Tag: Muhammadu Buhari

  • Why Buhari is not Jibrin of Sudan – Bayo Omoboriowo

    Why Buhari is not Jibrin of Sudan – Bayo Omoboriowo

    Following the long-held rumours that former president Muhammadu Buhari became the “Jibrin of Sudan” after his health battle and lengthy medical treatment in the United Kingdom in 2017, Bayo Omoboriowo, the ex-official photographer of the immediate past president dismissed the rumour.

    Omoboriowo in an interview with Channels Television’s morning programme said there was no mark difference between when Buhari fell ill in 2017 and when he recovered “because as he progressed, he was getting better, he was getting fresher”.

    Buhari fell ill in 2017 and was flown to the UK sometimes early in May of that year and returned later in August of the same year.

    During his long stay overseas, rumours that he was dead and had been replaced with a lookalike named Jibrin from Sudan gained notoriety and was popularised by embattled leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu.

    Omoboriowo, Buhari’s official photographer for eight years, dismissed the rumour about his former principal.

    “I would say it and I owe nobody any apology. To me, President Buhari is a man of grace.

    In his words, “I still had this conversation with one elderly woman over the Christmas break. She carried me into her kitchen and asked, ‘Is he really Buhari?’ And I tried to explain to her. For instance, I’m his photographer, if he changed, I should be able to know.

    “For me, it was more about telling the story of a man that when he went and when he came back, he was still the same to me. He lost weight and he gained weight.

    “Our conversations were still the same. When he didn’t see me, he asked, ‘Where is Bayo?’ So, if he is not the same, how would he know what his photographer’s name is?” he queried.

    ‘Very Challenging Time’
    Omoboriowo described the period of the ex-President’s ill health as “very challenging”.

    “Those periods were periods when I needed to portray a man in fairness. That he was President shouldn’t take away the fact he is human and I needed to have that mindset because there is very little margin for error in this work.

    “The way I presented him has to be fair yet accurate, has to be creative yet professional. That was the balance and it was very emotional for me at that period because someone with so much agility, all of a sudden, I have to be sure he is dressing right because he had lost so much weight at that time. It was a whole lot and it was quite emotional but we were able to document that process.”

     

  • Tinubu celebrates Buhari at 81

    Tinubu celebrates Buhari at 81

    President Bola Tinubu has celebrated his friend and ally, former President Muhammadu Buhari, whom he described as an icon of truth, justice, and patriotism on his 81st birthday.

    This is contained in a statement by Chief Ajuri Ngelale, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, on Saturday in Abuja.

    Tinubu extolled the peerless leadership credentials and feats of the former President, recalling his meritorious service to the nation at various times as Head of State and as President.

    The president recalled Buhari’s unparalleled record of infrastructural provision, comprising several new international airports, multiple standard-gauge railway lines, new seaport development, dozens of new dams, power stations, oil and gas infrastructure, expressways and mega-bridges.

    He added that Buhari also had to his credit establishment of Nigeria’s first ever national social investment and protection programme, amongst many other feats.

    The President fondly recalled the former President’s aggressive push to modernize Nigeria’s defence architecture while working towards import substitution with the empowerment of millions of Nigerian farmers in his progressive initiative to enhance food security.

    Tinubu described Buhari as the finest paradigm of sacrifice, devotion, patriotism, and fidelity to the national cause.

    “President Buhari is from the rarest phylum of virtuous servant-leaders. He has devoted his life to the service of the nation, even earning himself detention for his patriotism and service to our Fatherland. The emergence of leaders like my good friend, Buhari, happens only by divine orchestration. He is a man of absolute and undiluted integrity. His yea is yea, and his nay is nay,” the President said.

    Tinubu appreciated Buhari for his friendship and vote of confidence shown through his support for the administration.

    While wishing the elder statesman longevity and strength, Tinubu assured the former President that the hope of a prosperous, peaceful, and progressive Nigeria, which he had always worked for, would not be dashed.

     

     

  • Why I endorsed Emefiele’s Naira redesign policy – Buhari

    Why I endorsed Emefiele’s Naira redesign policy – Buhari

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari has opened up on why he endorsed the Naira redesign policy spearheaded by the embattled former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Godwin Emefiele.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Buhari to have said he endorsed the controversial Naira redesign policy in the twilight of his administration to protect his own integrity.

