Monday, 24 November 2014

185 Days To Go: A Government Divided

Implementation of the agenda to scuttle the 2015 elections and elongate the tenure of incumbent officeholders has started in earnest. I saw it coming, months ago. But, even now, many have not read the handwriting on the wall. It’s 185 days to May 29.

For starters, any extension of emergency rule in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states will mean that elections will not hold there. Non-approval of the extension by the legislature is likely to lead to the appointment of sole administrators and the dismantling of democratic structures in the states.

Promises of bribe money have not been able to convince many senators from the north to support the extension. And because the blackmail to impose sole administrators has not worked either, attacking members of the House of Representatives with tear gas became the next option.

A member of the House has been quoted as saying that the plot executed on Thursday was to prevent Speaker Aminu Tambuwal from presiding over the reconvened House. His deputy Emeka Ihedioha would then supervise the speaker’s impeachment (for crossing over to the APC) and perhaps approval of the state of emergency request.

The plot has backfired and we now have a divided government. Our honourable members turned cats and monkeys on Thursday as they scaled a high fence in order to make it to the chambers. In solidarity with the House of Reps, the Senate suspended plenary. Now, the House is reportedly preparing to initiate impeachment proceedings against President Jonathan.

Time has run out already. At present, Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states are not under emergency rule. The last 18 months of supposed state of emergency did not help anyway: Boko Haram intensified its onslaught and now over one million of our compatriots have been forced from their homes to live in makeshift camps. Close to 20, 000 others have been killed or kidnapped.

I’m aware that INEC is not even ready for the elections. When it announced that it would no longer create the contentious 30, 000 polling units, I knew it had understood where the nation was heading for. What would make an election that excluded votes from the three states credible? Would the internally displaced people also vote? And who would they vote for anyway in a presidential election?

Six more months of emergency rule in the north-east will not end terrorist activities in the region. Nor will they witness the return of over 200 schoolgirls kidnapped from Chibok 223 days ago. But what kind of country is this? So those girls and scores of others abducted later have been forgotten and we are preparing for elections? We wait to see the day the PDP or the APC presidential candidate will mount the rostrum in Bama or Mubi to make promises.

Our reps should quickly drop their impeachment threat. They and the senators do not need to be bribed – I know they need money now for electioneering – before they can approve extension of emergency rule. In fact, the entire country is in a state of emergency—emergency rule should be extended to every state that has witnessed bomb explosion in the last five years. And since the FCT has also lost its innocence, the National Assembly members should be on forced vacation – without pay.

Finance minister Okonjo-Iweala has spoken of “austerity measures” in the face of dwindling oil revenue. Cost-cutting should start from the jumbo pay enjoyed by our public “servants” that contribute almost nothing to the development of the nation and its economy. What has happened to the report of the National Conference that consumed more than N12billion this year?

My prayer is that the federal government would unite to fight the evils they have reared their ugly heads in this dispensation. We cannot afford any faceoff between the legislature and the executive in this wartime and election year. Let our leaders, for once, do what is right

2015: Robbers Visit Law Firm, Steal Court Documents On Jonathan’s Eligibility

Suspected armed robbers at the weekend stormed the law firm of one of the plaintiffs in the suit challenging the eligibility of President Goodluck Jonathan to re-contest in the 2015 general elections, Wahab Olatoye, and stole most of the files containing documents to be used in the eligibility suit filed at a Federal High Court in Abuja.

Olatoye alongside one Adejumo Ajagbe, approached the court seeking an order restraining the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the Attorney-General of Federation (AGF) from allowing Jonathan and Sambo to seek re-election for their respective offices in 2015.

While talking to newsmen, Olatoye said his office burgled on Friday night and vital documents he is using to pursue his case against the President and other vital documents were taken away.

He added that the crime had since been reported to the Garki Police station.

“It is really a great surprise to me, when I was called on Saturday morning that my office had been burgled by yet to be identified persons. It was my office alone that was burgled out of all the offices in the plaza. The thieves came in through the ceiling and ransacked all the files in my office.

“Although, they made away with some amount of money I left in the office, they also took away some documents, especially the ones I am using in pursuing my case against the eligibilty of President Goodluck Jonathan.

“As a plaintiff in the matter and a legal practitioner, there are some documents I need to hand over to my lawyers which I kept in the office. All my computer systems in the office were also destroyed, the office safe was also destroyed.

