Tag: Moghalu

  • #2019Debate: Ezeksweli, Moghalu, Durotoye analyse, proffer solution’s to Nigeria’s challenges

    #2019Debate: Ezeksweli, Moghalu, Durotoye analyse, proffer solution’s to Nigeria’s challenges

    …as Buhari, Atiku shun debate

    Presidential candidates of the three parties participating in the ongoing debate are reeling out solutions to some of the challenges bedeviling the country.

    Candidates of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN), Oby Ezekwesili; Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), Fela Durotoye; and the Young Progressives Party (YPP), Kingsley Moghalu all showed up for the debate.

    However, candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Muhammadu Buhari; Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar who breezed in from the United States of America (USA) on Saturday evening both shunned the debate.

    Asked what they will do to reduce cost of governance, candidate of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), Fela Durotoye, said he would ride in bus, rather than expensive cars if elected as president.

    Durotoye, who said he was running for Presidency because leadership and governance had failed to meet Nigerians’ expectations, said the cost of governance has been unwieldy and that he would cut cost drastically if elected as president.

    The ANN candidate also submitted that in order to create 30 million jobs, Nigeria must fix roads, make agric sector functional, and fix the housing sector.

    Durotoye lamented that, for the last 50 years, the nation had been ruled and not led, promising virile leadership if elected as president.

    For the presidential candidate of the Young Progressives Party (YPP), Kingsley Moghalu for the nation’s economy to pick up, it must decide what type of economy it wants — whether capitalist, socialist, or any other system as necessary.

    In tackling agitations particularly in the South East, Moghalu said that the reason there has been agitation for Biafra is because people from certain sections of the country don’t feel belonged.

    He promised to practice inclusive governance if elected, noting that a huge percentage of the armed forces come from a particular section of the country, depriving other parts of the country the opportunity to serve in the Forces.

    He said that if every Nigerian is given a sense of belonging, federating nationalities won’t be agitating for separation and new statehood.

    The presidential candidate of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN), Oby Ezekwesili, said that the nation needs the disruption of the status quo if it must move forward.

    She is of the opinion that the problem of the nation has to do with leadership.

    Drawing from her experience in governance and corporate world, Ezekwesili, in her opening speech, said her background provides the knowledge she needs to propel Nigeria to greater heights if elected as president.

     

     

     

  • 2019: Moghalu, Sowore denounce Fela Durotoye as consensus candidate

    Presidential hopefuls, former Central Bank deputy governor Kingsley Moghalu and the Publisher of Sahara Reporters, Omoyele Sowore have both rejected Fela Durotoye, as ‘their’ consensus candidate ahead of the 2019 presidential election.

    Despite Fela Durotoye emerging as the consensus candidate of Presidential Aspirants Coming Together (PACT), Moghalu has said that he is ‘pressing ahead’ with his plan to run for president in 2019.

    The former United Nations official said the outcome of the consensus candidate of PACT has ‘left many Nigerians expressing surprise and disappointment.’

    Young presidential aspirants including Moghalu came together to form a coalition to field a sole candidate for the Presidential election in 2019.

    The candidate was elected after a two-staged voting process that saw Durotoye score 4 votes and Kingsley Moghalu, 3 Votes.

    However, Moghalu has claimed dissatisfaction with the election process citing the withdrawal of candidates from the process as his reason for pulling out of the PACT.

    “Only seven aspirants participated in the final voting out of the original 18 aspirants, mainly because many of the aspirants had withdrawn from the process.”

    He further stated that PACT did not produce a truly consensus candidate because more candidates pulled out during the voting process.

    “Four candidates who were present in the meeting this morning withdrew from the process even while the voting process was ongoing.”

    The list of PACT aspirants include Moghalu, Durotoye, Yele Sowore, Dr Thomas-Wilson Ikubese, Ahmed Buhari, Tope Fasua, Sina Fagbenro-Byron, Eragbe Anslem, Jaye Gaskia, Mathias Tsado, Victor Ani-Laju, Alistair Soyode, Godstime Sidney Iroabuchi, Clement Jimbo, Elishama Ideh amongst others.

