Tag: Moghalu

  • Corruption: Over $600bn of Nigeria’s money stolen since 1960 – Moghalu

    Corruption: Over $600bn of Nigeria’s money stolen since 1960 – Moghalu

    Presidential hopeful, Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, on Thursday said that over 600 billion dollars of Nigeria’s money had been stolen through corruption since 1960.

    Moghalu, a former Deputy Director of the Central Bank of Nigeria, made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.

    He called for a systemic and serious approach in the fight against corruption, to build Nigeria and move it forward.

    According to him, corruption remains one of the biggest problems facing us in our country.

    He said that Nigeria needed to intensify the fight against corruption because it had remained a major challenge to its development and had worsened.

    “We can fight corruption in four very important ways. The first is through value system education and reform.

    “We have to teach our kids right and wrong from the elementary school to secondary school. Ethics must become a compulsory subject.

    “Secondly, Nigeria’s leaders must lead by example via accountability to the people.

    “Thirdly, there must be punishment for corruption. if anyone engages in the act of corruption, such person must be made to pay for it and anyone found guilty of corruption must go to prison. It is not enough to simply sack people because they were corrupt.

    “Finally, we have to improve the reward of public officers, their servants and the social safety net.

    “Many people steal in public life because they are afraid about their old age and whether they will have anything or a roof over their heads.

    ” So, these are some of the things we must look at. We have to look at fighting corruption in a systemic way and be serious about it,” he added.

    Moghalu reiterated that he was on a mission to build the nation.

  • FG should call Igboho, Kanu to address secession agitation –  Moghalu

    FG should call Igboho, Kanu to address secession agitation – Moghalu

    Former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Kingsley Moghalu has called on the Federal government to meet and dialogue with Sunday Igboho and Nnamdi Kanu agitating for Oduduwa and Biafra Republics.

    The former presidential candidate made the call on Wednesday during an interview on Channels Television’s breakfast show, Sunrise Daily.

    Moghalu during the show said both agitators feel marginalized and are only seeking justice.

    “I think that the government should be able to invite, whether it is IPOB or Sunday Igboho, all the secessionists; invite them to the table,” he said.

    Moghalu also decried proscribing the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) group spearheading the creation of an independent Biafra nation.

    He, however, noted that the IPOB is agitating in a wrong way but cautioned that the group should not be called a terrorist group.

    “They are essentially political agitators. You can call them terrorists. That is your own prerogative but we know what terrorism means in reality. Boko Haram are terrorists. We know that” he added.

    “When people begin political agitations and we very easily throw terrorism at them just because they are mouthing off and speaking in a language that nobody likes or insulting their fellow citizens. That is their way of handling this type of thing.

    “Can we address the agitations? Don’t be afraid to address the core reasons behind the agitation because they are crying out for justice. They feel marginalized. What is wrong with addressing those issues?”

    Agitation for secession has become widespread in the country with Sunday Igboho leading the call for the South West and Nnamdi Kanu for the South East.

  • New, greater Anambra is possible, APC Guber aspirants Moghalu, Chidozie Nwankwo insist

    New, greater Anambra is possible, APC Guber aspirants Moghalu, Chidozie Nwankwo insist

     

    From Chuks Collins, Awka

    A key governorship aspirant in the forthcoming November 6,2021 election in Anambra state and Chief Executive of the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) Dr George Nnadubem Moghalu has disclosed that youth welfare and empowerment will be his top priority as governor of Anambra state.

    The well decorated political bigwig of the All Progressives Congress (APC)who spoke during the formal inauguration of his mainstream political support group tagged “George’s Likeminds” at his Awka Campaign Headquarters yesterday however cautioned party faithfuls to remain vigilant and be wary of bogus and empty political promises by desperate aspirants, who are all out to manipulate support in their favour.

    Lamenting the poor state of youth affairs in the state, Moghalu said he would tackle the burgeoning restiveness, idleness, insecurity, unemployment, criminality and anti social behaviors with jobs.

    He listed technical education, sports, skills acquisition and agriculture as some of the areas he will put to good and proper use to stem idleness among the youth.

