By Desmond Orjiakor
Every well-informed Nigerian living in the country since the second coming of the military in December 1983 knows that very little investment was made in the power sector until the Olusegun Obasanjo administration came on board on May 29, 1999. For many, this is a misconception. Another misconception was the one peddled by the late political orator and former minister of power, and later Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Chief Bola Ige, that the sector could be fixed within six months. Those two misconceptions drove the thinking in the power sector. There were also very fundamental structural problems. Public utilities were run as a monopoly. Not just a monopoly, but also very top heavy and centralized in its administration, in the case of the power sector. And so, there were a number of things that had to be done.
*Obasanjo
There were the reforms, for instance, the 2005 Act, which provides for the unbundling of the utility into different entities which happened during the Obasanjo administration when Senator Liyel Imoke was minister. I think, Imoke worked closely with the Bureau of Public Enterprises, BPE, to make sure that the law was passed. In fact, the Power Reform Act was one of the most difficult laws to be passed in the National Assembly for obvious reasons. But it was passed, and that was the beginning of the reforms in earnest. With the passage of the law, Nigerians started seeing the unbundling of the utilities into smaller entities and this, in turn, saw them independently managed and being run more like business entities. This, of course, was a step in the right direction heading towards ultimately what we now see as the privatization of these utilities.
All the structural amendments that needed to happen, and all started during the Obasanjo administration. There was an attempt to re-bundle the utilities during the Umaru Musa Yar'Adua administration. This delayed for over two years the reforms and progress that had been made. Yet, the fact that the Goodluck Jonathan administration came back to that same blueprint of the Obasanjo era has led to some of the improvements we see in the sector today. We now see that the Federal Government budget for the power sector was very huge. Now, with the private sector buying in and taking some ownership through the privatization process, we are now seeing the Federal Government spending less and the private sector taking more responsibilities for investment in power supply.
Monday, October 19, 2015
Friday, October 16, 2015
Somaliland: The Strains Of Success
Somaliland’s hybrid system of tri-party democracy and traditional clan-based governance has enabled the consolidation of state-like authority, social and economic recovery and, above all, relative peace and security but now needs reform. Success has brought greater resources, including a special funding status with donors – especially the UK, Denmark and the European Union (EU) – as well as investment from and diplomatic ties with Turkey and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), though not international recognition. It is increasingly part of the regional system; ties are especially strong with Ethiopia and Djibouti. Given the continued fragility of the Somalia Federal Government (SFG), which still rejects its former northern region’s independence claims, and civil war across the Gulf of Aden in Yemen, Somaliland’s continued stability is vital. This in turn requires political reforms aimed at greater inclusion, respect for mediating institutions (especially the professional judiciary and parliament) and a regional and wider internationally backed framework for external cooperation and engagement.
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL REPORT
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL REPORT
Curbing Violence In Nigeria (III): Revisiting The Niger Delta
Violence in the Niger Delta may soon increase unless the Nigerian government acts quickly and decisively to address long-simmering grievances. With the costly Presidential Amnesty Program for ex-insurgents due to end in a few months, there are increasingly bitter complaints in the region that chronic poverty and catastrophic oil pollution, which fuelled the earlier rebellion, remain largely unaddressed. Since Goodluck Jonathan, the first president from the Delta, lost re-election in March, some activists have resumed agitation for greater resource control and self-determination, and a number of ex-militant leaders are threatening to resume fighting (“return to the creeks”). While the Boko Haram insurgency in the North East is the paramount security challenge, President Muhammadu Buhari rightly identifies the Delta as a priority. He needs to act firmly but carefully to wind down the amnesty program gradually, revamp development and environmental programs, facilitate passage of the long-stalled Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) and improve security and rule of law across the region.
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Clark, The Father, Jonathan, The Son
By Reuben Abati
I HAVE
tried delaying the writing of this piece in the honest expectation that someone
probably misquoted Chief E.K. Clark, when he reportedly publicly disowned
former President Goodluck Jonathan. I had hoped that our dear father, E.K.