    The lawyer referred to a clause in the PACT Memorandum of Understanding that gives him the constitutional right to pursue his political ambition.

    The Young Progressive Party (YPP) presidential aspirant emphasised the need to unite Nigeria, wage war against poverty and unemployment, and the restoration of respect for Nigeria in the society of nations as his ideals.

    Moghalu concluded that he will pursue his vision in ‘deference to the overwhelming outpouring of support’ for his candidacy from all over Nigeria.

    Similarly, Omoyele Sowore in a video he shared on his official Facebook account denied involvement in the final exercise that led to the emergence of Fela DuroToye.

    His words “I was never part of the pact, I never participated in their activities, so there was no way I could have accepted such. I never felt that PACT represented my aspiration. in fact one of them accused my people that we were too emotional.

    “And I replied that, if you have been in bondage for fifty eight years and you don’t have an emotional problem, then you have a problem; because the oppression has lasted for too long. Their disposition in the movement gave me the feeling that PACT was not where I should be. Regardless, I appreciate their decision, it is beautiful in democracy that we have varieties, I was even worried at some point that we might be setting ourselves for failure if we put all our eggs in one basket; considering that people like us may be too radical for the movement to handle.

    Watch Sowore’s video:

  • 2019: Fela Durotoye beats Moghalu, Sowore to emerge PACT consensus candidate

    2019: Fela Durotoye beats Moghalu, Sowore to emerge PACT consensus candidate

    Motivational speaker and businessman, Fela Durotoye, has emerged as the consensus candidate for the Presidential Aspirants Coming Together (PACT), ahead of the 2019 presidential election.

    Durotoye emerged as the alternative candidate at the party’s meeting on Thursday, beating the likes of former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Deputy Governor Kingsley Moghalu and Omoyele Sowore, publisher of Sahara Reporters.

    Former Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili, confirmed the development on her Twitter feed.

    “Today, a group of Presidential Aspirants under the acronym of PACT- Presidential Aspirants Coming Together held a Voting among themselves to decide their Consensus Candidate.

    “They invited me to be an observer. I observed their process and reported the outcome of their Votes.

    “PACT – Presidential Aspirants Coming Together used a two-staged Voting process and ended with an outcome that had Fela Durotoye score 4 votes and Kingsley Moghalu, 3 Votes.

    “I wish them well,” Ezekwesili wrote.

  • 2019: Atiku, Moghalu, Sowore other presidential hopefuls challenge Buhari to debate

    As the 2019 election year draws near, presidential aspirants have challenged incumbent, President Muhammadu Buhari to a public debate to come highlight his achievements since 2015 and why Nigerians should return him back to the highly coveted office.

    Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar; a former Kano State Governor, Ibrahim Shekarau, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Prof. Kingsley Moghalu; a former presidential candidate of the KOWA Party in the 2015 election, Prof. Remi Sonaiya; Publisher, Sahara Reporters, Mr. Omoyele Sowore; Prof. Iyorwuese Hagher; and Prof. Funmilayo Adesanya-Davies are among those who have indicated their interests to participate in a debate and are also challenging President Buhari to participate.

    According to the presidential aspirants, if they emerge as their parties’ candidates for the next election, they will engage in any presidential debate they are invited for and would like President Buhari to make himself available for such debates should he also emerge as the candidate of his party, the All Progressives Congress.

    Recall that Buhari had in 2015 shunned the last round of a presidential debate organised by the Nigeria Elections Debate Group, which was attended by the then President, Goodluck Jonathan (Peoples Democratic Party), Sonaiya (KOWA Party), Martins Onovo (National Conscience Party), Godson Okoye (United Democratic Party) and Chekwas Okorie (United Peoples Party).

    But for the next election, Atiku said he would take part in any presidential debate if he emerged as the PDP candidate.

    In a message on Twitter, he gave kudos to the Independent National Electoral Commission for recognising debates as a vital part of democratic process, saying “debates are a vital part of the democratic process.

    Our democracy and governance will be better enriched when voters have the opportunity to make the needed distinction in the offerings of those who apply to govern them.”

    When asked if he would be ready to face other presidential candidates in a debate, including Buhari, if he emerged as the APC candidate, his media aide, Mr. Paul Ibe, said, “His Excellency, Atiku Abubakar, will make himself available for a debate.”

