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Police Seal Off Ondo PDP Secretariat

The Ondo state Police Command on Monday sealed off the state secretariat of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Akure following the dissolution of the state working committee and their rejection of the national body’s decision.

The national leadership of the party has also invited notable leaders of the party to a meeting in Abuja to find a lasting solution to the crisis by the National Working Committee of the party. Governor Olusegun Mimiko’s defection to the PDP was the genesis of the crisis, is also expected at the meeting.

The Vanguard reports that at least 12 policemen were deployed to the party secretariat located at No 68 Oyemekun Road, Akure to prevent any breakdown of law and order. The new caretaker committee members appointed by the National Leadership of the PDP were yet to arrive the state yesterday.

Meanwhile, the former Ondo State Chairman of PDP, Ebenezer Alabi, in his reaction to the sealing of the party secretariat said “It is very unfortunate that this is happening in our party.

“We have been using the secretariat since 1998 and nothing of such had ever happened. Since the governor joined our party things have not been right.”

Alabi was, however, optimistic that the State Working Committee will get justice in the court as the matter is in court.

“Since we are already in court, we hope to get justice at the end of the day,” he said.

However, the Public Relations Officer of the Ondo Police command, Wole Ogodo, said he was not aware of the presence of policemen at the party secretariat.

“I do not know anything about the deployment of policemen to the PDP secretariat, but I will find out and get back to you.

 

Nigerian Man Sentenced By Magistrates’ Court For Stealing Pot Of Soup

A Somolu Magistrates’ Court, Lagos, on Monday sentenced a 28- year-old man, Abiodun Ojedokun, to six days of community service for stealing a large pot of soup.

The Magistrate, Mrs. Bola Osunsanmi, sentenced the convict to 48 hours of community service for each of the three-count charge, after he had pleaded guilty to them.

“Based on the facts of this case before this court, the confirmed report and your plea of leniency, I hereby sentence you to 48 hours community service on each of the counts of the charge,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the Magistrate as saying on Monday.

The convict, arraigned on a three-count charge of conspiracy, burglary and stealing, pleaded guilty to all the charges preferred against him.

The prosecutor, ASP Akinlabi Adegoke, told the court that the convict, who was a casual worker and whose address was unknown, committed the offences on September 20 at 2:00am at the Onipanu Model Market in Somolu, Lagos State.

“The accused connived with some others, now at large, to break into one Mrs. Gbadamosi Sanni’s shop at 2:00am.
“They broke the locks and stole her large pot of soup, valued at N8,000,” Adegoke said.

The prosecutor told the court that the offences contravened Sections 285, 308 and 409 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.
Ojedokun pleaded guilty to the charges and asked for leniency, claiming that he committed the offence because he was starving.

Aminu Tambuwal Formally Declares For APC Today, Adjourn House Till Dec To Remain Speaker

The long-awaited defection by the House of Representatives speaker to the All Progressives Congress is going to happen today, his associates told Daily Trust last night.

Alhaji Aminu Tambuwal will announce to colleagues during today’s House plenary session that he is leaving the ruling People’s Democratic Party to the main opposition APC, following months of consultation, one of the sources said.

Daily Trust Turaki A. Hassan & Ibrahim Kabiru Sule report that Tambuwal is going to stay put as speaker, despite him joining a minority party.

If this comes to pass, he will be the first speaker from a minority party and the first non-PDP politician to hold that position since the inception of this dispensation in 1999.

Tambuwal will also emerge as the highest-ranking public officer in APC, based on the National Order of Precedence.

“(The) speaker will formally defect to the APC during the plenary session,” an aide told Daily Trust, asking not to be named because he was not authorised to speak on the matter.

DailyTrust correspondents learnt that after announcing his defection today, Tambuwal will immediately adjourn the House till after the conclusion of party primaries in December.

This is to stave off any possible moves to remove him by PDP lawmakers, who have a majority with 189 members to APC’s 159. The remaining 12 lawmakers are from other smaller parties.

Tambuwal enjoys support from many PDP members who had themselves toyed with the idea of joining APC since a mass defection hit the House late last year.

“There is no constitutional provision that says he must vacate his seat as speaker after defecting from one political party to another,” an aide told Daily Trust.

