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#2019Election : List of Presidential Aspirants in Nigeria via @ynagNG

Democracy is participatory and it requires active involvement of all citizens to actualize the dividends of democracy. In Nigeria, there has been clamor by the people that there are only two options when it comes to presidential elections and they feel compelled to choose between lesser evil. Meanwhile, every election has always presented more than two options but because the people do not know or the remaining candidates do not have the means to get directly to the people.

In this thread, we share the full list of people who have declared interest in the highest office of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

1. Kingsley Moghalu

Age: 55
Profession: Professor of Practice in International Business and Public Policy at Tufts University; Former United Nations official; Former deputy governor of Central Bank of Nigeria
Education: University of Nigeria (BSc); London School of Economics (Ph. D)
Professional Affiliation: President of the Institute of Governance and Economic Transformation; Fellow, Nigerian Chattered Institute of Bankers

2. Fela Durotorye

Age: 46
Profession: Public Speaker and Business Strategist
Education: Obafemi Awolowo University (BSc/MBA)
Convener: Mushin Makeover Project

3. Donald Duke

Age: 56
Education: Ahmadu Bello University (LLB); University of Pennsylvania (LLM)
Profession: Former Commissioner for Finance and Planning; Former Governor of Cross River.
Initiator: The Tinapa Free Zone & Resort, and the Calabar Carnival

4. Funmilayo Adesanya-Davies

Age: 55
Education: Universities of Ilorin (BSc), University of  Port Harcourt (MSc), and Northwestern University (Ph.D)
Profession: Professor of Language and Communication Arts at the Rivers State University of Education
Founded Agape Bible Church

5. Muhammadu Buhari

Age: 75
Education: Left Secondary School for Army at 19
Profession: Current President, Military Head of State (1983-1985)

6. Oluremi Sonaiya

Age: 63
Education: Obafemi Awolowo University (BSc/MSc), Cornell University (Ph.D)
Profession: Retired professor of French Language and Applied Linguistics at Obafemi Awolowo University

7. Thomas-Wilson Ikubese

Age: 47
Education: University of Benin (MBBS)
Profession: Chief Medical Director, Sckye Hospital and Diagnostics Limited; Also a poet, motivational speaker, radio and television presenter.

8. Omoyele Sowore

Age: 47
Education: University of Lagos (BSc); Columbia University (MSc)
Profession: Lecturer, City University of New York; Writer, Public Speaker and Activist
Founder Sahara Reporters

9. Enyinnaya Nnaemeka Nwosu

Age: 40
Education: Asia University and Robert Gordon University
Profession: Former lecture, West George College; Formerly with Royal Bank of Scotland and Tribunals in UK.

10. Ahmed Buhari

Age: 40
Education: Federal University of Technology, Minna; Cavendish University, London
Profession: CEO, Skylar Inc

11. Peter Ayodele Fayose

Age: 57
Education: The Polytechnic, Ibadan (HND not ascertained)
Profession: Current governor of Ekiti State; Impeached in his first term in 2006.

12. Adesanya Fegbenro-Bryon

Age: 59
Education: University of Ibadan; Obafemi Awolowo University
Profession: Chairman/CEO of Mothergold Limited, Chief Responsibility Officer for Mothergold Consulting

13. Charles Udeogaranya

Age: 46
Education: Not ascertained
Profession: Former Lagos State chairman of the defunct African Renaissance Party; Now a chieftain of the APC

14. Mathias Tsado

Age: 41
Education: Federal University of Technology, Minna
Profession: CEO of Matstrutt Nigeria Ltd, Founder,Hope Platform Initiative

15. Eniola Ojajuni

Age: 39
Education: Lagos State University, Ghana Business School
Profession: Businessman and consultant on imports, exports, and investments
Previously ran for the Lagos State House of Assembly and the Governorship of Ondo

16. Olu James Omosule

Age: 48
Education: Dropped out of City University University, New York
Profession: Former Chief Officer for Scope America Outreach in the US; Served as General Manager for several US firms

17. Tope Fasua

Age: 47
Education: Ondo State University; London Business School; Harvard Business School.
Profession: CEO of Global Analytics Consulting Ltd.
He is National Chairman of the Abundant Nigeria Renewal Party (ANRP)

18. Sule Lamido

Age: 69
Education: Barewa College
Profession: Former Governor of Jigawa from 2007-2015; Former foreign minister from 1999-2003

OTHERS

This category comprises of those who either are not eligible by law but declared interest or those whose interest is know but yet to officially declare.

19. Adamu Garba II

Age: 35
Education: Rusticated from Kano State University of Technology
Profession: CEO: IPI Solutions Nigeria Limited; His company has won several awards.

20. Yul Edochie

Age: 36
Education: Not ascertained
Profession: Actor/Movie Director/Formerly ran and lost governorship ticket of Anambra State

21. Abubakar Atiku

Age: 71
Education: Ahmadu Bello University;
Profession: Formerly, Nigerian Customs Service; Has a business empire
Won Adamawa governorship ticket in 1998; Became Vice President in 1999-2007

This piece was written by Adetunji Adeniran ( @Adetunji1212 ) with contribution from Oche Oche-Obe (‏ @ochman101 ) via ynag.ng

How Buhari killed plot to extend Oyegun’s tenure

Tinubu: decision good for APC, democracy

President has scored another goal, says Okorocha

Advocates of tenure elongation for All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman John Odigie-Oyegun and National Working Committee (NWC) members suffered a major setback yesterday.

President Muhammadu Buhari said the party's constitution and the Nigerian constitution must be respected.

It was also a day of legal arguments among Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu and National Legal Adviser Muiz Banire, all of them Senior Advocates of Nigeria.

At the end of it all, many pro-tenure elongation governors were speechless at the Conference Hall of the APC National Secretariat, it was learnt.

After the fireworks, the National Executive Committee (NEC) raised a Technical Committee to work out modalities for the party's congresses and the National Convention .

The President said holding congresses and an elective National Convention was the lawful thing to do. Oyegun and all NWC members could be re-elected, he was quoted as saying.

According to sources at the meeting, the NWC put only two items on the agenda, namely: the report of the APC Restructuring Committee headed by Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai and amendments to the APC's Constitution.

Unknown to Oyegun, the President had another matter, which he did not discuss with his aides.

Shortly after the opening prayer by Lagos State APC Chairman Henry Ajomale, Oyegun gave a summary of expected amendments to the party's Constitution to accommodate provision for a caretaker management by the NWC for one year.

He said the proposal might be ratified at the National Convention in June if approved by the NEC.

But Buhari dropped the bombshell by opposing tenure elongation for the APC National Chairman and the NWC.

There was pin-drop silence as Buhari  spoke, saying tenure extension under any guise was a violation of both the 1999 Constitution and the APC's Constitution.

The President diplomatically added that members of the National Working Committee were free to "discuss and debate" his proposal.

That sparked the debate opened by Akeredolu who argued for allowing tenure extension for Oyegun and the others.

A source at the meeting said: "Akeredolu told the meeting that the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) and other parties could not take APC to court over tenure elongation because whatever is done by NEC is an internal affairs of the party.

"The governor said the PDP and others would be mere busybodies to dabble in the internal affairs of APC. He was confident that no court would allow the PDP or any other party to have its way."

Banire joined Akeredolu, stressing that NEC could make provision for a Caretaker Committee to manage the affairs of the party.

The source quoted Banire as saying: "It is true that Article 13 of APC Constitution says that we should have new executives every four years, but NEC can propose a National Caretaker Committee for the next one year.

"I know some people took us to court in Lagos and Abuja. The matter in Lagos came up on Tuesday (March 27) and the case in Abuja will be on March 28."

Banire said the applications before the court could not stand as long as the NEC took a legal decision to set up a Caretaker Committee."

Prof. Osinbajo warned the party against taking unnecessary risks on the Caretaker Committee because it could invalidate all nominations by the APC for the 2019 general elections at all levels.

Another source quoted Osinbajo as saying: "I agree with all your observations that raising a Caretaker Committee is an internal affair of the APC but none of us is a judge here. The judges have final say on matters before them, not we who are the lawyers.

