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Niger Republic Applauds Nigeria Over $1.96b Kano-Katsina-Maradi Railway Project

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Bazoum Mhamed (Credit: wikimedia)

President Mohammed Bazoum of Niger Republic has expressed appreciation to President Muhammadu Buhari for approving the $1.96 billion Kano-Katsina-Maradi railway project.

The Nigerien leader, who was on State Visit to Nigeria, made the commendation after a closed door bilateral talks with Buhari in the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Wednesday.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Buhari had in February 2021 performed the ground-breaking ceremony of the Kano–Dutse–Jibia (Katsina State}–Maradi 284km rail project connecting Kano in Nigeria to Maradi in Niger Republic, virtually.

The project, approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) in September 2020, is believed to be crucial to rail development in Nigeria and in the West African sub-region.

It is being executed by Mota-Engil Group, a multinational engineering and construction company.

The project, with 15 stations along the corridor, would boost socio-economic activities in Kano, Katsina and Jigawa states in Nigeria as well as Maradi in Niger Republic.

Bazoum said: “On economic issues, we discussed the Kano-Katsina-Maradi railway project and this project is an infrastructure that will integrate the economies of Nigeria and Niger.

“And so I’m here to thank President Buhari, for his efforts at ensuring that this project has taken off and I hope that it will be sustained because this project will radically change the trading exchange between the two countries.

“We also spoke about the gas pipeline in the sense that gas and oil now have become an issue in world politics, in the world economy.”

He also lauded Nigeria for leading the way in funding activities of the Multi-National Joint Task Force, currently maintaining security in the Lake Chad basin.

“My visit coincides with the very big operation that is taking place jointly today in the Lake Chad Basin region against the terrorists and this big operation is being conducted by MNJTF – the Multinational Joint Task Force.

“And as you will know very well the operations of the Multinational Joint Task Force is funded almost entirely by Nigeria. And this operation is meant to help in providing security challenges that both of our countries are facing.

“I want to reiterate my recommendation and thanks to President Buhari, who because of his support this operation is going on and will be very much continuing in future,” he said.

The Nigerien leader expressed optimism that Nigeria and Niger Republic would continue to promote ties in the areas of security and economic development.

NAN reports that the visiting Nigerien leader was also hosted to a lunch by Buhari shortly after their bilateral engagement.

NAN

Nigeria: Tribunal Stops Multi-Choice From Increasing DStv, GOtv Tariffs

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A Competition and Consumer Protection Tribunal sitting in Abuja has restrained Multi-Choice Nigeria Limited from increasing its tariffs and cost of products and services scheduled to begin on April 1.

The three-member tribunal presided over by Thomas Okosun, gave the order following an ex-parte motion moved by Festus Onifade, a legal practitioner, on behalf of himself and the Coalition of Nigeria Consumers.

Other members of the tribunal include Sola Salako Ajulo and Ibrahim EL-Yakubu.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that in the suit marked: CCPT/OP/1/2022, Multi-Choice Nigeria Limited and Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission are 1st and 2nd respondents respectively.

The motion ex-parte filed by the applicants on March 29 was brought pursuant to Section 39 (1) & (2) of the FCCPC Act 2018; Order 26, Rule 5 (2), (3) & 26 Rule 6 (1) & (2) Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 2019 and Section 47(a), (b), (c),(d), of the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act 2018.

The applicants had prayed for “an order of interim injunction restraining the 1st defendant/respondent, either by itself, agents, representatives, officers or privies, howsoever described, from carrying out the impending increase in tariffs and cost of its products and services intended to take effect from 1st April, 2022, until the hearing and determination of the motion on notice already filed before this tribunal.

“An order of the Honourable Tribunal mandating the 1st defendant/respondent to maintain status quo pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice.

  “And for such further order or other orders as this Honourable Tribunal may deem fit to make in the circumstance.”

“The 1st defendant/respondent is hereby restrained, either by itself, agents, representatives, officers or privies, howsoever described, from carrying out the impending increase in tariffs and cost of its products and services intended to take effect from 1st April, 2022 until the hearing and determination of the motion on notice already filed before this Honourable Tribunal.

“The 1st defendant/respondent is hereby mandated to maintain status quo pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice,” the tribunal ruled.