“Neither the constitution nor the House rules stops him from retaining his seat as speaker if he defects to another political party,” he added.

Another associate said Tambuwal will explain to colleagues today that his defection is because of the crisis and division in the Sokoto State chapter of the PDP.

“You know there is crisis and division in the Sokoto State PDP which necessitated the reconciliatory meeting held by Chief Tony Anenih last week. There are the old and the new PDP,” the source said.

Our correspondents report that Tambuwal will have to link his defection to a division in the PDP because the constitution requires a legislator who defects to leave his seat unless if the defection is caused by division in his former party.

The speaker’s defection has been long in coming, as he had been romancing with the APC since its formation last year.
He also kept a distance from major PDP outings, including zonal rallies organised for President Goodluck Jonathan.

Associates say he delayed his defection because of likely repercussions that may cost him his seat.

Late last year, the APC had snaffled the majority in the House from the PDP with a slight margin. But before Tambuwal could make his move, that majority was lost back to the PDP through some cross-defections. The speaker had to stay action.

But he continued to hobnob with APC leaders, especially Sokoto State Governor Aliyu Wamakko and Chief Bola Tinubu.
Last week, Tambuwal edged closer to joining the APC when he attended a stakeholders meeting of the party in Sokoto during which the state governorship seat was zoned to the southern zone where he hails from.

On Friday, the APC national executive cleared the biggest internal hurdle for Tambuwal—the requirement for defectors to spend at least 30 days in the party before contesting in primaries. The party’s national convention is due to ratify this decision tomorrow.
The APC primaries for the 2015 elections have all been scheduled to hold within the next 35 days.

Tambuwal is believed to be aiming for the Sokoto governorship seat in the event the APC presidential ticket eludes him.

When contacted yesterday on Tambuwal’s planned defection, spokesman Imam Imam said: “Nigerians need not to get worked up over the speaker’s political future. Sooner rather than later, the outcome of the consultation will be made public.”

PDP Formally Buried In Rivers State – APC

Press Releases made available to NewsWireNGR

The Rivers State Chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) is pleased to announce the formal burial of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the State. We warmly congratulate the 85,500 patriotic citizens of the State who empowered us to make this announcement through their physical presence at APC Port Harcourt Mega Rally held last Saturday, 25th October, 2014, at Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium. It was a rally during which 85,500 people struggled to see the man described as the hero of the new political dispensation in Nigeria – Rt. Hon. Chibuke Rotimi Amaechi, Governor of Rivers State and Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF). It was a day set aside to celebrate the epochal judgement of the Supreme Court that stands as a mystery to many political watchers – a verdict which ensured that Rt. Hon. Amaechi, who was denied his victory by the then PDP leadership, was handed over the mantle of leadership of Rivers State on 25th October, 2007.

Instead of the 50,000 expected by the organisers, over 85,500 eventually attended the rally, with 46,000 seated, 25,000 standing and 14,500 standing outside the stadium main bowl but participated fully by following the programme through the giant television sets and loudspeakers placed at strategic places outside the stadium by the oragnisers. Instructively, most of these great sons and daughters of Rivers State that attended the historic rally sponsored themselves to the event, thus practically demonstrating their great love for Amaechi and APC.

Joining this large throng of Rivers people to celebrate seven years of Amaechism were many other Nigerians, including all APC presidential aspirants – a former Head of State, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.); ex-Vice-President Atiku Abubakar; the Governor of Kano State, Musa Rabiu Kwankwaso; his Imo State counterpart, Rochas Okorocha and LEADERSHIP Publisher, Sam Nda-Isaiah. Also in attendance were the National Chairman of the APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun; Governor of Kwara State, Abdulfatah Ahmed, and his predecessor, Senator Bukola Saraki; as well as a former Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, and his predecessor, Engr. Segun Oni, the Deputy National Chairman, South, of APC; lawmakers and other eminent personalities.

The event was used to celebrate the seven golden years of the administration of Governor of Amaechi in Rivers State that witnessed unprecedented growth in all sectors of the economy of the state, particularly in the areas of Education, Health, Agriculture, roads and other physical infrastructure, the formal commissioning of one of the best stadia in Nigeria, the 46-seater Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium Complex that boasts world-class facilities for football, swimming, handball and several other sports.