"I am a SAN, you are a SAN but as far the matters in court are concerned, they can go either way. These cases before the primaries may linger beyond our primaries.

"Once a case is in a court, it is no longer an internal affair of the party. The outcome of the cases in court could affect all our candidates for 2019 poll including the presidential candidate.

"We should abide by Article 13 of the APC Constitution by holding congresses and the National Convention of the party. Any introduction of extraneous clause to our constitution can affect our electoral fortunes."

The source quoted the Vice-President as saying: "We should not forget that there are many court levels. A case can run from the High Court to the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court. We cannot say if we win at a High Court, it will be the same at the appellate courts."

Osinbajo cited a case of a member of the APC in the Kano State House of Assembly who was nominated by a Caretaker Committee.

He said: "The APC laboured and won the election but when the case got to the Supreme Court, the election was nullified because he was nominated by a Caretaker Committee, which was illegal.

"There is a Supreme Court judgment of 2015 which precisely says parties should obey their constitutions."

Overwhelmed by Osinbajo's "brilliant" submission, governors and members of NEC clapped thunderously, such that Oyegun had to call the session back to order, the source said.

A governor, who preferred not to be named, said: "Many governors and leaders, who wanted tenure elongation, dropped their position instantly.

"We did not pay attention to the implications of violating the APC Constitution. Our intention was just to avoid going into intra-party elections which can divide us," a source said.

Kano State Governor Abdullahi Ganduje was quoted to have said: "The case in Kano surprised everybody. That is why I must support this Prof. (refering to Osinbajo)"

House of Representatives Chief Whip Alhassan Ado Doguwa faulted Akeredolu for challenging the cautionary opinion of the President.

Doguwa was quoted as saying: "I have been in politics for 25 years; I have not seen where the President will talk and there will be a contrary opinion.

"It is unfortunate that the leader of the party and a sitting President based his opinion on constitutionality and you are dragging it on the basis of rationality. You people have exposed yourselves."

Akeredolu reportedly hit back at Doguwa, saying: "The President did not ask you to shield him but he said we should debate his suggestion/ opinion.

"What of the 2018 budget with you people? Up till now, you have not passed the budget. Yet, you are talking of having respect for the President."

Some of the NEC members jeered at Doguwa for his defence of the President.

After the tirades, Senate Deputy Leader Bala Ibn Na'Allah moved a motion asking NEC to mandate the NWC to "set up a technical committee to work out the modalities for congresses and the National Convention between Tuesday and Wednesday".

The party may hold another NEC meeting to ratify the modalities for congresses and the National Convention.

To douse the tension which accompanied his address, the President offered some words of encouragement to Oyegun and the NWC members.

He said: "We still have time between now and June 13 when your tenure expires. You can win again because the APC Constitution has provided room for another term in office for you.

"Nobody says you should not re-contest. Instead of adding illegal one year, you can go for a fresh term of four years in office. To me a four-year term is better than one year."

There was visible disappointment as some of the governors were said to have been disappointed by the outcome of the meeting.

A North-West governor was just gazing at the Vice President as he marshaled his legal argument, another source said. A Southern governor left before the end of session.

A pro-tenure extension governor who was billed to inaugurate the APC Press Centre, was rattled; he abandoned the assignment.

Source: http://thenationonlineng.net/buhari-killed-plot-extend-oyeguns-tenure/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

#2019Election: Atiku Abubakar Declares Intention To Run For President in 2019

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has officially declared his intention to run for president in 2019 on the Platform of the Peoples Democratic Party.

Mr Abubakar announced his candidacy in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital on Tuesday.

The former Vice President said his decision to make the announcement in Rivers State because is because he believes Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike represents what he represented in 1998/99 as the live wire of the PDP.

Mr Abubakar who defected from the All Progressives Congress to the PDP earlier this year, was in Rivers with the former Governor of Ogun State, Gbenga Daniel; Senator Abdul Ningi and some other party leaders.

Governor Wike, in reaction, described the former VP as a presidential candidate feared by the APC.

The governor, however, played down his own position in the PDP, insisting that all genuine members of the party are its live wire.

Three years and several legal battles after, the PDP was ousted from power at the federal level, its leaders believe it has what it takes to reclaim power in 2019.

According to Governor Wike, the PDP is not just interested to getting power in 2019, it is out to rescue Nigeria from what he described as a period of maladministration.

The Governor called on other aspirants of the party to do nothing to jeopardise its chances in the 2019 general elections.

 

Source: ChannelsTV

At least 78 dead in Lassa fever outbreak in Nigeria

Eighteen states have been affected in "unprecedented outbreak"More than 3,000 people who may be at risk are being monitored

At least 78 people have been confirmed dead and 353 are infected in an "unprecedented" outbreak of Lassa fever in Nigeria, according to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control.

A further 766 are suspected to be infected, and 3,126 contacts have been identified and are being monitored.

Lassa fever, an acute viral hemorrhagic illness, is endemic in most of West Africa, especially Nigeria, where it was discovered in 1969. Symptoms can be mild or severe, including hemorrhaging in the gums, eyes or nose.

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the disease is transmitted to humans through contact with food or items contaminated by multimammate rats -- or through contact with bodily fluids from an infected person.

On average, Lassa fever is deadly in 1% of all individuals infected, with higher rates of 15% morbidity among people hospitalized with the illness. According to an NCDC report from March 4, the case fatality ratio in the latest outbreak was 23.8%.

Sixteen health workers were infected of whom four died within eight weeks of this outbreak.

The NCDC said the country was facing an "unprecedented outbreak"as the disease has spread to 18 states since it began in January.

The agency said it is working with Médecins Sans Frontières and the Alliance for International Medical Action to manage cases in Ondo, Edo and Anambra states.

Many of the cases were self-managed and not tested at the onset because the illness was thought to be malaria, a disease endemic to Nigeria and whose symptoms mimic Lassa fever, said Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, director of the NCDC.

Those with symptoms of fever should "go to a health care facility in order to get a test that will determine the cause of the fever." before treating Ihekweazu said in a statement.

Original piece via https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2018/03/06/health/lassa-fever-death-toll-rises/index.html?__twitter_impression=true

Hello, PMB is beatable in 2019 by Sufuyan Ojeifo ( @SUFUYANOJEIFO)

In 2015, serial presidential contestant, Muhammadu Buhari, emerged victorious through the instrumentality of enclave politics to which the north adroitly resorted in the face of plans by Goodluck Jonathan to ensconce himself in power for another four years.  Had Jonathan succeeded, the north, barring any unforeseen circumstances, would have been out of presidential power for ten unbroken years following the demise of President Umaru Yar'Adua.

That cold fact apparently nudged the north to throw everything into the mix of 2015 presidential power politics.  Many key northern elements in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) deployed political brinkmanship, dismantled loyalty that characteristically underpins leadership-followership construction, betrayed trust and deceived Jonathan in the utilisation of campaign and election funds in order to ensure the defeat of a sitting president, for the first time, in the annals of Nigeria's presidential election.

Obviously, the absence of an alternative to Buhari in the north had left the northern collective with a fait accompli in the Daura-born general.  If there had been a northern alternative on the PDP platform, as it happened in 2007 when Yar'Adua beat Buhari silly in that year's presidential election by 24 million to 6 million votes, there could have been a repeat of the 2007 election debacle for Buhari.

But the PDP goaded itself into an egregious strategic blunder when it could not rein in Jonathan to show fidelity to the gentleman's agreement he allegedly reached with some leaders of the party that, having completed the unexpired term of the late President Yar'Adua in 2011 and another four years in office up until 2015, he would not afterward seek re-election in 2015.

Jonathan locked down the presidential ticket of the party and set up a two-horse race with Buhari, whose candidature had been appropriated by the north in the bid to reclaim presidential power. Had PDP leaders, including Olusegun Obasanjo at the time, succeeded in propping up a trump card in Sule Lamido, who was rounding off his second term in office as Jigawa governor, as the presidential candidate, the story could, today, have been different.