    Speaking in a televised interview on Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) on Monday night, the former President stressed the Naira redesign policy was also to show Nigerians that there was no shortcut to success.

    “Whether Nigerians believe it or not, we are an underdeveloped country. And in that sort of situation, there’s materialism and sometimes ruthlessly they didn’t care how they made the money.

    “…I still feel that the only way I could deprive these people was just to make sure that my integrity became unquestionable…I think as a developing country we still have a long way to go.

    “The motivation (for introducing the policy) was to try and make Nigerians believe that there is no shortcut to successful leadership,” Buhari said in his first interview after exiting office about six months ago.

    Besides, he explained that he wasn’t shocked that he was taken to court by Governors from his own party at the time to reverse the policy.

    Buhari said he allowed people to do their jobs when he assigned tasks, stressing that if he was given the same chance he wouldn’t do anything differently under Nigeria’s current system.

    He argued that Nigerians were a difficult set of people to govern, maintaining that they know the right thing to do, but would mostly refuse to do so, because they think they know better than the person on the saddle.

    Buhari said he was still being ‘harassed’ by people who throng his home on a daily basis, noting that if the border with a nearby country was not closed, he would have run out of Nigeria by now.

    He added, however, that he was glad he now wakes up anytime he likes. The former president said he doesn’t miss anything after leaving government.

    “God gave me the opportunity to serve my country, but I did my best. But whether my best was good enough, I leave for people to judge.

    “Nigerians are extremely difficult. People know their rights. They think they should be there, not you. So, they monitor virtually your every step.

    “And you have to struggle day and night to ensure that you are competent enough,” he said.

    He argued that some Nigerians attempted to set a trap for him by trying to ambush him with certain opportunities, but that he avoided the trap because he knew that once they knew he had been compromised, they would take advantage of the situation to milk the country. He added that they would rather become his boss.

    On the Ethiopian/Nigerian Air debacle at the tail end of his administration, Buhari said that if there was any shortcoming he had, it was giving people the free hand to do their work.

  • How Buhari fuelled inflation, weakened value of Naira – Sanusi

    How Buhari fuelled inflation, weakened value of Naira – Sanusi

    Former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Muhammad Sanusi II has opened up on how former President Muhammadu Buhari triggered inflationary pressure in Nigeria and weakened the value of the Naira.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Sanusi to have said CBN’s lending to the federal government under the administration of former President Buhari through Ways and Means triggered inflationary pressure and weakened the value of the Naira.

    Speaking in Abuja on Tuesday at a two-day Premier Capital Markets Day Event organised by MTN, the former CBN Governor said Buhari’s 8 years saw the rapid expansion of the apex bank’s balance sheet through ways and means.

    The 14th Emir of Kano said the CBN has, however, embarked on aggressive monetary tightening through various liquidity control instruments, including open market operations, Open Buy Back (OBB) and high T-bills rates, which Sanusi said is an indication that the bank was sticking to its core mandate of financial systems stability and inflation control.

    “I am optimistic, especially in the short term. We’ve had eight years of rapid expansion of the central bank’s balance sheet through ways and means. And that has fueled inflation and weakened the currency. And that is the fact.

    “If you look at OMO Bills and OBB rates in the last few weeks, I can see that the central bank has started a process of aggressive tightening. OBB rates are beginning to approach what they should be. And I think that’s what the market needs to look at; that the central bank is taking this role of tightening money and fighting inflation as a primary focus.

    “For the short term, I don’t think we have a problem. I think the central bank is doing the right thing – tightening money, clearing the backlog, trying to fund the market, and I think we will have stability,” Sanusi II said.

    TNG reports Ways and Means is a way in which the federal government raises funds by borrowing from the CBN.  The CBN’s loan to the federal government hit N22.7 trillion, an amount the CBN said had been securitised not to dampen its balance sheet.

    Speaking earlier at the event, CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, represented by Director in charge of Research Department, Dr Omolara Duke, said the bank would return to its primary role of price stability.

    Cardoso said “The Ways and Means will no longer be more than five percent, going forward. The period for the government to access Ways and Means is over” while adding that the central bank was looking at how to drive down the cost of remittances to increase the inflow and move them away from the informal sector into the formal.