The matter was adjourned until April 11  for the hearing and determination of the motion on notice.

“All parties in this suit are to appear before this Honourable Tribunal on the 11th day of April, 2022,” it ruled.

NAN

Turning The Other Cheek For Will Smith, By Azu Ishiekwene

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Editor-in-chief of LEADERSHIP Newspapers, Azu Ishiekwene

One week before Hollywood, Nigeria hosted a different kind of Oscar moment. At the swearing-in ceremony of Charles Soludo, former governor of the Central Bank and new governor of the most commercially significant South-East state, the wife of the outgoing governor, Ebele Obiano, staged an unusual drama.

Ebele, Nigeria’s modest answer to Kenya’s tempestuous Lucy Kibaki, floated across the dais to where Bianca Ojukwu, Nigeria’s former ambassador to Spain, was sitting to mockingly question what she was doing at the ceremony, after years of being a thorn in the government’s side. What followed wasn’t as pretty as Ebele’s butterfly-sleeved pink dress.

Right there before hundreds of guests and hundreds more watching on TV and following on social media, Bianca, a former beauty queen, landed the outgoing governor’s wife a slap and ripped her wig. Nollywood may have called it, Fury of The Fish Wives. But this wasn’t a movie; it was real.

The solemn handover ceremony instantly became a footnote. It was supplanted by an excited public that obviously judged Bianca’s assault excusable recompense for a provincial First Lady whose contempt for the State, apart from purchasing a pair of Gucci glasses worth $2,755, also included shopping for personal designer COVID-19 vaccines when the State could not afford a single jab for its citizens.

Bianca’s slap rocked social media. Even though she responded by claiming she had acted in self-defence, questions are still being asked about what kind of example she had set, whether she did not go too far and whether, in fact, the public had not been unfair in judging Ebele‘s record.

We had barely recovered from the Ebele-Bianca face off when Will Smith happened thousands of miles away, momentarily giving the impression that Hollywood had taken a leaf from Nollywood, except that even Woody Allen might have been hard pressed to script this. What was Will Smith thinking when he leapt to the stage and decked Chris Rock in reaction to the latter’s joke about Jada Pinkett Smith’s hair loss?

Some might say this question puts the cart before the horse. That the joke should not be on Will Smith but on Rock, who chose the Smiths’ day of joy to crack a poor, tasteless joke, with no regard whatsoever for the misery that Jada’s hair loss (a medical condition), must be causing the family.

And a tasteless joke by popular Nigerian comedian, Basketmouth, in 2014 comparing dating experiences between “white girls” and “African girls”, with a primer on which variety required “a bit of rape” to straighten out, was filed away until 2019 when he was chosen as an influencer for an EU-sponsored campaign against gender-based violence. The joke came back to haunt him. In spite of his apology, it cost him his EU endorsement as well.

Unfortunately, comedians, like most creative people, get paid to trade not only in others’ foibles, quirks or pet peeves, but in their misery as well. In his final days, Saddam Hussein served an Iraqi cabaret a death sentence for making him the butt of their jokes. For years, South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma was the subject of scathing jokes, and was in fact crowned with a “shower head”, a cartoon caricature from the president’s testimony during his rape trial.

Five years ago, American comedian, Katty Griffin, thought it was funny when she posed for a photo with the replica of Donald Trump’s tomato-splattered head. But the backlash was more than she bargained for. In spite of her apology that it was in the nature of her business to constantly “move the line” and then “cross it” and that she didn’t mean any harm, she lost her tour dates and endorsements, apart from being fired by CNN.

And a tasteless joke by popular Nigerian comedian, Basketmouth, in 2014 comparing dating experiences between “white girls” and “African girls”, with a primer on which variety required “a bit of rape” to straighten out, was filed away until 2019 when he was chosen as an influencer for an EU-sponsored campaign against gender-based violence. The joke came back to haunt him. In spite of his apology, it cost him his EU endorsement as well.

I don’t think there’s too much disagreement about whether Rock’s joke on Jada crossed the line. Alopecia, a general term used for any form of hair loss, is not a laughing matter. While the disease is not medically serious, sufferers endure different levels of psychological discomfort, which like talking about periodontal disease or tooth loss in the presence of the elderly, can only compound their misery.

