Monday, January 27, 2014

In Shuluwa frustration meets betrayal


"Power must return to the North in 2015 –Shuluwa" Sun online 1/27/14
 
Frustration meets betrayal

This Chief does not speak for the north so it will be wrong to cast aspersion on the whole north while responding to his confusion, his joblessness, and anti-party diatribe. By his innuendoes Chief Shuluwa is not a PDP member.  In reality he has neither political conviction nor affiliation. He is a politically prostituting chief. He is APC, PDP, APCPDP member., a political jobber.  

 This King without kingdom is lying to himself as he thinks of self as a northerner even when geography and Hausa/Fulani disagree with him. Shuluwa is of the northern minority stock that Ahmadu Bello described as the willing tool for Hausa/Fulani hegemony. Rather than allow ethnic nationalities a choice of self-determination Mr. Shuluwa said he will fight another civil war to enforce membership to the Nigeria union. This man is history that knows no history. Shuluwa needs show how the first civil war helped Nigeria and Nigerians before he threatens another one. He may have to show that things have gotten better in Nigeria as a result of the past civil war, the war he won. This man still lives in the past, in the 60s. Perhaps he wants partnership in his servitude to the Hausa/Fulani hegemony.

 In as much as many of us want Nigeria to remain one nation, in this day and age, it is brute, primitive, ignorance and outright stupidity to threaten violence for cohesion.   Forced cohesion among the ethnic nationalities is no cohesion and intrinsically explosive. Ethnic cohesion and harmony cannot be Coerced but reasoned, cultivated, nursed and appreciated. If Shuluwa is not anything but all mouth why has he not engaged in the war currently raging between his people and Fulani herdsmen, where his kith and kin are being slaughtered like chicken infested with H1 virus in the hands of the herdsmen?    

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Femi Aribisala, indicts Buhari.

"Why Buhari will never be president of Nigeria" By Femi Aribisala"