    Telecom sector contributes 16% to Nigeria’s GDP – MTN

    Meanwhile, the Chairman of MTN Nigeria, Dr Ernest Ndukwe disclosed at the event that the telecom sector now contributes over 16 per cent to Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    According to Dr Ndukwe, in pursuant to MTN’s vision 2025 strategy, the company had evolved from telecom to technology business, adding that it assured on building connectivity business while expanding its focus on platform businesses.

    Ndukwe said that as the digital ecosystem continued to grow, MTN’s impact on the nation’s economy would continue to increase.

    “MTN remains the largest network operator in Nigeria, and we recognise the enormous responsibility bestowed on us to continue to deliver world class ICT services to the people that patronise our services.

    “We aalso seize strong oopportunities or growth in both our voice and data businesses as we work to increase our market permutations on geographical coverage.

    “Our customers and their desires are the heart everything we do and plan for the future of the business. We are proud to say that the MTN ecosystem has directly or indirectly created employment for more that two million people, while supporting the livelihood of people across the country.

    “We are fully committed to working with our partners and the Nigerian government to ensure that Nigeria’s digital economy has its full potential on customers and stakeholders,” he said.

    In his remarks, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of MTN Nigeria, Mr Karl Toriola, expressed optimism that  the economic challenges of the country were gradually coming to an end.

    Toriola called on the stakeholders to enjoy the experience of the programme.

    Mr Timi Popoola, CEO of Nigeria Exchange Limited, said the event would make both local and foreign investors stay close to the country, adding that it deepened interactions with MTN.

    Popoola said that a sort code of *5474# was launched by MTN  in order to get a bouquet of options, which include: opening and closing prices of any security listed on the exchange.

    “We hope that this is the first step of using a tool like this to invest in a capital market,” he said.

  • Buhari did not supervised, questioned his Ministers – Adebayo Shittu

    Buhari did not supervised, questioned his Ministers – Adebayo Shittu

    Former Minister of Communications, Adebayo Shittu has said that former President Muhammadu Buhari did not ask his ministers how they go about their job.

    Shittu stated this during an interview on Channels TV’s Politics Today.

    He said: “Buhari did not give anybody any threat. As I said, Buhari is not Tinubu and Tinubu is not Buhari. What I know of Buhari with all due respect to him, he is a more reserved person. When he gives a job to somebody, he will never ask how they go about it.

    “I have to say this for national interest so that the government who comes after him should do something about it. In the Buhari government, if you don’t go and meet him, probably in the next four years, he will not ask about you.

    “People bring their memos, but in terms of supervision we really did have such things. Tnubu is trying to do things differently.

    “In his statement today, Tinubu shows commitment that he is trying to do things differently. What I think he needs to add to it is to lead a transparent and quantifiable supervision of each ministry.”

  • Amaechi reveals why Buhari sacked Hadiza Usman

    Amaechi reveals why Buhari sacked Hadiza Usman

    Rotimi Amaechi, former transport minister,has accused former managing director of the Nigerian Ports Authority, Hadiza Usman, of telling numerous lies against him in her book published earlier this year.

    Amaechi, who served under former President Muhammadu Buhari, stated this on Thursday at TheNiche annual lecture in Lagos, where he was the guest speaker.

    The lecture with the theme: “Why We Stride and Slip: Leadership, Nationalism and the Nigerian Condition,” held at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, Victoria Island. The occasion was chaired by a former director of the National Policy Development Centre, Dr Uma Eleazu.

    Speaking for the first time after his failed presidential bid, Amaechi contended that Usman’s book, titled, ‘Stepping on Toes: My Odyssey at the Nigerian Ports Authority,’ contained too many lies against him.

    Amaechi denied Usman’s claim in the book that he orchestrated her removal as the NPA managing director.
    “Some of you must have read the book written by the former MD of the NPA, ‘Stepping on Toes.’ There has been a huge debate about whether I should respond or not. The lies were too many,” Amaechi began.

    “For instance, she [Hadiza] claims that she was not indicted by the panel but she was found guilty of all the 10 counts. I even came with a copy of the memo to the President in which the President endorsed her removal.