Clark, would issue a counter statement and say the usual things politicians
say: “they quoted me out of context!” “Jonathan is my son”. That has not
happened; rather, some other Ijaw voices, including one Joseph Evah, have come
to the defence of the old man, to join hands in rubbishing a man they once
defended to the hilt and used as a bargaining chip for the Ijaw interest in the
larger Nigerian geo-politics.
*Jonathan and Clark
If President Jonathan had returned to power on
May 29, 2015, these same persons would have remained in the corridors of power,
displaying all forms of ethnic triumphalism. It is the reason in case they do
not realize it, why the existent power blocs that consider themselves most fit
to rule, continue to believe that those whose ancestors never ran empires can
never be trusted with power, hence they can only be admitted as other people’s
agents or as merchants of their own interests which may even be defined for
them as is deemed convenient. Mercantilism may bring profit, but in power
politics, it destroys integrity and compromises otherwise sacred values.
President
Jonathan being publicly condemned by his own Ijaw brothers, particularly those who
were once staunch supporters of his government further serves the purpose of
exposing the limits of the politics of proximity. Politics in Africa
is driven by this particular factor; it is at the root of all the other evils:
prebendalism, clientelism and what Matthew Kukah has famously described as the
“myownisation of power”. It is
both positive and negative, but obviously, more of the latter than the former.
It is considered positive only when it is beneficial to all parties concerned,
and when the template changes, the ground also shifts. As in that song, the
solid rock of proximity is soon replaced by shifting sands. Old worship becomes
new opportunism. And the observant public is left confounded.
*Abati
Chief
E.K. Clark? Who would ever think, Chief E.K. Clark would publicly disown
President Jonathan? He says Jonathan was a weak President. At what point
did he come to that realization? Yet, throughout the five years (not six,
please) of the Jonathan Presidency, he spoke loudly against anyone who opposed
the President. He was so combative he was once quoted as suggesting that Nigeria could
have problems if Jonathan was not allowed to return to office. Today, he is the
one helping President Jonathan’s successor to quench the fires. He always
openly said President Jonathan is “his son”. Today, he is not just turning
against his own son, he is telling the world his son as President lacked the
political will to fight corruption. He has also accused his son of being too
much of a gentleman. Really? Gentlemanliness would be considered honourable in
refined circles. Is Pa E.K. Clark recommending something else in order to
prove that he is no longer a politician but a statesman as he says?
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Five Facts About Millions Trapped In Hunger And Poverty
"World Food Day is marked on 16 October to raise awareness of the challenges of addressing world hunger and encourage people to get involved in the fight against it. The theme for 2015 is "Social protection and agriculture: Breaking the cycle of rural poverty" - which puts the spotlight on the link between ending hunger and food insecurity by enhancing social protection, a key tool in breaking the cycle of poverty.
"Education, healthcare and financial support are all forms of social protection which plays a major role in ensuring direct access to food or the means to buy food. Social protection is also essential in stimulating agricultural production, economic activity, resilience, and to encourage sustainable natural resource uses in local communities..."
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
Nelson Mandela ‘Persecuted Me’ Says South African Tribal King
King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, the king of the Thembu people, says his prosecution for terrorising his subjects was a political ploy cooked up by Nelson Mandela who had designs on his throne
The “tyrannical and despotic” Xhosa king ordered to jail for 12 years earlier this month for perpetrating a "reign of terror" over his people has blamed Nelson Mandela for his predicament.
King Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, 51, king of the Thembu clan to which Mr Mandela belonged, lost an appeal against his conviction for assault, arson, kidnapping and defeating the ends of justice heard by South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal.
How Safe Are Instant Noodles?
By Carllister Ejinkeonye
For many years now, instant noodles appear to have become one of the most favourite meals in many homes in this part of the world, and seem to have retained the capacity to greatly endear many mothers to their children.
Ask any child out there the particular meal he expects his mother to serve him once he gets home and he will not hesitate to name his favourite brand of instant noodles. Also, among students faced with several lectures in a day and workers hurrying off to their offices and sundry assignments, instant noodles remain a readily available, easy-to-prepare, meal to quickly assuage biting hunger before rushing off to the next lecture or assignment.
Some people have even become so addicted to these noodles that even where they have all the time in the world to prepare another meal, they would still settle for their favourite brand of instant noodles.