    Without going deeper into his package for a new, greater and better Anambra state, Moghalu who has been described and rated as the most consistent and well-focussed political leader in the state appealed to APC delegates to give him their votes so as to ensure the party wins the main election coming on Nov 6,2021.

    Also another key governorship aspirant on the platform of APC -Dr Chidozie Nwankwo has admitted that a new, better and greater Anambra state is very possible with the support of the party members and voters.

    Dr Nwankwo who addressed a select group of All Progressives Congress (APC) top brass in Awka yesterday said, “…to you my dear party delegates, electorates and good people of Anambra State, I truly believe that everything we do and everyone that we meet is put in our path for a purpose.

    “There are no accidents; we’re all teachers. If we’re willing to pay attention to the lessons we learn, trust our positive instincts and not be afraid to take risks, and not wait for some miracle to come knocking at our doors we will definitely win this election with your support.

    “Let’s work hard for what we want because it won’t come to us without effort. You have to be strong and courageous and know that you can do anything you put your mind to.

    “If somebody puts you down or criticizes you, just keep on believing in yourself and turn it into something positive.

    “With your prayers, support and encouragement, we will make a new, better and greater Anambra State that we will be proud of. It is very possible”. He therefore enjoined all to support his governorship project, for they will never regret it when he wins.

  • Nigeria is bankrupt, our politics, leadership are grand fraud – Moghalu

    Nigeria is bankrupt, our politics, leadership are grand fraud – Moghalu

    Former presidential candidate, Kingsley Moghalu, a says Nigeria is bankrupt because its leadership and politics are a “grand fraud”.

    The former deputy governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said Nigeria’s problem is not lack of brilliant minds, but a lack of strong and effective institutions.

    Moghalu made the remark via his Twitter handle on Thursday, Moghalu said it is only strong economic institutions that can provide the needed opportunity for wealth creation in Nigeria.

    He wrote: “90 million Nigerians live in extreme poverty and the country is essentially bankrupt not because we don’t have brilliant economists, but because our politics and leadership are a grand fraud. Prosperity requires nationhood, first, followed by strong, effective institutions.

    “Without strong political institutions, we can’t have strong economic institutions that can set up an equal opportunity for wealth creation. If we don’t restructure a big, diverse country constitutionally back to real federalism, Nigeria can neither be stable nor prosper.”

    Recall that the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) recently said at least 82.9 million Nigerians are living in poverty, although earlier data from the World Poverty Clock puts the estimate at above 90 million.

    This means that about 40.1 percent of Nigeria’s population — excluding Borno state which has been ravaged by Boko Haram insurgents since over a decade — is surviving on less than a dollar daily.

  • Moghalu denies joining APC

    Moghalu denies joining APC

    Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, on Wednesday, denied defecting to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as reported by an online medium.

    Moghalu, a political economist and Presidential Candidate of the Young Progressives Party (YPP) in the 2019 General Elections, made the denial in a statement in Lagos.

    How APC, PDP stand in Bauchi after Dogara’s defection He said: “My attention has been drawn to a news story published by Elombah News, an online medium, with the false and misleading headline, Kingsley Moghalu has Joined APC – Anambra spokesman.

    “This headline and the claim on which the report is based is false. ”In late 2019, I resigned my membership of the Young Progressives Party, the party platform on which I was a presidential candidate in 2019, but I did not subsequently join and have not joined any other political party.

    ”I am therefore not a member of any political party in Nigeria today.” According to him, the online report is mischievous.

    “Despite my denying this false claim when the online news outlet contacted me, Elombah News nevertheless went ahead to publish the story with this misleading and mischievous headline with no evidence to back it up, while burying my comment debunking the false claim deep inside its story. “This is irresponsible journalism.

    “I ask the public to disregard this fake news report and be guided by this clarification,” Moghalu said.

  • Our votes were stolen – Kingsley Moghalu

    The presidential candidate of the Youth Progressive Party (YPP), Professor Kingsley Moghalu, has said the party’s votes were “stolen, suppressed and diverted” on February 23.

    In his first major post-election press interview, Moghalu told The Interview that his party had “many credible indications” of the electoral fraud.

    He said he was targeted by those who felt threatened by his message, as a result of which they launched a wave of fake news attacks that he had stepped down for the two front-runners.