Some have said that a balding man would have taken the joke on his chin and that, in fact, Will Smith laughed momentarily before he caught the joke. But Jada is not a balding man and didn’t need to be. She is an actress who has struggled with a medical condition. She has not been shy to acknowledge her condition and it was maliciously cynical of Rock to exploit it for a laugh.

The relationship between the Smiths and Rock is also fraught. After Rock’s 2016 swipe at the Smiths that “Jada boycotting the Oscars is like me boycotting Rihanna’s panties,” and his comment that the Smiths “went mad” that there were no Black nominees that year, you would expect Rock to make his mickey elsewhere. But not only did it have to be the Smiths again, it had to be Jada’s hair this time.

Unfortunately, however mildly the Academy may have responded to this embarrassing moment of one Black man striking another on stage, it just feeds the prejudice of a few who would use the incident to justify sleepwalking on demands for a more diverse, inclusive Oscars.

Rock’s joke was disagreeable and deeply offensive. But in taking the law into his own hands and responding in a violent way, Will Smith modelled the worst excesses of modern pop culture – broken, out-of-control and narcissistic. It’s part of the reason why we do our best to keep our children as far away from that space as we can. To watch, on live TV, one celebrity decking the other suggests that it’s OK to smash the next fellow if you don’t like his or her joke.

There have, in fact, been insinuations that the Academy’s reluctance to press charges, which is possible under California laws, is not necessarily for Smith’s sake but more for its own enlightened self-interest. How does going from #OscarsSowhite to #OscarsBlackfights help the Academy, for example? And would Will Smith have responded the same way if Rock was a Caucasian comedian? Or did the joke only suddenly become insensitive and bad because he was at the receiving end?

Medieval literature is replete with fighting for love or chivalry, which not only ended in personal tragedies but sometimes in ghastly blood feuds like the Spanish succession wars. But the world has come a long way since. Jada didn’t need Will Smith to take us back to Lancelot or Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet.

Rock’s joke was disagreeable and deeply offensive. But in taking the law into his own hands and responding in a violent way, Will Smith modelled the worst excesses of modern pop culture – broken, out-of-control and narcissistic. It’s part of the reason why we do our best to keep our children as far away from that space as we can. To watch, on live TV, one celebrity decking the other suggests that it’s OK to smash the next fellow if you don’t like his or her joke.

 

Will Smith didn’t help Jada either. His action, like the unintended consequence of all chivalry, is to portray women as weak, defenceless and incomplete without male approval and protection, even when it is as foolish and needless as it was in this instance. In restraining himself after he was slapped, Rock looked the more admirable of the pair in the disgusting spectacle, somehow redeeming himself even in his moment of insane ribaldry.

Will Smith would have better served himself, Jada and millions around the world watching, by taking the stage not twice, but once, to express his displeasure and demand an apology for Rock’s rotten joke. And even if Will Smith didn’t step up, Jada’s extraordinary career and sterling social work are legacies that cannot be diminished by the unguarded moment of a chatterbox.

We see from the crime scenes – whether at the slapping drama at the Nigerian handover ceremony or at the Oscars in California – that politicians and celebrities are human and like most humans would in a moment of insanity say or do the wrong things in total disregard of their social statuses or the values we hold dear.

Will Smith’s assault on Chris Rock won’t be the last unscripted highlight of the Oscar and other Hollywood big nights. Even if the world turns the other cheek, celebrities would deck it because they assume that their status entitles them to do so.

Azu Ishiekwene is Editor-in-Chief of LEADERSHIP.

Building a $7bn Climate-Smart Pipeline Of Infrastructure Projects In Nigeria, By Gori Olusina Daniel

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Gori Olusina Daniel (LinkedIn)

The United Kingdom Nigeria Infrastructure Advisory Facility (UKNIAF) works to improve climate awareness across key infrastructure agencies in Nigeria. Our interventions are designed to promote and support Nigeria’s transition to a low carbon climate resilient approach to the planning and implementation of infrastructure projects. This article examines how through the technical assistance provided by UKNIAF’s Infrastructure Finance (IF) Component, UKAID has established a $7 billion pipeline of infrastructure projects for private sector participation and investment in Nigeria.