    “We took the President through all the counts, including the fact that a Managing Director of NPA with a N2.5m approval limit can approve a N2.8bn contract. No appropriation, including the fact that even if I were to approve despite the lack of appropriation, you are overpriced by N58m so tell them to refund the difference, having awarded the contract.

    “Why is that document not public? Prominent Nigerians are involved. She gave waivers to prominent Nigerians which she had no power to give and these are dollars accruable to the Nigerian economy but she was bold to write the book and Nigerians followed her to launch the book.”

    “We took the President through all the counts, including the fact that a Managing Director of NPA with a N2.5 million approval limit can approve a N2.8bn contract. No appropriation, including the fact that even if I were to approve despite the lack of appropriation, you are overpriced by N58m so tell them to refund the difference, having awarded the contract.

    “Why is that document not public? Prominent Nigerians are involved. She gave waivers to prominent Nigerians which she had no power to give and these are dollars accruable to the Nigerian economy but she was bold to write the book and Nigerians followed her to launch the book.

    But let’s wait until they bring the original copy because if I give you the photocopy, you will say it is fake. I will show you the original but I won’t allow you to read it because you would see the names of those prominent Nigerians that were indicted by the panel. I will rather read the areas that concern her and leave those prominent Nigerians, they didn’t look for my trouble.
    “But to show you how bad the situation was for me as the Minister of Transport, the Federal Executive Council, FEC, the President and Vice President including the Minister of Transport will approve an agreement for Lekki Deep Sea Port, the MD of NPA will change it and when queried, she will say for national interest, so we are for Biafra interest?” he asked.

    Also, Hadiza had claimed in the book that Amaechi was angry because she did not buy him a birthday gift.
    But contrary to her claim, Amaechi said she used to buy him birthday’s gifts until he became a Minister when he told her to stop buying him birthday’s gifts.

    “She gave me a lot of birthday presents, from the time I met her to when I became a Minister. When I became a minister, the last birthday present she gave me was a big returnee bag. So I said no, that I am Now a minister. You are now my subordinate, but she lied. Would you believe that somebody who worked under me from 2013 will not give a birthday present” he said.

    He said that the political class now rides on the strength of ethnicity to achieve their aim of winning political offices, adding that the scheme brings to bear division among the citizens.
    “Most times, we elect those who openly show that they are ethnic leaders and they are there for their ethnic group.

    “Our political elites constantly run to their ethnic bases to provoke ethnic debate each time they fail to win advantages in their struggle for power and privilege at the national level,” he said.

  • Buhari regrets, but is Tinubu paying attention? – By Dave Baro-Thomas

    Buhari regrets, but is Tinubu paying attention? – By Dave Baro-Thomas

    Mr Femi Adesina, former presidential spokesperson, told Nigerians that his boss, erstwhile President, Mr Mohammedu Buhari, is nursing regrets over some outcomes of his administration but swiftly retracted and subsequently tried to put in context his submission given the torrents of public outrage – sadly an attempt likened to crossing the Atlantic Ocean with a fisherman boat. When Solomon Dalung, a founding member of the All Progressive Congress, APC, and former Minister of Sports under President Buhari, spoke more recently about the failings and regrets of the former President, handshake was above the elbows.

    After eight (8) years of record-breaking national treasury pillage, unbridled corruption, policy misdirection, cabalizing the seat of power, ethnic/clannish chauvinism, political class rascality and historic misgovernance, Nigerians were not shocked that the former ruler had some regrets, but wondered how the man is not in depression over the state of the nation he handed to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    Once again, we suffer the agony of political party continuity in power after a lousy run because if President Tinubu had inherited this kind of economy from the opposition, the attendant volcanic eruption would make a tsunami look like child’s play. What effrontery and injurious approximation of a national calamity that destroyed the fabric of our nation and attempting to trivialize the outcomes with semantics is not acceptable. People should learn how to enjoy their (mis)fortunes quietly.

    The regrets of the former president are comical because the question is, at what point did he plunge into this feat; were the unpleasant outcomes of his regime avoidable and were the policies and programs not weighed and scrutinized during conceptualization and executions? Or at the height of such infamy, the processes/concepts hailed as the best thing that would happen to the country and dissenting voices seen as unpatriotic, stupid rants of the opposition, godless machinations of the civil society groups and like his spin doctors put it, corruption was fighting back.