    Former Presidential candidate of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party, Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau, also said it was important for those seeking to occupy the office of President to participate in a debate.

    This, he said, would go a long way in assisting the public to make informed choices about those who want their votes.

    Shekarau, who is also seeking to contest for the Presidency on the platform of the PDP, spoke through his Media Adviser, Mallam Sule Ya’u Sule, on Friday, saying he was “prepared to participate in a presidential debate anytime anywhere.”

    He said, “It is like attending a job interview, which will provide the prospective employer with an opportunity to assess individual candidates; Nigerians deserve to be given the opportunity to hear directly from those who seek their mandate to occupy the highest office in the land.

    If you will recall, His Excellency is not a stranger to debates as a trained teacher and public servant long before he became a politician. He has been involved in explaining and executing policies and plans on how to make this country better.”

    Also, Moghalu, a presidential aspirant on the platform of the Young Progressive Party, on Friday, expressed his readiness to confront Buhari in a debate ahead of the 2019 elections.

    “Yes, I am fully ready to face the President in a debate. Broadly, the areas that will be of interest to Nigerians are the economy, security, the fight against corruption, health, and education, among others,” Moghalu said in an interview with The Punch.

    Moghalu, who expressed worry over the rising incidence of incessant killings and unemployment in the country, said his ambition to contest for the presidency in 2019 was borne out of the realisation that past leaders had failed.

    Sonaiya, who has also expressed interest in contesting in the next presidential election, said if she emerged as her party’s candidate, she would “definitely participate in a debate,” adding that Buhari “should participate too as it is a duty; it is one of our duties to strengthen democracy.”

    If you talk about strengthening democracy and so on, this is one way to do so and I think that even if there is no law that compels a candidate to participate in a debate, every candidate should see it as a responsibility.

    It is one of the platforms to engage with the people. I participated in the debate the last time so there is no reason for me not to participate again,” she said.

    According to Sowore, he cannot wait to debate with President Buhari on issues affecting Nigerians.

    He said, “I can’t wait to debate with President Buhari, I think Nigerians are anxiously waiting for such an important moment in our political history. A popular debate will afford the President an opportunity to state to the Nigerian public where he thought he performed well and also present us an opportunity to lay before the Nigerian people our programmes of action to lift Nigeria to progress and prosperity.

    I decided to run against the President because I came to the conclusion that he has failed in every ramification and ought not to be re-elected to office again for another four-year term.”

    Hagher, who hopes to contest for the presidency on the platform of the Social Democratic Party, said he was “ever ready” to have a presidential debate with Buhari, adding that “even if it is now, I’m ready for him. I don’t want to wait, let him come out, he is a colossal failure.”

    Another presidential aspirant on the platform of the PDP, Adesanya-Davies, also said that she was ready to face President Buhari in a presidential debate should both of them emerge as candidates of their parties.

    Adesanya-Davies said she would like to take the President up on issues concerning the economy, education and security, especially why the Christian girl, Leah Shuaibu, had not been released by the Boko Haram sect.

    She explained that though the President did not participate in the 2015 presidential debate, Buhari should be able to be part of the 2019 presidential debate to explain certain things to Nigerians.

    Certainly yes; I am ready for a debate if I emerge as the candidate of my party; the PDP. I know that before the 2015 election, President Buhari did not go for any debate. He should not dodge the debate this time if he emerges the candidate of his party.

    He (Buhari) should not only be talking to me; he should be talking to the entire Nigerians. We need him to explain why he should be the President and also the Minister of Petroleum. Why did he give a person like Babatunde Fashola multiple portfolios when one portfolio is already difficult to handle?

    At such a debate, I will like to discuss the economy and education. We will like to talk about security; we have yet to find the Christian girl (still with the Boko Haram sect),” Adesanya-Davies said.

    The presidential aspirant also queried the age and physical ability of the President, saying, “We will talk about the incumbent’s age and his health; why is he coming back again without considering his age and health?”

  • Moghalu urges media to speak truth to power

    Presidential candidate and former Deputy Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, yesterday said one of the ways the Nigerian media can transform the country is by speaking truth to power.

