Tag: Appointments

  • C/River Govt adopts “Monkey Work, Monkey Chop” in giving appointments – APC

    C/River Govt adopts “Monkey Work, Monkey Chop” in giving appointments – APC

    The Cross River chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC), says it would invoke the “Monkey Work, Monkey Chop” mantra in the appointment and empowerment of its members in the State.

    This is contained in a press statement, titled: “Ward Nomination for Appointments and Empowerment”, by the Publicity Secretary of the party, Mr Erasmus Ekpang.

    The statement noted that this is aimed at ensuring that only those who worked for the success of the party during the 2023 general elections are rewarded in terms of appointments and empowerment.

    It further stated that this same modality would be used at the local, State and Federal levels.

    The statement also directed that the 20 names to be submitted by each ward must include 10 females and should also take care of sensitivity to geo-political spread across polling units.

    The statement subsequently directed the members to meet at ward levels across the State on Sunday, July 2, to select 20 names from each of the ward and forward same to the State Chairman on Monday.

    The statement read in part: “Based on the kind approval of our amiable Governor to appropriately reward our people, an expansion from three to 20 names per ward has been granted to the party leadership.

    “Therefore, the State Chairman, Mr Alphonsus Eba, has directed all party Ward Executives, Ward leaders and major Stakeholders of the party to meet either physically or by zoom to come up with 20 names from each ward as follows:

    “Only persons who worked sincerely for the victory of the party in the Presidential, Senatorial, House of Representatives, Governorship and State Assembly elections with evidence of their results will be finally considered by the Party in consonance with the Party’s “Monkey work, Monkey chop” mantra.

    “Youths, students, farmers, businessmen and women with political capital who invested same in the last election towards the party’s victory should please be nominated as most of them will be considered for empowerment if they are not literate enough to be considered for appointment.”

    It stated that Curriculum Vitae, voter’s card, membership slip, result in the last election are also a pre-condition for nomination.

  • Eid-el-Kabir: Politicians lobbying for appointments relocate to Ikoyi

    Eid-el-Kabir: Politicians lobbying for appointments relocate to Ikoyi

    Hotels and apartments close to President Bola Tinubu‘s private resident in Bourdillon Street, Ikoyi, Lagos State have reportedly been fully booked by politicians lobbying for appointments.

    It was learnt that since the  announcement of  Tinubu spending  his Sallah holiday in Lagos, many politicians immediate rushed to book apartment close to the President’s residential area.

    Tinubu had yesterday arrived Lagos following his trip to France and the United Kingdom.

    He had attended the Financial Pact Summit on “A New Global Financing Pact” in France last week and proceeded to the United Kingdom for a short visit.

    Sources close to the President told The Guardian that politicians lobbying for ministerial appointments have temporarily relocated to the Ikoyi axis of Lagos Island to celebrate Eid-el-Kabir with the President.

     

  • Prioritize merits in your appointments- Arewa Forum urges Tinubu

    Prioritize merits in your appointments- Arewa Forum urges Tinubu

    A group under the aegis of Arewa Economic Forum (AEC) has advised president Bola Tinubu to prioritize merits and pedigrees in the appointments of ministers, advisers, and heads of various agencies and not old politicians.

    The forum pointed out that by placing meritocracy at the forefront of decision-making, the President can ensure that the best individuals are entrusted with the responsibility of serving the nation.

    The Chairman of AEC, Ibrahim Yahaya Dandakata made the call at a media parley in Abuja said the president should not appoint people whose only credentials are political participation or who had failed in the previous positions they held.

    While commending Tinubu on the recent appointments of the National Security Adviser, Service Chiefs, and others which are in line with the principle of federal character, and defined by competence and track record, he urged the same for subsequent appointments on merit.

    “We firmly believe that the appointment of individuals who possess the necessary competence, track record of probity, diligence, and capabilities is a crucial step toward effective leadership and governance. Nigeria finds itself at a critical juncture and the country’s leadership must be guided by these qualities rather than political patronage and expediency.