Jonathan's aspiration ran contrary to the plan by the northern hegemony to clinch power in 2015. That was PDP's faux pas. The lesson to draw from this is simple: if, as a result of wrong political calculations and strategic untidiness, Jonathan lost election as an incumbent, it means that Buhari, as an incumbent, can also lose election if his political and electoral strategies are dissimilar to the pragmatic approaches that can ensure victory, especially in a strangulating political economy that Nigeria has become under his leadership.

Is Buhari in a pole position to win re-election in 2019? It is difficult to impassively answer in the affirmative. The scenario will understandably be different. Since the APC and the PDP have resolved to field northern presidential candidates, there is no doubt that anything can happen.  If Buhari contests, there are good chances that he can be defeated.  If that happens, it would be a tragic personal loss and not something for which to unsettle Nigeria since power would still have, in any case, remained in the north.

Apart from the scenario that I have painted above, it would interest you to know that there was a miniature electoral battle that took place recently in Katsina, the home state of Buhari, which outcome, I strongly believe, has implications for the president's re-election in 2019; that is, if he seeks re-election.  The APC and the PDP did battle in the by-election for Mashi-Dutsi federal constituency seat in the House of Representatives.

What is interesting about the by-election was the amount of effort, resources and intimidation that the ruling APC in the state allegedly invested in it and still struggled to secure controversial victory. With the state government's machinery, supported by the Aviation minister, Hadi Srika, one would have thought the APC would have put the PDP to rout.

But, alas, the APC posted controversial figures that presented PDP as a very formidable opposition in Katsina. After the forward and backward movements to the tribunal and the conduct of a supplementary rerun in some fifteen polling units cancelled by the tribunal for some irregularities, the APC candidate, Mansur Ali Mashi, cumulatively scored 30,719 "controversial" votes while the PDP candidate, Nazifi Ayuba, scored 22,610 votes.

The lesson to draw from the small corner of Katsina state within the context of a nationwide presidential election involving Buhari is that if the president and his foot soldiers could face this kind of stubborn opposition in his Katsina home state, one can imagine the dimensions of opposition the president may have to contend with in other parts of the northern states where he would be locked in vote-seeking battle with other formidable northern candidates, not to talk of the southern states.  Hello, are you with me? Candidate Buhari is beatable.

In the southern part of the country, the narratives from there cannot sustain the kind of popular sentiments that ensured Buhari's victory over Jonathan, for instance, in the southwest in 2015.  The southwest has become tentative. The leadership of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu that galvanised the zone's support for Buhari has been put under intense pressure. Tinubu's sense of longing and belonging has arguably been assaulted and diminished.

Back to the Katsina experience: it bears historical nexus with a promise during the electioneering for PDP's leadership positions at its December 9, 2017 national convention. Senator Umaru Tsauri, a prominent son of Katsina state, who emerged as the national secretary, had boasted that the PDP would ensure the defeat of Buhari in the state in 2019.  I had shrugged off his swank as mere sloganeering that cannot happen. My belief had always been that Buhari and his party, at least in Katsina, would always record landslide over other political parties.

The Tsauri-led oppositional tsunami, which is thriving on the power of articulation and enlightenment of the people to reject the status quo that has mindlessly impoverished them and increased the hunger and anguish in the land, is a classic example of the series of internal contradictions to APC's bludgeoning mantra of change that has unraveled as a historic scam, portraying the Buhari administration as incompetent and jejune in the overall appreciation of its episodic failures.

Those who delusionally think that it would be difficult to defeat Buhari in the 2019 presidential election in the event he decides to throw his hat in the ring should, therefore, perish the thought. PMB is, in fact, beatable in a free and fair election, notwithstanding his power of incumbency. The prognosis may appear sacrilegious to them, but therein is the possibility of a silent revolution that a vast majority of Nigerians can bring about through their power of choice.

In 2015, about 15 million electorate checkmated Jonathan's re-election gambit with their voter cards and he accepted the people's verdict. Buhari will do well to build on that new tradition in a similar circumstance in 2019. That is how to build institutions and democratic ethos.  It should not be about Buhari's ego.  It should also not be about the mindset and desire of the horde of his fanatical supporters. It should be about national interest and survival.

Postscript: In the jostle for the presidency in 2019, I urge for restraint and equanimity, not the gory pictures of baboons and dogs being soaked in their blood.  I urge parties and their presidential standard bearers to emphasise, in their electioneering, issues that will conduce to the rebuilding of citizens' confidence in our federation, strengthening of peace, harmony and national unity, and not nepotism-driven political considerations, ethno-religious chauvinism and divisive mantra. God bless Nigeria!

Ojeifo, editor-in-chief of The Congresswatch magazine, contributed this piece via ojwonderngr@yahoo.com

Source: https://www.thecable.ng/hello-pmb-beatable-2019/amp?__twitter_impression=true

OPINION BY FESTUS ADEDAYO: The church and #2019Elections

The Church, right from the medieval times, performed the role of the main stabilizing force in Western Europe. Not only did it provide religious leadership, it also offered the world secular leadership as well. Through the Roman Catholic Church, the Church satisfied the spiritual needs of the medieval society. The Pope, who headed the Roman Catholic Church, offered ordinary folks of the time earthly and spiritual comforts in troubled times. Since it was the largest landholder in Europe at this period, the Church also possessed wide-ranging and significant economic powers. It played a very dominant role in reviving, as well as preserving, ancient Greek and Roman texts.

In Africa, the church was no less dominant in the lives of the people. It played a formidable role in speeding up the end of colonialism and was responsible for the stoppage of slavery and apartheid in Africa, especially, its role in pushing up the internal contradictions of colonialism which led to the nationalist struggle for independence. The modern church has even played a greater role, especially in the mounting secular challenges of the 21st-century, most significantly, the increasing attempt by science and technology to swap the place of faith and the role of God in the lives of the human being.

Yes, science and technology have eliminated the spatial gaps in communication. Technology, for instance, has found easier ways of either curing or reducing the pains hitherto suffered in terminal ailments. In spite of the above, however, technology has proven critically unable to fill the void in the life of the human being. As predicted in II Timothy 3:1 which says, "but know this, that in the last days, perilous times will come," the perilous times are actually here and science and technology are profoundly incapable of providing solutions to the existential pains suffered by humanity. The perilous times are the existential void, agony and crises that man undergoes today. The pains man underwent decades ago are little compared to his challenges today. The Church is still where people frequent for solutions to these existential crises and where they get "spiritual fixes" whenever they get to inexplicable crossroads of their lives.

Overtime, governments were the pinnacle of hope of redemption for man and society. Today, however, governments, all over the world, are literally throwing their hands up in surrender. The perils and pains of society are proving intractable for secular powers-that-be, where man laid his hope. Unemployment has reached a crescendo that is unprecedented in the world; economic, health and social crises have proven really indomitable, in spite of coordinated attempts to tackle them. Hopelessness is becoming infectious like a pestilence and the world, which had made governments and technology its hope, especially since the renaissance period, is returning to the Church for the way out of its existential dilemma.

The above are also very true of the Nigerian situation. The situation is perhaps even worse. Economic and social problems in Nigeria are on the upswing, indeed in an unprecedentedly scary manner since the amalgamation of the country. Our children come out of schools every year to join an army of unemployed persons. In the bid to wriggle out of this societal hopelessness, our children take to drugs at frightening dimensions, making the rate of youth who take drugs today to climb to a pandemic level. Statistics of spousal abuses are becoming scary as pent-up angers and frustration about life are tearing husbands and wives asunder in homes. Never has the church faced this level of massive hopelessness and disenchantment of its flocks. Having encountered failure in looking up to government for remedy, the Church is the only hope of the people today.

Statistical data show that church members are more beggarly than they have ever been; in spite of the wealth of the Nigerian nation. Also, despite the unprecedented technological advancements made in the area of health, the number of church members who die of ordinary sicknesses and diseases and sundry other challenges are on the increase. The church is indeed the hope of the common man for remedy.

