Tag: atiku

  • Falana blasts Obasanjo, Atiku for owning private universities, says ‘your pension can’t establish primary school’

    Human rights lawyer, Femi Falana has lambasted former Nigeria leaders who allegedly use public Funds to enlarge their business empire.

    The foremost lawyer tactically referred to former President Olusegun Obasanjo and his Vice Atiku Abubakar.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo owns Bells University of Technology, Ota, Ogun state, while former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar is the founder of American University of Nigeria in Yola, Adamawa state.

    Falana spoke at the launch of Sahara Reporters’ Civic Media Laboratory.

    In his words: “These guys who have restructured the economy of Nigeria. Or you are not aware that these guys restructured the economy of Nigeria to the extent that Nigeria is the only country today where former heads of states openly own universities.

    Have you ever heard of that anywhere in the world that the likes of Obasanjo, Atiku, Babangida and others, own universities, and of course, the man who is now pushing for restructuring, Atiku, has a univerisity as well.”

    None of these guys worked outside the government. One was a customs officer, the others were soldiers; their pension cannot establish a primary school, not to talk of a university. For young people, I think there is enough provocation on the part of the ruling class,” he added.

  • Building a Nation that Works: My Diary and Way Forward – Atiku

    By Atiku Abubakar

    The reality is that our nation does not work well whether we focus on security, education, economic production, employment generation and people’s welfare or we focus on governance and politics or the relationships among our diverse ethnic, regional, and religious groupings. Our government relies excessively on rent derived from a single export product, crude oil, for revenues.

    The consequences of that have included over-exposure to the vagaries of the world oil market over which we have little control. It has also led us to over-centralize power and concentrate economic resources at the federal level at the expense of the federating states. We have poor infrastructure and low investment, high unemployment and high level of poverty, as well as the highest level of out-of-school children in the world.

    We also have poor governance, lack of due process, lack of proper coordination of government processes, a high level of corruption, and a high level of insecurity characterized by armed robbery, kidnapping, militancy and terrorism.

    While progress has been made in recent times in the fight against terrorism, the rate of other violent crimes remain unacceptably high. Then there are persistent cries of marginalization and unfair treatment by various ethno-religious and regional groups in terms of resource and power-sharing, investment and other government services.

    What Went Wrong?

    It wasn’t always this way. At independence we had many challenges, but we began to make steady progress. We had a federal structure with three powerful regions, which retained 50% of the revenues derived from their regions. With this they provided security, infrastructure such as roads, power, portable water, built healthcare facilities, schools and universities, and provided other social services. But when the political leaders tried to extend their influence beyond their regions of dominance, it precipitated a crisis that led to military seizure of power as well as a counter-coup, and ultimately a civil war. The military remained in power for all but four years in the period 1966-1999.

    Among the measures taken by the military leaders was the fragmentation of the regions into states which now number 36; the centralization of power and concentration of resources at the federal level at the expense of the federating states; and the expansion of infrastructure provisioning. Others include, the expansion of the government’s reach into various aspects of our national life, including the economy (not just as a regulator but as an investor in all sectors of the economy), and involvement in religion by subsidizing of religious pilgrimages.

    There were also the federal take-over of institutions and services hitherto belonging to the federating states such as schools and universities, hospitals, roads and power plants; and an activist foreign policy that saw the government intervening diplomatically and financially in the causes of African liberation and Black emancipation, especially in Africa and the Caribbean.

    These measures were encouraged by a sudden rise in oil revenues in the early 1970s. The sudden oil wealth had other consequences, including relative neglect of agriculture. It created a mentality, which survives to this day, that oil wealth is here to stay and that we really need not engage in diverse economic activities, which governments typically tax for revenues.

    Thus, we got used to the notion of wealth without work, and government revenues that do not come directly from taxation. Thus, it has been rather difficult for citizens to hold governments to account. Currently also we have a situation where most of the states in the country are unable to pay their workers or provide basic services unless they collect monthly revenue allocations from the centre.