(pix: wikipedia) |
Whatever the brand – Indomie, Chikki, Mimee, Honeywell, Tummy Tummy,etc, – it has, no doubt, become the magic word that can instantly wake a child from sleep to take his meal when ordinarily he wouldn’t have loved to. For many children, adolescents and even adults, these noodles qualify as the “real meals” in the family menu.
Not too long ago, I heard some people talking about how these instant noodles do not constitute the healthy diet their consumers have always assumed they are. This got me really troubled. As is the case in many other homes, instant noodles were also enthusiastically consumed in my own home.
This now compelled me to research this popular meal, and what I discovered was quite astonishing. As one with a deep passion for children and youths who of course are the major consumers of this product, I cannot but cry out just like I did in one of my articles last year titled “The Child, The Youth and The Country, Nigeria.”
I would be glad if the National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON), the Ministry Of Health and all other government agencies entrusted with the duty of determining the healthiness of what are offered to consumers, and indeed, concerned well-meaning Nigerians, would look at my findings and see if indeed we are not all running after this favourite, easy-to-prepare, delicious meal to our own hurt? If indeed my discoveries are valid, then many kids and adults are already at the waiting hall of future health disasters.
Now, these instant noodles contain very high amount of sodium, in fact, more than 50% of the recommended limit for adults and even much more for children. This means that as one consumes other meals that equally contain sodium, it would amount to excess intake which then exposes the consumer to the high risk of hypertension, other heart diseases, stroke, kidney damage, etc.
Also, these noodles are coated with waxes that are considered very injurious to health. Some findings have even suggested the wax could cause cancer. Now do this little experiment. Get a pack of instant noodles and put into a bowl, and pour hot water on it which should cover it and wait for a few minutes. You will see the wax coating which was probably used to stick the noodles together separating themselves and floating on the water.
A look at a pack of instant noodles will also show that one of the ingredients it contains is the toxic preservative known as Tertiary-Butyl Hydroquinone (TBHQ). The amount of it in the product as stated on the pack may appear small but considering the quantity of instant noodles consumed regularly by many people, soon, several consumers may discover when it has become too late that the amount of this TBHQ in their bodies have become excess and therefore harmful. And according to experts, restlessness in children, nausea and actual vomiting could be some of the indications that one has got this substance in excess in one’s body. Also, the seasoning that accompanies each pack of instant noodles contains Monosodium Glutamate (MSG). This serves to enhance the flavour of the noodles, thereby increasing its demand and consumption and also the negative effects it has on consumers. Interestingly, this same additive is found in several prepared and packaged food. MSG operates on the brain and may affect the brain cells as more doses are consumed over a considerable time. Its impact on the brain can also lead to several other diseases.
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
New Oil Revenue Plans: Nigeria Could Shoot Itself In The Foot
By Charles Kennedy
The new government of Muhammadu Buhari is scrambling to find ways to plug budget holes. Between July 2014 and September 2015, receipts for the state-owned National Nigerian Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) from selling oil dropped by two-thirds.
Buhari’s government has said it is
interested in renegotiating contracts with oil majors, with some of the
contracts dating back to the 1990s. The intention is to tweak the terms in
order to boost the government’s take.
There are several majors operating inNigeria , including ExxonMobil,
Chevron, Eni, and most importantly, Royal Dutch Shell. Shell has been operating
in Nigeria
for decades. On October 5, Shell announced that it had started up the third phase of its
offshore Bonga facility, which will have peak production of 50,000 barrels per
day.
But a change in the terms of the production-sharing contracts could slow or derail investment in new ventures. The FT reports that there are eight offshore projects, which could add a combined 1 million barrels per day in new production by 2020, that could be deferred because of both low oil prices as well as the uncertain regulatory environment. Shell has already put off its final investment decision on another expansion of the Bonga South West.
In response to the possibility of changing the contracts, an executive from one of the international oil majors reportedly said to the FT: “Don’t mess with the fiscal terms.”
International companies are already slashing spending on new projects as they try to shore up their balance sheets. But the unfolding drama inNigeria
represents a new challenge. Oil-producing countries are also struggling, so
battles over how to slice up the revenues from oil fields could proliferate.