The political society has dealt very unkindly with the church. Every time election is nigh, politicians who pretend that they are examples of that meek and temperate servant in the bible, come to the church to seek its partnership in securing power. Once they assume power, however, not only do they fail to advance the cause of the people who constitute the catchment area of the church, they put greater burden on the church.

Thus, the church cannot but be interested in good governance and a better society. To seek a better society, the church must fortify its understanding of what the power equation in society is, what the challenges are and why it has become such a rocket science for politicians to give the people good life. I guess this lecture is one of the church's attempts at understanding what the challenges of good governance are and the way forward for Nigeria.

Challenges of 2019 elections

In the build-ups to the Nigerian federal elections which will hold in 2019, there have been several fascinating and interesting scenarios which cannot but interest any student of history. Already, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has cried out that the growing number of political parties would certainly pose challenges to the commission in the 2019 general elections. According to the Chief Technical Adviser to the INEC Chairman, Prof. Bolade Eyinla recently, the 68 registered parties at present, which would translate into 68 party agents in each polling unit and 68 party names on INEC ballot papers, could pose a massive challenge of management to the electoral umpire. If this is added to the other challenge of INEC having to monitor the congresses, conventions and primaries of the 68 parties who are contesting for, conservatively, 1000 elective positions, the challenge could be imagined.

As we speak, President Muhammadu Buhari has on his table the Revised 2019 Electoral Bill. He is likely to decline assent to the bill, in which case, the National Assembly, by a two-third of the two houses, can override it. In the bill, the National Assembly reordered the course of the proposed elections as earlier scheduled by INEC. INEC had proposed to have the presidential and National Assembly elections first on the same day and the governorship and State Houses of Assembly last. However, the National Assembly changed this order to its own election coming first, governorship and Houses of Assembly election next and the presidential election to be held last. Many people have reasoned that the federal parliament was merely being smart as configuring its elections to hold same day with the presidential election could tie its fate with that of the president's. Which the National Assembly does not want. Even though this was for selfish purpose, God is perhaps using the parliament's foolish self-centeredness to establish the people's electoral freedom from the hands of elections that do not represent the wishes of the people.

You will recall that this scenario of having the presidential election on the same day with that of the federal legislators paid off for the legislators in the 2015 elections because, many of them, relatively unknown by the electorate, got voted into office on the hitherto goodwill and name of General Buhari. However, today, same is not the story as the parliamentarians ostensibly felt that the president's goodwill had plummeted greatly, a baggage he could carry into the elections.

The challenge of the practice of party politics in Nigeria today is also a major challenge to the 2019 elections. As I wrote in my column in the Sunday Tribune of March 4, 2018, I said that, comparatively, especially with the First and Second Republics, party politics, like everything bright and beautiful in Nigeria, has become withered flowers. Today, party politics has taken a turn for the worse. Not only has it lost its reverence, parties have no ideological base any longer. Moneybags superintend over the fates of political parties and this is simply because ordinary party men do not own the political parties. The only way to own the parties is to return to what obtained in the First and Second Republics where party men contributed weekly or monthly dues and had the power to ask how they were being administered or how their monies were being spent.

Political parties today have become mere organs of winning elections. Political party system, we must note, is central to the survival of any democracy. It is indeed the platform for recruitment of leadership. In Nigeria's weak political architecture and absence of democratic political culture can be found the nil or weak democratic institutions of the Nigerian state. Some people have argued that the weak party politics Nigeria runs is a product of military authoritarianism and authoritarian legacy we inherited.

The result of the weak party structure that we have today in Nigeria is that, once the political party is not able to guarantee equitable choice, it destroys the foundation upon which representative government stands, limits and pollutes the choice of the people and ultimately provides a wonky and tainted foundation for the electoral process. And the holy writ asks that once the foundation is destroyed, what can the righteous do?

Once we do not get party politics right, we can as well forget about democracy. Party nomination or party primaries is the most integral element of democracy. These have been so corrupted in Nigerian party system, so much that there can be no logical mode of producing God-fearing representatives of the people with the current political party status quo. There is thus no wonder that Nigeria hasn't been able to get democracy right since.

For the church and many Nigerians, the challenge goes beyond the above. In my estimation, the greatest challenge for the church is the quality and inner constitution of elected representatives who would carry the baton of power from 2019 and beyond. For, if Nigeria is not successful in electing God-fearing men and women into positions of power in 2019, who will in turn ameliorate the social burdens that have consequentially become the heavy load which the church carries today, the pressure on the church would multiply, probably leading to a revolt of immense proportion.

The first challenge which the church has to confront is the need for it to wake up from its apathy and lethargy of the past towards politics and the process of acquiring political power. You cannot blame the church wholesale for this. The church had been driven away from having anything to do with the process of seeking power. The backstabbing, murder, corruption, occultist search for power and sundry vices of politicking in Nigeria would make anyone who has integrity to protect to see politics and politicians as lepers. An average Nigerian politician will kill his father and rope his mother for the murder once it leads to political office. This has been on since the 1950s when indigenous party politics took over in the country. It has driven away many God-fearing people who had the heart of bringing meaningful changes into governance.

Over the years however, due to the abdication of space by the righteous for the unrighteous to reign, the worst of us have superintended over the best of us, while the collective keeps silent. Nigeria has been battling challenges of corruption, nepotism, selfish leadership, ethnic irredentism and cronyism, among sundry others. These challenges are brought about by the executive who execute haphazard and self-centered policies which have kept Nigeria down; as well as the legislators who legislate unrighteousness as the credo of Nigeria's legal code. So, for how long will the righteous stay on the sideline and allow the heathens take up the space to foul up Nigeria? This perhaps is the greatest challenge which confronts the church as Nigeria marches to the 2019 elections.

The first way out is that the church must purge itself of its ancient allergy to politics. Not only must it come out of its hiding place, the church must take full and undisguised interest in who runs for offices, from the minutest to the biggest office in the land. Due to its closeness to the congregation, who make up the electorate and the people at the grassroots, the church has an understanding of who the nefarious people in communities and society as a whole are. It must move against the reprehensible set of people who contest elective offices and who have, over the years, drawn Nigeria backwards. The church must also wholeheartedly goad on and support the few good ones in society who demonstrate purity of mind and character.

Even though the time is very short, the time to begin this task is now. My personal take is that the church must however be religion-blind in this task. This is because there are several people out there of different and even nil faiths but whose purity of mind is not in doubt. The church must embark on a methodic process of identifying them and parceling them for the process of seeking political power. The same zeal with which the church evangelizes for lost souls must be deployed in searching for the thousands of pure souls who can be encouraged to change the already messed up status-quo. Even though there cannot be any logical expectation that the church would be hundred per cent successful in getting righteous men to be in power in 2019, whatever strides it makes could be the foundation for future attempts.

The church must also encourage the calls for a return to full-blown democracy in political parties. As it is now, the political parties are in the hands of a very few cabals who do not mean well for Nigeria but who crave a rehash of the same political party system with which they promote charlatans and never-do-wells to political relevance. This has resulted in the unmitigated disaster of governance in Nigeria. Governors, ministers and other political party barons have hijacked the parties, the only vehicle through which anyone who wants to contest political office can deploy. The result is that, if party politics is this uncharted and atrocious, it would be difficult to change the status quo from what it is to what the church and Nigerians in general want it to be, so as to better the lot of the common man on the streets.

Party members must collect their parties from moneybags who run them today and this can be done by fastidiously paying their tokens at party meetings. We must also ensure that only those who have verifiable means of livelihood are nominated for party offices. The mistake of electing those who do not have verifiable means of livelihood is that, they become easily purchasable and worsen the take for the Nigerian people.

Perhaps the most important challenge for the church is how to mobilize its members and communities within its jurisdiction to collect the Permanent Voter's Card (PVC). This is an urgent imperative. Due to its age-long apathy towards the process of acquiring political power, the church has shown little interest in this core area of electioneering. For 2019, there must be an urgent reversal of this mindset. Since PVC ownership is a sine qua non for electing persons into office, other tasks earlier enunciated seem to be secondary when compared to the urgent need to collect the voter's card. It would not be out of tune if the church dedicates some days to encouraging its members to collect the PVCs. It is when the church has ensured that members have sufficiently procured PVCs that it could go ahead with other strategic plans of securing the buying-in of its worthy sons and daughters into the task of vying for elections.