on vanguard online,  / in Femi Aribisala 12:40 am             
By Femi Aribisala

       " ON Friday, 23rd August, 1985, the military government of Major-General Mohammadu Buhari decided to place me under arrest. My crime was that I wrote, among others, an article entitled: “Counter-trading Nigeria’s Future” in the National Concord, exposing the government’s scam of diverting public funds into private coffers through barter-trade with Brazil. A man by the name of Benson Norman was sent from the State Security Services (SSS) to my office to get me. Not finding me, he left a note that I must present myself unfailingly at the SSS office at 15 Awolowo Road, Ikoyi Lagos the next Monday morning.
However, on Sunday, 25th August, 1985, Lateef Aminu came first thing in the morning to my house to inform me that the government of Buhari/Idiagbon had been overthrown. For this reason, I am fond of telling people that God brought about a change of government in Nigeria just because of me.
Coup-plotter
Under the Buhari/Idiagbon regime, once you ended up at 15 Awolowo Road, you may never be heard of again. Decree Number 2 of 1984 empowered Tunde Idiagbon to arrest and detain anybody indefinitely without trial and without legal reprieve. After Buhari was overthrown, Mohammadu Gambo opened the prison doors of 15 Awolowo Road on public television, revealing people in various stages of undress and malnutrition that had been kept in the dungeons without trial by Buhari’s hound-dogs.
As self-imposed Head of State, Buhari had no regard for human rights. Immediately he seized power, he announced that he would “tamper with” the press. Soon, the infamous Decree Number 4 was promulgated which made even the publication of the truth a punishable offence. Under this cover, Buhari jailed innocent journalists, including Tunde Thompson and Nduka Irabo. He abolished civil liberties, promulgated retroactive decrees enabling him to kill Nigerians through jungle justice, proscribed civil society organizations and professional groups and exercised “absolute” power.
This same Buhari would now have us believe that he has gone through some metamorphosis and has become a democrat. I am sure you will forgive me if people like me don’t believe him. Buhari is not, has never been, and will never be, a democrat. Only in Nigeria would a man with his track record, who came to power through a military coup that illegally overthrew a democratic government, now be acclaimed as a democrat. It is on record that Buhari’s military regime is the only one in Nigeria’s history that failed to promulgate a programme for return to civilian rule.
Facts and fiction
So what exactly qualifies Buhari as a democrat today? Precious little! There is nothing democratic about forming and joining political parties just in order to be the presidential candidate. Little wonder then that Buhari’s parties have a short shelf-life. Buhari would like to be Nigeria’s head of state once again. He can no longer achieve this through the barrel of a gun. The only route now open to him is through the democratic process. That is the reason he now conveniently fashions himself as a democrat. It is merely a means to an end; no more, no less.
Buhari’s reputation as an anti-corruption crusader is also a myth. As head of state, he did not make any dent in Nigerian corruption. All we got was a cosmetic “war against indiscipline.” The counter-trade scam happened under his watch. Rather than deal with it, he sent his hound-dogs after nonentities like me who dared to expose it. That scam was no different, in scope and scale, from the petroleum subsidy and other corruption scandals that have since plagued Nigeria. The Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) that Buhari headed under Abacha was also a citadel of corruption. While Buhari himself might not have enriched himself, his cronies and those who worked under him did so handsomely.
On three different occasions, Buhari has run for the presidency. On three different occasions he has failed. That should really be enough. If, as seems likely, he were to run for the presidency a fourth time in 2015, there is no question that he would fail yet again. Try as he might again and again, Mohammadu Buhari can never be President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Buhari’s sectarianism
There is a fundamental reason behind this. Buhari is a bad politician. He is an unbending former military dictator and not a democratic consensus-builder. Like his new ally, Bola Tinubu, Buhari is a regional, sectional politician. Such politicians are practically impossible to package and market nationally in the ethnically-delicate Nigeria of today.
Former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Malam Nasir El’Rufai, one of those Northerners who deserve to be serious contenders for the presidency of Nigeria, observed that Buhari remains “perpetually unelectable” as a result of his “insensitivity to Nigeria’s diversity and his parochial focus.” This is an elegant way of saying that politically, Buhari has an uncanny tendency to put his foot in his mouth. He talks before thinking of the political implications of his words. He shoots from the hip.
The strength of Obasanjo, which enabled him to capture the presidency on two different occasions, was that he was perceived as a broadminded politician, not overly partial to his people in the South-West. As a matter of fact, in his first election, his people did not want him. The strength of Goodluck Jonathan, which propelled him to win the presidency, was that he was able to string together a coalition that stretched both north and south of the Niger. The weakness of Buhari is that he is totally unacceptable to people outside his region.
Buhari is a Northern regional champion. As head of state in the 1980s, his government was unapologetically Northern. No attempt was made to balance the ticket at the top. It was the only regime in Nigeria’s history headed by two Northerners. When he seized power, Buhari put Shagari, the Northern head of state he overthrew, under house arrest. But then he jailed Alex Ekwueme, the Southern vice-president. You may well ask what makes Shagari less culpable for the misdeeds of the Second Republic than his number-two man. The simple fact was that Buhari was Fulani as was Shagari; but Ekwueme was Igbo.
Impolitic words
At the height of the Sharia debate during the Obasanjo administration, Buhari declared that Muslims should vote only for fellow Muslims. This was politically suicidal for a man seeking national office. He became an advocate for implementation of Sharia all over Nigeria. He protested to the Oyo State governor, in the context of a dispute between Fulani herdsmen and indigenous farmers in the state, that “your people are killing my people.” This turned out to be unfounded and perhaps the reverse.
His threats during the campaign for the 2011 elections incited widespread violence in the North after he lost. His supporters went on a rampage; looting and killing; in spite of the fact that, by all accounts, the elections were adjudged the most free and fair in the history of Nigeria’s current democratic experiment. By the time the mayhem had subsided, over 1000 people had been slaughtered in cold blood and some 65,000 displaced.
Forgetting that a statement made in Hausa would readily be translated into English, Buhari later declared unapologetically in a BBC interview: “If what happened in 2011 should again happen in 2015, by the grace of God, the dog and the baboon would all be soaked in blood.” These are the tokens of an irresponsible politician, whose ambitions for power supersede the national interest. Who then are the dogs and baboons that Buhari has in mind to soak in blood if and when he loses yet again come 2015? Are they his children or are they those of others?
With the Boko Haram insurgency in the north, Buhari played to the Northern gallery yet again, calling the Jonathan government “the biggest Boko Haram.” Wole Olaniyi was a fly in the wall at a meeting in Kano Government House designed to persuade PDP rebel governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, to decamp to the APC. Assuming that only Northerners were present, Buhari declared the Boko Haram was a “strategic plan” by the government of Goodluck Jonathan to “destroy the North.” When Jonathan declared a state of emergency in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states, Buhari still saw this with Northern goggles, insinuating that the President is waging war on the North.
President of the North
Without a doubt, Buhari has massive support in the North. Indeed, he is the most popular Northern politician in the North today. But that precisely remains his undoing at the centre. The more he has been identified as a Northern champion, the less attractive he has become as a national choice. Even in the North, his support base is limited to the Muslim population. He does not appeal to Northern Christians. Then there is the added factor of the opposition of his implacable opponents among the Northern elite. Men like Babangida and Atiku would rather die than allow Buhari get to Aso Rock.
One thing is certain, the South-South and the South-East will not vote for Buhari in 2015. Not only that; there are no buyers for Buhari’s sectarian politics in the South-West. No matter what Tinubu might be telling him, the people of the South-West will not vote for Buhari in 2015. We already had the template in 2011, when Buhari tried to sell himself, first by balancing his ticket with a Yoruba man; and then by making sure the Yoruba man is a Christian; a pastor no less. But it just did not wash. It will not work in 2015.
The worst thing that can happen to Northern presidential aspirations in 2015 is for Buhari to be on the APC ballot. That is a sure guarantee that the North will not be providing the next president. Buhari would be a shoo-in in an election for president of Northern Nigeria. But in an election encompassing the entire country, the best he can envisage is to be a kingmaker. He cannot be king. The nearest Buhari will get to Aso Rock in 2015 is by attending the Council of State meetings."