    “I was the only presidential candidate targeted with such fake news campaign a few days to the election,” he said. “The campaigns depressed our votes because many people in the Northern states (Buhari’s voting base) and the Southern states (Atiku’s voting base) believed it.”

    He, however, indicated he that he would not challenge the result of the election in court, saying, “the question of going to court is neither here nor there,” and might have made sense if YPP came second.

    He said his focus will be to campaign for electoral reforms, adding that even though he was disappointed by the result of the election, it was a reflection of the mindset of Nigerians.

    “Anyone that complains,” he said, “should first look in the mirror. Did you vote? If so, for who? The status quo or for something new, different and bold?”

    He also spoke on the lessons he learnt from the campaign, the highs and the lows, and the endorsement he received from Noble Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka.

     

  • 2019: YPP presidential candidate, Moghalu opens up on how his votes were ‘stolen, suppressed and diverted’

    The presidential candidate of the Youth Progressive Party (YPP), Kingsley Moghalu, has said the party’s votes were “stolen, suppressed and diverted” on February 23.

    In his first major post-election press interview, Moghalu told The Interview that his party had “many credible indications” of the electoral fraud.

    He said he was targeted by those who felt threatened by his message, as a result of which they launched a wave of fake news attacks that he had stepped down for the two front-runners.

    I was the only presidential candidate targeted with such fake news campaign a few days to the election,” he said. “The campaigns depressed our votes because many people in the Northern states (Buhari’s voting base) and the Southern states (Atiku’s voting base) believed it.”

    He, however, indicated that he would not challenge the result of the election in court, saying, “the question of going to court is neither here nor there,” and might have made sense if YPP came second.

    He said his focus will be to campaign for electoral reforms, adding that even though he was disappointed by the result of the election, it was a reflection of the mindset of Nigerians.

    Anyone that complains,” he said, “should first look in the mirror. Did you vote? If so, for who? The status quo or for something new, different and bold?”

    He also spoke on the lessons he learnt from the campaign, the highs and the lows, and the endorsement he received from Noble Laureate, Wole Soyinka.

  • Presidential candidates, Moghalu, Durotoye react to election postponement

    Presidential candidates of the Young Progressives Party (YPP) and Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN) Kingsley Moghalu and Fela Durotoye on Saturday reacted to the postponement of the general elections by the Independent Natioanl Electoral Commission (INEC).

    In his reaction, the YPP candidate, Moghalu on Saturday said INEC’s postponement of the elections signposted the recycling of failure under the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    He said the general elections were also postponed in 2015 under the PDP government, and that Nigerians should remain calm and resolute to vote for a new kind of leadership.

    Recall that INEC postponed the presidential election and election into the National Assembly slated for today, and elections for the governorship and the state Houses of Assembly, originally slated for March 2nd, by one week.

    Moghalu, who expressed disappointment with the development, described it as burdensome with serious implications.

    School children will now face further disruptions to the school calendar. Economic activities will suffer further setbacks,” he said.

    And Nigerians who have travelled to various parts of the country to vote or monitor the elections that would have held today now face logistical nightmares.

    I would like to thank the teeming volunteers of my campaign and supporters of our party, the YPP, for their service to our country. Let us ensure this election is a watershed for the liberation of our country from the vice-like grip of incompetence
and lack of vision.

    I remain committed to providing our country the needed visionary and competent leadership,” Moghalu said.

    Also expressing his dissatisfaction, the presidential candidate of Alliance for New Nigeria, Mr Fela Durotoye described the postponement of the elections until next Saturday as a global disgrace.

    We are so disappointed with the announcement of the postponement of the elections. It (the elections) should have happened today (Saturday). Today was a day that history was supposed to be made,” he said on Saturday in a broadcast on Instagram Television, popularly known as IGTV.

    Durotoye however appealed to the electorate not to be dismayed by the development.

    They can only delay the elections, they can’t delay our destiny, which is to have a new Nigeria where promises are kept,” he stated.

    We don’t need this national embarrassment. This is a national disappointment and embarrassment. It is a global disgrace.”

    The 47-year-old ANN presidential candidate said it was baffling how after having four years to prepare, the Independent National Electoral Commission wasn’t adequately prepared.