Of important interest to the church and the 2019 elections should be the current herdsmen's crisis. It is apparent that President Buhari cannot be divorced from his paternalistic embrace of his kinsmen whenever they are at loggerheads with other Nigerians. He did that while Governor Lam Adesina was in office when he gathered his Fulani brothers and arrived Ibadan. He had asked the governor, why are your people killing my people? That was Buhari in his unpolluted essence. In today's dailies, the president, toeing earlier comment of another Fulani, the Emir of Kano, Lamido Sanusi, had said that the number of people (apparently Fulani herdsmen) killed in Taraba was more than those killed in Benue, Zamfara. It is the first time in my life I would hear such an indecorous comment from the president of a nation justifying a killing over the other.

What that means, as I said recently, is that if President Buhari is re-elected in 2019, he will continue to side with his Fulani herdsmen kinsmen in clashes with the rest of Nigeria. The killings will get to a climax and Nigerians will be forced to revolt. The presidency and its security apparatus, controlled by the likes of the Minister of Defence, who is also a Fulani and many other Northerners, will send in troops to repel the attacks. May God help us not to return to Aburi, post-2019.

More fundamentally, the church must begin to speak up on the side of righteousness over policies at local, state and federal levels. You will recall that your fellow clergymen – Bishops of the Catholic Church, recently spoke truth to power in an unprecedented way. They had met President Buhari at the Aso Rock Villa and told him to his face that the ship of state was in the process of capsizing. They spoke against the bloodletting in the country which are said to be superintended over by Fulani herdsmen and how the President had literally kept silent. I have said it at another forum that the blood that has been shed in the last years of President Buhari's government has rivaled that which was shed in the Nigerian civil war. A combination of all those speaking up to power has culminated in the President waking up only yesterday to embark on tours of Taraba, Benue and Nassarawa states where the herdsmen have killed hundreds of people.

Even though Christians and politics are uneasy partners, we must begin to befriend politics. Of a truth, philosophers like Nietzsche believe that this kind of alliance could lead to crisis, but the facts of our current helplessness as a people dictate that the church must take more than a passing interest in politics. Nietzsche had said that we must be careful, lest in fighting the dragon, we become the dragon but doesn't the church possess the fire of the Holy Spirit any longer? Should the fire that the dragon spits frighten the church?

In conclusion, I must state that the task of befriending politics in the build-up to 2019 for the church, is very crucial. It is indeed in the interest of the church to so do. Otherwise, there may be a revolt among the congregation at their worsening plights. May God have mercy on us all.

Source: https://www.thecable.ng/church-2019-elections/amp?__twitter_impression=true

Oil subsidy may return as cross-border losses hit N774m daily

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) is worried about the proliferation of fuel stations in communities at the nation's borders which has led to an unprecedented smuggling of petrol to neighboring countries. This has made it difficult to sanitise the supply and distribution matrix in the country.

The Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Dr. Maikanti Baru, said based on the heightened petrol consumption rate of 50 million litre per day, the corporation was incurring an under-recovery of N774 million daily. Under-recovery is the difference between the landing cost and the cost at the pump station.

Baru explained that because of the obvious differential in petrol price between Nigeria and the neighbouring countries, it had become lucrative for the smugglers to use the frontier stations for smuggling of products across the border. This has resulted in a thriving market for Nigerian petrol in Niger Republic, Benin Republic, Cameroun, Chad and Togo and even Ghana which has no direct borders with Nigeria.

Consequently, Baru said: "NNPC is concerned that continued cross-border smuggling of petrol will deny Nigerians the benefit of the Federal Government's benevolence of keeping a fix retail price of N145 per litre despite the increase in PMS open market price above N171 per litre.'' Baru, who spoke in Abuja when he paid a courtesy visit to the Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service, Hammed Ali, hinted that the proliferation has driven up national consumption figure from 35 million litres to above 60 million litres per day.
 
The NNPC boss said a study conducted by the corporation revealed a strong correlation between the presence of the frontier stations and the activities of fuel smugglers. According to him, the smuggling has led to an abnormal surge in the evacuation of petrol from less than 35 million litres per day to more than 60 million litres per day.

The study revealed that 16 states, having 61 local government areas at the border communities, account for 2,201 registered fuel stations. The fuel tank has a combined capacity of 144, 998, 700 litres of petrol. Also, eight states with coastal border communities spread across 24 local government areas account for 866 registered fuel outlets, with combined petrol tank capacity of 73, 443, 086 litres.

A further breakdown of the findings shows that among the states with land borders, three local government areas in Ogun State account for 633 fuel stations with combined petrol tankage of 40, 485,000 litres while nine local councils in Borno State have 337 fuel outlets with combined petrol storage capacity of 21, 114, 480 litres. Lagos State with one local government at the border community has 235 registered fuel stations with total petrol storage facility of 19,916, 600 litres.

On the coastal front, Lagos with six local government areas leads with 487 registered fuel stations with combined in-built storage capacity of 50, 239,560 litres, Akwa Ibom with five councils has 134 registered retail outlets with capacity to store 8, 322, 986 litres, while Ondo State with two councils has 110 fuel stations with capacity to store 3,871,320 litres.Ali said the Customs Service would work with the corporation to tackle the smuggling of petroleum products.

Meanwhile, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has vowed to continue to oppose the full deregulation of the oil sector until three existing refineries are producing at the maximum capacity and new ones are built. Reacting to the NNPC findings, Deputy President of the NLC, Peters Adeyemi, accused the government of laziness and always raising petrol price when it needs cheap money to fund projects. "But for the interventions of the NLC in the last 40 years, the price of petrol would have been more than N500 per litre today. Successive governments have been very lazy in devising means of generating resources to fund their projects whenever revenue dwindles. To government, deregulation means price increment only. They are not willing to explore critical areas of operation that can improve efficiency and reduce corruption prevailing in the system even under this current government. We have said that we will only accept deregulation when the existing refineries are working and new ones are built. Deregulation based on importation will lead to increase in prices and not necessarily improve efficiency of the sector," the labour leader said.

Besides, the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has urged the Federal Government to pay the NNPC all the expenses it incurred on subsidy payment to marketers.

Rising from its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Warri, Delta State at the weekend, PENGASSAN said NNPC had continued to shoulder the responsibility of providing products to close gaps created by the withdrawal of other marketers owing to the non-payment of subsidy claims from 2015 to 2017.

In a statement which was made available yesterday by the PENGASSAN President, Francis Olabode Johnson and the General Secretary, Lumumba Okugbawa, the union stated that the extra burden absorbed by NNPC was depleting the corporation's finances and consequently hampering an effective discharge of its statutory obligations.

The oil workers expressed worry over the delayed payment of subsidy and debts owed oil marketers and urged the Federal Government to resolve the differences to avert the loss of jobs in the oil and gas industry.

Source: http://guardian.ng/news/oil-subsidy-may-return-as-cross-border-losses-hit-n774m-daily/amp/?F=&__twitter_impression=true

OPINION: How Nigerians shoot Nigeria in the foot -Michael Bush

The chronic ailments that pin this country down are only a handful. They include self-deceit, selfishness, and foolishness. Fortunately or unfortunately, none of the lot is natural or extraneous. The nation-destroying vices are man-made: made in Nigeria by Nigerians for self and country!

It is not too hard to deduce that our country is where she has been, man and boy, because of the idiosyncrasies of her people. The situation is worsened by the fact that leadership and followership are as guilty as they are unpatriotic. Or which of the two strata is better: our clueless leaders or we the apathetic population? Nigeria is, has been and, may always be in trouble because those who lead are as bad as, if not worse than, those they lead.