    Yes, it is human to have regrets because it aids genuine repentance, but willful sins come with strokes of canes – Pastor Femi Adesina can relate to that and convey the same to his principal. Painfully, the entire country has been in regret since 1960 but revved up beyond bearable limits since the fourth republic (1999), and its irreconcilable extremities celebrate a rich mix of abundant mineral and human capital resources yet infirmed with leadership failings of unimaginable proportions.

    Nigerians loved former President Buhari and gave him their trust, and for once in this country, a man with a messianic toga burst into the national political landscape with massive goodwill – breaking all known ethnoreligious boundaries that set him above his predecessors.

    Incontrovertibly, almost all his electoral promises and bravado fell like a pack of worthless cards after eight (8) years of purposeless governance, but do not take my words for it -you can ask Pastor Femi or whoever was on that voyage: where are the refineries promised, where is the 20,000MW power by 2019, was the oil subsidy removed, was the educational sector better and what about the promised free education from primary to tertiary, and ASUU staying at home breaking strike records, what was SMEs growth, was the agricultural revolution including the investments in rice farming sustainable or a sham/scam? Where are 3,000 superhighways constructed and all manner of infrastructure development promised, what was the state of manufacturing and industrial growth, how was forex management, and of what value was the Naira redesign policy?

    By 2014, the country had the largest economy in the continent but became recessed in months under Mr Buhari as the inflationary rate soared and GDP growth dipped – leaving so many unanswered questions. Was the Naira equal to the dollar, was medical tourism abated, life -expectancy raised by an additional ten years as promised, and how can anyone forget Ajeokuta Steel Company, unemployment, level of insecurity, the defeat of Boko Haram and dissipation of insurgency, one functioning airport in each of the 36 states, free maternal and child health care service, constitutional amendments, restructuring, and what happened to Nigeria Air, yet some spokesperson is playing semantics with the word, REGRETS.

    It smacks reasonability that the actors of that administration are not under intense depression, given the pains the country is undergoing because the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, got the nation into Intensive Care Units (ICU) and left it in a coma, APC under Mr Buhari pulled the plugs.

    From the consistent rise of Lagos State, surpassing some critical performance metrics owing to the revolution and foundational realignment by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu as governor back then, and the deliverables by the present Governor, Mr Sanwo-Olu, there is no doubt a magic wand exists somewhere but raising the dead at the federal level is not a miracle for jokers – the stakes are very high. It takes the blind to argue that Lagos is not working, but it takes sincerity for those living in Lagos to say this was not the Lagos we met in 1999 without prejudice to the quantum of resources sunk, and of course,  give Nigerians service and tangible benefits, you can live on exotic islands in the Bahamas and rule this country without pressure.

    Will President Tinubu conduct the funeral rites of this country even when his capacity to make a difference is not in doubt because, it appears, the economic medication currently administered, seems ineffectual as things appear to be moving in the wrong direction – making a bad situation worse – after all, the preexisting conditions of this patient called Nigeria are notoriously fatal. Nigeria is on the dead slab, and it is either the interventions are not working, or Nigerians are much in a hurry for this Lazarus to come back to life. History will not forgive this president after all the disastrous lesson notes handed to his administration by the immediate, and saving Chief Ajuri Ngalale unnecessary explanations later.

    Yes, this president will not escape regrets if political appointments are continuously not balanced and spread evenly – a hallmark of the former president.  Mr President risks not enjoying a peaceful retirement if ethnic and religious bigotry tear this nation apart, but thank goodness, we know him better than that.  There will be enough room for regrets if this economy does not rebound significantly after four years because Mr. President was touted better prepared and experienced for the job thus he is inexcusable.

    So, the way to go is to take a holistic view of the calamities that befell the Buhari administration and is instructive to avoid these pitfalls to recover this economy from its negative trajectory. President Tinubu will have no business regretting if he realizes that Nigeria is not Lagos, although the latter is a fitting microcosm. The eyes of Nigerians are on the renewed hope manifesto and still wondering if this president is the messiah.