    However, the decline in oil prices and revenues in the early 1980s, and periodically ever since, has exposed the folly of our ways. It has led to serious economic and political crisis including high level of unemployment and such associated social problems as crimes, including robbery and terrorism, militancy, decline in the quality of education, healthcare, and other social services, poor infrastructure provisioning. We also have agitations by different segments of the country against what they perceive as marginalization by the governments and the other segments. Excessive centralization has also led us to place a very high premium on political power, especially at the federal level, leading to instability in our politics, which in turn, scares away investors.

    So How Do We Build a Nigeria that Works?

    There is a saying that if you want to get out of a hole you dug yourself in you first stop digging. So, we need to stop our slide towards economic and political precipice. And one way to build a Nigeria that works is to identify what our people want and what they think our priorities should be. The next step is to assess whether the policies and strategies we currently pursue will adequately address those, and if not, in what ways they might be better addressed.

    When you talk to ordinary Nigerians as I do regularly what they profess to be at the top of their priority list include the provision of and access to high quality education and training; infrastructure such as power, roads, railways and ports; security; employment and job creation; and accountability and reduced corruption. They also call for a reorientation of values, which, I think, will come mainly from the change of behaviour by leaders. A Nigeria that works would be one that effectively and efficiently meets these needs. But there are two huge impediments to doing that.

    Rentier economy: I believe that if we continue to rely on revenues from oil derived from mainly from three states of the federation, we will be unable to build an economy that works and will be unable to provide the education, security, and employment that our people desire and deserve. And we will be unable to adequately tackle the corruption and lack of accountability, which the dependence on oil facilitates.

    The fight over the sharing of oil revenues has also been a huge distraction from what we need to be doing to diversify our economy and secure our economic future. Although the Petronas Towers are there to remind us that Malaysia is still an oil producer we seem to forget that. The reason is because Malaysia has diversified its economy and reduced the influence of fluctuating oil revenues on its economic fortunes. Today oil contributes only 14% of Malaysia’s GDP. The industrial sector has taken over.

    Unitary federalism, that is, our deformed federal system characterized by the centralization of power and resources, with the resulting excessive dependence on the centre by federating units. That dependence on oil revenues is also a major reason for the fractured and fractious relationship among our various regional, ethnic and religious groups. It has also created a perverse incentive system where rewards do not necessarily go to those who work hard. And the perverse incentive system as well as the mistrust arising from the fractured relationship among our diverse groups, has created entrenched interests, thereby making reform difficult.

    To build a Nigeria that works, therefore:

    We need to restructure our federal system to devolve more powers and resources to the federating units. It will encourage states to compete to attract investment and skilled workers rather than merely waiting for monthly revenue allocations from Abuja. This will also include the establishment of state police for the states that so desire so as to improve security.

    We must be open to changing the nature of the federating units such as using the existing geo-political zones as federating units rather than the current 36, of which only a few are financially viable.

    Political decentralization must be accompanied by economic diversification. We need to diversify our economy away from the dependence on oil. We need to create opportunities for our people to engage in diverse economic activities which governments will then tax for revenues. But we can’t do that efficiently and effectively without accurate data.

    I have in the past called for an end to the self-defeating politics we play with census in the country. With all the data gathering and analytic tools in existence in the 21st century we have no good reason not to have accurate data on our people, down to the smallest unit, the individual. Without data, we cannot plan properly and all of us will lose, including those who try to inflate their population figures and those who want to suppress those of others. Political decentralization will also help to deepen and strengthen our democracy as it will encourage more accountability. Citizens are more likely to demand accountability when governments spend their tax money rather than rent collected from an impersonal source.

    To further strengthen our democracy, we need to reform our politics, especially by reforming our electoral system. Such reform must ensure that those who emerge as winners after an election are really those freely chosen by the people.

    The electoral reform should largely be along the lines recommended by the Justice Mohammad Uwais panel on electoral reforms. For example, funding the electoral umpire from the first line charge in the Consolidated Revenue Fund is critical; transferring the power to appoint the chairman of the electoral umpire from the President to the National Judicial Council will help, as will efforts to curb the role of money and godfathers in our elections. I have also been arguing that the declared winner of an election should not be allowed to assume office until all legal challenges to that election have been resolved. The recent Supreme Court decision nullifying the election of a member of the House of Representatives and ordering him to refund the pay that he had collected as a member is an encouraging sign. Hopefully that decision will serve as a disincentive to those aspirants and candidates who wish to engage in electoral fraud.