The facts are horrendous and compelling. First, we are a docile people who allow leaders to get away with just about anything. Next, we contrive a system that plays politics even with life. How on earth do Nigerians expect a different result when we keep repeating the same lousy mistakes of old?

For instance, weeks after Dapchi transmogrified into Chibok, we have done absolutely nothing differently to reassure the populace. To this day, no one knows for sure exactly how many of our daughters were carted away. Government's initial back and forth coupled with parents' insistence that the number is 105, not 110 drains away the essential element of believability. We need to step up and provide leadership while so-called leaders step down and manage as followers!

Imagine, they bungled something as basic as lawmaking. Our 36 State Houses of Assembly, in their legislative wisdom, want autonomy for themselves but not for Local Governments which need it more. To the goosy honourable members, autonomy cannot also be sauce for the gander-third-tier. The legislature can only stand up for self; not for the weak, the oppressed, nor the helpless.

Disappointed, my mind wanders back to Dapchi. This may not be the best time to raise this, but when would be? Without any intention whatsoever to rub it in, I just need to wonder aloud about what's going on in the name of education up north. I thought those Chibok and Dapchi girls abducted were in secondary school?

Why then do their mates and they always speak to Anglophonejournalists in Hausa? Is there something I am missing, please? Those I have put this question to always tell me some crap about female education in that part of the country. I know too many northern women who can beat their southern counterparts educationally, to believe such fallacy.

Still, my worry persists. Are we witnessing the downside of a strategem by good-for-nothing sexists called men to keep our sisters, daughters and future wives up north permanently subjugated? Is Hausa the pedagogic lingua franca in the north? I am desperate: just what is going on?

Furthermore, I am horrified that we see the deliberate zoolification of this beautiful country as one of those things. Human beings turn into snakes and monkeys and swallow tens of millions of Naira. Yet, we laugh it off because it's nothing. I mean, what's 36 million or 70 million Naira in a country where people help themselves to (not steal) billions every day?

We are a huge joke. On the eve of the general elections which should activate that century-elusive change, the electorate is busy focusing on clannishness, partisanship and allied backward mannerisms that brought us to this cul-de-sac in the first place. For crying out loud, an alarming majority of current leaders deserve quit notice not tenure extension. These guys only take this country backwards!

Or, do we enjoy the silly ritual of the same folly every four years? 2019 is the time to show that we don't, and indeed that we have had enough of self-inflicted hypocrisy, greed, and lunacy. Let's go out, register and get our voter card so that in February we would use it to render snakes, monkeys, rats, hyenas, wolves, lion kings et al jobless. God bless Nigeria!

Exactly how does the brain of a Nigerian political office holder work?

Why do people we expect so much from give us so little? Howdoes even the most fanatical Buharist explain away the president's decision to visit Kano for the wedding of Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje's daughter just weeks after the same man kept away from Benue and Yobe which had suffered untold lives-involving incidents? Do our leaders think we are fools?

We always knew about President Muhammadu Buhari's propensity to make choices that damn the people but this one is completely over the bar. Try as hard as I have, I can't seem to wrap my head around this presidential malfeasance. I am happy he attended the young couple's wedding but I am sad not being able to understand the president's rationale for ignoring Benue, Yobe and other states which need his presence!

I hope nobody adds salt to injury by offering one of those unmathematical excuses. The only way to heal this hurt faster is the president apologising personally or (since he never would) allowing the matter to dieoff naturally. Or, better still, Governors Samuel Ortom and Ibrahim Gaidam should be smart enough to set up Muslim weddings at Guma/Logo and Dapchi respectively, and invite the president!

Calling aides of second term seekers

Thou shalt not stop being proactive. Thou shalt not react to opponents hate with hate.

Thou shalt not depart from subtle marketing of thy boss's achievements. Just as thou shalt not fail to focus on his/her achievable plans and promises.

This is re-election strategy 101.Thank me on May 29, 2019!

Source: http://reubenabati.com.ng/index.php/component/k2/item/6476-how-nigerians-shoot-nigeria-in-the-foot-micheal-bush/others-views

OPINION: To Kill Hate Speech, End Hate Governance! By Gbenro Olajuyigbe

It is heart-warming that the Federal Government has identified "Hate Speech" as a national vice. Anyway, that is not the whole picture! Hate Speech is not the starting point of the vicious cycle. It is neither the fountain of the malaise nor the foundation of the 'new troubling culture' that is drawing wedges between brothers and building walls, between sisters. A country that is skewed and branded to dispense injustice can never be free from hate. In Aristotle's voice, 'man perfected by society is the best of all animals; he is the most terrible of all when he lives--- without justice'! Nigeria has not been a country where people are perfected to be the best. We are nurtured by injustice to be hard on ourselves, on our country and on others.  Rulers over the years have created Hate Environment for citizens to live in.  Rulers are guilty even though the rest of the citizens are not victims! We are all accomplices!

Youths across the country are going through unending unemployment, yet you have government ministries, departments, and agencies carrying out secret recruitment. Opportunities and   Employments are dispensed to children and relatives of Ethnic and Political patrons as a matter of privilege rather than a matter of qualifications and experience.  No equal opportunity for all even in a country where unemployment has almost become a state policy. And you want Love Speech from those short-changed?

Criteria for admission into Federal Schools; secondary and tertiary have bred much more hate than diversity due to manipulation of both the processes and outcome. Those who rob Peter to Pay Paul will have a lot of Paul to clap for them. Definitely, not Peter! He will not dare to applaud them. Peter, in frustration, will fight back, even from his distressed position; and with every available tool! A Victim's cheapest tool is his or her mouth, the speaker of all words that flow from heart and mind.

The youth who recently won a niche of victory in the 'Not Too Young to Run' campaign should beware of the management of its implementation. The 'seeming success' of Not Too Young to Run'  campaign will amount to nothing if the battle of 'Not Too Poor to Run' is not won. Its counter-productivity and the antithesis will be felt when the space created is only effectively available for the children of the rich. Expensive political system vis-a-vis poverty and unemployment of youth will produce this unintended outcome! Yet, you expect Love speech from those who will be negotiated out for no reason other than they are poor youth?

 Civilization has become a joke in Nigeria; freedom, a ruse, even as we continue to labor in vain for peace in the mist of everyday injustices that have become the manifest feature of our private, public and societal lives. Those who should know better are defending the heresies of avowed wreckers of country and conscience. In policy and practice governments, over the years have brought disgrace, humiliation, and reproach upon Nigeria, a state they have turned to the nation without nationalities and a country without citizens.  We are Yorubas, Ibos, Hausas, Niger Deltans among others. But not Nigerians! Our bellies have become our god, what to eat, our prophet! We live in an era of cruel counter-revolution- of hyper tribalism, - of rentalism, - of nepotism, -of prebendalism and – of unjust denialism. So, why not of hate? Wise states are authoring their development and driving their progress with lessons learned from past failures and present efforts. Wisdom, knowledge, and commitment to collective progress determine the baseline of humanity and define how far one goes in a world set on edge by competition. Does Nigeria understand this context? In the face of mounting challenges posed by corruption, exclusion, poverty, leadership failure, intolerance, injustices, institutional errors and exponential spread of disenchantment, can Nigeria stand, without the right values to contend these?  Nigeria has been unlucky. We always have rulers that present us the choice of doing evil than that of doing well. Rulers who make you to hate than to love.  Rulers addicted to social injustice, and obsessed with nepotism.

How do we walk out of the cold love, vibrating hatred, hostility, and aggression that invade our firmament like colossal? How do we smack the keg of false ideas that propel and sustain mediocrity in our land?

A strike at the very roots of values that breed and nurture honesty, character, integrity, humility, respect for others, social justice, tolerance, accountability, transparency and human dignity would yield results. A new dawn is possible with leadership and followership driven by these values. A new dawn will come when leadership becomes the platform of and for service when service delivery becomes the right of the people and state exists absolutely for the sake of the people. When the primary purpose of the state is indeed the security and welfare of the people. There is no secret weapon for battling vices. The best way to win the war is by creating an open society, ensuring entrance for all and providing exit door for those whose values run contrary to good conscience. We do not have to crush the vicious. We can take them to the threshing floor. Drive them through the mills and turn out better product molded with good input, using new standard of values and reformative laws.