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Progressive Nigerians support ethni-religious politics because insanity is defined as,

"Information Minister [Labaran Maku] raises the alarm: ‘Why they are after the President’ vanguard 1/19/14.




Progressive Nigerians, support ethni-religious politics because insanity is defined as,

Labaran is right and as I have said it before, Jonathan is not that messiah but he is surely the prophetic voice in the wilderness that preparing for the coming of the One. Jonathan is not that ideal leader that will finally set Nigeria and Nigerians free but without doubt he will make the way straight for that leader if he continues with his leadership style. It is an indisputable truth that in the last  three years the current administration by any measure have done better  than Murtala through Yar'dua administrations combined.
Lest I forget, folk I have to admit Labaran's defense here  of the current administration is superb, coherent, articulate. He is  an able information Minister. I hope he will deliver his state, Nasarawa for Jonathan.

Fellow Nigerians please don't be deceived by the Hausa/Fulani's rabid quest for power. For over 34 years this group led this country without single opposition but had nothing, absolutely nothing to show for it, neither for their people nor for the Nigerians at large.  If Hausa/Fulani military dictatorships offered NOTHING but, economic, social, political, infrastructure, security and moral decay for 34 years under their unchallenged military dictatorships  how could they usher in good leadership in a democratic dispensation where every policy is challenged, debated, opposed, negotiated and compromised with the opposition parties? Folk the taste of fofo is in the eating. And for 34 years we ate the Hausa/Fulani leadership fofo and we all know the taste, the effect, the consequences of the pill we were force to swallow for these 34 years. Folk, insanity is defined as doing the same again and again and expecting different outcomes.

I can sware that an average Hausa/Fulani man or woman not religiously indoctrinated to religious fanatism is a good human being. But most Hausa/Fulani  political elites are schooled on feudal Islamic theocracy hence it would be  practically impossible for a Hausa/Fulani leader to succeed in a secular multi- ethno-religious nation like Nigeria.
Folk, I do not make these up, do your research; Islamic feudal theocracies have no room for a truly multi-party, multi-religious secular system. For a true moslem the order of importance is, Allah, Islam, Mohammed, Imams, moslem serf and others. For the average Hausa/Fulani, Abacha, IBB were exceptional leaders, because in Islamic theocracy the leader no matter how evil he or she may be  is anointed by Allah.  Yet they can't explain the type of leader the devil anoints if Allah anointed even the evil ones.

