowess dumped the project after the FHL allegedly decided to extend the floors to 21 from 15. On Tuesday, Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu removed Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA) General Manager, Gbolahan Oki. Sanwo-Olu announced that an investigative panel is to be constituted, promising that all found culpable will “face the law”. Interestingly, hours before his suspension, Oki announced that the “owner” had been arrested and would be prosecuted. “The materials he used for the reinforcement are so terrible. He got approval for 15 floors but built 21. He has been arrested”, he told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN). The structure at 20, Gerrard Road caved in at about 2:45pm. Being the first day of the week, the site was full of activities with many workers on duty. In a trending video, Femi Osibona is seen with his sister – Dele Momodu’s wife – and four male foreigners. All from Italy, one was described as the “architect”. Osibona’s sibling also pointed the tallest man among the expatriates, saying “That’s Formenti (a furniture company)”. Now, there is a strong allegation that Osibona is a front for/partner with the real owner of the building, “a prominent Lagos topshot in Abuja”. DAILY POST reports that if true, it gives credence to why government regulators and profesional bodies in Nigeria have all been silent. Three days after the tragedy, none has issued a statement. A source regretted the situation, stating that “COREN’s deafening silence is unfortunate and condemnable”. “I wonder why none of our leaders and bodies have not said anything. About 20 people are dead and there may be more casualties. “Why are they quiet? I don’t understand it. This again attests to the fact that Nigeria’s problems are not all about Buhari”, the Engineer said on condition of anonymity. In 2019, President Muhammadu Buhari assented to the Engineers Registration Amendment Act 2019 to address collapse of buildings and other engineering failures. The law empowers COREN to prosecute: “Any person or firm that contravenes the provisions of this Act in a court of competent jurisdiction.” COREN can now regulate training schemes in engineering practitioners and students; ensure capacity building and monitor local content development in the Nigerian engineering industry. The law backs “compulsory attestation to all expatriate quota for engineering practitioners; including key projects that there are no qualified and competent Nigerians for the job in question at the time of application”. Before being allowed to practice in Nigeria, such foreigners “must be granted work permit, register with the council and obtain such licenses as may be required from time to time”. The Act admitted the Nigerian Association of Technologists in Engineering, Nigerian Society of Engineering Technicians, and Nigerian Association of Engineering Craftsmen into COREN. A stakeholder in the industry, Professor Danladi Matawal has presented a written position on the disaster. Matawal was Director-General, Nigerian Building and Road Research Institute (NBRRI) and former Chairman, FCT Building Collapse Panel The Civil Engineering lecturer said: “First, a personality as high as Deputy Governor of Lagos (Femi Hamzat) confirmed on camera that the building was approved for 21 storeys. “Secondly, the practice we established when I chaired the FCT Panel is to immediately arrest and put behind bars the Building Owner and for him to identify all the professional teams involved. “The letter of a consultant withdrawing should be subjected to further scrutiny and confirmation because under desperation, such letter can easily be generated and back dated. “Why did they not report their reservations to professional regulators and if true, they may have withdrawn for non-payment and not technical reasons. “We established a procedure to identify ongoing, existing buildings and construction sites owned by the same client, designers and contractors. We sealed immediately and got them subjected to integrity tests. “As I posted on my Factbook page, 21 storeys is no mean height. Anyone involved should have ensured a water-tight readiness for the work. “Site Investigations, Designs, Construction Competence, Supervision and Independent Professional Critique Reviews and constant site meetings where decisions are taken. Approvals issues, including casting and test results, are discussed. “Finally, the FCT Panel instituted a standard practice, irrespective of outcome of investigations, that every Collapsed Building Site automatically becomes the property of government to put up a public facility and no longer owned by any private developer.”