The climax of the event was the formal burial of PDP in Rivers State, with Hon. Emmanuel Deeyah Nwika, one-time Deputy Speaker of Rivers State House of Assembly with Gov Amaechi as the Speaker then, one-time Commissioner of Finance and two-time member of the Federal House of Representatives from 2003 to 2011, decamping from PDP to APC with the 5,800 remnants of PDP in Rivers State. According to Hon. Deeyah Nwika, “with today’s event, PDP ceases to exist in Rivers State probably only in the minds of few hungry fellows still singing the praises of confused Chief Nyesom Wike whose vision is just to take Rivers State to the days of insecurity that we have passed.”

Rivers APC deeply appreciates all the goodwill messages received at the epochal rally and fully associates itself with the following words of Governor Amaechi at the rally: “They (PDP leaders) have made too much noise. President Jonathan says we exist only on posters and billboards. So, we brought a large billboard for him. If the President is not watching the rally, they will give him security report.This stadium is 46,000 seating capacity. I built it. It was built by me. One of them campaigning for Rivers governorship (Chief Nyesom Wike, the immediate past Minister of State for Education) was the contractor to do the roads. He abandoned the roads and took N3 billion and left. Now, he wants to be governor.

I challenge them to an integrity test. Any of them from Abuja to Rivers State, I challenge them to an integrity test. I have worked with them. I have their records and their (records) are in the Office of the Governor.

We have developed 750 megawatts, but the problem is Federal Government not allowing us to distribute electricity.

We were to give Port Harcourt water. As I am talking to you today, the Minister of Finance (Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala) has refused to move the file again back to Executive Council for approval, so that you can have water. They do not care for you. They want you to die of water-borne diseases. Punish them with your votes. Punish PDP with your votes. He (Jonathan) is our son; why can’t we have water?

The problem we have is that the EFCC (Economic and Financial Crimes Commission) is no longer working. Corruption is at its industrial scale. Thieves are thieves because we now have an industry called corruption.”

We join the Rivers Governor to laud members of the National Assembly from the State who have wisely chosen to stand by our Governor. We are happy that eight members of the House of Representatives from the State moved with him to APC, while the rest betrayed him and will surely be punished by Rivers people with their votes in 2015.

We also join the NGF Chairman in thanking Rivers people for keeping him as Governor and standing by him. We fully associate ourselves with Amaechi’s words when he stated: “They said the reason why the President (Jonathan) is not performing in Rivers State is because he is quarrelling with the Governor of Rivers State. Okay, what is the quarrel between the Governor of Akwa Ibom State and the Governor of Cross River State that the road from Akwa Ibom State to Cross River State is abandoned? Are they quarrelling too? It is more of lack of performance. When the President (Jonathan) spoke in Benin, he spoke in a stadium that was less than 20,000-seating capacity. When TAN (Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria) held their rally in Port Harcourt, they held it at the 16,000-capacity Elekahia Stadium and this was a South-South rally. The rally in Benin was South-South. The rally in Port Harcourt was South-South. This one (APC mega rally) is Port Harcourt rally. Do you remember Ebola? To show you how much the President hates us, he visited Lagos; did he visit Rivers State? He did not care. He wanted all of us to die, but I took it as a challenge and said none of us would die. Whatever it will take, I will do what I can by God’s grace to protect Rivers people.

Can you see our airport (Port Harcourt International Airport)? The president lands at the airport. But see how we look like refugees. They say there is no light at the airport. What did we do to them? We gave him the highest votes in the country and the punishment we get for given him the highest vote is operation nothing. So, APC is the solution to protect our interest. We must go there to vote out the PDP. It is not about our son.

They tell you that you should not vote for these people, because they are Hausa people, they are Muslims, but the refinery in Rivers State was built and commissioned by Tafawa Balewa, a northerner. Shehu Shagari started NAFCON, Ibrahim Babangida commissioned it. IBB started the Eleme Petrochemical Company, Sani Abacha completed it. They are all northerners; they are all Muslims. NLNG was started and completed by Abacha and he is a northerner and a Muslim. Bonny NLNG, NDDC, Niger Delta Ministry were established by northerners.

In fact, when late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua was alive, Niger Delta Ministry was working; now it is only one item: East-West Road, and they say he (President Jonathan) is our brother. He is not my brother. My brother is the man who delivers on his services for me. If the President says he is our brother, let him call one project (his administration has embarked upon in Rivers State).”