No law can decree love into existence. To end Hate Speech, end Hate Governance. Create just, equal and open society!

Gbenro Olajuyigbe is an Abuja based Executive Director of Emergency & Risk Alert Initiative.

Source: http://saharareporters.com/2018/03/04/kill-hate-speech-end-hate-governance-gbenro-olajuyigbe

APC: Between Oyegun And Tinubu By SOC Okenwa

Chief John Odigie-Oyegun was a former executive Governor of Edo State. In a keenly-contested guber election, decades ago, that pitted him against another former Governor Lucky Igbinedion Odigie-Oyegun narrowly triumphed. A rude battle for the occupation of the Dennis Osadebay Government House in Benin City experience and age prevailed over money. Lucky Igbinedion, the son of the richest man in Edo State, was also a former Chairman of Oredo local government area. As studious students in Benin City then we watched the heated campaign on the state TV with fascination.

Though Lucky later emerged Governor post-Oyegun history had it that a scion of a stupendously-rich family was trounced in an electoral contest he was desperate to win. When he left power after eight uninterrupted years as Governor Igbinedion had had a date with the anti-graft agency for criminal misappropriation of state funds. And in the end he had to cleverly negotiate with the EFCC for a soft-landing by 'vomitting' some of the loot he had cornered.

The randy Lucky failed woefully in his first term in office and as he sought re-election his equally randy billionaire father, Gabriel Osawaru, was once seen in one of the campaign events of his beloved son telling the Edo electorates that Lucky had indeed failed but that he should be given another chance to redeem himself. He compared his son to a poor student who had failed his terminal exams but who needed every moral and parental support to be able to make it next time by repeating the class!

SOC Okenwa
The Edo indigenes gave him another golden opportunity at redemption but Lucky failed yet again! He not only embezzled more of the state funds to the tune of millions of Dollars and billions of Naira but underdeveloped Benin City in particular and the state in general even as his popular family developed single-handedly Okada Wonderland turning the village into a world-class town with world-class infrastructure. It took the arrival of Comrade Adams Oshiomhole to transform Benin city into a befitting city worth its cultural ands academic greatness.

Edo State has produced great politicians and Nigerians in the past. The late Anthony Enahoro made history as a young radical in the national parliament that moved the motion for our accelerated independence pre-1960. He remained a venerated patriot and an elder statesman till he gloriously passed away. Before Edo was carved out of Bendel State the defunct mid-western state had produced the late Governors Ambrose Alli and Osaigbovo Ogbemudia. The two strong-men had fought each other politically when politics in Nigeria had not been polluted with filthy lucre. Then, there were gentlemen in politics Nigeriana and politics of service and honour was the order of the day. Then Nigeria was a good country to live in. And she was promising in her predicted future.

However, Edo State had equally given us the men of infamy. We remember with trepidation the late armed bandit, Lawrence "The Law" Anini, who terrorized the then Bendel State in audacious Oliver Twist-like armed robbery operations. During the Babangida tyranny he was caught, tried and executed! Again, we could not forget in a hurry one infamous Edo man, Tom Ikimi, the former magniloquent Chairman of the defunct National Republican Convention (NRC) and later the Foreign Affairs Minister during the ill-fated Sani Abacha despotism. Then the late 'Khalifa' was the Locust loathed at home and abroad but Ikimi was there as a loyal defender of the indefensible, playing the African Joseph Goebbels!

For some years now John Odigie-Oyegun has been the Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). His mandate was recently, albeit controversially, renewed for one more year by the party's National Executive Committee (NEC). Before the vote of confidence passed on him Oyegun had been at loggerheads with the so-called National Leader of the party, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. 

Between Oyegun and Tinubu there is no love lost. One sees himself as the 'godfather' and kingmaker of the party and the other as a recalcitrant old foxy politician without a power base. The 'Lion of Bourdillon' had sought desperately to discredit Oyegun by portraying him in bad light as a political light-weight, a nonentity without any unifying or mobilizing force in the party. And Oyegun has equally sought to demystify the cult of personality swirling around the proud Lagosian.

The former Governor of Lagos State was appointed by President Muhammadu Buhari to reconcile the existing differences among members in the party. A hard mission in itself given the existing alienation and grievances toward the methods and tactics of Buharism Tinubu accepted the task and went about doing the near-impossible. But sooner than expected he had encountered entrenched hardened positions and conveniently heaped the blame on the party Chairman. He had forwarded a letter to the President and other party Chieftains accusing Oyegun of undermining or sabotaging his mission. Oyegun was summoned by the President and he must have given his own side of the story. Following that open feud the party's NEC extended Oyegun's tenure in a move that was interpreted as spiting Tinubu.

While Oyegun cannot be described as a superlative party Chairman or a leader without problems Tinubu is not a paragon from all indications. For one, Asiwaju, it would be recalled, had had to deal with issues related to graft in the past. For another, many a politician detest his guts and ruthlessness in terms of imposition of candidates and mafia-like stranglehold on western politics. And for yet another, Asiwaju as a political 'prophet' is not respected by all and sundry in Yorubaland. He has laboured very hard to impose his will, Adedibu-like, in the Oduduwa zone but he has failed to win every heart and mind.

While his dominance in Lagos state is doubtless given his achievement as Governor and his uncommon capacity to maintain his political ground his national appeal or popularity is nothing much to write home about. Many Nigerians still see Tinubu as a glorified 'crook' who knows how to work himself to the corridors of power at all times. 

Asiwaju Tinubu has effortfully conquered Lagos through the dint of political hardwork and organization. After governing the state of aquatic splendour for eight long eventful years the strongman of Eko politics has always had his way in determining who succeeded whom and who got what in the state. But it is to his credit that good materials always emerged as Governors for the general good of Lagos.

Seeking extension of influence to other Oduduwa states Tinubu had 'planted' his 'big boys' in government houses in Ibadan, Abeokuta, Osogbo but attempts to impose his preferred candidates on the people had hit a brick wall in Ado-Ekiti and Akure. Governor Ayo Fayose simply organized an electoral heist of the century to be able to outwit Asiwaju. And when Olusegun 'Iroko' Mimiko was there in Ondo State as Governor he displayed little or no respect for Tinubu ensuring that he failed to determine who governed the state.

Between Oyegun and Tinubu there seems to exist some irreconcilable differences, dating back years, bordering on ego and hubris. The President as the bigger man must endeavour to reconcile any differences or the ruling party risks going to the next general elections as a divided house on fire. And that would definitely spell doom for Buharism in his inordinate quest for another 4-year residency of the Aso Rock Villa.

SOC Okenwa
soco_abj_2006_rci@hotmail.fr

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Nigeria’s 2019 general election our major priority – U.S.

The U.S. says Nigeria's 2019 general election and a peaceful transition, remained its major priority in view of the country's strategic position in the region.

The U.S. Department of State said during a background briefing on the first trip of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to Africa, monitored by the News Agency of Nigeria in New York.

Mr. Tillerson would meet with Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari and other top government functionaries, and also leaders of Chad, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya during his travels from Tuesday, March 6 to 13.

The department said over two decades ago, the number of countries in Africa with really democratically elected government were really very few – only three or four.

It said, however, now we had over two dozen African countries with democratically elected governments and which are hopefully not going to have transitions in government through coup d'etats and other illegal methods.

"As we look at the 20 elections, obviously Nigeria, though it's not this year – it's going to be next year – that really is a major priority focus, because that's going to be the third most populous country in the world by 2050.

"It has really very complex political issues, ethnic, tribal and security issues.

"And that's an area that we really are focusing on how to do a peaceful transition, a democratic transition, but more important is how to hold governments accountable to the people," the state department said.

The department explained that obviously, a lot of those African countries were still fragile democracies and the U.S. was trying "to strengthen them."

The U.S. commended the most recent elections in Liberia, saying it was the first open, fair, and peaceful transition of governments in over 75 years, saying that is a good thing.

