Thursday, February 11, 2016

PMB Foreign Trip Is Getting Too Much.

IN arriving at the fact that the nation throbs with a plethora of questions over the necessity of the foreign trips of President Muhammadu Buhari, the presidency succeeds in feeling the pulse of the citizens. But it clearly underestimates the difficulty of stemming the impatience of the citizens by offering justification for the president’s travels. The citizens may not have wholly aligned themselves with the Emersonian disparagement of travelling as a fool’s paradise since those who made England, Italy or Greece venerable were not peripatetic. But the urgency of the need to solve the country’s myriad of problems at home and the unsavoury memories of the globe-trotting of past political leaders  have crashed what was left of the brittle confidence in our leaders’ fascination with overseas’ trips.

Our leaders have left the stark records of not sparing a thought for the suffering poor citizens. Instead of staying at home to consider strategies for taking the blight of poverty off the people, they are rather attracted to a life abroad at the expense of their states or the country. This is why they travel abroad to attend birthdays of their cronies and paramours. Some even travel abroad to organise weddings for their children or they are guests at the weddings of their friends which they have sponsored. In some worse cases, such travels have been used as opportunities to negotiate how to stash slush funds in foreign accounts. But our political leaders justify such travels as opportunities to bring foreign investments to the country.

Still, travelling abroad is a means of escaping from the problems at home.  Our political leaders have no problem with leaving the citizens to writhe and wither away under the weight of the crises sired by the former’s misbegotten governance. And when they are overseas, they do not bother to copy the good things they see there. They do not pay attention to how through transformational leadership, what would have been a barren country is turned into an investors’ delight. Nor do they observe how on account of the fact that leaders live by example, the citizens are ready to obey the laws of the country that would redound to the peace and good of all. What our leaders are only interested in as they travel abroad are the homes that are the exemplifications of modern architectural  ingenuity. They would come home and then loot the treasury in a bid to replicate these architectural masterpieces for their private use.

For a Nigerian leader who travels to the Vatican and takes a photograph with the pope, his or her day is made. Then such a leader would now strive to push the photograph to the front pages of major newspapers in the country. A political leader does this perhaps because he or she would like the citizens to know the opportunity he or she  has just got to put the name of their backwater carrying the beautiful title of a state or country on the map of the world. It could also be to gleefully announce to the hell-bound citizens that their leader is on the way to heaven.  For some politicians, putting the pictures on the front pages of newspapers is not enough. Billboards must be erected in every strategic corner of the state to announce this treasure trove. This was exactly what Governor Rochas Okorocha did in Imo State after taking a photograph with President Barack Obama during a visit to the United States.

Our political leaders often argue that their travels are to enable them to drive foreign investments into the country. Thus they try to justify their frivolous travels by holding town hall meetings with Nigerians overseas. At such meetings, our political leaders would harangue their audience with the need for them to return home; to use their professional experiences to shore up the national fortunes;  and invest their dollars or pounds in the local economy. But it is not likely that the Nigerian audience is really fascinated by the opportunities being reeled out. What is more likely is that the Nigerian citizens are remembering how they lost their loved ones – parents , siblings or children – to the predatory society they left behind at home. They would remember how some of these loved ones have been unjustly incarcerated and how the justice system has failed to give any succour. They would remember how they escaped from kidnappers or the stray or deliberately targeted bullets of bribe-starved and marauding policemen and women and they were forced to relocate abroad.     Now that the presidency has joined in the argument for the necessity of foreign trips, it should have gone further to tell us if Buhari has any magic wand to drive these investments home. Or, is it that once the foreign investors see Buhari they would fall in love with him, empty their bank accounts and bring their hard-earned money to  invest in Nigeria? Regrettably, the illusion of the ease of securing foreign investments by our leaders travelling abroad has made us oblivious of the necessity of keeping our house in order before seeking foreign investors. No foreign investor would put his or her money in a hostile business climate.