In Islamic feudal theocracy the leader is sovereign, he is everything. So to ordinary Hausa/Fulani man, is not only that Abacha and IBB did no wrong but they were exceptional. The question is, how come this mindset, well average moslems are not taught otherwise but that the leader, the king is a god after Allah. It is no surprise that Ahmadu Belllo never like Igbos that have neither king nor a central sovereign leader. So the Igbo Hausa/Fulani rivalry is political, religious, and cultural and can only be resolved by either complete political separation which am against or by regional autonomy which am in favor of. To a less degree this Igbo Hausa/Fulani cultural dichotomy also applies to Hausa/Fulani to Northern Minorities, Hausa/Fulani to yoruba, Hausa/Fulani to southern minorities, relationships.

Recently Lai Lie Mohammed, APC pubsec have been warning against ethnic and religious politics yet when Hausa/Fulani state governments deny city allocations for the building of churches in their states, when these governor refused to sponsor christian pilgrimage while at the same time they finance pilgrimage to Mecca, when Hausa/Fulani military dictatorship allocate 44 local councils to Kano after the state has been split into three, when Hausa/Fulani military ruling councils and administrations are overwhelmingly dominated by Hausa/Fulani,  when governor Kwankwosa and Hausa/Fulani governors  give free education to predominantly moslem natives and to moslem none-natives while they denied the same to other Kano residents  who know no other home than Kano, when federal quota aka federal character that favors Hausa/Fulani are used in federal appointment, admission and military recruitment, then Lie Lai Mohammed did not raise alarm on the dangers of religious and ethnic politics. I read a news article just few hours ago where Governor Kwankwosa  was warning Jonathan to leave Sanusi alone. The Governor in the article  called Sanusi a good citizen of  Kano yet Sanusi is from Yobe State but moved to Kano. Surprising Kwankwosa  calls him Kano citizen while  Igbos born, raised in Kano and know no other state as home  but Kano are not described as citizens but as nyamiri and they do not benefit from Kano free education policy simply because they may not be Moslems like Sanusi.
Hausa/Fulani political elites and military juntas claim that they have the demographic numbers and asuch arrogate to themselves  more states and more local government councils which translate to more Niger Delta oil wealth to them yet when it is time to do accurate headcount they either boycott or stifle it.


I have nothing personal against any Nigerian or against any section of Nigeria, God forbid and far from it. However, until we start being upright, honest, truthful, not deceitful, not taking advantage of each other ethnically, not killing on the bases of ethnicity and religion, until every Nigerian sees self as being at home regardless of the city, state he or she lives in, Nigeria will continue to remain a pipe dream, an illusion. And I, we must continue to call spade a spade. Until Nigeria sees it proper to abolish the divisive indigene-ship policies in the regions and in the states, the calls for national unity would continue to be a ruse and at best a waste of time. It is impossible to achieve cohesion among the people in a country with fluid and incoherent citizenship. Today in Nigeria depending on current place of residence every Nigerian is either first or second class citizen. If you're Igbo in Lagos or Kano, or Hausa in Onitsha or Lagos or Yoruba in Onitsha or Kano you're a 2nd class citizen. But if this Nigerian goes back to a city, a state in his ethno-geo-political area he or she then reclaims 1st class citizen.  Our politicians know that it's impossible to  achieve unity, cohesion, love, patriotism from and among the citizenry with this kind of incoherent citizenship classification yet they pretend to not know that the political turmoil, ethnic rivalry, ethnic mistrust, hate and tension, unhealthy competition, the cutthroat politics, professional mediocrity in Nigeria; all stem from this incoherent citizenship classification. Northern Politicians would not fathom addressing this incoherency in citizenship classifications because such action would go against the politics of North's foremost leader and father and the chief advocate of the two classes of citizenship in Nigeria, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello. Ahmadu Bello's unpatriotic policy of north for the Northerners, and divisiveness and his Igbo fears is purely responsible for ethnic mistrust, and division in Nigeria today. Almost all political problems in Nigeria today even the January 1966 coupe have their root in Ahmadu Bello's geo-tribal politics.             