    “Nigeria has been battered with economic, social, and political problems, which have consequently resulted in issues of national concern, such as a high rate of unemployment, unprecedented inflation, and disunity among citizens, which metamorphosed into insecurity in some parts of the country.

    The forum urged the President to continue preserving this legacy and projecting a positive image of his administration and the country.

    Dankata said, “the Arewa Economic Forum remains committed to supporting initiatives that promote good governance, accountability, and the welfare of the Nigerian people. We stand ready to work alongside the government in its efforts to build a prosperous and inclusive Nigeria.

    Members of the Arewa Economic Forum included academics, business entrepreneurs, industrialists, legal practitioners, youth leaders, and retired officers from the security and public services.

     

  • 2023: Give us appointments to recover money we stole to support you -Groups tell Tinubu

    2023: Give us appointments to recover money we stole to support you -Groups tell Tinubu

    A coalition of support groups across Nigeria’s 36 states under the aegis of G36 Renewed Hope Support Group has called on President Bola Tinubu to compensate them with board appointments.

    To underscore their frustration, the support groups said their members stole and borrowed money to oil the campaign wheels of Mr Tinubu.

    “Your Excellency, you are a grassroots politician, so you are aware of all we must have passed through during the election. Many of our support groups borrowed, begged, indirectly stole and sold our properties to ensure victory for you at the poll,” stated the groups in Lagos on Wednesday at a press conference. “On this note, we are speaking in one voice, appealing to you that we deserve to be compensated.”

    group’s leader, Samson Bilesanmi, noted that “we know we cannot all be your ministers, special assistants, or chief of staff, but you can appoint us into federal boards and agencies which are over 200 in number.”

    It went further to call the president’s attention to how the earlier amalgamated support groups disappointed them, urging Mr Tinubu to disband them.

    “Your Excellency should dissolve the amalgamated and replace it with another name,” stated Mr Bilesanmi. “This is because anything given under that umbrella would be cornered by few individuals who could not account for millions given to us during the campaign.”

  • Appointments: Beyond the stampede at the entrance – By Chidi Amuta

    Appointments: Beyond the stampede at the entrance – By Chidi Amuta

    This is political appointments season. It is also a season of migrations to Abuja and the various state capitals where there are new governors and overlords. It is the season of intense shoving and jostling for choice government positions. Predictably, there is a virtual stampede at the entrance door of the new administrations at federal and state levels.

    Most hotels in Abuja and some state capitals are fully occupied. Hotel lobbies are brimming with all manner of fringe politicians and their appendages. Smart lobbyists are also making a kill in fees and back pocket payments from desperate job seekers. All manner of resumes are flying around just as lobbyists are having a hard time. In a nation of gifted artists,  sifting plain idiots from the few who have anything to offer can be tough.

    It is mostly an elite game. The elite is literally on bended knees at the feet of new political deities and men of power. It is understandable. In Nigeria’s peculiar ecosystem , politics is almost the only industry with guaranteed funding and almost instant returns.

    As the hustling  rages, the common folk who trooped out to vote at the polls in February and March have since moved on. Their hope and expectation is that the new leadership will use good people to do good things for the people. There lies the importance of this appointments season in the unfolding culture of democratic succession and seasonal renewals. But we need to put the season of  stampede into context.

    Since 1999, democracy has delivered two predictable dividends in Nigeria. There is now a fairly predictable calendar of national democratic succession rituals. There is above all the rise and consolidation of a clear political industry complete with all the features of a real industrial complex in a free market.

    Imperfections and disfigurements notwithstanding, we now have a fair idea of what must happen in the political industry every election season of four- year cycles. The noisy campaigns. The festival of rallies and mob assemblies. The pageant of politicians in garish robes who address mobs of starving illiterates in English. The parade of aspiring messiahs and the reduction of our national hopes into party marketing slogans. There are of course the few good men and women driven by good intentions and lofty ideals. After the elections, the mournful processions of losers and their crashing ambitions drowned by the drums of triumphant winners heading towards immense power, wealth and glory.