We thank APC leaders, including our presidential aspirants, for attending the Port Harcourt Mega Rally and for the message of hope they gave to Nigerians during the rally. For example, Buhari said that APC, from next year, would provide security and development in Nigeria, while Atiku urged Nigerians to vote for APC in 2015 to eradicate poverty and ensure steady electricity, good roads and good schools, among others. On their part, Okorocha assured that the APC would provide the best presidential candidate with vision for Nigeria, not based on religion or tribe, while Kwankwaso noted that Amaechi is ensuring peace and stability in Nigeria, as the Chairman of NGF, and Nda-Isaiah stated that God gave Rivers people a good Governor in Amaechi, declaring that he had never seen the kind of crowd he was seeing at the Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium.

Odigie-Oyegun assured that the APC would wipe out corruption in Nigeria and that APC is in charge of Rivers State, contrary to the claim of PDP leaders, stating that the progress in the state could be replicated at the centre and all over Nigeria.

In conclusion, Rivers APC urges the Nigerian electorate to save our nation from PDP’s misrule in 2015 by punishing the PDP and President Goodluck Jonathan with our votes in 2015, in order to bring about the much-desired change. The power to bring about a better Nigeria is in our hands. Let’s use it wisely in 2015 and end the suffocating circle of doom and gloom occasioned by the visionless leadership of President Jonathan.

 

Chief Eze Chukwuemeka Eze,

SSA Media and Public Affairs to the State Chairman, APC Rivers State

27-10-14

2015: “I Am The Game Changer The Nation Needs” Ben Murray-Bruce Declares

Media business owner, Mr. Ben Murray-Bruce, on Monday joined the race for the Bayelsa East senatorial district, the home district of President Goodluck Jonathan, when he submitted his expression of interest form.

Murray-Bruce, who stormed the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) state secretariat in Yenagoa with hundreds of supporters, insisted that what the upper legislative house needed at this critical stage was a game changer, a process which he represents.

Bruce stressed that things had gone terribly wrong with the polity and that it was a problem that must be fixed in order to fix the country.

Murray-Bruce, who re-affirmed his loyalty to the President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP, however made it clear that his move would not affect the objectivity of news reportage by the Silverbird Television and Rhythm Radio stations nationwide.

He disclosed that he would be resigning his chairmanship of the board of the Sylverbird group shortly even as he reel out the names of opposition party stalwarts and governors whom he insisted will remain his friends despite political differences.

According to Thisday Newspaper reports, Bruce insisted that he shares a leftist political view with the president; hence they would be working most effectively together.

“I am politically loyal to President Jonathan, but I will reach out to the opposition. Even before I am elected, I am already working on 10 bills that would be presented to the house immediately on inauguration. The situation cannot remain business as usual.”
The decision of the Silverbird boss to contest the senate followed the decision of the state caucus of the PDP to zone the senate position to his Akassa homested.

David Mark In Tears As Constituents Purchase Nomination Form For Him

Senate President, David Mark, reportedly broke down in tears on Monday as constituents from his Benue South Senatorial District purchased the  2015 Peoples Democratic Party nomination form for him to seek a re-election into the senate in 2015.

Mark has been in the Senate since 1999 and was elected as the President of the upper chambers on June 6, 2007.

In a statement by Mark’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Kolawole Ologbondiyan, in Abuja, it was explained that the nine local government council chairmen in Benue South Senatorial zone purchased the party nomination form in Makurdi.

The statement added that the people said they want Mark to return to the Senate unchallenged.

Ologbondiyan said, while accepting the nomination form at a crowded gathering in his Otukpo country home on Monday, Mark promised not to depart from the path of honour, justice and equity in the service to his country men and women.

He said, “This is the covenant with my people. This endorsement speaks volume of the immeasurable responsibility on my shoulder by my people. Please pray for me that God gives me the grace, wisdom and courage to continue to serve to the glory of God and benefit to humanity.”

 

2face To Celebrate 10th Anniversary With New Album, Releases New Video For Remix Of Hit Song

He has attained the status of a legend in the Nigerian music industry and he just keeps working and showing the stuff he is made of. 2face Idibia fondly referred to as 2Baba has released a new video and it is a remix to his first single after he went solo, Nfana Ibaga. We are not talking of that Nfana Ibaga remix which had Reggie Rockstone and Beenie Man but a very fresh remix and an amazing video to go with it.