Access to finance plays a key role in the government of Nigeria’s efforts to plan, build, maintain, repair, or replace critical infrastructure. Doing this in a climate-smart manner is critical to aligning with the principles espoused in the Build Back Better World (B3W) initiative that serves as key pillar of UKAID. The key mechanism that UKNIAF has established to do this is the development of a credible pipeline of climate-smart projects that can be structured and positioned for finance and private sector investment.

At the inception of the programme in October 2019, UKNIAF committed to developing a $3 billion pipeline of infrastructure public-private partnership projects (PPP). In addition to this ambitious target, the team committed to working towards attracting a third of this value in private sector financing by the time the programme closes in Q3 2023.

In keeping with the programme’s inclusive and sustainable development focus, UKNIAF adopted a “people first” and climate-sensitive approach to the design of its Infrastructure Finance interventions. With these dual objectives in mind IF initiated its strategies, tools, and guiding approaches to screening, prioritising and developing climate-smart infrastructure projects with a view to ensuring that it was socially inclusive, climate-sensitive, and aimed at alleviating poverty. Using the Project Screening Tool developed by the team, IF screened over 160 projects from the pipeline of projects published by the Infrastructure Concession & Regulatory Commission – Nigeria’s PPP Regulator, to establish a shortlist of projects that met the climate, poverty, and socially inclusive criteria for investment and TA support. Eleven of the screened projects met these criteria, and also demonstrated the potential to attract finance. The shortlisted projects were pitched to a panel of institutional investors including CDC, PIDG, Africa50, African Development Bank, World Bank, Afreximbank and others between July 2020 and February 2021, with varying degrees of interest established.

Following a change in the programme in early 2021 to reflect the impact of the pandemic on the UKAID budget, the project pipeline was resized to $2 billion, as support for the $1.2 billion Highway Development & Management Initiative – one of the eleven projects on the UKNIAF pipeline had to be dropped to reflect the need for all UKNIAF IF interventions to be 100 per cent aligned with the programme’s climate focus.

Over the last six months, in further evidence of the critical role UKNIAF is playing to support FGN’s transition towards low carbon and climate resilient infrastructure, an additional 167 projects from a range of FG agencies have been screened and assessed using UKNIAF’s Project Screening Tool. This has produced a shortlist of 18 climate-smart projects across multiple sectors, with estimated project value of over $5 billion that meet UKNIAF’s criteria for investment, which has grown UKNIAF’s pipeline of climate-smart projects to about $7 billion.

Beyond the development of climate-smart infrastructure pipelines, the IF team is supporting the delivery of Phase 1 of the $540 million Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zones Programme funded by the AfDB and its co-financiers,IFAD and IsDB. As part of this, the team is supporting Oyo State and Kaduna States to meet the requirements to draw down about $80 million in committed support to help progress these projects to procurement phase. This is the next step in the process expected to crowd in an estimated $320 million in private sector investment for the delivery of these special agro-industrial zones.

Gori Olusina Daniel is the Infrastructure Finance Lead at UKNIAF, which is committed to supporting Nigeria’s transition towards low carbon, climate-resilient infrastructure planning and implementation.

Ramaphosa Appoints New National Police Commissioner

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Ramaphosa decorates Sehlahle Fannie Masemola, as the new National Police Commissioner

By Sunday Elijah

President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced Sehlahle Fannie Masemola as the new National Police Commissioner.

Masemola carries the baton from General Khehla Sitole, who vacated the position on Thursday after reaching mutual consent with the President in February.

Making the announcement during an address to the nation on Thursday, President Ramaphosa said he believes Masemola is a “fit and proper” person for the role.

He said General Masemola has been a Deputy Police Commissioner with an outstanding record of achievements in policing across South Africa.

This, he said, included helping with the de-escalation of violence in KwaZulu-Natal after the first democratic elections in 1994, where he was stationed. Masemola also brings to this position his experience in drastically reducing cash-in-transit crimes in the period around 2016.

The incoming Commissioner also played a leading role in coordinating security for all elections since 1994 and all major events hosted by the country. Most recently, the General served the country as the chairperson of the National Joint Operational and Intelligence Structure (NatJOINTS) on COVID-19, which coordinated government’s efforts across different sectors nationally and internationally.

The President said the weight of the nation’s expectation resting on the Commissioner’s shoulders would only be matched by the amount of the support government would place at his disposal.