Do we really expect foreign investments in these climes ravaged by insurgents, state brigandage and decrepit infrastructure?  If there is a right investment climate, the president does not need to travel to beg any foreign investor to come to Nigeria. They would come here on their own. Or, are we now saying that these so-much cherished foreign investors are so cut off from the world that they on their own cannot get a true picture of developments in Nigeria?

Granted that the president really engages in these frequent travels to negotiate the release of Nigeria’s funds stashed away in foreign banks. But as long as the environment for corruption to fester has not been changed, the money would find its way back to those foreign banks. We must remember the foreign travels of former President Olusegun Obasanjo in a bid to cancel the nation’s foreign debts. He succeeded. But the debts are back. Instead of the presidency being excited at defending the president’s foreign trips, it should be conscious of the fact that the bulk of the work is at home.

Now is the time for the president to do less travelling and sit at home to solve the nation’s problems. It is an illusion to expect foreign leaders who are faced with their own problems to give Buhari a blueprint on how to solve the problems of his country created by its own leaders’ greed, profligacy and short-sightedness.

Instead of attempting to justify to the citizens while Buhari’s foreign trips are necessary, the presidential spokespersons should find more profitable things to spend their time on. Let the results speak for themselves. Then the citizens can decide whether the president’s travels are worth the state resources expended on them.

No to Under Age Voters - INEC Warns.

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) said on Wednesday that it would prosecute under-age voters in Plateau.

Dr Godwin Kwanga, the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) of INEC in the state made this known in a Stakeholders’ Forum in Jos ahead of re-run elections in the state fixed for Feb. 20.

Kwanga said that the state was replete with underage voters in possession of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

The stakeholders at the forum included representatives of security agencies, politicians, media and election monitoring and observer groups.

He announced that the polls would hold in Langtang South, Pankshin North and Pankshin South state constituencies.

The REC said that the menace of underage voters almost marred the last general elections in the state.

According to him, the menace produced a lot of mutilated and voided votes during the April 11, 2015 polls in Quan’Pan Local Government Area.

“Our experience in Quan’Pan showed that a lot of underage voters were having the PVCs and this led to a lot of cancellations.

“One of the underage voters, who had PVC bearing his image and the age of 36 years, confessed to INEC officials that he was only 16 years old.

“We looked the other way even when in the same elections, our tags were photocopied and massively reproduced by agents of political parties,’’ he said.

He, however, said that unlike what happened in the April 11 polls, INEC was set to prosecute any case of underage voters in the coming rerun and supplementary polls.

Kwanga said that card reader machines would be solely used for the Feb. 20 polls and that newly registered voters were excluded from participation.

He assured that INEC would provide all political parties a level playing ground and appealed to party agents not to compromise ad hoc staff into tampering with materials to stall the polls.

“I beg agents of political parties not to lure ad hoc staff to tamper with materials as it will disrupt the process.

“Once you remove the battery from the machine, it malfunctions when you replace it, and ad hoc personnel are not trained on such duties,’’ he said.

He explained that accreditations and voting would hold simultaneously between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. as against past practices.

Akwanga announced that election in Langtang North would hold in 68 polling units and would be contested by only All Progressives Congress (APC) and Mega Progressive Peoples Party (MPPP).

He gave the names of their candidates as Jackson Ninmwang and Rinsmicit Emmanuel, respectively.

He said that Vincent Bulus of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was excluded.

“Pankshin South state constituency election will hold only in Nyelleng polling unit in Fier Area while that of Pankshin North will hold in Pyabor polling unit.

“The four political parties and candidates to contest in Pankshin North state constituency are Alice Dimlong, APC; Yakubu Zetgang, LP; Tamnakat David, MPPP and Diket Plang, PDP.

“Supplementary election in Pankshin South will feature Gideon Dashe, APC; Dagak Michael, APGA; Theresa Bartuk, MPPP and Mwamsat Istifanus, PDP,“ he said.