2face is also set to release a new album, Rewind, Select & Update as he celebrates his 1oth year anniversary in the music industry as a solo artiste this year. We hear he is also working with his former record label, Kennis Music who plan to release Face 2 Face 10.0 which is a modification of his first album, Face 2 Face

Like fine wine, 2face just keeps getting better.

Check out the video and there is a special cameo appearance by another great Nigerian music artist.

Play

Nigeria’s Goodluck Jonathan Leads 2015 Election Race: Reuters Analysis

ABUJA (Reuters) – Not many presidents could survive three multi-billion dollar government oil corruption scandals and a wave of cold-blooded killings and kidnappings of civilians by Islamist militants still holding hundreds of schoolgirls after six months.

Nigeria’s president Goodluck Jonathan has not only survived, he will seek re-election in February stronger than ever, after five years in a job no one expected him to get, reports Reuters News Agency.

Jonathan’s support base within the ruling party is now unchallenged, a rare feat for the often fractious People’s Democratic Party (PDP), while the main opposition APC coalition is split between two contestants for the presidency.

The government announced a ceasefire with the Islamist Boko Haram rebels 10 days ago, ahead of talks in neighbouring Chad to secure the release of more than 200 girls seized from Chibok village in April in an abduction that shocked the world.

If the talks are successful it would help the president’s image. But nothing has come of it yet and violence has since surged, with dozens more children kidnapped.

Jonathan has defended his overstretched military’s efforts against a Boko Haram insurgency that has killed thousands. In the case of the failure to free the schoolgirls, he has said any rescue attempt would endanger their lives.

Meanwhile, apart from the security challenges, his government also has been beset by corruption allegations.

A parliamentary report detailed a $6.8 billion fuel subsidy fraud. A government investigation revealed corrupt cut price crude sales to oil majors that cost the treasury billions. And a former central banker has reported that between $10 billion and $20 billion had been diverted by the state oil firm over 18 months between 2012 and last year.

The government pledged to investigate the first two cases and denied the third.

Last month, South Africa froze two payments from the Jonathan administration totalling $15 million that it suspected were for illegal arms deals. Nigeria said the deals were legal.

Yet it is a testament to Nigeria’s complex mix of ethnic rivalry, patronage and intense competition for centralised oil wealth in Africa’s top producer that Jonathan can brush off these various scandals and attract a high level of support.

WEAKER OPPOSITION

Jonathan, a Christian southerner, was an accidental president, taking over in 2009 after President Umaru Yar’adua, a Muslim from the north, died from illness.

When Jonathan was elected to his own term in 2011, many in the north resented his decision to run, believing he had torn up an unwritten rule that power should rotate between mainly Muslim north and mainly Christian south every two terms.

Former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari, who lost to Jonathan in 2011, and defected PDP ex-vice president Atiku Abubakar are vying for the opposition APC ticket. Both launched bids in the past month, focusing on security and graft.

Roddy Barclay, senior Africa analyst at Control Risks, a political risk consultancy, sees two “principle factors for Jonathan’s robust position in spite of the scandals and failings which have rocked his government”.

“Firstly, the primacy of money and patronage in determining electoral outcomes in Nigeria,” means an incumbent gets a huge advantage, and second, “the opposition lacks steadfast unity”.

That marks a big change from less than a year ago. In December it was the PDP that was in crisis. Thirty seven lawmakers defected to the APC that month, demolishing the PDP’s lower house majority. Rotimi Amaechi, powerful governor of the oil hub state of Rivers, also defected.

The same month, Jonathan’s mentor and PDP Godfather, ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo, wrote a scathing letter saying it would be “fatally morally flawed” for Jonathan to seek re-election in 2015 because of corruption under his rule. Jonathan called the intervention “unjustifiable and indecorous”.

Ten months on and the APC has failed to capitalise. It has not agreed on a presidential candidate and several disillusioned APC figures have flipped to the PDP, underscoring the fluid nature of Nigerian party politics.