“The matter have been reported to the FCDA police station in Garki, and the police have promised to come around on Monday morning for further investigation”, Olatoye stated.

Olatoye and Ajagbe had anchored their suit against Jonathan on the provisions of sections 132(1), 135(2)(a) and (b), 137(1)(b), 142(1) and (2) of the Constitution and the Supreme Court decisions.

The plaintiffs argued that by the virtue of constitutional provisions, the President and the Vice President elected in the same election and sworn into office on the same date and ceremony were taken to have been elected for one single term of four years.

Friday, 21 November 2014

Still Sharing The Money Even Whilst Nation Under Siege

As war rages in the North East and insurgents continue their onslaught, annexing towns and villages, politicians and indeed Nigerians seem oblivious of the inferno at their gate. As if unperturbed, politicking for 2015 has commenced in full force with the same corrupt individuals asking Nigerians once again for their mandate; these same individuals that are responsible by their actions and inactions for this insurgency and the current state of insecurity in the country.

Being in government, for this ignominious club of career politicians, has proven to be a very lucrative business as they move from one political post to another, sharing the money. But for a few individuals, politics in Nigeria has become ‘theft incorporated’, as voters mortgage their better judgement for the proverbial bowl of porridge or ‘stomach infrastructure’ as it is now comically referred as by politicians. Vital funds that could have gone into hospitals, schools and roads and other public services are being shared for votes.

With impunity waxing strong because of the weakness of our institutions, it is now open season for looting. Wherever you look in the public sector, the story is the same ‘share the money’. The tragedy is that there is nothing anyone can do about it, even more so in a society where individuals are more powerful than institutions.

Meanwhile millions of our fellow citizens are fleeing the advance of Boko Haram as towns and villages are abandoned to insurgents. Fleeing families are left to fend for themselves as the political elite and the rich run to Abuja.

The government had hitherto been in denial of the threat we face as a nation, burying their heads in the sand, as if that would make the problem go away. Good advice from concerned Nigerians were shunned and these individuals were maligned and labelled as opposition by government. Even when the Borno State Governor Shettima made his honest assessmentearlier this year on the challenges facing the military in prosecuting this war, he was slapped down by Dr Doyin Okupe and the presidency, with the usual response, that ‘the government is on top of the situation’. Current events have without a doubt vindicated the governor. Since his comments in February, the insurgents have become more brazen in their attacks, emboldened by their successes. Many local governments and towns like Gwoza and Mubi have been overrun. The insurgent are no longer content to operate just as a guerrilla outfit but are now holding territory and setting up what can only be described as a parallel government.   A once rag-tag army has evolved in a very short time into an organised fighting machine that is able to make daring forays to towns as far south as Lokoja, to release prisoners from jail.

Nigerians must not be under any illusion that they will stop at Mubi, unless there is a radical revision of the current strategy.   Now we hear that even Chibok itself has been seized by the militants in a show of strength that makes the safe release of the Chibok girls a more distant prospect than ever. Nowhere is safe in Nigeria, not even Abuja. The more territories these insurgents are able to hold the more confident they become.

We have a serious situation on our hands but you won’t know this from watching the machinations of our politicians. It was said of Nero, the Roman Emperor over 2000 years ago that he fiddled whilst Rome burned. What is unfolding before our eyes are the symptoms of many years of institutional decay that began in the late 1980s and worsened in the last 10 years with the institutionalisation of corruption.

The military can only operate within the limit of its resources. They cannot be expected to act outside the conventional chain of command or the parameters set by government. The buck must stop with the president as Commander-in-Chief.

The recent Boko Haram video was crushingly disappointing for those campaigning for the release of the Chibok girls. After weeks of speculation, the venomous words of the Boko Haram leader, who we were told had been killed, informed the world that far from freeing the girls, they have married them off. This is heart breaking, especially for the parents, but not surprising nonetheless after over 200 days of these children being in captivity. The video was particularly humiliating for Nigeria, as it scoffed and mocked the government’s jubilant claim of an agreed ceasefire, leaving our president looking at best naïve.