President Ramaphosa said: “[A] stable, capable and capacitated South African Police Service is our surest guarantee that our constitutional rights will not be violated by criminals.”

Government, he said, will be taking further steps to restore stability in the country’s security structures by filling critical vacancies in a number of agencies. These include the State Security Agency and Crime Intelligence.

He assured Masemola of Cabinet and government’s full support.

“I want to call on the leadership, as well as the rank and file, of the South African Police Service [SAPS] to pledge their support to you as well. You have the weight of the nation’s expectations resting on your shoulders, but I am confident you are more than up to this task and responsibility.

The President also called on South Africans to offer support to the National Commissioner.

“We can only eradicate crime if we work together,” he said.

Selection process

Masemola’s appointment is a culmination of the work done by a selection panel appointed by President Ramaphosa in February.

The panel comprised Prof Sydney Mufamadi as chairperson; Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga; Police Minister General Bheki Cele; Retired Former Police Commissioner George Fivaz, and Presidency, National Treasury and State Security Director-Generals Phindile Baleni, Dondo Mogajane, and Ambassador Thembisile Majola, respectively.

While 24 Lieutenants-General or higher were invited to apply for the job, five were shortlisted.

They were interviewed on what the President described as eight critical competencies. These were:

  • Strategic capability and leadership;
  • Programme and project management;
  • Financial management;
  • People management;
  • Community confidence level;
  • Change management;
  • Problem solving and analysis; and
  • Integrity.

“In addition to evaluating candidates on the basis of these competencies, the advisory panel assessed candidates within the broader societal, strategic, operational and reputational context of the SAPS.”

“The advisory panel was guided, in part, by the decisive role the police service has in respect of nation-building and the ongoing national efforts to strengthen democracy and to entrench the rule of law.

“The panel also noted the need to bring the police closer to the communities they serve and to rebuild the trust relationship.”

Strengthening the criminal justice system

The appointment is the latest in a series of commitments to strengthen the criminal justice system President Ramaphosa made in the 2022 State of the Nation Address.

During the address, the President said government would make resources available to recruit and train an additional 12 000 new police personnel to ensure that the SAPS urgently received the capacity it required.

In the past few weeks, government has reinforced the criminal justice system through the appointment of:

  • A new Head of the Investigating Directorate (ID) of the National Prosecuting Authority; Adv Andrea Johnson
  • A new Director-General of State Security, Amb Thembisile Majola and
  • Five permanent Directors of Public Prosecutions in five provinces where these positions had been occupied by Acting Directors.

The new directors are:

  • Adv NR Khanyane Mpumalanga
  • Mr L Mzukisi , Northern Cape
  • Adv N Somaru , Free State
  • Adv N Bell, Western Cape and
  • Adv Makhari-Sekhaolelo, North West

Political Task Team Supports Measures to Counter Load Shedding – Mabuza

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Eskom Electric Power Lines

By Sunday Elijah

Deputy President David Mabuza says the Eskom Political Task Team continues to provide support to the power utility to ensure that it runs the grid optimally, while mitigating against load shedding.

The Deputy President said this when he responded to oral questions at a sitting of the National Assembly in Cape Town on Thursday.

“The Eskom Political Task Team continues to provide support to ensure that Eskom meets its obligation of providing electricity.

“The support includes ensuring that Eskom, in the short-term, is able to implement a credible and transparent maintenance programme to ensure that power generation plants operate at an optimal level to reduce the negative impact of electricity supply disruptions,” he said.

The Deputy President said these measures, along with work being done to add generation onto the power grid through independent power producers, are aimed at addressing the currently load shedding and future power generation needs.

“However, we must make a point that Eskom’s load shedding is not as a result of limited market role for alternative power generation, but mainly as a result of breakdowns encountered from the old and ageing generation infrastructure.”

Government creates conducive environment for alternative power producers

The Deputy President said, meanwhile, that government has created a regulatory environment that is very conducive to opening up the market for alternative power generation producers.

“Within the framework of the Integrated Resource Plan, alternative energy generation measures are being explored and implemented to augment electricity supply and improve the stability of the grid.

“In addition, the President announced the amendment of schedule 2 of the Electricity Regulation Act of 2000, increasing the embedded generation threshold from 1MW to 100MW.”