    We also need to reform the anti-corruption agencies to help depoliticize them and make them really independent. This will help to strengthen the fight against corruption, which is critical in renewing our people’s belief in the integrity of public institutions and pubic officials. Such a reform will require changes to how the agencies are funded, how their heads are appointed and who they report to.

    While not exhaustive, these steps, if taken, will help us to produce effective and public-spirited leadership and certainly help us to live up to our economic potentials and evolve into a nation where citizens and every segment of the population feel proud, welcome and committed to its long-term health and survival.

    Atiku Abubakar, former Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria, delivered this speech (excerpts) while accepting the Hero of Nigeria Democracy Award conferred on him by Hall of Grace Magazine in Lagos, at the weekend.

  • Easter: Atiku calls for love, sacrifice

    Former Vice President and chieftain of All Progressives Congress (APC), Atiku Abubakar, congratulates the Christian community in Nigeria on the occasion of the celebration of this year’s Easter festivities.

    He states that the celebrations are a worthy finale to the period of fasting, prayer and self-denial which they had gone through in the past 40 days of Lent.

    In a press statement released by his Media Office, the APC chieftain urges the Christian faithful and Nigerians of other faiths to see the sacrifice and deprivation of the period preceding Easter as similar to the sacrifice and perseverance which the present economic difficulties has imposed on all Nigerians and which would finally terminate with celebration and merry-making when the difficult period is over.

    The former Vice President advises all Nigerians to learn from the pain, joy, love and caring which characterize the period of Lent and the Easter celebration, and allow these virtues to continuously guide us as a people in our individual and community relationships. He says that a national attitude built on selflessness and sacrifice would go a long way in laying the foundation of true patriotism and greatness of the nation.

    The Turakin Adamawa urges those in positions of authority to endeavour to encourage the citizens to make sacrifice and show love especially when the country is facing challenges by making their own lives, in public and private, something transparent, and worthy of emulation.

    Atiku prays for peace and prosperity for all Nigerians and urges them to enjoy a stress-free and violence-free celebration. He also reminds the celebrants and other Nigerians in their midst to continue to seek God’s divine favour on the efforts of the present administration to make the country, a better place for us all.

  • Easter: Buhari, Ekweremadu, Atiku, others felicitate with Christians

    Easter: Buhari, Ekweremadu, Atiku, others felicitate with Christians

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday joined notable leaders in the country in sending goodwill messages to Christians and members of other faiths to mark this year’s Easter celebrations.

    The President urged Nigerians to live in peace because without peace, no meaningful and sustainable development can take place.

    He said, “I congratulate our Christian brothers and sisters on the celebration of this year’s Easter.

    The message of Easter is filled with themes of love, faith, sacrifice, dedication, commitment, fulfilment of prophecy, hope, expectation and victory, as espoused in the Scriptures and the teachings and lifestyle of Jesus Christ.”

    Similarly, the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, urged Nigerians to use the occasion of the Easter celebration to rededicate themselves to the virtues of justice, forgiveness, and reconciliation, which he said were the essences of the ministry of Jesus Christ on earth.

    Ekweremadu said no nation would make progress unless the people were willing to forgive the past, reconcile their differences, and enthrone justice for all, irrespective of their religious, ethnic, and political backgrounds.

    The immediate past President of the Senate , Senator David Mark, also asked Nigerians across the religious or socio-political divide to close ranks and work harmoniously in order to overcome the challenges facing the country.

    The All Progressives Congress and former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, enjoined Christians not to forget the significance of the resurrection of Christ which the Easter season signifies.

    In two separate statements in Abuja, on Saturday, the party and the former vice president urged Christians to imbibe the spirit of sacrifice and continue to pray for the well-being of Nigeria and its leaders.