    He argued that there were brilliant people in the country who could have organised the elections without logistics problem due to their expertise in project management.

    He said, “Everywhere across the world, people set dates. For four years, they knew we were going to have elections. How do we postpone elections at 3am on the day of elections?

    People had left their homes because the system did not work, they couldn’t transfer their Permanent Voter Cards, so they travelled. People left their children at home to travel to vote to deliver a new Nigeria. Some came in from abroad.”

    Durotoye said the elections postponement was a “systematic way to frustrate the people, to disenfranchise them, especially first-time voters.”

    But, he said people were now wiser and would not be discouraged.

    I challenge the youth to be awake. They should not be discouraged. Your efforts would only amount to waste if you don’t show up at the polling booth next Saturday,” he said.

  • 2019 presidential election: Sowore speaks on Soyinka’s endorsement of Moghalu

    The candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC) in the forthcoming presidential election, Omoyele Sowore, on Friday said he is contented by the ‘endorsement’ of the Nigerian people.

    Sowore was reacting to Friday’s endorsement of Kingsley Moghalu, candidate of the Young Progressive Party, YPP, by Nigeria’s Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka.

    Recall that Soyinka had on Friday endorsed Moghalu’s candidature in his capacity as convener of the civic group, Citizen Forum.

    Earlier, Sowore had said that the literary icon would not endorse him as presidential candidate, urging his supporters to respect the Nobel Laureate’s choice nevertheless.

    But a statement signed Friday by Malcom Fabiyi, Director General of the Sowore 2019 Campaign on behalf of the AAC candidate, said Sowore is not threatened by the endorsement of rival candidates.

    For the past year, Omoyele Sowore, leader of the Take it Back Movement and presidential candidate of the AAC has travelled across the 6 geopolitical zones, travelled to over 200 cities and towns within Nigeria, and engaged extensively with Nigerians at home and abroad to share his vision for birthing a vibrant and prosperous nation,” the statement said Friday evening.

    Those consultations and engagements have created the broadest coalition of Nigerians that our nation has ever seen.

    On our platform, those previously considered inconsequential – the voiceless, the teeming poor and the forgotten youth – have found a voice and an outlet for the realisation of a nation that works for all of her people.

    We have said from the beginning that we do not believe in the politics of godfathers, godmothers or endorsements. Indeed, we seek to create a nation where the only opinions that matters, and where the only voices of influence are not those of privilege, power, status, or fame. The only endorsement that matters to us is the one the Nigerian people have already given us. We are the voice of the Nigerian people, and the only organic platform that will represent the interest of the Nigerian masses.”

    The AAC said that there is no presidential candidate that can boast of “the antecedents, the history of principled engagement, and the sacrificial participation in the struggle to move Nigeria forward that Omoyele Sowore has displayed over the last 30 years.”

    According to the party, from the fight to reverse the annulment of the June 12th 1993 elections, to the restoration of democracy in 1999, to the truncation of Obasanjo’s 3rd term bid, to the exposure of the Yar’Adua cabal’s bid to deny a constitutional transfer of power to a minority president, to the courageous real-time release of the 2015 poll results that helped to safeguard and ensure free and fair elections, Sowore has been at the forefront of pivotal political events of in country.

    The statement reads in part: “No other candidate has had this level of engagement. No other candidate can speak of a thirty-year consistency in their service to the nation. No other candidate has worked for the Nigerian people as thoroughly and comprehensively as Sowore has done.

    No other candidate speaks to the aspirations of the Nigerian people with the authenticity that Sowore does. That authenticity is what has powered our party to becoming one of the three largest parties in the nation.”

    The party affirmed that on February 16th, the African Action Congress will be on the ballot and that day, Mr Sowore and the AAC will get the only endorsement that matters when the Nigerian people vote to elect him as the next president of Nigeria.

    On February 16th 2019, the Nigerian people will speak with one voice, and that onerous voice of reason will trounce the dictates of godfatherism,” the statement said.

  • 2019: Soyinka endorses Moghalu for President

    Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka has endorsed the flag-bearer of the Young Progressive Party, YPP, Kingsley Moghalu for president and asked Nigerians to cast their vote for him in next week’s presidential election if they want a change in the country.