    The difference between the former president and the current is that the former wanted a trophy for the shelf, but the present declared it was a lifetime ambition, EMILOKAN. However, the ambition to do what? To make Nigeria succeed like the Asian Tigers, or leave the stage with his tails between his legs.

    Yes, this president is advantaged because, unlike his predecessors, he boasts of a roadmap to becoming the president, and he fought and grabbed it against so many odds, but no matter how well-intentioned, sound governance and prosperity for the people require honest insights and courage to take the big decisions no matter how unpopular even when one of the biggest problems good presidents contend with is, having devious elements and serial sycophants that surround them. Men whose bellies are their gods and for filthy lucre take the president on a merry-go-round circus, but when the chips are down, Nigerians will only ask President Tinubu questions like we are doing right now with the man from Daura, who is gradually becoming lonely in retirement.

    So, for this administration to avoid hosting a regret/pity party after its exit like Pastor Adesina and Solomon Dalung are doing on behalf of their former boss, the present coordinating minister of the economy must urgently bring to the table the chief executives of frontline MDAs that impact the economy significantly and dispassionately deal with every element that impedes seamless linkages and growth and like an Okonjo-Iweala, get a hold of the economy from an elevated and advantageous view, and ruthlessly demand reforms or boot out erring laggards because Mr President has not set up a tea party that will later host him a pity party.

    If the quality of persons we see on the corridor of power are trusted friends and mentees of the president but cannot deliver the goods, then the renewed hope agenda is a mission impossible already

    Indeed, this president has all it takes to succeed, but he will bear the responsibility for all the outcomes, and the regrets will be his wholesale – Mr Buhari is regretting, and all eyes are on the Jagaban!

  • FG suspends Buhari’s N-Power program indefinitely

    FG suspends Buhari’s N-Power program indefinitely

    Amid outstanding payments running to over nine months, the Federal Government has announced the indefinite suspension of the N-Power program introduced by the immediate past Buhari’s administration in 2016.

    The objective of the program as a stop-gap for graduates and non graduates looking for job to have a little income, among others has been compromised as it has been enmeshed in alleged corruption typified by lack of supervision and monitoring of participants, haphazard payments pattern as while some were fully paid the N30, 000 for the graduates category with results, others were either not paid at all or paid in piece meal.

    Infact the supervisory ministry was said to be basically preoccupied with only disbursement of funds without verifiable register and monitoring to know whether the participants were at their primary assignments or not.

    For instance, most of the participants were paid three months arrears for last October, November and December 2022, recently while most of the participants have not been paid a dime this year.

    Early last year, the handlers of the program wrote to the participants to update their accounts, with the Place of Primary Assignments (PPAs) distributed to them , urging them to report at the various centres.

     

    Similarly, the other category, regarded as trainees, who are either graduates but awaiting results or non graduates were recently informed to get ready for posting to various PPAs, with N10, 000, monthly stipend agreed to be paid, without telling them the commencement date, but uptil the time if this report, nothing has been heard from the government.

    However, Betta Edu, the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, disclosing the indefinite suspension during her appearance on a Saturday TVC news program said the new administration will look at what has been done with a view to correcting any areas they are not comfortable with.

    She explained that the decision was prompted by irregularities within the scheme, highlighting that the government has initiated an investigation into fund usage since the program’s inception.

    The Minister asserted that certain recipients are absent from their designated work locations while still anticipating their monthly allowances.

    According to her, some of the beneficiaries ought to have exited the program in 2022 but are still on the payroll.

    “We must go back to look into N-Power and understand what the problems are so we will basically suspend the programe for now until we are done with proper investigation into the utilization of fund into the N-Power program.

    “We want to know how many persons are basically on the program right now, how many persons are owed, amount they are owed. We are totally restructuring the N-Power and expanding it.

    “There are lots going on. We met people who were supposed to have exited the program last year and they are still claiming that they are still teaching.

    “Sometimes we contact the school or the places where they are working and they are not there. They are not working yet they keep claiming that they are being owed eight or nine months stipends.
    “About 80% of them are not working yet they are claiming salaries”.

    The N-Power Program was launched by the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration in 2016 to address the issue of youth unemployment and help increase social development.

    The scheme was created for unemployed graduates and non-graduates between the ages of 18 and 35.