    The APC noted that the Easter season signified a time for renewal and rebirth. It expressed the hope that there would a rebirth of the belief that “each of us is our brother’s keeper, irrespective of our religious, tribal, political and sundry affiliations.”

     

  • Meningitis: Atiku urges more action, condoles with families

    Meningitis: Atiku urges more action, condoles with families

    Former Vice President and chieftain of All Progressives Congress, Atiku Abubakar, has expressed concern on the high death toll so far recorded this year following the outbreak of Cerebro Spinal Meningitis (CSM) in parts of the country.

    In a statement issued by his media office in Abuja on Thursday, Atiku called for concerted efforts to forestall further spread of the disease and attendant deaths.

    The former vice president described as worrisome the death toll, which currently stands at 366.

    “I understand that the heat-induced illness which causes the swelling of the outer part of the brain has also affected 2,996 cases in 16 states and 54 local government areas.

    “For me it implies a lot of effort is required to stop these deaths,” Atiku said.

    He also called on the international community and donor agencies to come to Nigeria’s aid on the grounds that “it is an emergency situation”.

    Besides, the APC chieftain urged relevant agencies of government to take precautionary measures to ensure that preventive measures were in place in states prone to the health challenge.

    He also called for serious inter-agency collaboration involving the Ministries of Health, Housing, Environment, Information, metrological agency as well as the National Primary Health Care Development Agency and Nigeria Centre for Disease Control.

    According to him, the inter-agency collaboration would lead to the development of a comprehensive preventive and treatment master-plan that would ensure that the carnage recorded in 2017 is avoided in future.

    The former vice president also called for sustained research on the ailment to avoid new challenges being experienced in treating victims of the outbreak of meningitis this year.

    Atiku further called for appropriate budgetary allocations by government at all levels, to ensure the availability of funds for early procurement of vaccines and other items needed for better medical response to outbreaks.

    He also appealed for a preventive package that includes a robust enlightenment and educative programme on the disease.

    “The package should clearly explain how the disease should be avoided; signs of contracting the disease as well as what to do when there is such an outbreak,’’ he said.

    He said by providing the enlightenment and educative programmes, individuals and families would become part of efforts to kick meningitis out of Nigeria.

    The APC stalwart said that traditional rulers and religious leaders should be part of the campaign since they are closer to the people, especially in the rural areas.

    Atiku prayed for the repose of the souls of those who died from the outbreak of the disease and the quick recovery of those receiving treatment.

    He also prayed that God gives the bereaved families the fortitude to bear the loss of their loved ones.

     

     

    NAN

  • Atiku lauds book written on Gwandu Emirate

    Former Vice President of Nigeria, Atiku Abubakar at the launch of the book, Gwandu Emirate: The Domain of Abdullahi Fodio since 1805 extolled the contributions of Sheik Abdullahi Fodio to Gwandu Emirate. According to him, Abdullahi Dan Fodio was a great intellectual , a general in the Jihad campaigns and a reputed Statesman of exemplary character. The book launch was held on Saturday in Birnin Kebbi on Saturday.

    While delivering his speech as the Chief launcher , Atiku said:” I consider this event very significant and special in many respects. For instance, this is the first time that a comprehensive history of Gwandu Emirate, established in 1805, is produced. As we all know, the story of Gwandu Emirate is inseparable from the life history of its founding leader, Sheik Abdullahi Fodio. Similarly, a history of the Sokoto Caliphate, from any perspective, cannot be complete without due acknowledgement of the multiple roles played by Abdullahi Fodio. He was a great intellectual, a general in the jihad campaigns, an administrator whose objective was to establish equity and social justice among people, and a reputed statesman of exemplary character.”

    He revealed the intricate themes covered in the book saying though the book was written in the 19th Century, it is still relevant

    “The book deals with issues relating to governance, exemplary character by leaders, organization of State, justice, revenue and expenditure. Other topics include the roles of scholars in society, renewal, the practice of declaring other Muslims as unbelievers (or takfir in Arabic), jihad, lawful income, ostentation, indolence, and the proper observance of the provisions of Shari’a in conducting public affairs. I can say with conviction that this book is as relevant to the contemporary world as that in which it was conceived and written in the 19th Century.”