Adoption of Entrepreneurship will boost the economy. - Says Obasanjo

FORMER President Olusegun Obasanjo who was represented by Mr. Ayodele Aderinwa, the debuty chief Cordinator of Obasanjo presidential Library has called for the adoption of entrepreneurship as the way out of the economic downturn in the country. He said this yesterday in Ibadan at the maiden graduation ceremony of central bank of Nigeria entrepreneurship Development centre.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, who was represented by his debuty, hajia Adiza Maina asked state governors to provide start up fund for graduates and also urged the youths to be creative.

He stated the need to embrace entrepreneurship at this critical time of economic harsdship.

The CBN-EDC turned out 456 people in various skills like service, agriculture, production, lifestyle, trading and ICT.

Obasanjo told his audience that; “The current international price of crude has negatively affected the livelihoods of our citizenry and from all indications, could experience further decline.”

“Jobs are currently being lost in all sectors of the economy, posing a challenge for government to deal with. The Nigerian market is that which thrives on population and economic power.

“We must begin to look inwards by creating value through commercialisation of services and products driven by skills acquired by individuals, who strive to engage in business endeavours,” he said.

Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State in his speech called for the diversification of the economy, adding that the time is ripe for people to start looking inwards to reduce the current level of unemployment in the country.

Ajimobi was represented by Mr. Olalekan Ali, a former Secretary to the State Government.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Arakangudu is dead


One of the most popular Nigerian Yoruba artist that is known as Sikiru Adeshina with stage name Arakangudu has passed on to the great beyond yesterday to meet is ancestors.

He died in the northern part of the country yesterday and his corpse will be taking to his home town in Osun state today for burial ceremony.

We gathered that he cried out from his sleep before dying. Our correspondent was able to interview one of the veteran popular Yoruba actors who is based in ekiti by the name Jimoh Aliu said he was shocked when he heard about the demised of Arakangudu.

He is survived by wives and children and he has acted in lots of Yoruba movies and also produced movies like agbede Ogun, idunnu mi, ogbologbo, Iya oju Ogun, ere agbere, ilu gangan and a couple of other movies.

Corruption will cost Nass from meeting up with the Feb. 25 deadline for 2016 budget.

Members of the National Assembly have begun questioning the integrity of the document before them because their seem to be duplication and carryover of figures in the budget which are means of corruption and as a result of this, they suddenly announced yesterday the indefinite suspension of the deadline they had earlier fixed for passing the budget.
‎The two houses had fixed February 25, 2016 as the deadline for passing the document.

After the persistence of the confusion that began when the 2016 budget document was declared “missing” at the National Assembly four weeks ago, doubts still remain over the figures allocated to subheads in various ministries, departments and agencies.

Meanwhile, presidency State House officials yesterday defended before both chambers of the National Assembly the N18.1 billion proposed for its operation in the 2016 fiscal year during which they offered an insight into the contentious State House Clinic allocation.

The Permanent Secretary, State House, Jalal Arabi, who made the defence while appearing before the joint National Assembly Committees on Federal Character, Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs, noted that the N1.7 billion generated by the State House in the 2015 fiscal year had since been remitted to the Federal Government coffers.

On the contentious State House Clinic, Arabi explained that the N3.219 billion proposed was meant for the completion of ongoing projects as well as procurement of drugs and other medical equipment.

Justifying the clinic’s budget Arabi said: “the medical centre provides health care treatment for the president and vice president, their families as well as numerous civil servants working in the State House and across the ministries.”

In a related development, Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria has condemned the business-as-usual attitude displayed by Federal Government officials in the preparation and presentation of the 2016 budget proposal by President Muhammadu Buhari to the National Assembly last year.

It decried the way corruption has remained consistently mainstreamed in national budgets, especially against the fact that Nigeria seeks external assistance to fund the budget deficit.

This is coming on the heels of a call by Ekiti State governor, Mr Ayodele Fayose to Buhari to save the country from national embarrassment being caused by the 2016 budget that he presented to the National Assembly by formally withdrawing it and representing it.