The Deputy President said in this regard, the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy has amended the electricity regulations of new generation capacity, and has put together processes that should be followed to ensure the requests by municipalities for owned generation are speedily attended to.

“Currently, 292 small-scale generators have registered with NERSA and have the total generation capacity of 187MW.

“The Independent Power Producers office is processing offers by Independent Power Producers for approval by Eskom and National Treasury.

“The Department of Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe has issued determinations on the required new generation capacity in concurrence with NERSA.

“The determination made resulted in the procurement of 7309MW from renewable energy. Most of these power plants are already operational, with less than 400MW still under construction.”

SAnews.gov.za

They Hate God They Loathe Humanity, By Femi Adesina

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Femi Adesina

Haters of God and humanity struck on Monday, bombing the Abuja-Kaduna train. They then proceeded to open fire on passengers of the immobilized coaches. It was premeditated murder from the very bottom of hell.

See the toll of the carnage. Promising lives, cut short. Destinies terminated. Hopes and plans, ruptured. People who committed no sin, no crime, except that they lived in the same space with people who hate God, who loathe humanity, and who despise themselves. Hell awaits them, indeed, the hottest part of that nether region, “where their worms do not die, and the fire is never quenched.”

May God rest the souls of the dead, console their loved ones, cause rescue to come for the kidnapped. And the evildoers? They have their comeuppance awaiting them. “Though hands join to hands, the wicked shall not go unpunished.”

Whoever or whatever they are, terrorists, bandits, it doesn’t matter. They sow evil, and they will reap it. They do not deserve to live. Not in this world, nor the next. They need to be sent to their master, the Devil, and speedily too. They are like the British satanist and occultist, Aleister Crowley, who after a lifetime of evil and repudiation of God, said to himself on his deathbed: “I am perplexed. Sometimes I hate myself.” Yes, they hate God, loathe humanity, and despise themselves.

The rail revolution in the country has been hailed for its safety, comfort, luxury. Now the evil people have come to show that they hate safety, comfort, luxury. They abhor any form of progress or development. They prefer to live in the Stone Age, out there in the wild, visiting sorrow, tears and blood on humanity.

The President Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government has taken some right steps in response to the tragedy. The President has summoned the Service Chiefs, and the Inspector General of Police, giving the marching orders once again. You know what he once said at a security council meeting? “Wipe out these evil people. Kill them. Eliminate them. Nigerians love me, they trust me. That is why they keep voting for me. Wipe them out. Kill them. Eliminate them.”

Short of personally carrying a gun to confront the troublers of the country (he did that in his younger days), President Buhari has given the necessary support to the different security agencies. He has equipped them, trained them, boosted their morale in different ways. And they, too, have risen to the occasion. Daily, they are dispatching the evil people to meet their principal, the Devil. But those ones keep coming like locusts. You cut their fingers, they are even wearing rings.

However, there’s one thing we are sure of. Evil has never overcome good. Light has never conquered darkness. Nigeria will win. This country will be rid of terrorists, insurgents, bandits, ritual killers, all forms of criminals. As night inexorably follows the day, and dawn comes again, it will happen.

But the role of some Nigerians in perpetuating anomie in the country is worrisome. Through their tongues. They say evil about the country, utter negativity, thinking they are saying it against the government of the day. I mean even bishops, pastors, imams, commentators, talk show hosts, all sorts. They are engaged in war of tongues with Nigeria. They don’t know that the more they say it, the more evil happens. The cup fills up, and runs over. Let’s change our tongues. Change our hearts about our country. Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks. Let’s begin to bless our country, rather than curse, and sow negatives in the hearts of people.

As horrendous as the train bombing is, do you know that some people are playing politics with it? See that statement from the failure called PDP, reducing the development to just leadership by the All Progressives Congress, APC. In such national tragedy? I’ve never seen a more silly, otiose, idiotic statement. All because of power, which if God wills, they may never smell again in their lifetimes? How imprudent, incautious, can some people be!

I remember an interview the then General Muhammadu Buhari granted to The News magazine in its maiden edition. Trying to defend some punishments considered draconian under his leadership as military head of state, he gave the illustration of people who vandalize electricity facilities supplying power to a major hospital. And in the process, all premature babies in the incubators died. He said, why don’t you shoot those kind of evildoers, so that those young babies could live?