    In his closing remarks, he expressed his gratitude to the organizers for inviting him and also emphasized on the relevance of the book to the contemporary age

    “I would like to express my sincere gratitude to the organizers of this event, the Gwandu Emirate Development Association, but especially the Chairman of its Board of Trustees, His Royal Highness, Maj. General (Dr) Muhammad Iliyasu Bashar, CFR, for finding me a worthy son of the Emirate to be associated with this important occasion. I believe that this book, Gwandu Emirate: the Domain of Abdullahi Fodio, since 1805, will be relevant to our students and teachers of History, Political Science, Administration, Sociology, the Military, the Judiciary and all those who are interested in political developments and the pursuit of scholarship. At this point, I am proud to present this important book that systematically documents the history of Gwandu Emirate since the capture of Birnin Kebbi by the jihad forces on Saturday, 12th Muharram 1220, equivalent to 13th April 1805, and recommend it to all our institutions of higher learning and the general public.”

     

     

     

     

  • Atiku extols supreme sacrifices of Nigerian military

    Atiku extols supreme sacrifices of Nigerian military

    Former Vice President and chieftain of All Progressives Congress, Atiku Abubakar commends the remarkable, incredible, unflagging and patriotic sacrifices of our military personnel in the line of duty and in the defence of the country.

    The former Vice President made the statement shortly after his arrival from an overseas trip at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja on Sunday.

    A statement released by his media office to mark this year’s Armed Forces Remembrance Day, quotes the former Vice President as observing that since the end of the civil war in 1970, members of our armed forces have not faced greater challenges than today in the face of counterterrorism war against the Boko Haram insurgents.

    Atiku Abubakar says apart from sapping energy and resources, counterterrorism is one of the most stressful security duties, adding that the performance of our military personnel under these gruelling challenges “is admirable and praiseworthy.”

    According to Atiku Abubakar, laying down one’s life for the sake of others is the highest sacrifices, explaining these officers and men are driven by sheer patriotism and love of fellow citizens. He notes that any group of people who can overcome fear for the call of duty and love of one’s country deserve the greatest honour, respect and rewards from their societies.

    The Turakin Adamawa also states that he was impressed beyond words by the recent military successes against the Boko Haram insurgents, including the successful assault on the notorious terrorists den, the Sambisa Forest, which he says has sent a clear message that criminals, cannot defeat law and order permanently.

    He pays special tributes to the officers and men who lost their lives in the line of duty or battle field, and calls on the authorities to take adequate care of the families of fallen heroes. The former Vice President also says he is looking forward to the day members of our military personnel would join the list of military inventors and designers such as Mikhail Kalashnikov of Russia, the designer of the famous AK-47 assault rifles.

    He says that the Defence Industries Corporation Kaduna should one day showcase the inventiveness, and technical acumen of our military. The former Vice President while congratulating our gallant armed forces, advises the military leadership to create special units for research to help Nigeria produce its weapons, among others locally to reduce the pressure on the over dependence on foreign countries for weapons and equipment.

  • Kure was a dignified politician – Atiku

    Former Vice President and chieftain of All Progressives Congress, Atiku Abubakar says the death of the former Governor of Niger State, Engineer Abdulkadir Kure, has robbed Nigerian democracy of one of its finest, decent and peace loving politicians of our time.

    In a condolence statement issued in Abuja by his media office on Monday, the former Vice President explained that “it was impossible to encounter the late Kure without respecting and admiring him ever more for his humility, gentleness, patience and peace loving nature.”

    According to Atiku, “Kure looked at power as an opportunity to serve his people without keeping a ledger of ill will towards anybody, whether you supported him or not.”

    He said the exemplary life of Kure was good evidence that there are gentlemen in politics, despite the widespread negative perceptions of politicians in the country.

    The Turakin Adamawa also stated that he valued every moment he shared with the late Kure because “you couldn’t help admiring his wisdom, experience, patience and knowledge.”