The festering confusion that we gathered has been exacerbated by the inability of top government officials, including permanent secretaries, who are accounting officers in federal ministries, to offer acceptable explanations to lawmakers at budget defence sessions.

The Minister of Health Professor Isaac Adewole, for example disowned outright what he was confronted with at the National Assembly.

As the confusion continued last Monday night, we seek explanations from the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma who yesterday sent a terse reply through a text message stating: “It is being sorted out.”

According to Adewole, the provisions of the budget before the National Assembly were in contrast to the priorities of the health sector as contained in the original budget it prepared, adding that some of the votes earmarked by the ministry for some activities had been re-distributed while some important fields in the sector had been excluded.

Responding, the committee chairman, Tejuosho said: “Honourable minister, we need to have an executive session. Obviously, the budget we are looking at now is not your own,” and Adewole swiftly responded: “No, it is not. We ‘ll submit the revised document tomorrow. It will be an updated version of what you have.”

Just last week, permanent secretaries were embarrassingly grilled by federal lawmakers over the padding of ministries’ and agencies’ budgets. In one case, a subhead in the Ministry of Education was inflated by N10 billion.

In fact, an exasperated Chairman of the Senate Committee on Labour and Employment, Suleiman Nazif exploded thus: “You are proposing a budget here and we are seeing duplications .

What we seem to see that is wrong is that there is a pattern and everything you are telling us is national budget and planning template.What is this template in which you make mistakes and you say it is a template? For example general, tangible and non-tangible, all this things that you bring out we don’t really understand them.”

On Monday night, Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun did not want to be drawn into the ensuing confusion. Presidential spokesman, Mr. Femi Adesina, also referred our enquiries to Udoma.

It would be recalled that following the anger of federal lawmakers in both Houses of the National Assembly over the mess surrounding the budget last week, Presidency officials had sought to distance the president himself and political office holders from the confusion, , blaming the top civil servants who prepared the document instead.

Reacting to the confusion, chairmen of the Appropriation Committees of the Senate and House of Representatives, Danjuma Goje and Abdul Mummun Jibrin‎ respectively, who addressed a joint press conference at the National Assembly stated that the February 25 date was no longer feasible on account of the increasing contradictions and corrupt practices in the budget figures.

Goje who presided over the press briefing said:”We are here in connection with the ongoing processing of the 2016 budget, and because of the observed instances that are being reported from the beginning of the budget submission; there are a lot of controversies surrounding the budget.

“We designed a timetable for the consideration and passage of the budget and in that particular timetable we had said that we will pass the budget on February 25,2016 but as you are all aware, a lot of issues have come up and sadly so.
“Again during the budget defence a lot of issues based on padding from over-bloated overhead and in some instances cases over-bloated personnel cost. But generally there has been a lot of issues.

“So in summary, the timetable for the passage of the budget is no longer realistic because as appropriation committees of both chambers of the National Assembly we need additional time to be able to do a thorough job for the 2016 budget.”

Fayose in a statement issued yesterday by his Special Assistant on Pubic Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, said: “The president should admit that there were avoidable errors in the budget and since he is human and not immune to errors, he should simply do the needful by presenting a new and credible budget to the National Assembly.”

Fayose described revelations by Adewole that the proposal drawn up by the ministry and submitted to the budget office had been doctored and that “foreign” appropriations, different from what was submitted, had been sneaked in as the height of national embarrassment.

On its part, Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria in a statement signed by Rev. Fr. Evaritus Bassey, Executive Secretary, said members of the National Assembly “should overcome their transactional mindset and adopt a transformative one that goes beyond party affiliation to take a critical look at the budget and appropriate a final document that puts the Buhari government in its perceived perspective …

“It is amazing that in spite of the seriousness, which the president has shown towards the fight against corruption, the first budget of this government is showing such terrible mainstreaming of corruption.