    Soyinka, in a statement he issued on behalf of the Citizen Forum, where he is the convener, said over the past few months, the forum studied the careers, experiences and track records of most of the presidential aspirants, and most intensely those actually short-listed by the opposition parties themselves and picked Moghalu as the best choice.

    Like millions of Nigerians, we watched the debates. I physically interacted with some of the acknowledged top contenders, in some cases several times. We participated in Handshake Across Nigeria, where some candidates presented their briefs. Among others, I delivered a keynote address. We watched television interviews. We have exchanged notes with highly respected international Civil Servants. The drive towards Consensus among these dedicated groups sometimes took the form of test questionnaires to the aspirants, including items such as: ‘Who among the contestants would you choose, if you did not emerge as the ultimate preference?’

    There was nothing complicated about assessment parameters: mental preparedness, analytical aptitude, response to the nation’s security challenges, economic grounding, grasp of socio-political actualities, including a remedial concern with the Nigerian image in foreign perception etc. etc. not forgetting a convincing commitment to governance and resource decentralization – commonly referred to as Restructuring,” he explained.

    Soyinka said the Forum rejected retrograde propositions of a political merry-go-round, which urged the electorate to choose this or that candidate in order to ensure “our turn” at the next power incumbency, saying that overall, the exercise was exacting but also-therapeutic.

    It proved yet again that there is over-abundant leadership quality locked up in the nation, and that it is a collective shortcoming that the political space has not been sufficiently opened up to let soar such potential. Well, to cite the Chinese proverb: a journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.

    Let me reiterate: there is over-abundant, but stifled leadership material, and there can be no excuse, now that that potential of high quality is being manifested, for constricting the political space in a population that is nudging two hundred million. And that statement is of course specially addressed to those who took part in this exercise, those who deliberated opted out of it, some of whom were assessed anyway. Such potential compelled us to exercise utmost rigour in what proved to be a most daunting exercise. The final determination however is – the flag-bearer of the Young Progressive Party–Kingsley moghalu,” he said.

    Soyinka said the Civic Forum would now join forces with those who pray, “Evil Spirit, leave us be!” – at least those who subscribe to the belief that political elections are not a Do-or-Die Affair!

    The Nobel laureate had earlier said that the nation had been brought to her knees as the blaring media testimony needed no augmentation, adding that beyond her borders, Nigeria is the tale of citizens designated pariahs of the global community for whom special dossiers were opened, and units of security agencies were specifically assigned.

    Soyinka said online transactions were programmed to reject basic usage once the word ‘Nigeria’ was inserted in the data profile, saying that there were few nation left, within or outside the continental borders where – no matter the codeword – a Nigerian ‘room’ had not been designated.

    Her humanity litters the sand trails of the Sahara, it lines the Mediterranean sea-bed with the bones of a desperate generation, seeking ‘green pastures’.Lines from my poems have been appropriated and embossed as epitaphs on the tombstones of Nigerians washed up the isle of Catania and accorded dignified burials by total strangers, certainly paid more respect than Nigerians themselves consider due to their own humanity.

    Other would-be migrants have been slaughtered by religious fundamentalists on the shores of Tripoli, while waiting for their precarious crossing on suicidal boats. Yet others end up as commodities in the slave markets of Libya and Mauritania, hundreds recently rescued and airlifted – credit where credit is due! – repatriated by government.

    It was not always thus. Numerous Nigerians believe that it need not remain so. There is always a choice to be made outside any presumptuous orders – in reality associations guaranteed to perpetuate social disorders and the politics of inequality.This is not the thinking of any one individual but of a large section of this populace. If it were not, there would not have been a record number of nearly a hundred political groups aspiring to take over the reins of governance.

    We do not need any instruction however to estimate that several of the aspiring groups are mere plants, raised to sow confusion.It redounds to the credit of a few individuals, including some of the candidates themselves, who embarked on efforts to winnow down their own ranks, then seek a consensus candidate as standard bearer for the battle against the two political behemoths,” he stated.

    He said the Forum, which was last heard of during the time of the dictator, Sanni Abacha – was pulled out of retirement to join in their effort to arrive at peer consensus and change the narratives.