    Atiku Abubakar prayed to Allah to grant the deceased eternal rest in peace and abundant blessings in paradise. He also expressed his condolences to the government, family and the entire people of Niger State over the demise of the late Governor Kure.

  • The Atiku cross

    By Udenna Orji

    In politics, reputation is critical to the success or failure of a candidate at the polls. And so, advertising and indeed, branding are used relentlessly by politicians to fight for the mind of voters.

    One of Nigeria’s most intelligent and most gifted politicians, former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, the Turakin Adamawa, is carrying a burden; a political cross of sorts placed upon him by a tiny but influential group of politicians who are determined to use any means possible to destroy his ever-rising political influence. They are committed and sworn to doing anything, whatsoever; legitimate or illegitimate, moral or immoral, even the outright peddling of falsehood, to deny Nigerians the dividends of Atiku’s election to political office.

    In this enterprise of stopping Atiku by any means, the former Vice President and stalwart of the APC’s traducers have deployed the practice of branding, the process of creating a unique name and image for a product in the consumer’s mind mainly through advertising campaigns with a consistent theme. In communication, if you say a thing consistently, it goes into the consciousness of the people as the truth.

    In Nigeria, all you need to do to destroy a politician’s electoral fortunes is to put on him or her, the toga of corruption, whether true or false. And that is the strategy of those who feel embittered and threatened by Atiku’s political pedigree – brand Atiku as corrupt and promote this theme of corruption consistently before the voting public – lie consistently to the public and destroy Atiku politically.

    None of those painting Atiku as corrupt has produced any shred of evidence that he is indeed corrupt. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo and members of his kitchen cabinet, who are credited with placing this corruption tag on Atiku in vengeance over the Turaki’s truncating of his (Obasanjo’s) Third Term bid, investigated Atiku in Nigeria and virtually in every country of the world. But everywhere Obasanjo and his henchmen went, Atiku was given a clean bill of health. No corrupt act was found to have been perpetrated by Atiku in Nigeria or in any country of the world. No court in Nigeria or in any nation on earth has found Atiku guilty of any iota of corruption.

    But still, the stop-Atiku-cabal continues to advertise and brand Atiku as corrupt. Their reason is simple: If Atiku stopped Obasanjo from getting an unconstitutional Third Term in Aso Rock, then Atiku must not be allowed to enter Aso Rock.

    Even those who did not plot Obasanjo’s Third Term bid but who see Atiku’s growing influence as a threat to their own ambition have now joined the Atiku-is-corrupt symphony in order to dislodge the former Vice President politically and realize their own ambition.

    Obasanjo while President of Nigeria hounded then Bayelsa State governor, Diepriye Alamieyeseigha, impeached and jailed him because of corruption. Obasanjo also went after then Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Tafa Balogun, arrested him, tried and jailed him also for corruption. A rampaging Obasanjo went after Atiku, searched the entire world for evidence to nail him but could not find any evidence to show that he (Atiku) committed any crime or act of corruption whatsoever, in Nigeria or in any country on earth.

    Considering Obasanjo’s yet-to-be diffused anger towards Atiku for his (Atiku’s) almost single-handed truncation of Obasanjo’s infamous Third Term bid, if the Turaki was remotely corrupt, Obasanjo would have given him something far worse than the Alamieyeisigha and Tafa Balogun treatment. As the Americans would say, Obasanjo would have eaten Atiku for dinner. That Atiku is able to move freely, even with Obasanjo still seething with anger towards him is because Atiku’s hands are clean.

    Atiku’s political opponents who are clearly intimidated by and envious of his never-fading political influence and goodwill among Nigerians have consistently floated the false narrative that Atiku is wanted in the United States for criminal activities bordering on money laundering. This evil rumour, which has circulated for very long in Nigeria despite Atiku’s refutation of the allegation, was finally dispelled in November 2016 when the Spokesman of the United States Department of Justice, Mr. Peter Carr said, in response to an enquiry by The Punch Newspaper, that the US has no case against Atiku.

    In an email sent to The Punch which was reported in the newspaper’s edition of November 20, 2016, Carr wrote: “Thank you for reaching out to us. I have checked the public court records, and they do not show cases filed against a defendant named Atiku Abubakar.”