2023: Tinubu’s SWAGA is not the South-West agenda By Olu Fasan

LET me be clear from the outset. Bola Ahmed Tinubu, former governor of Lagos State and a leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, is constitutionally eligible to run for president of Nigeria. Eligibility, however, does not mean suitability. But that’s a subject for future columns if he formally decides to run for president in 2023. Of immediate interest, however, is the big falsehood being peddled by those fronting the campaign for his yet-undeclared presidential ambition. Falsehood? Yes, because under the banner of SWAGA, acronym for “South-West Agenda for Asiwaju”, Tinubu’s acolytes are touring the length and breadth of the South-West, telling Yoruba leaders and traditional rulers that a Tinubu presidency would advance the collective interests of the Yoruba, or the South-West agenda. To be sure, the South-West agenda is the Yoruba’s long-standing call for political restructuring. From demand for sovereign national conference under President Olusegun Obasanjo and advocacy for national conference under President Goodluck Jonathan to current clamour for restructuring under President Muhammadu Buhari, the Yoruba have been at the forefront of agitations for restructuring, for genuine federalism. For the Yoruba, restructuring is an article of faith, a desideratum. They clamour for regional autonomy within a federal structure to allow their region to develop at its own pace, as it once did under self-rule when Chief Obafemi Awolowo laid the foundations for its prosperity. That goal is bigger than, and transcends, the personal ambition of any individual, especially an individual that lacks strong commitment to the agenda. And truth is, Tinubu pays no more than lip service to restructuring, treating the issue as a political football. In 2014,Tinubu rallied his party, APC, in strong opposition to the Jonathan administration’s national conference. The APC later rejected the conference report, widely believed to be capable, if fully implemented, of moving Nigeria closer to genuine federalism. Restructuring requires both political and elite consensus. Thus, once APC, then government-in-waiting, opportunistically rejected the Jonathan national conference, its report was dead in the water! But ahead of the 2015 general election, APC wanted the votes of the South-West people, for whom restructuring was a key demand. So, the party made the following commitment in its manifesto. “We will initiate action to amend our Constitution with a view to devolving powers, duties and responsibilities to the states and local governments to entrench true federalism and the federal spirit”. During the presidential campaign in 2015, Tinubu and other South-West APC leaders played up the political-reform and power-devolution pledge to sell Buhari’s candidacy to their people, and Buhari went along with the campaign vow. Yet, more than six and a half years in power, with barely 18 months left, President Buhari has done nothing to keep that key manifesto promise, and Tinubu rarely says anything beyond the perfunctory or platitudinous on the issue. He can’t bring himself to challenge Buhari’s adamantine opposition to restructuring; he even ignores the report of his own party’s committee on restructuring, led by Nasir El-Rufai, governor of Kaduna State. One must wonder: Why has Tinubu not pushed hard for the fulfilment of a commitment that his party made in its Constitution and Manifesto, which it described as “Honest Contract” with Nigeria? Tinubu is called “The National Leader” of APC, the definite article “the” suggesting significant influence. Yet, in truth, when it comes to President Buhari and the North’s powerful interests opposed to restructuring, Tinubu has zilch influence. Well, except on symbolic gestures. Ahead of the 2019 presidential election, with an eye on the South-West’s votes, Tinubu apparently managed to persuade Buhari to declare June 12 as ‘Democracy Day’ to commemorate the annulment of the presidential election of June 12, 1993, presumed to have been won by MKO Abiola. The Federal Government also conferred Nigeria’s highest national honour, Grand Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic, GCFR, on Abiola, while also naming the Abuja National Stadium after him. But these purely symbolic gestures cannot, by any stretch of the imagination, substitute for restructuring Nigeria, or amount to the nullificationof the South-West agenda. Truth is, Tinubu has failed to demonstrate serious commitment to political restructuring. First, he rejected the Jonathan administration’s national conference and its report and, second, over six and a half years of his party being in power, he has maintained inordinate silence on Buhari’s betrayal of their party’s unambiguous constitutional and manifesto commitments on political restructuring. Yet, despite Tinubu’s two-facedness on Yoruba’s restructuring demand, his self-serving SWAGA minions are falsely juxtaposing his putative presidential ambition with the South-West agenda and bouncing Yoruba leaders and traditional rulers into embracing the deception. In April, during the SWAGA group’s visit to Chief Reuben Fasoranti, former Afenifere leader, the elder statesman said: “When he (Tinubu) gets there, he will do all we want”. He added that, with Tinubu as president, Afenifere’s prayers for Nigeria would be answered, “particularly on the issue of restructuring and federalism”. The Tribune titled the story thus: “Nigeria will be restructured if Tinubu is elected President in 2023 – Fasoranti” (Tribune, April 6, 2021). But really? It’s utterly fanciful! As yet, Tinubu has said nothing himself about 2023. But if he ran and became president, he would not do what Afenifere wants; he once split the socio-political group for his political ends. And he will not restructure Nigeria. But that would leave the Yoruba in a moral quagmire. If another Yoruba becomes president in 2023 and fails to restructure Nigeria, the South-West will lose the moral authority to complain about power imbalance after 2031. The rest of the country will, rightly, say: “What’s your problem. You ruled Nigeria for sixteen years since 1999 and you’re still complaining of imbalance, what imbalance?” Which is why, as I once wrote in this column, the Yoruba are better off joining hands with others to fight for restructuring rather than targeting the presidency in 2023. They will be utterly misguided to put their hopes in Tinubu. His SWAGA is not the South-West’s agenda! Disclaimer Comments expressed here do not reflect the opinions of vanguard newspapers or any employee thereof.