By Charles Kennedy of Oilprice.com
There are several majors operating in
But a change in the terms of the production-sharing contracts could slow or derail investment in new ventures. The FT reports that there are eight offshore projects, which could add a combined 1 million barrels per day in new production by 2020, that could be deferred because of both low oil prices as well as the uncertain regulatory environment. Shell has already put off its final investment decision on another expansion of the Bonga South West.
In response to the possibility of changing the contracts, an executive from one of the international oil majors reportedly said to the FT: “Don’t mess with the fiscal terms.”
International companies are already slashing spending on new projects as they try to shore up their balance sheets. But the unfolding drama in
By Charles Kennedy of Oilprice.com
The Defeat Of President Buhari’s Idealism
By Femi
Aribisala
THINGS have not been going according to plan for President Buhari. For the last four months since his famous victory, the president has been engaged with a battle royal with the very people who put him in power. In order to win the election, Buhari had to form an alliance with wily politicians of the old-school; men seasoned at getting their hands dirty and adept at manipulating the system to power-political advantage.
THINGS have not been going according to plan for President Buhari. For the last four months since his famous victory, the president has been engaged with a battle royal with the very people who put him in power. In order to win the election, Buhari had to form an alliance with wily politicians of the old-school; men seasoned at getting their hands dirty and adept at manipulating the system to power-political advantage.
*Femi Aribasala
Buhari had tried to make
it without these men in the past, but without success. On his third
attempt in 2011, he opted for Tunde Bakare as his running mate. Bakare
was not a politician but a man of known integrity: a radical Christian pastor
to boot. Nevertheless, Buhari still lost by 10 million votes to the
lesser-known Goodluck Jonathan.
In 2015, he chose Yemi
Osinbajo as his running-mate, another man of integrity and, yet again, a
Christian pastor. But there was something different this time
around. He agreed to dine with known political devils. He
formed an alliance with the very political elite he had long despised.
These are men who know the crooked ropes of the Nigerian political
system. They know how to finance a nationwide campaign with
funds obtained magically; no questions asked. They know how to buy
and manipulate the press. They know how to conjure votes with the
sleight of hand.
With
their help, Buhari finally became president against all the odds. The
million naira question then became how he would rule alongside these strange
bedfellows. How is he going to be their anointed president without
becoming one of them? How is he going to be president without becoming
another politician? How can he become president through the help of these
men without becoming hostage to them in his victory?
Buhari
has kept Nigeria
waiting as he struggled with this dilemma. While the press nicknamed him
“Baba Go-Slow,” behind the scenes, he was fighting an epic battle against his
strange allies the best way he knew how. In that free-for-all, Buhari has
thrown his best punches and made his best moves. Finally, after four
months of protracted infighting in which his media handlers tried all
they could to put the best spin on the situation, he finally caved in and
accepted defeat.
On
30th September, 2015, Buhari was forced to accept he could not go it
alone. On that day, he finally decided to join the APC politically as its
president. Even more significantly, he finally agreed to join forces as
president with those he had despised all his political life; the PDP. On
that fateful day, President Muhammadu Buhari jettisoned his earlier
druthers. He relinquished his much-ballyhooed “change” programme and
became reluctantly a full-fledged old-school politician.
*President Buhari and Senate President, Saraki
Buhari’s
first mistake was to presume his campaign idealism could carry him through his
presidency. Having won the election comfortably, the president decided
the decent thing to do was to allow the legislators in the National Assembly to
choose their own leaders without interference from Aso Rock.
This
was a departure from the procedure of his predecessors and his naïve
supporters praised him for it. This was the Buhari they voted for; a man
who would breathe new life into the clogged political system. But the
whole thing backfired disastrously as the president became a victim of his own
attempted saintliness.