    In his decades-old involvement in politics, Atiku has always come out tops as the leader with the brightest ideas on governance and policy. His views always resonate with the wishes of the people. His policy documents are the best articulated and that Nigeria continues to grapple with poor electric power supply is because the Atiku plan has not been implemented in Nigeria. Atiku’s power strategy is the construction of smaller power generating plants all over Nigeria to serve clusters of people in the areas where these plants are located. Nigeria’s current power strategy has continued to invest and waste billions of dollars on white-elephant power infrastructure that have continued to produce darkness, decades after.

    Which of Atiku’s opponents can match the Turakin Adamawa’s job creation acumen and record? Which of them has Atiku’s pedigree in business and financial management? Which, among them, can equal Atiku’s track-record in human resources development? Are these not some of the most important qualities a person aspiring to national leadership should possess?

    Nigerians should look at the origin of the Stop-Atiku-Project and see it for what it is – a vengeful and selfish reputation-destruction mission embarked upon by a tiny but influential group of envious politicians embittered by Atiku’s intimidating track-record of enviable achievements, and his growing capacity to sweep the polls in any free and fair electoral contest.

    Atiku’s traducers should play fair in politics. Politics is majorly a contest of ideas; and the superior ideas captured in manifestoes and policies, win the votes. They should come up with governance ideas that will best Atiku’s own. For it is in the purveyance of great ideas that Atiku holds the ace. Atiku’s traducers should not resort to lies, character assassination, conspiracy theories and hitting below the belt to destroy the man. Discerning Nigerians are already beginning to see through the smokescreen and the tide is now turning the way of Atiku.

    For Atiku’s traducers, I leave them with the immortal words of William Cullen Bryant; that “Truth crushed to earth shall rise again. The eternal years of God are hers; by error wounded, writhes in pain, and dies among her worshippers.”

    Udenna Orji, writer, businessman and political analyst lives in Abuja.

  • Year 2017: Atiku urges sacrifice, hope

    Year 2017: Atiku urges sacrifice, hope

     

    Former Vice President and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Atiku Abubakar has declared 2017 as a year of new hope for Nigeria and Nigerians.

    In a statement released to mark the New Year celebrations, the Turakin Adamawa described the outgoing 2016 as a year in which our nation faced a multitude of challenges, but which ended on a high note, giving us hope and confidence in what we as a nation can achieve when we stand to work together.

    “Our military has recorded an important victory over Boko Haram and we should be grateful for the sacrifice our men and women in uniform are prepared to make to keep us safe. To honour them, we should also remember that it is our collective responsibility to make peace, and not just in the North East.

    I believe we can and will work around our differences, because we know that our strength lies in our diversity. And when we make our New Year’s resolutions, I hope my countrymen and countrywomen will join me in aspiring to be tolerant and to listen with an open mind and heart to those who do not share our views. We should respect each other’s views and traditions, and we should remember that our humanity shows in how we treat the most vulnerable.”

    The Turakin Adamawa also addressed the economic challenges Nigeria is facing.

    “On the economic front, the federal government has given assurances of a speedy recovery. I am confident that we will see investments in key sectors, and that steps will be taken to restore business confidence. We’ve been dealt a cruel hand, but things are looking up, and I’m confident we will emerge stronger: we’re learning to be more efficient and effective, and we’re learning to evaluate what we really need and what we can afford. We’re suffering, but we’ll become more innovative and competitive.”

    The former Vice President concluded that hope was important to all we aim to achieve in 2017, as that hope and perseverance will guide us through the darkness that announces the break of dawn.

    “Hope must be our starting point,” he said. “We must never stop aspiring for a better future and a better life – for us and for future generations. And we must persevere, changing the small things we can influence without losing sight of the bigger picture.”

    The Turakin Adamawa expressed thanksgiving to God for seeing Nigeria through a tough year, noting that the rest of Nigeria’s journey could only be made possible with God’s help.

    “All our hope, our confidence, continues to rest in God,” he said.