    The Program was built to prepare young Nigerians for a modern, globalized economy by helping equip youths with skills and certifications for emerging global markets.

     

  • Tinubu’s Buhari burden – By Chidi Amuta

    Tinubu’s Buhari burden – By Chidi Amuta

    President Bola Tinubu’s success or failure in office may not be the result of his own making. It would be the weight of a political burden he is so far carrying apparently quite willingly. Every policy pronouncement he has so far made and measures he has hinted at taking is an inherited yoke from the immediate past Buhari presidency. In a sense, Tinubu’s presidency so far is looking more like a reactive incumbency. He has merely been reacting to what his predecessor left in the in-tray at the Aso Villa office. Insecurity. Monumental poverty. Economic hopelessness. Subsidies and entitlements. A critically divided nation. Unprecedented corruption. Name it. It is all inherited from Mr. Buhari. But Tinubu and his cohorts seem reluctant to say so.

    The most elementary lesson of the presidential systems and indeed every democratic succession is that the new leader is elected not just to clean up the mess made by his predecessor but also to leave room to make his own peculiar mess. So far, Mr. Tinubu seems too preoccupied with the baggage left by his Daura friend instead of getting ready to make his own mess or landmarks.

    In some sense, president Tinubu has carried on literally like a beast of burden. He has not complained to the nation about the burden he inherited nor the extent of the mess on his plate. One or two random arrests have been made and a probe of the Central Bank has been instituted. It is of course true that government is a continuum. Each new leaders is chosen to deal with the trouble he finds on the plate. Leaders are elected to lead, not to lament or offer excuses on behalf of those gone by especially when the past and the present are born of the same party. But it is also an elementary responsibility of leadership to name the source of present headaches so that the public can minimally understand and empathize.

    And this is where Tinubu’s publicity machinery is failing. They are busy constructing political enemies from among the opposition of Atiku Abubakar’s PDP and Peter Obi’s Labour Party. This is quite excusable. But it is lazy public relations. Tinubu’s existential adversaries are not the current opposition. They are not yet a full blown opposition figures since they are still in court. His most consequential political enemies might lie in his ruling party and the devotees of his predecessor. His greatest enemy is to be found in the inner cultic followership of his immediate predecessor. It is Mr. Buhari that laid all the booby traps that are likely to fell Tinubu or keep him busy for the next four years. The best test of party solidarity would be to try and upset Buhari’s apple cart. The political fangs and jack knives will come out.

    And yet so far, the Daura general is comfortably savouring his cosy retirement in his ranch. He has even had the temerity to unleash his megaphones on the public to justify his actions in office. The most disastrous leader in the whole of Nigerian history is being revised as a man without regrets and who took the best decisions in the best interest of the nation. It is either being trumpeted that he has no regrets for the disaster he unleashed on the nation. And because we live in a nation where leaders face no consequences for their actions in office, Buhari is sufficiently shameless and immune as to use every occasion to preach to or lecture Nigerians on patriotism, good governance and the value of good leadership. In every other self respecting republic, a man with Buhari’s record in office should either be in jail, facing trial at the Hague or quarantined in disgraceful internal exile for the rest of his life. And here is just a tip of why.

    Under Mr. Buhari’s eight years, close to 90,000 citizens were killed by bandits or kidnappers. Fewer than 100 known bandits and kidnappers were were either arrested or brought to book for these crimes. Any number of our young daughters, wives or female relations were abducted, raped, abused, carted off  into forceful  matrimony or sold off into direct slavery. Under Buhari’s watch, insecurity forced an estimated 7 million Nigerians to become Internally Displaced Persons, sequestered from home, kith and kin  and livelihood for an indefinite period.

    In this period, Nigeria climbed up the global insecurity index. We became among the top five most dangerous nations of the world in the league of Somalia, Syria, Yemen, Libya and Sudan while our police force is now grouped among the worst in the world.

    Under this illustrious Daura general, the national economy was literally eviscerated.  Arguably, we have been set back a good three decades in economic terms. An external debt of anywhere between $80 billion and $100 billion hangs over our collective neck with over N30 trillion in domestic debts. Our external reserves, long brandished as $34-$37 billion was surreptitiously used to leverage clandestine external loans from American banks to the extent of over $18 billion with neither parliamentary approval nor other statutory due processes. We are now spending over 98% of our total revenue on debt servicing. Only this week, the World Bank designated the Nigerian Naira as one  of the worst currencies in sub Saharan Africa. As we speak, over N1000 is equivalent to $1 USD!