Monday, October 12, 2015
Central African Republic: The Roots Of Violence
The full report is currently available in: French.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Crisis in the Central African Republic (CAR) is longterm and characterised by sporadic surges of violence against a backdrop of state disintegration, a survival economy and deep inter-ethnic cleavages. Armed groups (including the anti-balaka and the ex-Seleka) are fragmenting and becoming increasingly criminalised; intercommunal tensions have hampered efforts to promote CAR’s national unity and mend its social fabric. Unfortunately, the roadmap to end the crisis, which includes elections before the end of 2015, presents a short-term answer. To avoid pursuing a strategy that would merely postpone addressing critical challenges until after the polls, CAR’s transitional authorities and international partners should address them now by implementing a comprehensive disarmament policy, and reaffirming that Muslims belong within the nation. If this does not happen, the elections risk becoming a zero-sum game.
By virtue of its geography and history, CAR is located at the crossroads between two regions and two peoples: in the north, the Sahel with its pastoralist communities and majority Muslim merchants, and in the south, Central Africa with its communities of the savanna, initially animist but now predominantly Christian. The Seleka power grab in March 2013 marked a fundamental reversal of CAR’s traditional political landscape. For the first time since independence, a force stemming from the Muslim population of the north and east of the country held the reins of power. The ensuing clashes between Seleka and anti-balaka forces generated strong intercommunal tensions that were exacerbated by the instrumentalisation of religion, societal fractures and collective fears, reviving traumatic memories of the pre-colonial slave trade era.
Cameroon: The Threat of Religious Radicalism
The full report is available in: French.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
In Cameroon, the rise of Christian revivalist (born again) and Muslim fundamentalist movements is rapidly changing the religious landscape and paving the way for religious intolerance. Fundamentalist groups’ emergence, combined with communal tensions, creates a specific risk in the North and increases competition for leadership of the Muslim community: such competition has already led to local conflicts.
*President Paul Biya of Cameroon
Moreover, the various religious groups have negative perceptions of each other. The state and the mainstream religious organisations’ response to the emerging radicalism is limited to the Boko Haram threat and therefore inadequate, and in some cases carries risk. A coherent and comprehensive response has to be implemented by the government and religious organisations to preserve religious tolerance and to avoid the kind of religious violence seen in neighbouring Nigeria and the Central African Republic.
Unlike these two countries, Cameroon has never experienced significant sectarian violence. However, the emergence of radical religious groups risks destabilising its climate of religious tolerance. Traditional Sufi Islam is increasingly challenged by the rise of more rigorist Islamic ideology, mostly Wahhabism. The current transformation is mainly promoted by young Cameroonian Muslims from the South, whereas the Sufi Islam of the North, dominated by the Fulani, seems on the decline. These southern youths speak Arabic, are often educated in Sudan and the Gulf countries, and are opposed both to Fulani control of the Muslim community and to the ageing religious establishment. Disagreements between Sufi leaders, traditional spiritual leaders and these newcomers are not only theological: the conflict between “ancients” and “moderns” is also a matter of economic and political influence within the Muslim community.
These changes have divided Muslim communities and already degenerated into localised clashes between Islamic groups. Fundamentalist groups’ growth in the North, combined with local communal tensions, is a potential source of conflict. In the South, the competition between Sufi members and Wahhabi-inspired groups over leadership of the Muslim community will increase and could lead to localised violence.
Friday, October 9, 2015
ANC Being Destroyed By In-fighting, Division – Zuma
Negative tendencies such as the bulk buying of membership and gate keeping were costing the party votes, party presidentJacob Zuma said on Friday.
Delivering his political report to the national general council (NGC), Zuma also warned against ill-discipline, hooliganism and violence taking place in the party.
“There is a lot of work that must still be done to rid the movement of certain tendencies which may undermine the gains we have made."
He said this was "even more important" as the party needed "an effective African National Congress [ANC]" to prepare for the elections.
"We have continuously received an overwhelming number of votes in the national general elections; thank the millions of people who voted for the ANC in the last elections and acknowledge the hard work of all the tiers and structures during that period.
“It was a difficult election. While celebrating the 2014 election victory, we realised some of our traditional voters have in recent year become dissatisfied and some have chosen to abstain from the elections, demonstrating their displeasures, but are still remaining loyal to the movement.”
Zuma said South Africa’s loyalty to the party should not be taken for granted.
Nigeria: The Vendetta In DSS
By Ikechukwu Amaechi
When President Muhammadu Buhari pulled out his kinsman, Lawal Daura, from retirement to head the Department of State Services (DSS), it did not come as a surprise to many.