Yes, ironically Mohammed Lie is right, religious and ethnic politic is wrong but I should add, in a ideal society but Nigeria is far from ideal. Nigeria is not even up to un-ideal. So, presently I would support none violent religious and ethnic campaign politics if it would help wane Hausa/Fulani political elite from their born-to-rule drunkenness, if it will disprove Hausa/Fulani claims of population demographic superiority over other groups and faithfuls. Yes I will support it if it will guarantee their political defeat and win for the rest of the Nigeria groups who have for long played second fiddle.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

The Ironsi lesson

"Jonathan sacks defense team"


The Ironsi lesson 

Yes, it is the Presidents prerogative to hire and fire the service chiefs and executive cabinet. Yes the president may to some degree follow the federal character in his appointments but competence and the safeguard for democracy and his government must be the ‘ first’ character to follow in his appointments.  Just to please the un-please-able Hausa/Fulani  political elites with born-to-rule mentality,  the president must not make the Thomas Ironsi mistake of appointing people he would not in his heart or heart trust.

The president must know that as longer as he remains the president, effective and not a stooge to Hausa/Fulani political elite he would never be able to please this group. Why?  Because the President has something that the group truly believes is theirs. Yes, twice they have allowed Obasanjo to have a test of their god given right to rule. But they believe that Jonathan took the presidency from them by force, without their consent and blessing. Therefore it would be impossible for Jonathan to please Hausa/Fulani political elite even if 100% of his cabinet ministers and service chiefs are the group’s ethnicity. However the group would be happy with the 100% position not because they would feel compensated but because they would have turn this administration into stooge for fulfilling their hegemonic interest and the maintenance of the   status quo of social classification of Nigerians into the two groups of Hausa/Fulani and the Other-Nigerians.

The disdain of Malam Sanusi, Speaker Tambuwal,  the other 5 minsters  fired 6 months, the 4 decamped governors, and the flood of decamping of PDP state and national legislators of Hausa/Fulani extraction to APC is not something from the blue. The question is; what is it that Jonathan did to this group that is worse than what Obasanjo did to the group and to Nigeria? Well Obasanjo served with the Hausa/Fulani consent and permission while Jonathan is serving under their disapproval and great opposition.  The Hausa/Fulani has been in power for over 34 years, which is a life-span, in Africa. One could imagine how difficult it would be to give up habit one has had and held for a life span. 

To wane Hausa/Fulani political elite from their addiction and obsession to power, Jonathan must not only contest in 2015 but must ensure his own victory and the Other-Nigerian must help in this effort because as brother’s keeper, it behooves us all to wane Hausa/Fulani from the disease of addictions, whether it is violence, religious intolerance, mass murdering of others, power, or addiction to Niger Delta oil. Jonathan would never win the predominantly Hausa/Fulani, states of kebbi, sokoto, zamfara, kano, yobe, gombe, borne, bauchi, niger,  katsina and jigawa.  However, Jonathan stands to win the remaining 7 middle northern states, 3 western states and 11 eastern states and therefore win the presidency.

So Mr.  President, be bold and treat all persons, all Nigerians, the Hausa/Fulani and the other-Nigerians as equals, without fear or favor. For it is written thou shall rule with the fears of God and not the fear of mortal men.  