It regretted what it called the "horrendous rule of Charles Taylor and the degradation of the institutions there, but now we're going back and they're building, and I think with the election of George Weah that's going to be a positive thing".

The U.S. also noted the election of Nana Akufo-Addo in Ghana, Alassane Ouattara in Cote d'Ivoire and Macky Sall in Senegal, describing them as positive developments.

It said, however, that Ethiopia remained a challenge for the U.S. and a focus for it as well and an opportunity.

The U.S. explained that it was looking at trying to build institutions, really strengthen institutions, and also have peaceful transitions and hold governments accountable to the people in Ethiopia.

It said it was also looking at how it could have reconciliation and dialogues between all of the different groups – the Oromos, the Amharas, the Tigrays, and also in Kenya with the opposition and with the ruling government.

Accordingly, the department said building strong institutions and holding governments accountable are some of the things that are certainly going to be the subjects of discussion during Mr. Tillerson's trip.

Source: https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/260700-nigerias-2019-general-election-major-priority-u-s.html/amp?__twitter_impression=true

#2019Election : Pressure Grows on Buhari To Bow Out of Re-election Race.

The calls for him to quit were already loud, coming from two former presidents, a prominent pastor and newspaper editorials. Even Catholic bishops weighed in with criticism.

Now, the president of Nigeria is facing a new crisis: the mass kidnapping of 110 girls from their school late last month, prompting another wave of outrage at the government.

The pressure is mounting on President Muhammadu Buhari to step down after his first term expires next year. A diverse range of Nigerians have joined the chorus, and while the presidential vote is still almost a year away, campaign season in Nigeria is in full swing. Billboards have popped up in parts of the country and election news dominates the headlines.

Nigeria's Constitution allows Mr. Buhari to seek a second term, but already his opponents and former allies are piling on. Even his wife has emerged as a detractor of sorts, using social media to post video clips of politicians criticizing her husband's presidency.

The latest tragedy gripping the nation — the 110 girls who went missing in the town of Dapchi after militants attacked their school — has only deepened the skepticism of Mr. Buhari. He has been criticized for being slow to speak out about the attack, especially after he swore that something like this would never happen again after a similar kidnapping in 2014 of nearly 300 schoolgirls from Chibok.

Then on Friday, Mr. Buhari came under more criticism after militants began a major attack on a military installation near a displaced persons camp in the town of Rann, killing at least three aid workers and several others. Three people were missing amid fears they had been kidnapped. The same camp was erroneously struck by Nigeria's own military jets last year, killing dozens of displaced people and aid workers.

Mr. Buhari has not announced whether he will seek a second term. His aides have indicated that he will, arguing that other aspirants have nothing to offer Nigeria, the continent's most populous nation.

"Buhari has already transformed and changed the image of leadership and that of our leaders in this country, both locally and internationally," said Boss Mustapha, secretary to the federal government.

Mr. Buhari, a retired military general, transfixed voters in 2015 with his promises to lift the nation's troubled economy, end decades of corruption and win the war with Boko Haram, the Islamist militant group that has claimed thousands of lives and uprooted millions from their homes in the north of the country.

All those problems are still festering.

"This good will is being fast depleted by some glaring failures of government," said Archbishop Ignatius Ayau Kaigama, until recently the president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria, which said living conditions have worsened under Mr. Buhari.

Critics also cite Mr. Buhari's health as a concern. He spent weeks at a time last year in London receiving treatment for an illness whose nature he has yet to disclose.

In his time in office, a secessionist movement championed by a group called the Indigenous People of Biafra has gained steam in the southeast of the country, 50 years after a civil war over the same issue left one million people dead. Under Mr. Buhari, military operations have led to dozens of arrests and deaths, and the disappearance of the movement's leader.

Beyond that, conflicts between farmers and pastoralists looking for places for their cattle to graze have escalated, with recent bouts of violence killing dozens.

Critics complain that Mr. Buhari has failed to resolve these tensions. But even his opponents concede that he has tried to work on the promises that helped him win the presidency.

Almost as soon as he began his term, Mr. Buhari began an assault against Boko Haram, with the military taking back territory and capturing and killing scores of militants. His government negotiated the release of several dozen of the students taken in 2014 from the village of Chibok. Two other groups of high-profile hostages — women police officers and university professors — were released this year.

But those successes have been marred by the new kidnappings at the Dapchi school. Officials didn't initially label the episode a kidnapping, despite numerous witnesses reports of militants hauling away the girls. The president's aides would say only that the girls are missing.

The war with Boko Haram still rages, with suicide bombers pulling off regular attacks and militants conducting increasingly complex operations. About 100 students from Chibok are still held hostage.

Yet Mr. Buhari has baffled the nation by repeatedly saying Boko Haram has been defeated.

His government has worked to crack down on corruption, uncovering millions of dollars' worth of cash and making high-profile arrests.

But critics say corruption is still widespread. They were outraged that Mr. Buhari hired a former director of the nation's pension fund to a new post in his government after the previous administration had fired the man on grounds he had pilfered billions.

Mr. Buhari also hired a national health insurance executive who was being investigated by Nigeria's anti-graft agency on suspicion of approving shady contracts and engaging in nepotism. When Transparency International recently announced that Nigerians think that corruption has worsened during Mr. Buhari's tenure, he rejected the report as misleading.

On the economic front, Nigeria officially pulled out of a recession late last year. That achievement has been overshadowed by soaring unemployment and the fact that the country — one of the world's leading producers of oil — faces a fuel scarcity in some areas, with motorists stuck in miles-long lines for hours in blistering heat.

Fed up, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, who served from 1999 to 2007, released an 18-page letter recently calling for Mr. Buhari's "dignified and honorable dismount from the horse."

In a lengthy response, Lai Mohammed, Mr. Buhari's information minister, detailed the president's achievements: a near doubling of foreign reserves, lower inflation, plans for a new rail line, an increase in agriculture exports and production, and other gains.

But the list of people calling on Mr. Buhari to step aside keeps growing. It now includes Ibrahim Babangida, a former military ruler of Nigeria; prominent human rights lawyers; and a coalition of young voters.

The Punch, a popular Nigerian newspaper, said in a recent editorial that Mr. Buhari was "unfamiliar with the nuances of modern governance and insular to the point of self-entrapment in primitive provincialism."

In Nigeria, informal agreements call for the presidency to alternate every two terms between someone from the predominantly Muslim north — where Mr. Buhari is from — and a person from the Christian south. If Mr. Buhari does not seek a second term, many Nigerians will expect the presidency to go to a fellow northerner.

Mr. Buhari maintains a significant base in northern states, but he will need to build more support in other regions to win another term. Analysts are buzzing about suitable replacements.

Potential contenders include Atiku Abubakar, who served as vice president from 1999 to 2007. He is a co-owner of one of Nigeria's largest oil and gas logistics companies and the founder of the American University of Nigeria, a private institution. Another possible candidate is Sule Lamido, a former foreign minister. Both men are members of the opposition People's Democratic Party.

Bola Tinubu, the national leader of Mr. Buhari's party, the All Progressives Congress, was recently appointed by Mr. Buhari to lead reconciliation and confidence-building efforts among party members. Many analysts believed the move was intended to assuage feelings that Mr. Tinubu had been sidelined during Mr. Buhari's administration. Some speculate Mr. Tinubu could make a bid for the presidency himself.

Tunde Bakare, a well-known pastor who was once Mr. Buhari's running mate, has also become a vocal opponent.

"This administration anchored its policy outlook on three main thrusts, including security, job creation through diversification, and anti-corruption," Mr. Bakare said in what he called his own state of the nation speech. "Yet all around us are signs of retrogression."

Dionne Searcey reported from Abuja, and Tony Iyare from Lagos, Nigeria. Emmanuel Akinwotu contributed reporting from Abuja.

Original piece can be read via https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/03/04/world/africa/nigeria-muhammadu-buhari.html?referer=https://t.co/GHmIpUDO7b?amp=1#click=https://t.co/GHmIpUDO7b