The lesson for government is that you don’t make such an announcement to the world until you have physical custody of the girls or at least some of them. We are dealing with an ideological enemy that wants nothing from Nigeria and so the only way you can negotiate with them is from the position of strength. The problem is not that this group is too strong but that the State is seemingly weak. We cannot go into a ceasefire agreement from a position of weakness. As a commentator noted, these individuals are diametrically opposed to all that Nigeria stands for or aspire – democracy, education, openness, tolerance, secularity and freedom of worship. There can be no meeting of minds with this group until fighting ceases to be an option for the group, at which point a discussion can then be held from a position of strength.

The president had no business visiting Burkina Faso when he has greater challenges at home, with millions of citizens displaced. You do not leave your home when it is on fire to put out a spark in your neighbour’s house. No one died in Burkina Faso.

We need a radical revision of the way we have approached this insurgency. Efforts must be intensified to win the hearts and minds of the disenfranchised youth in the North who believe they are not part of the Nigerian project, making them ready recruits for Boko Haram. Islamic clerics must work with government to stop the brainwashing of these youths. The government must devise effective strategies to ‘follow the money’ allocated for the prosecution of this war and also the funds allocated to NEMA for the welfare of displaced persons.

The president’s advisers will tell him and indeed Nigerians that there is terrorism everywhere in the world just to placate Nigerians and explain their incompetence. The president must now jettison these advisers, they are enemies of Nigeria. With the increasing spate of bombings in the country and the spectre of Afghanistan lurking at our gates, we must all give the military and our security agencies all the support they need. Sadly, with 2015 election is almost upon us, the response from our politicians is all too familiar, ‘share the money’.

Thursday, 20 November 2014

LASU withdraws ASUU chairman’s PhD certificates, 13 others

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yesterday revealed that the management of the Lagos State University (LASU) has withdrawn the PhD certificates of some of its members which include the branch ASUU LASU chairman, Dr. Adekunle Idris.

ASUU Lagos zonal Coordinator, Dr. Sola Nasir, dropped the bombshell at a press briefing held at the old LASU Sociology Department lecture hall of LASU and flanked by ASUU chairmen from University of Lagos, Olabisi Onabanjo University, University of Agriculture Abeokuta, Tai Solarin University of Education and the host ASUU-LASU.

The ASUU-LASU, Dr. Adekunle Idris confirmed that the management withdrew his PhD and that of 13 others from different departments claiming errors were made in the wordings.

According to Dr. Nasir, the LASU management in their letters to the affected lecturers said it discovered some errors in their PhD and asked the holders to return them. He said the union expect them to correct it and produce new ones for Dr. Idris and others.

His words: ‘’The ASUU-LASU chairman, Dr Idris is not alone, there are 14 other lecturers with the Accounting Department having the highest with five. For LASU Senate to have made those errors, it places question mark on the persons that make up the Senate. We can rule that the purpose was to victim some of our members’’.

The ASUU Lagos coordinator called on Governor Babatunde Fashola to set up a visitation panel on LASU and also urged the state government to call the VC to order to give peace a chance.

‘’What we experiencing in LASU is a fall out of the last ASUU-LASU strike. ASUU Lagos zone and national are behind ASUU-LASU. We will fight him (VC) until he is out of the office’’, Dr. Nasir, warned.

Giving details of the PhD withdraw, Dr. Idris, said he concluded his PhD in 2011 and was issued the certificate in 2012 and signed by the current Vice Chancellor, Prof John Obafunwa and the former Registrar, Mr. Lateef Animashaun.

‘’I fulfilled all the conditions before being issued the PhD certificate. It is because of the last ASUU strike, it is a backlash. They are withdrawing the certificate, if I were working abroad what will happen? The Senate that took the decision ended there meeting after 8pm without lunch or dinner for the Professors and others.

‘’Accreditation is coming in December in 2014, five of lecturers whose certificates were withdrawn are from a department that will face National Universities Commission (NUC) accreditation team. Th3e issue of certificate withdraw is an act of victimization. There are 14 persons involved, but I know I am the target. In the letter asking me to return the PhD certificate, no time frame was given unlike others’’.

‘’ My PhD is in the Business Admin (Marketing) but they say the error is the marketing but my counsel has written the Governing Council and VC, Prof Obafunwa on the PhD certificate withdraw’’.

Daily Sun gathered that two of those affected in the Accounting Department used same PhD certificates to earn promotion to Associate Professors.