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Buhari a bad choice

Buhari a bad choice

I am neither PDP member nor do I have any sympathy for APC. Both parties are led by the same criminally corrupt senile minded old buffoons. If any of these two parties shows me any official of either party elected or not, in a position power or had held position of power that is not corrupt then I would show Nigerians the end of corruption in Nigeria and the beginning of prosperity for all Nigerians. There can never be change without a change; by this I mean unless decent Nigerians I mean youths, young, women, of all ethnic nationalities understand the bleakness of their future since 1985 and resolve and device a way to rightly sack these crooks raiding the country, either through popular rebellion or voting revolution, change would never come to Nigeria. Perhaps I should say the change in decay in social, economic, infrastructure, education, and security, would continue and accelerate until Nigerians find it proper to sack the senile running the country.
Because leadership in Nigeria has been synonymous to nation led by the blind, Jonathan’s administration in my opinion is like the gift of one-eyed leaders to a nation of people ever blind and ever led by the blind. By any measure since after the Gowon’s administration Jonathan have done better than all the other administrations combined. For this reason I have sympathy for his administration. Since he would mostly likely contest for 2015 presidency under PDP I intend to support Jonathan in 2015 should he chose to run. And because of current political permutation and danger pose by APC to Jonathan’s victory in 2015 a strong ‘Put Goodluck back to Aso Rock” campaign and strategy must be devised. Praying and wishing for implosion in APC is neither a political nor a winning strategy
The potential threat to Jonathan’s victory in 2015 would not be Buhari but, shekaru, Limado Tambuwal and others should they choose to contest under APC. Buhari a former military dictator that overthrew a democratically elected civilian government would be the most flawed and internationally despised, isolated and rejected leader of a democratic nation ever. How would the world’s first class democracies view, receive one time dictator in the person of Buhari? Today in America it is a crime to participate, support, be an accessary to forceful sack of a legitimate government any where in the world. By US law, one who in any way facilitates the forceful sack of a legitimate government is barred forever from entering into U.S. I do not think that Nigeria can afford to avoid co-operation and partnership with the United States of American for 8 years under unthinkable Buhari’s presidency. But Buhari’s biggest flaw is not his past despotism and nepotism or his overthrow of elected legitimate government of Shehu Musa Shagari but his severely Hausa/Fulani tribal jingoism. APC would lose SW if Buhari is the 2015 presidential flag bearer because people in that region would easily remember when Buhari led red eyed group of Huasa/Fulani men to confront a SW Governor about reported mass killing of Fulanis in an area in SW state. But as it turned out it was Fulanis that killed several Yoruba’s. When Buhari was presented with fact on the massacre by the governor of the state it was reported that Buhari and his men left in shame. When the governor narrated this incidence to media he described it as ‘How he [the Governor] prevented a second civil war in Nigeria.’ The point here is that Buhari is too flawed both domestically and international to be president of multi ethno- religious nation like Nigeria. I concur Buhari may exercise some degree of integrity on issue of official corruption but he has no respect for the law. There can never be good ruler-ship without the rule of law. Buhari’s overthrew of Shagari’s government and his incite-full and incendiary remarks after losing elections speak volume. In homogenous ethno-religious Islamic state Buhari would make a good leader.
To win against Buhari in 2015 Jonathan needs surgically targeted state by state strategy that would be hedge on winnable 11 states of SS and SE, plus Plateau, Benue, Taraba, Kogi, Kaduna (Sambo’s turf), Ondo, Lagos. Jonathan, if he does his homework very well would be able to bank these 18 states before the electioneering even starts. He would be very competitive in the states of Oyo, Ogun, Ekiti, Osun, Nassarawa, and Adamawa if he invests capital and incumbency in these states. Then he would implore ‘muddle the water’ strategy and make APC spend considerable amount of resource and manpower in the states of Katsina, Jigawa, Bauchi and Gombe.

84 crude, yet is the magic numeric panacea for current political quagmire.

84 crude, yet is the magic numeric panacea for current political quagmire.

For stability and escape from political turmoil Nigeria must adopt terminable  zonal presidency that would terminate on the 84th year with a South West presidency.
To achieve this zonal presidency the current 6 geopolitical zones in the country should be adopted and enshrined into the law of the land. Under this arrangement The office of the Vice presidency would be third in line to the presidency. Either the position of senate president or the speaker should be zoned to a reputable person from the same zone that produces the current President. The vice presidency should be zoned to the zone that would assume the presidency when the 8 year term of the current zonal presidency expires.
If the president dies or is impeached and removed the Speaker or the senate president assumes the presidency and this ensures that the presidency remains in the same zone that is its turn to produce the presidency.
If the speaker is 1st in line to the presidency, under emergency the senate president would assume a-no-more-than 4 months temporary presidency assuming the president and the speaker suddenly dies or become incapacitated simultaneously. Within the 4 month temporary presidency the National Assemble would vote to select the president from among the national legislative delegations from the zone which it is still its turn to produce the presidency. The 4 month temporary presidency is not recoverable for the zone
that lost it.
I agree this zonal or 8 year rotational presidency is not an ideal democritic arraegement or process but perfect is not an enemy of the good. Nigeria with its current situation, intractable and myriad of issues, gross mistrust and division among its constituent nationalities may have to adopt this model for an 84 year period at which time hopefully the country may have fully matured democratically. And the current breed of criminally corrupt cutthroat ethno- jingoist politicians would have died out and eternally condemned; at which time any Nigerian would call and beliefs any part of the country as home.
Yet still, the National Conference must enshrine fiscal federalism with power in the center reasonably dissolved to the zones.
Here is the breakdown of the 84 year rotational presidency envisioned to begin in 2015:
SS: 2015 to 2019
North: 8-years
SE: 8
North: 8
SW: 8
North:8
SS:8
North: 8
SE: 8
North: 8
SW: 8.