    It is not just democracy as a desirable  imperative of nation being that is coming to stay. There is a more fundamental development. Like elsewhere in the ‘free’ world, the rituals of post election succession now taking place in Nigeria form part of the seasonal worship of something no one wants to call its real name. The deity in season is the goddess of the political industry. The season of appointments is the time for the selection of the managers and messengers who will preside over the state for at least another four years.

    There is perhaps nothing to be prudish about this.  It is only natural that those who worked for the electoral victory of the new overlords should expect compensation through this seasonal bazaar of appointments. But there is a logic to it all.  You cannot have a free, open liberal political system without its corresponding economic equivalent. The ethos of the open market economy dictates that the political order also partakes of the manners of the market place.  Or, better still, the political order must carry the imprints of its enabling economic environment. Open society, open market, free wheeling, dealing and stampede in appointments and trade in lucrative positions. Nothing out of the ordinary!

    So, our politics has become a full- fledged industrial sub sector, a gigantic trading floor. Votes and alliances are bought and sold freely. Even personal integrity has a price tag and is up for sale.  Political parties are run more like joint stock companies. In these parties, nomination forms for contests for high political offices attract gigantic ‘market determined’ price tags (N100 million for the last APC presidential ticket)! The prices are fixed by captains of the political industry and determined by the anticipated returns on the initial ‘investment ‘ recoverable in the form of pork and patronage when the ‘food’ of electoral victory ‘is ready’.

    Beyond this drama, the real dividend of democracy for the practitioners may be the emergence of a political industry that remains largely unregulated. Yet, politics and politicians regulate and direct every other aspect of our lives.  The political industry through its control of the mechanics of government is the ultimate allocator of wealth, opportunity and privilege. It owns and controls the public sector through the complex machinery of the administrative state. It also indirectly controls the private sector through regulatory institutions like the stock exchange and the Central Bank in addition to frequent legislative disruptions and interventions. The political industry has a monopoly of the awesome power of pork, patronage and elaborate rents.

    As the political enterprise has blossomed into an industry, a big question has arisen: who regulates the political industry? This question has become urgent and necessary as the nation reels under a prevalent and crippling deficit of competence, accountability and responsibility among key captains and operatives of the nation’s power and politics complex. The appointments will be made all right. All manner of miscreants and a few people of honour will be named and sworn into positions bearing fancy titles and lofty appellations. But the nation and its governing state will remain static.

    Appointments into our political industry are mostly not really about competence and efficiency. It is mostly about filling slots and extending patronage. This industry is an expansive all- dominating industry. It is a manpower dominant industry, employing a huge army of people with their own extended family of hangers on and subordinates. It is equally an influence driven industry. Most importantly, this is an industry that controls every other industry, regulating the environment in which others practice, thrive or wither.

    The political industry is a super ordinate behemoth, one that determines its own rules and regulations, sets its own entry requirements, procedures and performance standards. For the nation at large, the choice of who leads us is vested in the political parties which act as insular clearing houses for the political industry.

    We can only guess the precise size of this industry when we estimate the sheer number of elective and appointive offices and their correlates that have featured in the political cycles since 1999. There are at any given time, the President, Vice President, about 36-42 ministers, 30-100 presidential advisers (special, senior special, plenipotentiary etc),109 Senators, 360 House of Representative members (add at least 500 legislative aides), 36 Governors, 36 Deputy governors, about 540 commissioners, about 1,000 plus members of state houses of assembly, 776 Local government chairmen, 9,288 Councilors. There are probably more to count!

    Take the total emoluments, allowances, perquisites, paraphernalia and benefits of all political office holders at the various levels of government and you begin to imagine the expanse, size, capital and recurrent costs of the political industry. A recent industry market survey has determined that official Nigeria alone buys more Japanese SUVs every four years than all the desert safari companies of the Gulf Arab states put together!