They include popular two-term ex-governor of Kano state Ibrahim Shakarau, a Buhari rival, and former anti-corruption chief Nuhu Ribadu, denying the APC a strong anti-graft platform, although Buhari still has strong anti-corruption credentials.

“MODEST EXPECTATIONS”

In June, the APC then lost a governorship election in southwestern Ekiti state to the ruling party.

“The opposition is cannabalising itself. Its top elites are vying against one another. That’s a glide path for President Jonathan,” said Eurasia Group’s Philippe de Pontet.

“Had the APC sustained its momentum from 5-6 months ago … we’d be in a different world.”

On Dec 2, the dynamic could shift when the party picks its candidate. Buhari earned a reputation for cracking down on corruption during his time in power in 1983-85, and most Nigerians agree he did not use the post to enrich himself, but it is not clear whether he would win votes from APC supporters in the south.

The emotional conflict felt by Barrister Isaac Matthew illustrates Jonathan’s staying power.

Driven by the plight of the schoolgirls to leave a court case he was defending to join protesters demanding more action to rescue them, he says Jonathan bears ultimate responsibility since “leaders are supposed to protect their people”.

“I’m still probably going to vote for him,” he said, citing Jonathan’s concentration of power and some works Matthew said had greatly improved the road network.

“The opposition has no credible candidate to stand against him. Not Atiku (Abubakar) and not Buhari.”

The power sector is also under improvement, but that may not draw votes since the supply in one of the world’s most electricity-starved countries has fallen in the short term.

Many voters are likely to see the Boko Haram insurgency, which only affects the remote northeast apart from occasional bomb attacks in the capital or other cities, as just one problem in their large, diverse country.

“Expectations in the electorate are fairly modest and they are hugely disenfranchised, despite … years of civilian rule,” said Antony Goldman, head of Nigeria-focused PM Consulting.

“You don’t need to be popular or successful in conventional terms to win an election in Nigeria,” he said, although he added that no president had managed to stay popular after four years in office, and the APC had yet to present a clear alternative.

EBOLA NOT A FACTOR SO FAR

One issue that has not yet played an important role is Ebola, rampant in some other West African states. A mixture of luck and impressively decisive action has meant Africa’s most populous country was able to avoid a potentially devastating epidemic after a Liberian brought it to the mega-city of Lagos, but the virus could still come back to plague Nigeria, with unpredictable political consequences.

Jonathan’s assumed decision to run has widened a divide between elites in Nigeria’s south and north because of a feeling in the north that it is still their “turn” to rule.

That makes violence likely, especially if the poll is close. In 2011, more than 800 were killed and 65,000 displaced in three days of violence after Jonathan beat Buhari in the poll.

If Buhari, now 71, gets the ticket but loses the election again, his supporters may have less reason to end the mayhem so quickly if they sense he has missed his last chance.

By Running A Government Which Rewards Only His Friends And Family, Jonathan Is Practising Presidentialism And Clientelism -Atiku

Former vice president and presidential aspirant of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar has accused President Goodluck Jonathan of leading a government that rewards only his cronies and family, describing it as clientelism.
The former vice president also said that what the country has had since Jonathan took over government is presidentialism, in which the President wields too much power.
Atiku said this on Monday through Prof Babalola Borishade, the Director of His campaign organization at a Press Conference held in Abeokuta.
“as a result, effective accountability and representation through popular democratic participation is giving way to
personal rule and single party dictatorships rooted on politics of Clientelism.
“Clientelism refers to the awarding of personal favours among patrimonial cronies. These favours take the form of public sector jobs,appointments, distribution of resources through licences, contracts and tax wavers.
“Corruption, nepotism and official impunity have brought our country down to the bottom. 3 per cent in the world in terms of political
stability.
“In essence, what we have now in Nigeria is a form of patrimonial democracy. This is posing serious threats to the durability of democracy.
“Not only because it erodes civil liberties of citizens, thus creating a culture of political
apathy and disenchantment among them, it also severely limits the extent to which Government can be pressed to be responsive and accountable towards the citizens.
“Thus, for both of those who are inside and outside the network, the future is bleak,” he said.

Tolu Ogunlesi: Let’s Insist On Presidential Debates For 2015

If I’m voted into power within the next four years, the issue of power will become a thing of the past. Four years is enough for anyone in power to make significant improvement and if I can’t improve on power within this period, it then means I cannot do anything even if I am there for the next four years.” That was President Goodluck Jonathan in February 2011.