Monday, January 6, 2014

SenatorUzodinma misses the point


Uzodinma misses the point (see the interview given by Senator Uzodinma on Sun Newspaper 1/5/14)

 

Senate Uzodinma’s diatribe in this interview is but a wash, substantively. By this I mean Uzodinma neither made any point nor bold political statement. All he did here was 100% cheap partisan propaganda. And there is nothing wrong about political party propagandas except that they are un-excit-full, boring, obvious, none innovative and simply minded. One would have expected the Senator to state how PDP plans to win the election, win the presidency in 2015. Instead Senator Uzodinma spoke vainly on how APC would lose in2015. What Senator Uzodinma said in this interview is like a war-time Army General who spoke only on how his adversary would lose the battle but said nothing about his strategy to win the battle; a sign that the general have neither confidence nor strategy to win the battles.  Uzodinma and PDP need to tell their supporters and members how the Party plans to win in 2015 giving the threat posed by APC; wishing and praying for implosion in APC is neither a political nor a winning strategy.

 

I am neither PDP member nor do I have any sympathy for APC. Both parties are led by the same criminally corrupt senile minded old buffoons. If any of these two parties shows me any official of either party elected or not, in a position power or had held position of power that is not corrupt then I would show Nigerians the end of corruption in Nigeria and the beginning of prosperity for all Nigerians. There can never be change without a change; by this I mean unless decent Nigerians I mean youths, young, women, of all ethnic nationalities understand the bleakness of their future since 1985 and resolve and device a way to rightly sack these crooks raiding the country, either through popular rebellion or voting revolution, change would never come to Nigeria. Perhaps I should say the change in decay in social, economic, infrastructure, education, and security, would continue and accelerate until Nigerians find it proper to sack the senile running the country.     

 

Because leadership in Nigeria has been synonymous to nation led by the blind, Jonathan’s administration in my opinion is like the gift of one-eyed leaders to a nation of people ever blind and ever led by the blind. By any measure since after the Gowon’s administration Jonathan have done better than all the other administrations combined.  For this reason I have sympathy for his administration. Since he would mostly likely contest for 2015 presidency under PDP I intend to support Jonathan in 2015 should he chose to run. And because of current political permutation and danger pose by APC to Jonathan’s victory in 2015 a strong ‘Put Goodluck back to Aso Rock” campaign and strategy must be devised and this strategy is what I expected from Senator Uzodinma in his interview. 

 

The potential threat to Jonathan’s victory in 2015 would not be Buhari but, shekaru, Limado Tambuwal should they choose to contest under APC.  Buhari a former military dictator that overthrow a democratically elected civilian government would be the most flawed and internationally despised, isolated and rejected leader of a democratic nation ever.  How would the world’s first class democracies view, receive one time dictator in the person of Buhari? Today in America it is a crime to participate, support, be an accessary to forceful sack of a legitimate government any where in the world.  By US law, one who in any way facilitates the forceful sack of a legitimate Government is barred forever from entering into U.S. I do not think that Nigeria can afford to avoid co-operation and partnership with the United States of American for 8 years under unthinkable Buhari’s presidency. But Buhari’s biggest flaw is not his past despotism and nepotism or his overthrew of elected legitimate government of Shehu Musa Shagari but his severely Hausa/Fulani tribal jingoism. APC would lose SW if Buhari is the 2015 presidential flag bearer because people in that region would easily remember when Buhari led  red eyed group of Huasa/Fulani  men to confront a SW Governor about  reported mass killing of Fulanis in an area in SW state. But as it turned out it was Fulanis that killed several Yoruba’s. When Buhari was presented with fact on the massacre by the governor of the state it was reported that Buhari and his men left in shame. When the governor narrated this incidence to media he described it as ‘How he [the Governor] prevented a second civil war in Nigeria.’ The point is that Buhari is too flawed both domestically and international to be president of multi ethno- religious nation. I concur Buhari may exercise some degree of integrity on issue of official corruption but he has no respect for the law. There can never be good ruler-ship without the rule of law.  Buhari’s overthrew of Shagari’s government and his incite-full and incendiary remarks after losing elections speak volume. In homogenous ethno-religious Islamic state Buhari would make a good leader.