    Most importantly, the captains of this army of political officialdom are responsible for determining the national, state and local government budgets. They allocate the resources, appropriate the funds and expend same on behalf of all of us!

    Yet somehow, politics manages to disguise its industrial scope and status by focusing public attention on the myth and ritual of democracy and ‘service to the people’. This is further decorated with the rhetoric of representative government and public service. Sometimes, politicians have focused attention on the gaming aspect of politics, playing it more like a vicious but unserious sport. A few honest political animals will come close to admitting their role as ‘players’ in an all -important industry devoted to serving  a nebulous client called ‘the people’.

    But we can temporarily forget the myth of service to the people and focus on the controlling powers of the political industry and its operators on the rest of society. As leaders and controllers of the mechanics of government, politicians as captains of their unique industry determine the basic outlines of our lives and livelihood as private and corporate citizens. They determine your access to basic services, how much you will pay as tax and what will be left for you and your family. They determine how much you will pay for darkness punctuated by electricity, the quality of teachers that your children will be saddled with, what your essential drug will cost, how many toll gates will dot your way to your village as well as the size of your retirement pension if any.

    Some people endlessly trumpet the relative independence and awesome powers of the private sector. The argument pretends as though the private sector is a self -driving machine of progress, a counterweight to an overbearing public political domain. That is false.

    It is the political industry and their control of the machinery of government that creates the legislative and general macro economic regulatory environment in which the private sector can even operate. Even the boldest and most massive private sector investment and initiative can be neutralized overnight by a casual regulatory twist by the political establishment.

    The political industry also happens to be the most attractive and profitable sector of the economy. It guarantees an out of this world return on investment. It  powers the creation of new social classes at a rate that would make any business entrepreneur blue with envy. It used to be the belief that education or entrepreneurship are the quickest routes out of poverty. Not anymore. The political industry is the only one in which a destitute can leapfrog into the billionaires club in less than four years. A local government councilor or chairman can transmute, in a very short time, from a miserable jobless pauper into an upper middle class poster boy cruising around in fancy cars, living it up in five star hotels and jetting around the globe.

    This is precisely because the main unofficial economic activity of the political industry is rent seeking and rent sharing. This is a complement to the allocation of pork as well as the privatization of constituency benefits. In Nigeria, political office holders tend to be state officials in the day and rent seekers and pork administrators at night. Due to the preoccupation with rents, a political city like Abuja is easily the most expensive piece of real estate anywhere on the African soil. Property prices and rentals as well as the general price levels for luxury goods tend to bear no relationship to the value of the item on sale.

    This is not peculiar to Abuja. It tends to apply to most political capitals in the world. In the United States for instance, of the ten most expensive neighborhoods nationwide, five are in Washington DC. In a rent seeking economy, the proceeds come from an invisible trade in favours, influences and connections up to the highest level.

    Like every other industry, our political industry has a monopoly of its own recruitment and entry requirements. The strengths and defects in the system are showcased by the performance of the leaders of today especially our imperious state governors.  In all fairness, the system has also thrown up a few good men and women.

    From this mixed bag of possibilities, the question that therefore arises is this: Are the captains of the political industry a special interest elite or just strange bed fellows? Are they recognizable by certain features beyond their garish costumes and humongous SUVs? Is there a unity of purpose, a solidarity of ways and means or some esprit de jouer among them as political players?

    Let us make no mistake about it. Politics everywhere is about the allocation of pork and portfolios of patronage among contending political elites. But in admitting this truism, there is an overarching  moral question. Where does enlightened self interest stop and the pursuit of the public good begin? The Nigerian collective mind is haunted by the imbalance between the instant prosperity of political office holders and the abject poverty of the general populace who vote at elections. Worse still, the poor quality of social service delivery to the public is a constant glaring indictment of the quality and competence of those who jostle for public offices in the country.