    Moghalu made the remarks while delivering a lecture at The Niche 4th anniversary lecture in Lagos, with “Development Reporting and Hysteria Journalism in Nigeria,” as theme of the anniversary.

    He said one of the major ways by which the media can play the role of a catalyst in social transformation is through investigative journalism.

    “By uncovering evidence of malfeasance and shedding light on social ills, journalists can influence public discourse in a major way,” he said.

    “There is so much that is wrong with our country today, and a vibrant tradition of investigative reporting can help change this.

    “The tradition of investigative reporting in Nigeria has been dying slowly as news has become more commercialised

    “Speaking truth to power and going beyond press releases is never easy, but that is what must be done in order to truly make an impact.

    “Good investigative journalism is about resources, and the ability for editors and publishers to resist external pressure when reporters ask uncomfortable questions. There is a general absence of both, and that is a key reason why there are so many important stories which remain untold.”

    He also lamented about the working conditions of many journalists in Nigeria, noting that this factor have turned journalism in the country to a real estate that is sold to the highest bidder.

    “In many outlets, journalists go for months without pay, while their bosses live large. The result is that the media becomes real estate to be bought by the highest bidder, because people have to feed their families. The truth is that much, though certainly not all, of what appears in news media in Nigeria today is paid for. In this state of affairs, journalism does not perform a public good, and it cannot serve developmental ends.

    “Before journalists can even educate others, they must also be educated. What is the financial literacy level of journalists who cover finance and economic topics? What’s the science and technology literacy of the journalists who cover those topics? If most media houses find it difficult to pay their staff, how would they be able to invest in their staff to upgrade their knowledge of their respective beats? Every day, new information is being created, and it is so easy to get left behind. It would now fall on a highly motivated journalist to educate himself or herself.

    “The result of this current landscape is the inability of the Nigerian journalist to inform the public, be at the forefront of social transformation, and hold the powerful accountable. Everyone loses. The Nigerian journalist exists within the Nigerian state, and unfortunately cannot rise above the average level of his or her environment. It would be unfair to demand this.”

  • 2019 presidential aspirant, Kingsley Moghalu pays condolence visit to Benue

    Professor Kingsley Moghalu, former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria and an aspirant in the 2019 Presidential race paid a two-day visit to Benue following the recent attacks and unjust killings visited upon residents in the State.
    He was accompanied on this condolence visit by his wife, Mrs Maryanne Moghalu and key members of the Kingsley Moghalu Benue Support Group.
    Professor Moghalu and his wife made it a point to visit the burial site along Naka Road in Makurdi where 73 victims of the January 1 and 2 attacks on Guma and Logo local government area of the State were buried in mass. The couple laid a wreath and made prayers for the dead.
    Commiserating with fellow Nigerians
    At the Palace of the Och’Idoma, His Royal Highness Agaba Idu, Dr. Elias Ikoyi Obekpa IV, in Otukpo, Kingsley Moghalu described the purpose of his visit to Benue as a show of “solidarity with the people of Benue; to listen and to commemorate with people of Benue on the misfortunes that have hit the community in recent times.”
    In his response, the royal father, blessing and accepting him with the customary Kola, commended the presidential aspirant on being the first in the political class to have considered it expedient to pay such a visit during this period.
    The party also paid a visit to the Igbo community in Benue. They were received by the Igbo Council of Elders made up of elder statesmen from Anambra, Imo, Enugu and several other parts of the South East. The Council, which was visibly pleased with the visit, assured Professor Moghalu of their support and blessings in his ambition to become the next President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
    “Hope is not a strategy”
    Kingsley Moghalu who declared his intention to contest the 2019 presidential election at a World Press Conference in Abuja in February has emphasised his candidacy as one not born of ethnoreligious colourations but rather rooted in a desire to build and grow Nigeria through innovation and strong global worldview.
    Kingsley Moghalu re-emphasised this point at the opening of the Benue State Support Group office, donated by members of the Kingsley Moghalu Benue Support Group to serve as the base for grass root activities in
    the State.
    Having deliberately chosen the Benue as the “first stop on a nationwide listening tour”, Professor Moghalu made it a point to hold a town hall meeting in Makurdi where he spent hours answering questions from
    residents of Benue.
    The crowd at the town hall meeting – made up of students from various tertiary institutions in the State, the Benue
    Market Women Association, Benue Motorcycle Riders’ Association, the Association of Tiv Actors, as well as representatives of the various zonal communities within the State – also offered suggestions on how many of Nigeria’s problems can be solved using innovation.
    This crowd-sourcing of solutions to national problems is an integral part of the style of leadership Professor Kingsley Moghalu proposes to override what he has described as “a lack of true political leadership
    in Nigeria.”
    According to the political economist and former professor of practice in International Business and Public Policy at the prestigious Tufts University, “seeking the opinion of citizens and forming a government based on this is the only way to move from a political atmosphere of “godfatherism” to one where power truly lies with the electorate”.
    The future
    As the residents of Benue dispersed from the town hall meeting to continue their daily activities, it was evident that the visit had reinvigorated them with a new perspective on building a better Nigeria in spite of the current circumstances.
    “We have to kill tribalism and declare it as the enemy of progress”, said a representative of the Benue Motorcycle Riders’ Association who had attended the town hall meeting.
    According to a student representative who met with the Presidential aspirant for the first time during the meeting, Kingsley Mogahlu represents the kind of leader Nigeria needs to heal and grow.
    “We have given Professor Moghalu the key to Benue. He is exactly the kind of leader Nigeria needs. Part of being a leader is to help pull people up from their pain; knowing that despite the hurt, we must ensure that we get past it and move on. It is time we elect such leaders.”
    The Presidential aspirant and his wife had earlier been given honourary titles as Peace makers of the Tiv Kingdom by members of the Tiv Actors Association who also presented them with traditional Tiv attires and a symbolic key to the city in a show of complete acceptance.
  • 2019: Former CBN deputy governor, Moghalu declares interest for presidency