The DSS with Ita Ekpenyong as Director General had become overtly partisan in the run up to the 2015 general election and the moment former President Goodluck Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) lost the vote, it was apparent that Ekpenyong’s days were numbered.
It didn’t also come as a surprise to many discerning observers of the country’s security and power architecture when about 40 DSS top ranking personnel, including its rambunctious and noisy spokesperson, Marilyn Ogar, were sacked or compulsorily retired on August 31.
What many Nigerians did not foresee, however, was what happened two weeks later.
On September 11, the appointments of 60 trainee officers out of 452 that belonged to Basic Course 28 of 2014 codenamed COBC28/2014 were whimsically terminated and the trainees thrown out of the State Services Academy (SSA) in Lagos.
Those dismissed had only one month of training to undergo before their commissioning as senior intelligence officers on October 26, 2015.
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Cross River's Politics Of Name Dropping
By Dan Amor
It is alarmingly discomforting that Cross Rivers State, unarguably one of the most endowed states in Nigeria in terms of human capital and its twin benefit of modern civilization, is gradually slouching towards sentimental politics, if not politics of bitterness. Politics of integrity, tolerance and civility for which the state was highly rated was recently threatened by fellows who suddenly invaded the terrain with the sole intention to loot and perpetuate themselves in office as though the state was no longer capable of regeneration. Indeed, the gain-politicians from within the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, filled with intractable ambition and desperation to hijack the political machinery from their benefactors hit a dry well when they found out that the then governor Senator Liyel Imoke who was leader of the party in the state was not a pushover as they had thought.
*Former Gov Liyel Imoke
This development generated a dry rot of apathy, infighting and distrust culminating in last minute defections to other parties. But the arguments, the back-hall scheming, and the last minute flip-flops that somehow produced real accomplishments also set in motion an almost tragic series of events that threatened the peace and stability of the state. Since, as they say, to the funeral of an elephant, all manner of knives are invited, the foibles and frailty came to a defining moment when the unpopular ones saw themselves roundly defeated and their sense of frustrated ambition got understood in their bones. Rather than appreciating the reality of their predicament and re-strategize for yet another round, they are dropping Imoke's name here and there as being responsible for their failure.
Yet, beyond the empire building, the raining of insults and abuses on Imoke, the backstabbing, the restrained idealism, the cynical posturing, the raw ambition, and, above all, the endless political spinning in the state, the public deserves an overview of the real issues fueled less by any score-settling agenda than by an honest investigation into what really happened. For dispassionate observers of the political scene in Cross River State since the current democratic political dispensation began in 1999, the PDP, after the struggle of the primaries with Kanu Agabi (SAN), went on to win the general elections even though the odds were against Donald Duke, its candidate. It could be recalled that the All Peoples Party, APP, had more members at the local governments than the PDP and had members at the State House of Assembly. It also had members at the National Assembly. Imoke was the Director General of Donald Duke Campaign Organisation and a founding member of the PDP who brought the party to the state. Sixteen years down the road he and his team were able to deliver the state to PDP to the glory of God.
It is alarmingly discomforting that Cross Rivers State, unarguably one of the most endowed states in Nigeria in terms of human capital and its twin benefit of modern civilization, is gradually slouching towards sentimental politics, if not politics of bitterness. Politics of integrity, tolerance and civility for which the state was highly rated was recently threatened by fellows who suddenly invaded the terrain with the sole intention to loot and perpetuate themselves in office as though the state was no longer capable of regeneration. Indeed, the gain-politicians from within the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, filled with intractable ambition and desperation to hijack the political machinery from their benefactors hit a dry well when they found out that the then governor Senator Liyel Imoke who was leader of the party in the state was not a pushover as they had thought.
*Former Gov Liyel Imoke
This development generated a dry rot of apathy, infighting and distrust culminating in last minute defections to other parties. But the arguments, the back-hall scheming, and the last minute flip-flops that somehow produced real accomplishments also set in motion an almost tragic series of events that threatened the peace and stability of the state. Since, as they say, to the funeral of an elephant, all manner of knives are invited, the foibles and frailty came to a defining moment when the unpopular ones saw themselves roundly defeated and their sense of frustrated ambition got understood in their bones. Rather than appreciating the reality of their predicament and re-strategize for yet another round, they are dropping Imoke's name here and there as being responsible for their failure.