2014’s Most Influential People In Entertainment

The Nigerian entertainment industry has, indeed, come a long way. Boasting unique personalities who, through their giant strides, creative contributions, ideas and participation, have etched the name of our industry on the world map in recent times, Nigerian Entertainment Today profiled the Most Influential People in Entertainment in 2014. Here:



2Face Idibia

CEO Hypertek Music

From his artistry to his passion for change, the acclaimed ‘African Pop King’ has continued to use his music as a means to influence aspects of his immediate environment. His 2Face Idibia Reach Out Foundation has dedicated a great deal of efforts and resources towards reaching out to people in need.



Ade Bantu

Musician/Founder of Afropolitan Vibes

Co-founder of BANTU (Brotherhood Alliance Navigating Towards Unity), Ade Bantu, went beyond his comfort zone to create the monthly gig called ‘Afropolitan Vibes’ in 2013.



Adebayo Salami

Actor/Director

An infinitely influential figure in the Nigerian movie industry, Salami has put in more than 30 years of active service. ‘Oga Bello’, as he is fondly called, has earned his stripes since his days with the Ojo Ladipo Theatre Group.



Aina Kusoro

Movie Marketer (Highwaves Video Mart)

Aina Kusoro is the bubbly individual behind several popular Yoruba movie productions and his name is as popular as his company.

Akeem Olatunji Balogun

Movie Marketer (Olasco Films)

Renowned for bank-rolling many of Funke Akindele’s flicks (especially Jenifa, Return of Jenifa and Omo Ghetto 1 & 2), ‘Olasco’, as he is fondly called, wields appreciable influence in the movie industry which is why many refer to him as one of the ‘godfathers’ of the Nollywood marketing business.



Alex Okosi

Media Entrepreneur, Snr VP Viacom International Africa

As senior vice president and managing director of Viacom International Africa, Okosi continues to showcase Africa to the world via the MTV, BET, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central platforms.



Ali Baba

Comedian/MC

AlleluyaAtuyota Akporobomeriere aka Ali Baba pioneered stand-up comedy in the country, nurtured the trade into profitability and continues to use his influence to hold up the platform for others to shine. Doing a good job of not competing with his protégés, he has got ahead to repackage his brand even more.

Ali Baba is the king on his lane and a comedian of immense repute.



Amin Moussalli

CEO, AIM Group (owners of Cool FM, Wazobia FM, Cool TV)

Mousalli’s love for broadcasting drove him to establish the radio stations Cool FM and Wazobia FM and, later , Nigeria Info, with his daughter Evita at the helm of affairs.

Not yet done, in September 2014, Mousalli recently added Cool TV and Wazobia TV to the growing portfolio.



Audu Maikori

CEO, Chocolate City Group

The last one year might not have been the best for Chocolate City as a business, but Maikori, lawyer and entrepreneur, has shown exemplary skills in steering the entertainment label through the murky waters of low ratings, inactivity and desertion in recent years.



Ayo Animashaun

CEO, Smooth Productions (owners of HIP TV, awards)

Here is one man whose story is no secret. From a miniature magazine filled with song lyrics, he made a brand and just when you think there’s little or nothing he can add to the whole mix, Animashaun springs another surprise on entertainment lovers.

Through his Smooth Promotions Productions, the 44-year old has launched some of the most relevant entertainment platforms, including the Hip Hop World Awards (the Headies) and the 24-hour channel, Hip TV on DSTV which recently celebrated 324 days of transmission in September 2014.



Others on the list include

Ayo Makun

Banky W

Bolanle Austen-Peters

CEO, Terra Kulture

Chioma Ude

Chris Ubosi

Clarence Peters

D’banj

Danny Kioupouroglou

Davido

DJ Jimmy JATT

Don Jazzy

Edi Lawani

Efe Omorogbe

Emeka Mba

Emem Isong

Femi Ayeni

Femi Kuti

Funke Akindele

Genevieve Nnaji

Ibinabo Fiberesima

Jason Njoku

Jide Kosoko

John Ugbe

King Sunny Ade

Kunle Afolayan

KWAM 1

Lancelot Imasuen

Linda Ikeji

Matthew Ohio

Mo’ Abudu

‘Mola Ogundele

Olamide

Olisa Adibua

Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde

Omoyemi Akerele

Paul Okoye

Peace Anyiam-Osigwe

P-Square

Rotimi Pedro

Shina Peller

Tajuddeen Adepetu

Tiwa Savage

Toyin Uthman

Tunde Kelani

Wizkid

Uche Eze