    For the political leadership of the country, therefore, there is a pressing burden in this appointment season. It is that of appointing ‘fit and proper’ persons to ensure the highest level of service delivery to the public in all spheres of government responsibility.

    Currently, our seasonal political appointments tend to replicate the same embarrassing incompetence that the public has come to associate with government presence in our lives. That has fuelled a tradition of public apathy and congenital cynicism about government among the populace.

    But there is a way out. Appointments to strategic government positions in areas that drive service delivery and the overall efficiency of the state must be guided by merit. Politicians should appease themselves with private sector support and patronage. The core of national trained manpower and technocracy should fill the positions that drive a functioning republic. This should be the guiding spirit of this season of mass appointments into key public offices. The current crowding of the entrances of the corridors of power in a mass quest for mostly unmerited government positions (‘jobs for the boys and girls’!) should be abandoned.

    Let the core machinery of the state be run by the best among us while politicians can reward themselves in other ways for enabling and sustaining a functioning republic.

  • Abia: Otti’s appointments show he’s incompetent – PDP

    Abia: Otti’s appointments show he’s incompetent – PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Abia State chapter has criticized the appointments made so far by Governor Alex Otti.

    State Vice Chairman and the acting state publicity secretary of the party, Hon Amah Abraham on Friday in a statement said the first few appointments made by the Abia governor were skewed in favour of a particular section of the state.

    “Making appointments that speak against our oneness is at best divisive and would not provide the conviviality needed to move the state forward.

    “The mistakes he has made show him as incompetent, bringing credence to the point we made during the campaigns that there is a huge difference between running a small financial institution and running a big public corporation like Abia state”, the party added.

    The party criticized Governor Otti for disbanding the task force on collection of vehicle levies on Abia without first creating an alternative to those that earn a decent living from that sector.

    It further regretted that the state governor bypassed extant laws that established statutory boards in Abia and dissolved them with executive fiat and described the action as unlawful, high-handed, and obnoxious.

    “As if that was not enough, he asked the chairman of all the illegally dissolved boards to hand over to the most senior officers in the board, but in the case of Abia State Universal Basic Education Board (ASUBEB), he contradicted himself by imposing an officer who is not the most senior. What manner of imposition is that?” The State PDP queried.

    The main opposition party also came hard on the state governor over the recent removal of Professor Hagler Okorie as Rector of the state-owned Polytechnic in Aba, and replaced him with his deputy, Mrs. Chidinma Martha Ndukwe.

    It partly stated: “Hagler Okorie, a renowned professor of law was just appointed and confirmed in march 2023 by the immediate past Governor of Abia state, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu and we begin to wonder the reason for his removal because he has shown capacity as a good manager in the last few months of administering Abia Polytechnic.”

    The Abia PDP continued: “If what we are thinking, that he is making good his threat not to touch anything used by the former Governor, Okezie Ikpeazu is correct, then we are worried that Abians are in for a ride with an emperor not a governor.

    “The best Governor Alex Otti can do to move Abia forward is to rid himself of the excessive and deep seated animosity against the PDP and those that did not vote for him. The day he was sworn in as the governor of Abia state is the day he became the father of all Abians.

    “We expect that he should apply the best principles of good governance and not conduct himself as an intolerant leader. Unfortunately, that is the way he comes across to many people. Abia belongs to all of us and every Abian deserves to be treated fairly and equally.”

  • Plateau governor suspends last-minute  appointments

    Plateau governor suspends last-minute  appointments

    The pleateu state governor Caleb Mutfwang has suspended last-minute appointments into the state’s civil service made by his predecessor, Barr. Simon Lalong.

    Mutfwang’s in a statement issued by his media aide media aide Gyang Bere,  in Jos yesterday said that the governor directed the suspension of the appointments because they were “flagrant abuse of Public Service Rules’’.

    The statement reads:
    “All appointments into the state’s civil service from Oct. 1, 2022, to date are hereby suspended with effect from the same date subject to review in line with due process.