    A former Deputy Governor of the CBN, Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, announced on Monday that he was consulting widely to run for the presidency in 2019.

    Moghalu told political correspondents in Lagos that time had come for technocrats, intellectuals and experienced people to take power from Nigeria’s career politicians.

    He said that he would not be deterred from joining the race, in spite of speculations that 2023 was the year slated for Igbos to have a shot at the presidency.

    Moghalu argued that politics in Nigeria should be detribalised for Africa’s most populous nation to grow and take its rightful place in the comity of nations.

    `It is the turn of any competent Nigerian to aspire for the post of presidency because career politicians have failed Nigeria.’’

    He said that zoning, which had been used by the major political parties, might have been relevant in the past but that it was no longer necessary because competence should be placed above tribe in present day Nigeria.

    “Zoning was an internal arrangement by political parties that was not constitutional. It should no longer matter where the president comes from.

    “The future of Nigeria rests in technocratic interventions. We need thinking people that will take Nigeria from the politics of stomach infrastructure to politics of mental infrastructure.’’

    The former CBN chief said that the first part to progress for Nigeria was for the people to begin to think differently and beyond tribe in choosing those who would lead them.

    Speaking on a second term for President Muhammadu Buhari, Moghalu said that the president had constitutional rights to seek re-election.

    “I don’t fathom how anyone can say the president should not run for a second term. It is his choice, the decision on who becomes Nigeria’s president in 2019 rests with Nigerians. ‘’

    On the nation’s economy, the economist pointed out that “the economy was in a delicate situation before the present administration.

    “The handling of the forex crisis though was misguided. The drop in oil prices actually affected the value of our currency but government should have simply allowed the naira to find its true value which would have reduced the inflation rate.’’

    He said that Nigeria must look beyond continued dependence on oil and encourage independent institutions to flourish.

    Moghalu, however, advised Nigerians to eschew docility and become more forceful in demanding accountability from their leaders at all levels of governance.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Moghalu, who served as CBN deputy governor from 2009 to 2014, is a political economist, lawyer and a former United Nations official.

    He was also a professor of practice in international business and public policy at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in Massachusetts, U.S.

    Born on May 7, 1963, Moghalu is a graduate of the London School of Economics. He also read Political Science at the University of Nigeria Nsukka.