“With duplicated, repeated and carryover figures, sometimes for projects that have already been executed, the customary tendency would then be for officials to invent the means to retire these monies when they are finally appropriated, usually through a give and take process between relevant parliament officials and ministry officials,” Bassey said.

Sunday, February 7, 2016

NEW HIKE IN ELECTRICITY TARRIFF DESPITE EPILEPTIC POWER SUPPLY

The scourge that has bedeviled the power sector in the country is as old as the sector itself. Right from the days it was known as National Electric Power Authority (NEPA) to Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) and now a privatized sector, the problems had remained the same- poor power supply, lack of facilities, excess billings, lack of maintenance and others.

When the sector was handed over to the private owners by the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) on November 1, 2013, all sorts of promises were made to Nigerians. Many had thought consumers would heave sigh of relief as witnessed in the telecommunications sector within a short period.

Alas, more than two years of the private owners’ operation, nothing much seems to have changed especially in the area of power supply, billings, metering and maintenance. A situation that has made some Nigerians to call on the present government to review the privatization process which some allege was characterized by fraud.

What has consistently become a bone of contention between consumers and the distribution companies is the tariff. While the companies have argued that they need to review the tariffs upward to enable them provide services, the consumers have insisted that the tariff cannot be reviewed upwards amidst poor power supply, absence of prepaid meters, poor facilities and others.

It would be recalled that on assumption of office, President Muhammadu Buhari’s government challenged the power companies to provide Nigerians with adequate power supply before increasing the tariff. To the amazement of many Nigerians, the country witnessed steady and improved power supply within the first few months that President Buhari assumed office.

But before the consumers could understand or explain the mystery behind the sudden increase in supply, the situation relapsed. Rearing its ugly head recently was the contentious issue of hike in tariff that was championed by the distribution companies.

The move has pitched the distribution companies against the customers. Some of the consumers have dragged the regulatory agency, National Electric Regulatory Commission (NERC) and the distribution companies to court over the planned hike in tariff.

While Nigerians await the outcome of the legal tussle on the matter, the NERC announced a new tariff regime of 45 per cent increase that took effect from February 1.
Across the country, severe criticisms, protests, condemnations and threats have continued to trail the hike since its commencement.

Many Nigerians have questioned the rationale behind the hike, considering that they have been paying for services not rendered to them before now by power distribution companies.

A Lagos- based businessman, Mr. Nixon Okwara, told us that the hike is an obvious sign that the present government is insensitive to the plight of Nigerians.

He said: “Where is the light? We have been paying for darkness even after the privatization of the sector. Why the hike now without improved supply? They promised to meter every house, but more than 50 per cent of Nigerians do not have prepaid meters today. Is this the change President Buhari government promised Nigerians? Obviously this cannot stand. It must be resisted.

To Kunle Adewole, the sudden hike is an attempt to defraud Nigerians under the present economic difficulties.

“It is obvious that the private owners of the companies are in alliance with Buhari’s government to impoverish Nigerians. If not, what was the magic behind the steady power supply within President Buhari’s first few months in office and its collapse thereafter?”

Meanwhile, the leadership of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and other labour groups have concluded plans to organize a nationwide protest on Monday over the hike. They have warned the government, NERC and power companies to revert to the old tariff.

The hike in tarriff is seen as a move to further impoverish the indigents in our society. With the combined effect of non-availability of meters and continued power shortages, Nigerians are right to once again be anxious about electricity tariff increase.”

“Nigerians have the right to ask the hard questions, but we must not remain oblivious to the underlying reasons behind the hike. The debate and discussions on this issue should be devoid of emotions and political undertones.

An official of the government said before the last increase electricity was sold to consumers below the short-run and long-run marginal cost of production, and even the most rudimentary understanding of basic economics and common sense dictates that this is not a sustainable business model.

“Quite simply, power generation, transmission and distribution will be a failure if potential investors cannot get fair returns of their investments, as no investor will be willing to invest in the sector. With the new Multi-Year Tariff Order, investment in the Nigerian power sector is now a bankable venture.