I agree. Those who visit evil on society do not deserve to live, no matter what some activists may say. They should be sent to hell, and I join the President to plead with our security agencies: wipe them out. Kill them. Eliminate them. They have declared war against the country and its people. We are at war, yes we are.

They do not deserve to live. They have lost their humanity. Wipe them out. Kill. Eliminate.

Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity

Politics of Rotation in Nigeria, Way Forward

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Nigerian Politicians

For a long time now the polity has been awash with the annual rehash of agitations for political inclusion of the country’s geo-political divides on whose turn it is to produce the country’s president in 2023.

In the past days, prominent politicians have been declaring their intentions to run for their party’s tickets for the exulted Presidency of Nigeria.

Atiku Abubakar, a former Vice President under Olusegun Obasanjo’s eight years administration and the 2019 presidential candidate of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) recently formally declared his intention to be the party’s presidential candidate.

Barely three days after his claration, precisely, March 24, his running mate in the 2019 polls and former Anambra governor, Peter Obi, also indicated interest to seek the party’s nod for the presidential ticket.

Obi made his intention known while addressing some traditional rulers in Anambra while Atiku’s was at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.

This is as the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) was on March 26 at a convention sought to finalise its consensus arrangement for its National Working Committee (NWC) offices.

After the NWC ratification convention, APC’s candidates for the presidential ticket would continue their horse trading to ascertain who bears the party’s flag among contending candidates from virtually all the country’s political divides.

On Jan. 24, no fewer than 1,000 Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) besieged the secretariats of the two domineering political parties, the APC and the PDP demanding that the nation’s next president should be a southerner.

Protesting under the aegis of Coalition of Civil Society Groups (CCSG) its president Bassey Williams demanded that both parties should nominate southern candidates as their flag bearers in the 2023 presidential elections.

A political school of thought argues that the ceding of the slots would engender national peace and integration and save the country from instability. They also posited that the idea would engender fairness.

Some of the placards the group displayed read: “please respect power rotation; power rotation is not negotiable”; “we support a united Nigeria, one nation great people”, “southern president now; and southern president for national unity”.

The question of who occupies the presidency hits all time high whenever major national election is around the corner. Curiously, the 1999 Constitution, now in use did not in any way mention power rotation in any of its provisions.

The constitution, giving credence to the choice of democracy as the preferred system of government, would pinion itself if it jettisons the very tenets of democracy, which is equal opportunities, to take in rotation as an issue.

The constitution says that to lead Nigeria one only needs to be a citizen, attain 35 years of age, obtain a minimum of secondary school certificate or its equivalent and belong to political party and such party must sponsor him or her. However, Nigerian, knowing full well the need for accommodation, devised an unofficial, but nifty, way of making electoral offices to move round by introducing the rotation principle.

Some states have adopted rotation over time. One of such is Enugu, which has done two uninterrupted circles of rotation among the three senatorial districts: Jim Nwobodo (East); C.C. Onoh (West) Okwesilieze Nwodo (North); Chimaroke Nnamani (East); Sullivan Chime (West); and incumbent Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi (North).

The late second republic Vice-President Dr Alex Ekwueme, while leading the design for a national political movement called G34, which metamorphosed into the PDP created what is today known as the six geo-political zones.

The party won the Presidency in the third republic 1999 election and many of its candidates became governors as the country transited from many years of military rule to a civilian administration in 1999.

Exwueme had postulated then the nation was carved into two predominant North and South, with each having three distinct zones of North East, North West and North Central on the one hand and South East, South West and South-South on the other.

Ekwueme’s idea, accepted by his team, was that power should rotate between the North and South each time there was transition and that on each occasion the part that has not produced one should have a slot when it returns to its primary zone.

PDP demonstrated leadership of the new arrangement after the late Umaru Ya’Adua from the north emerged President after President Olusegun Obasanjo of South had completed his two tenures of four years each. By design rather than default, for each administration, the Vice-Presidential slot went to the other zone.

After Yar’Aduah’s death, his deputy, Goodluck Jonathan mounted the saddle to complete is 4years after which he did another one term for the South South zone. Although Jonathan ran for a second term he lost, incidentally, to incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari, a northerner.