And here is Muhammadu Buhari, two months after Jonathan: “This campaign is the third and last one for me, since, after it, I will not present myself again for election into the office of the President.”

The lesson here is a simple one: Politicians ought to be careful about the statements they make.

Having said that, I should also add that we ought to acknowledge the fact that people are allowed to change their minds. Four hours is a long time in Nigerian politics, let alone four years. If Jonathan and Buhari have decided to change their minds, we should respect their decisions. But I also believe that in the spirit of the accountability that true democracy demands, Nigerians deserve explanations from both men.

This is where presidential debates will come in. I’ll be looking forward to debates at which Jonathan, Buhari, Atiku Abubakar and whoever else is seeking to rule Nigeria between 2015 and 2019 are all made to confront their records in word and deed. I believe we ought to have at least three major presidential debates before the election in February 2015, moderated by credible, courageous and knowledgeable people who can hit the candidates with tough and uncompromising questions.

For those wont to dismiss the idea of debates in our stomach-infrastructure-dominated political system, I’d say that we shouldn’t let the sad realities of today (cash-and-carry elections) stop us from envisioning and constructing the framework for a better future (in which vision and intellect dominate).

Debates are a way to put some power in the hands of the electorate, and to force candidates to pay attention to the people who will be deciding their fates. Let me also put forward the eloquent argument made by Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola, at an event organised by the Kukah Centre, in Abuja, in September.

He said: “Debates help you to test the candidates and be able to form an idea; that this candidate has an idea what the problems are. Those are the things that help people to make choices.” He cited the example of the best-known presidential debate in Nigerian history, the one between M.K.O. Abiola and Bashir Tofa, in June 1993. “Immediately, Tofa could not answer what the price of fuel was, it became clear to Nigerians that this was the candidate who was disconnected… We should not have people seeking high office without participating in debates.”

At least, one 2015 presidential debate should be devoted wholly to the economy. Another should focus on the security situation – Boko Haram, crude oil theft, ethnic militias, etc. A third could take a more personal, less ‘policy’ – route the one in which we expect the candidates to defend their records and credentials – cluelessness, bigotry, corruption and everything in between.

I don’t think it matters which of the parties or candidates wins the presidency, as long as Nigerians are guaranteed a certain commitment to improved governance; as long as whoever that victor is realises that business cannot continue as usual.

One big charge against the incumbent is that he is clueless and incompetent; and not in control of his government. I think the problem – and even his prominent critics like Lamido Sanusi and Tunde Bakare have put forward this argument – is that we have a good man who has allowed himself to be surrounded – and derailed – by all sorts of shady characters, to whom his natural proclivity for loyalty binds him. He needs to be reminded that Nigeria needs a decisive and visionary leader more than it needs a ‘nice’ man. And we need a President who is not only in charge, but is also seen to be in charge.

President Jonathan, should he get a second term, actually now has an incentive to rise to the challenge of the Nigerian Presidency: If we assume that he has pandered to all sorts of interests because he’s got an eye on re-election, he will no longer have that pressure upon him in 2015.

On their own part, one big charge against Buhari and Atiku is that they are ‘serial losers’ and ‘failed politicians’, with nothing fresh to offer. That’s an ignorant thing to say, if you ask me, considering that before winning the presidency of Brazil in 2002, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva had lost three previous elections (1989, 1994 and 1998). The losses didn’t stop him from eventually becoming one of the most popular Brazilian presidents ever, and a successful one at that.

Two years after losing the presidential election to John F. Kennedy in 1960, Richard Nixon ran for the Governorship of California. He lost, prompting the widespread belief that his political career was over. The morning after the election, he famously announced to reporters, at a press conference: “You won’t have Nixon to kick around anymore because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference”. Five years later, he changed his mind, and went on to win the 1968 presidential election.

It is in the very nature of politics for persistence and the demonstration of staying-power to be a defining element.

But beyond ambition and persistence, clarity of purpose and a sense of vision are for me the greatest qualities needed in persons aspiring to elected office. And the leading contemporary Nigerian model for that, in my opinion, is the outgoing Governor of Lagos.