 

To win in 2015 Jonathan needs surgically targeted state by state strategy that would be hedge on winnable  11 states of SS and SE, plus Plateau, Benue, Taraba, Kogi, Kaduna (Sambo’s turf), Ondo, Lagos. Jonathan, if he does his homework very well would be able to bank these 18 states before the electioneering even starts. He would be very competitive in the states of Oyo, Ogun, Ekiti, Osun, Nassarawa, and Adamawa if he invests capital and incumbency in these states. Then he would implore ‘muddle the water’ strategy and make APC spend considerable amount of resource and manpower in the states of Katsina, Jigawa, Bauchi and Gombe.   

 

 

              

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Mr. Jime, perfect is not enemy of good

"Zoning, an impediment to good governance — Rep" 1/2/14

 Mr. Jime, perfect is not enemy of good
It is impossible to have something and the same time have-it-not. It is absurd to emphasis division and expect unity. Mr. Jime's position on zoning could only be true if we remove indigene-ship and state of origin from our system and from our civil service. It is impossible to have it both ways; our system cannot emphasis much on our differences like indigene-ship and state of origin and yet expect cohesion and oneness among the ethnic nationalities.
Mr. Jime like most politicians from the north are  never sincere but very hypocritical  when they talk of national unity. Northerners or these privileged  politicians only call for national unity and stand against zoning   when it  benefits and serves their narrow interests better.
Yes, zoning is neither a perfect nor a sound democratic idea and neither is quota system in our institutions and in the civil service. I agree, let the best candidate win election and let the best qualified Nigerian get that job. Except that it serves narrow northern interest or  Jime's ethnic interest better, otherwise how could he defend and condone mediocrity in hiring in our institutions and civil service and yet champions meritocracy in our politics? Jime talked about good leadership but he knows that it's impossible to have good leadership or leader in a society where ethnic division and winner-takes-it-all is the politics and political ideology of politicians including himself.
 Perhaps all ethnic nationalities in Nigeria are guilty of the divisive educational policy announced  last week by Kano State government. Last week Governor Kwankwaso announced free education at all level for all indigenes of the state but not for all residents of the state. What this means is that if one was born, bred, pays taxes in Kano, have lived in Kano all his or her life but have parents of Tiv or Ijaw heritage he or she or children will not benefit from this free education policy. Yet more than 90% of the huge federal allocations that Kano State and its bloated 44 local governments receive is based on its population that includes Tiv, Ijaw, Igbo, Yoruba and indigenous people.


But more disturbing is that  95% of Kano's federal allocation comes from Niger Delta oil wealth. How come that by mere being a member state in the Nigeria union, Kano and 30 other states benefit from Niger Delta oil and yet one benefits not from  Kano free education even when one is the state's born and life long resident? Weird? One with opposite view may rightly ask, if all the states receive allocation why should Kano State give free education to none indigene? But this would be chicken and egg question; that is of the two, which came first. That is,  Kano's huge federal allocation and big population which came first? But the most pressing question begging for an answer is what makes a Kano State or any state resident either an indigene or  none indigene? Precisely, if one's father is a 'Kano indigene' but the mother is a tiv, Ijaw, Igbo etc or the mother a Kano indigene and the father Yoruba, edo, is this person a Kano indigene or not? What if one's grandparents were Kano indigene but either one or both of one's parent is not? God knows that if I am Kano resident that I will go to court for a legal redress if am denied Kano's free education base my parent's ethnicity or state of origin.
 So Mr. Jime  quite know that Nigeria will never have a detribalized leadership or politics until it does away with the divisive indigene laws, policies and politics in the states and regions. Until such a time a tiv Kano resident, an Igbo Kano resident, a Hausa/Fulani resident in Enugu, Porthacourt or Ibadan would be able to viably stand for a statewide election in their state of  residence, zoning remains the good but not the perfect solution to the political and leadership quagmire in the country.
Mr. Jime, should remember that perfect is Not an enemy of the good.