If the rotation principle is maintained, experts say the next Nigerian president who will emerge in 2023, at the end of Buhari’s eight years rule should come from the South.

But there are fears that for personal and ethno-centric gains, some politicians are scheming to truncate the rotation policy in other to promote their political and somewhat ethno-centric interests even as many aspirants have showed up to grab the presidential tickets of their various parties.

From the ruling APC, former Lagos governor, Bola Tinubu, Gov. Dave Umahi of Ebonyi, former Abia governor. Orji Uzor Kalu, have emerged. Some individuals, such as Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, although has not made formal declarations, are being prompted by loyalists to run, same for the serving governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Godwin Emefiele, whose posters dot many parts of Abuja. Emefiele, for now, is not a card carrying member of any party.

Some other candidates even have their posters dotted in major Nigerian cities unchallenged by them, thus creating the impression that they might have interest. In the PDP the aspiration of Atiku Abubakar is being orchestrated by his loyalists to ahead of his formal declaration.

Media guru, Chief Raymond Dokpesi, leading Atiku Abubaka Campaign Technical Committee, took to major electoral stakeholders to lobby for its candidate. In Umuahia and some of the heartlands of the South East, the group met with PDP stakeholders and told them to jettison the idea of a president from their stock until 2027 to pave way for Atiku in 2023.

Other politicians who have declared interest in PDP are erstwhile Secretary to the Government of the Federation and former Senate President, Anyim Pius Anyim, and the Delta-born Orefo Anyichie. A Diaspora Nigerian and President of the Nigeria community in Japan, Chief Kennedy Nnaji, also declared intention for presidency, although without stating under which party.

There are speculations that Atiku’s candidacy may not sell while his loyalists will thereafter back his running mate in the 2019 race, former Gov. Obi for the ticket. At an event for his declaration in Enugu in the first week of January some PDP leaders agreed to support Anyim for his party’s ticket.

A 10-point resolution issued at the end of the meeting was signed by Sen. Theodore Orji, former Abia govwenor, who also chaired the session and Chief Duru-Iheoma, SAN, former chairman of PDP in Imo.

The document appealed to the PDP “in the interest of equity, justice and harmonious national cohesion to zone the presidential ticket to the Southern zones of the country and the South East in particular.

It further stated that: “the people of the South-East geopolitical zone have earned the right to occupy the office of President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in 2023 on account of their eminent qualifications and overwhelming contributions to the development of all parts of the federation through the years”..

The participants at the forum therefore “ further reiterate that the choice of a South-East citizen as the presidential candidate of the party in 2023 will guarantee to every Nigerian a sense of equity, justice and inclusion in the management of the affairs of the nation. They also stated that: “in our view, this is the best way of ensuring that we build a nation that leaves no one or group behind.’’

Such passion and sentiment expressed by the Anyim group is marched in gusto by every group propagating the interest of its geo-political presidency claim.

Such is the case with consultative meetings midwifed of recent by former Senate President Bukola Saraki, Sokoto governor. Aminu Tambuwal and his Bauchi State counterpart, Bala Mohammed. It is their contention that the 2023 presidency should be zoned to the North.

In spite of the permutations, observers say the crux of the matter remains “where does the pendulum swing that will appease the yearnings of no fewer than 200 million citizens“?

Some protagonists of rotation often mention the use of `quota system’, `disadvantaged area’ and sundry legislations supporting balancing in Federal Government employments and appointments. Antagonists argue there the zoning arrangement does not reflect a true spirit of give and take, insisting that every political office must be fought for through the ballot box.

Nigerians in 1993 looked at the pedigree of the then presidential candidacy of Bashorun MKO Abiola when they voted massively for him and his fellow Muslim running mate Amb. Babagana Kingibe.

That election was truncated by the military. But by the time democracy returned to the country after about 16 years, the electorate leveraged on the injustice meted to the South West and picked Obasanjo against fellow tribesman, Chief Olu Falae, who ran under the only known opposition party, the Alliance for Democracy (AD)..

For some electorate, a 2023 presidential poll should be a contest between candidates from South East, irrespective of the parties they come from. For others the best candidate, irrespective of region, should be allowed.

With such posturing many stakeholders argue that Nigeria country still has a long way to go in eliminating with ethnicity, nepotism from its polity.

NAN/Features

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