Yet, beyond the empire building, the raining of insults and abuses on Imoke, the backstabbing, the restrained idealism, the cynical posturing, the raw ambition, and, above all, the endless political spinning in the state, the public deserves an overview of the real issues fueled less by any score-settling agenda than by an honest investigation into what really happened. For dispassionate observers of the political scene in Cross River State since the current democratic political dispensation began in 1999, the PDP, after the struggle of the primaries with Kanu Agabi (SAN), went on to win the general elections even though the odds were against Donald Duke, its candidate. It could be recalled that the All Peoples Party, APP, had more members at the local governments than the PDP and had members at the State House of Assembly. It also had members at the National Assembly. Imoke was the Director General of Donald Duke Campaign Organisation and a founding member of the PDP who brought the party to the state. Sixteen years down the road he and his team were able to deliver the state to PDP to the glory of God.
Thursday, October 1, 2015
A Problem Like Fulani Herdsmen
By Ugochukwu
Ejinkeonye
The brutal abduction early last week of Chief Olu Falae, a
former secretary to the government of the federation (SGF) and former finance
minister, by a band of suspected Fulani herdsmen has once again brought to the
fore the often tragic excesses of these cattle herders whose distorted and unwholesome
understanding of their place as co-inhabitants in their host communities
appears to have led them into the erroneous and dangerous belief that they are,
perhaps, incapable of being restrained by any law.
On Monday, September 21, 2015, the
day Falae turned 77, armed Fulani herdsmen reportedly stormed his farm at Ilado
in Akure North council of Ondo
State , attacked his
workers and violently took him away.
This is how his personal assistant (PA), Capt Moshood Raji
(retd), explained what happened while speaking with newsmen in Akure on Thursday, September 24, the day Falae
regained his freedom, as reported by Vanguard newspaper on Friday:
“About a month ago, there was a clash between the herdsmen and Chief
when some cows destroyed maize on the farm. I was the one that led the
policemen to arrest them. We arrested some and detained them for about four
days. Chief Falae said he has no problem with them that they have to sign an
undertaking that they will not go there again. They signed an agreement that
they will not go there again. The Fulani Secretary signed for them. The
secretary then said I should caution Oga
(Falae) that he should go and fence his farm. He said if he dared harm any cow
or kill any of their cows, there would be trouble. He said that before the
officer in charge of SARS. They have [now] carried out the threat. What they
destroyed was about N500,000.00 but N120,000 was paid and the chief distributed
the money to all his workers when it was brought to him.”
After his abductors
set him free, Falae reportedly told Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State
who visited him that during his four days in captivity, he was made to sleep on
bare floor and trek several kilometers from his farm in Ilado, where he was
kidnapped, to about 10
kilometers near Owo, where he was eventually set free.
And when Gen Alani Akinrinade visited him on Monday September 28, he explained
further:
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Why I Withdrew From The APC Bayelsa Governorship Primary
By Timi Alaibe
It is with all nostalgia that
I recall the zeal, enthusiasm and hope with which thousands of Bayelsans made a
statement in the direction of change in August, 2015. I can also vividly recall
a mental replay of the occasion wherein a qualitative representation of the
leadership of our great party, the All Progressives Congress ( APC) ushered in
respected leaders and members from their then party, Peoples Democratic Party (
PDP)
That
singular event has been phenomenal just as its true meaning and direction have
all exuded confidence, unity of purpose, cohesion, collectivism and courage.
That day undoubtedly marked the beginning of a people's journey from
hopelessness and quandary as enunciated by the accidental PDP-led government in Bayelsa state to that of quality
leadership that an APC government will represent.
As one of such leaders who took that historic decision, I thought of
giving a further bite to my burning desire to extricate the state from abysmal leadership
failure. Therefore, my aspiration to be governor after series of consultations
was to rekindle our collective hope and lift the state beyond its current state
of decay under the PDP.
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