In his demonstration of his grasp of the issues that matter the most to Lagos, Fashola never fails to impress. At the Kukah Centre debate, he told the audience that he came to office with the full understanding of the city’s residents and their wishes, and its problems, based on two things: One, the fact that he’d lived in Lagos almost all his life, and two, his four-year-stint as Chief of Staff, which gave him experience in the workings of a complicated government system. When he came to office, he said, he knew what needed to be done urgently.

“Fundamentally, I saw the need to restore law and order,” he said, adding that it explains why he focused on equipping and motivating the police force, through the creation of the Lagos State Security Trust Fund. He said he met a situation in which policemen were expected to buy their own uniforms, and to “confront criminals without ammunition.”

He also said something that cannot be disputed: “In seven years, I have sat in traffic with the people who elected me. I have never used a siren. That is what gives me the moral right to challenge those who do.” He was alluding to the widely reported incident a few years ago in which he arrested an army officer for driving against traffic. “We didn’t have governors arresting soldiers, it [used to be] the other way round.”

Looking around the crowded field that is Nigerian politics today, I can’t think of any other person more qualified than him to be used as a yardstick for the sort of President Nigeria needs at this time. (I’m open to a debate on this!)

It’s a shame, however, that a man who is undoubtedly one of the most qualified for the job of president isn’t even in the running. Perhaps, we can work out an arrangement in which Fashola can at least debate alongside the main contenders, when the presidential debates kick off. Even if he won’t himself be a candidate.

Wouldn’t you love to see that?

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Article written by Tolu Ogunlesi and published with permission from the writer, On twitter @toluogunlesi and Culled from PUNCH

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Abdulbaqi Aliyu Jari: Curbing Mass Failure Among Secondary School Students

A lot of mass failures in various examination are now been recorded yearly.  The recent 2014  WAEC results  have shown that over 68 percent of the 1.6 million candidates have failed either Mathematics or English – which are prerequisite for getting admission into any tertiary  institution in Nigeria as against 65 and 60 in 2013 and 2012 respectively. Only about 30 percent got five credits including  Mathematics and English. That was against 35 percent and 38 percent for 2013 and 2012 respectively. Also, about 8.4 percent of the results was nullified. Even the traditional NECO that students passes with flying colors is now in comatose. The NECO 2014 results shows that over 52 percent failed in either Mathematics or English. UTME use to a failure for most students every year. 2014 was not different. Though both paper and computer tests were used to assess the students, but still over 60 percent scored below 180. Even in our tertiary institutions, the cases of spill over and students graduating with pass degrees are on the increase. The questions that should be asked is what is the cause of this mass failure?  and How can we remedy them?

In my own assertion as a one time volunteer teacher, I believe the following are among the major problems:
1.  Lack of quality education, educators and learning environment. The teachers are half-beaked graduates that are also product of corrupt teachers and schools. The environment is not favourable for learning. Twenty students par twenty foot square room.
2. Lack of well and proper examinations standard. Different schools with different curriculum. WAEC standard, NECO standard etc
3.  Lack of robust and articulated orientation for the students. Many students do not  know the format of UTME, NECO etc. They thought it was like their ordinary school exams.
4. Effect of social networks and media. Even during the time of examinations, one will still see students online. Whether on Facebook, Twitter, 2go etc. Young people from the age of  thirteen are allowed to register on this networks. Therefore, they spend most of thier time on this networks. Instead of “facing their books, they eventually end up on Facebook”.

While they are suppose to go to class, they spend their time on 2go. Etc other factors include lack of determination of students to succeed, motivation
from parents, teachers etc
All those problems among many other can be remedied. The first answer to avoiding mass examinations failures lies on the qualitative teaching and learning materials and  environment. Also, in the national education policy, conducive environment, including feeding, recreation should be ensured among the basic for conducive atmosphere for learning.
Before taking school teachers, their ability to impact the needed knowledge should be a top priority not just certificate. That is very imperative for the promotion of knowledge.  Among other things needed is regulation of social networks in schools – especially during the times of study, lectures and examinations.

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Article written by Abdulbaqi Aliyu Jari

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It is the policy of NewsWireNGR not to endorse or oppose any opinion expressed by a User or Content provided by a User, Contributor, or other independent party.
Opinion pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of NewsWireNGR.