“In addition to its economic impact, underpricing electricity precipitates the wasteful usage of electricity and critically impairs the operating revenues of operating companies, forcing them to reduce efficiencies and capital investment, forego essential maintenance and to seek government subsidies.”

“The unwillingness of governments to raise tariffs in line with costs due to political and labour pressure has led to power reform failures in many economies of the world,” he noted.

The energy expert for the government further stated that in response to consumers’ concern, the new tariff is a 10-year policy that would be reviewed upwards or downwards.

“The new tariff order also removed fixed charges, consumers can now pay for what they use. The Multi Year Tariff Order also provided for a service agreement that mandated the distribution companies to meter all customers within a time frame – failure to meter within the time frame will not result to disconnection or estimated billing,” he said.

In the past, positive effects of the hike had always been outlined and praised by analysts and the operators, but consumers hardly experience them because implementation has always been a knotty issue in Nigeria. Whether there will be any difference this time, around would be determined by time.

There Was No Election In Niger state-PDP

PROTESTS have continued to trail the January 16, 2016, Local Government Election in Niger State, where the All Progressives Congress (APC) announced themselves winner of the chairmanship seats for 25 councils and won a majority number of the councillorship positions.
At the initial stage, the Chairman of the Niger State Independent Electoral Commission (NSIEC), Alhaji abubakar, announced results of 24 council areas, withholding the result of Suleja council area, because of an alleged clash between supporters of the main opposition party in the state, the Peoples Democratic Election (PDP) and APC, a few days to the election.
Since the results were released and announced, there have been accusation and counter accusations, between the ruling party and the opposition, especially the PDP. Their grouse is that the results did not reflect what happened at the polling units and wards collation centers which is not meant to be.
As there was no pronouncement by the NSIEC chairman on Suleja council area, they did not anticipate foul play until the electoral umpire suddenly changed its decision and issued Certificate of Return to all the Apc Chairmanship candidates, including Suleja, where election was pronounced not to have taken place. The PDP is protesting what they described as injustice.
The Chairmanship candidate for suleja, Barrister Bala Maigaskiya, insisted, “there was no election as far as he his concerned. What they are doing is just mere propaganda.
Said he: “On the election day, all the election materials were released in the morning and all of a sudden the Returning Officer did not release result sheets to the polling units. When we discovered that, we raised an alarm and by that time they’ve already accredited some of the electorate. We told them that we agreed with the accreditation that had taken place, but that until they bring result sheets, nothing would happen. That was the genesis of the whole problem. Even in some of the polling units, no election materials were provided, meaning there was no election there.
“We insisted that without the result sheets we wont allow them to continue, they later gave the sheets to only two wards, out of the 10. When they realised that PDP was leading, they refused to allow other wards to have their result sheets and at the end, most units did not cast their votes, others insisted they’d not count their votes until they bring the sheet.”
Maigaskiya said based on their position, the electoral officials mandated them to come to the collation centre where things would be sorted out, but nobody was there till after 8pm. “We moved to the local government centre but everywhere was locked with high security personnel. How can they declare themselves winners in an election where there were no result sheets, an election that was not counted? This is to tell the whole world that there was no election in Suleja Local Government Area.”
He accused the ruling party of attacking PDP members, noting that despite the presence of the police during their stakeholders’ meeting last Sunday, APC thugs allegedly used all forms of weapons to vandalise vehicles and ran away.
“The case was reported to the police and nothing has been done. That is why they have been threatening our peace. They are threatening that they will kill every PDP member in Suleja in the presence of the police.”
When asked the party’s next move, he said “I am just a contestant, the party has its plans, if the party says we are going to Court, then we will take it in good faith.
  1. We learnt that the APC-led administration was also accused of using the military to rig elections in three council areas-Agwara, Tafa and Shiroro. It was alleged that the returning officers of some councils were known blood relatives of the APC chairmanship candidates, who were hired to manipulate the results.

Efforts to speak with NSIEC chairman were unsuccessful.