    “All those who have retired but are yet to vacate their offices or duty posts either because of extension or contract appointment are to hand over government property in their possession and vacate the offices immediately.

    “All civil servants due for retirement but are yet to tender their letters of retirement or notice of retirement should do so forthwith and proceed on retirement immediately.

    “All civil servants and or persons appointed Permanent Secretaries from January 2023 to date should revert to their previous positions forthwith,’’ the Governor directed.

    The government assured that measures and steps to strengthen and build a result-oriented civil service would be taken in due course.

  • After inauguration, Gov Otti announces massive appointments (SEE LIST)

    After inauguration, Gov Otti announces massive appointments (SEE LIST)

    The Governor of Abia State, Dr. Alex Otti, has appointed 21 advisers/Senior Special Assistants for smooth take-off after inauguration.

    The following underlisted positions have been filled effective from June 1, 2023.

    SEE LIST BELOW:

    1. Mr. Michael Akpara – Special Adviser on Finance

    2. Mr. Uwanna Ikechukwu – Senior Special Assistant on Legal Matters

    3. Professor Uche Eme Uche – Special Adviser on Education

    4. Professor Joel F. Ogbonna – Special Adviser on Petroleum and Energy

    5. Dr. Clifford C. Agbaeze – Senior Special Assistant on Agriculture

    6. Mr. Chimereze Okigbo – Special Adviser on Internally Generated Revenue

    7. Mr. Uche Mark Nwosu – Chief of Protocol

    8. Mr. Uche Ukeje – Senior Special Assistant on Aba Rejuvenation

    9. Mr. Dodoh Okafor – Special Assistant on Public Communication

    10. Mr. Uzor Nwachukwu – Special Adviser on Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs

    11. Mr. Kingsley Anosike – Special Adviser on Planning and Strategy

    12. Mr. Uzoma Nwagba – Senior Special Assistant on Digital Economy and SME

    13. Rev Father Christian Uche Anokwuru, PhD – Special Adviser on Policies and Interventions

    14. Mrs. Ifeoma Thomas – Special Assistant on Vulnerable Groups and Poverty Alleviation

    15. Pastor Dike Nwankwo – Senior Special Assistant, Special Duties

    16. Mr. Okey Kanu – Special Adviser on Strategic Communication

    17. Dr. (Mrs.) Betty Emeka-Obasi – Senior Special Assistant, Special Duties

    18. Mr. Chinedu Ekeke – Senior Special Assistant Youth and Sports Development

    19. Mr. Chuka Ofili – Senior Special Assistant, Domestic

    20. Hon Luke Ukara Onyeani – Senior Special Assistant on Legislative Matters

    21. Navy Commander Macdonald Ubah (Rtd) – Special Adviser on Security

    22. Dr. Chimezie Ukaegbu – Special Adviser on Trade and Commerce

    SIGNED:
    Kazie Uko
    Chief Press Secretary to the Governor
    Abia State
    01/06/2023

  • BREAKING: Tinubu formally announces fresh appointments

    BREAKING: Tinubu formally announces fresh appointments

    …see list

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Friday in Abuja announced the appointment of outgoing Speaker of House of Representatives, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila as Chief of Staff.

    The president also appointed Sen. Ibrahim Hassan Hadejia, a former Deputy Governor of Jigawa State, as Deputy Chief of Staff.

    In a meeting with the Progressives Governors Forum (PGF), the President also named a former Governor of Benue State and immediate past Minister of Special Duties, George Akume, to serve as Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF).

    Details shortly…

  • BREAKING: Tinubu makes first set of appointments

    BREAKING: Tinubu makes first set of appointments

    …Dele Alake now presidential spokesman

     

    The newly sworn in President, Bola Ahmad Tinubu has reportedly made his first set of appointment.

    According to reports, Tinubu named ‘Ambassador Kunle Adeleke as the State Chief of Protocol (SCOP) to the President

    -Dele Alake – Presidential Spokesman

    -Dada Olusegun – SA Digital Media

    More details Shortly…