    Not long before the 2023 presidential elections, a dubious Nair re-design project was suddenly unleashed on Nigerians by the duo of Presdient Buhari and his Central Bank Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele. People’s bank deposits were literally confiscated by the government. An unanticipated cash crunch hit the nation. People could not access their own hard earned money. Others went through untold hardship to  get into banks that had no money- ether new or old currencies- to dispense. People died of poverty, disease and hardship. Up to this moment, hardly more than a trickle of the new currencies on which huge public expenditure had been incurred is in circulation. And no questions are being asked.

    Still on money matters, close to N29.3 trillion of worthless currency was printed and pumped into the economy by a colluding Central Bank through a dubious Ways and Means mechanism, thereby fueling further runaway inflation which today hovers above 27%.

    Under Buhari’s eight years, Nigeria witnessed the largest migration of citizens into multidimensional poverty than at any other time in our history. An estimated over 130 million Nigerians now live in poverty being the largest ‘poverty republic’ in the world, more than India with a population of over 1.4 billion people.

    As Petroleum Minister, Mr. Buhari presided over the emergence of oil theft, illegal bunkering and illicit refineries as an industry and a sector of Nigeria’s expanding insecurity sub sector. At its worst moments, close to 30% of Nigeria’s daily oil production was being creamed off by oil thieves often with official and security knowledge and enablement.

    Under Buhari, the nation witnessed the institutionalization of corruption. The leadership of the very agencies established to fight corruption (EFCC and ICPC) were themselves investigated and found culpable of condoning high level corruption and there were no consequences. No arrests. No prosecutions.  No recoveries. No reasonable forfeitures.

    Mr. Buhari presided over a deliberate and reckless mismanagement of our national diversity through aggressive nepotism, nativism and divisive politics.

    In response to irritations from secessionist movements in the South East, Buhari could not hide his allergy to the Igbos as a nationality. He threatened on Twitter to unleash genocidal violence on them by speaking to them “in a language they understand from the civil war years.” He capped this xenophobic vituperation by describing the igbos as a mere ‘dot’ surrounded by ‘a circle’ of Nigerian security viciousness. Twitter scrubbed this twit as ‘hate speech’ for which Twitter was banned from the Nigerian web space for close to a year!

    Back to Tinubu’s self -imposed Buhari burden. It is true that faithfulness to party demands that Tinubu should remain silent on the culpability of Mr. Buhari for the myriad burdens he has to contend with. Faithfulness to party perhaps dictates that he should gloss over some of Mr. Buhari’s excusable lapses. But we are not dealing with casual lapses but fundamental acts of epic incompetence or deliberate misdeed occasioned by ignorance or patent wickedness and insensitivity. We are dealing with acts and policies that have literally destroyed the nation we all call home.

    Within the rubrics of faithfulness to party solidarity and policy continuity, it is perhaps understandable that President Tinubu has continued to own the highpoints of his predecessor’s infamous rule. He may have been emboldened in this regard by the outcome of the 2023 presidential elections. After all, he ran under the platform of the APC and was declared winner. This may indicate that the Nigerian populace saw nothing wrong with Buhari’s or the APC’s rule. That would be a conventional democratic wisdom. Ordinarily, the electorate should ‘punish’ a party with a defective performance record at the next election. The controversial result of the 2023 presidential election indicates widespread public hesitation to endorse the return of the APC after the Buhari infamy. It stops short of a wholesale rejection of the APC. A vote tally of less than 9 million in a registered voter population of over 83 million and a population of over 200 million cannot by any stretch be described as an endorsement of a ruling party.

    Even at that, President Tinubu needs to understand the dividing line between faithfulness to party solidarity and his own political self interest. While party solidarity dictates a rhetorical commitment to continuing with the Buhari legacy, real politik dictates that he distances himself, as much as possible, from the worst of Buhari.

    As Buhari and his jaded acolytes continue to bring him out for occasional airing, his plight reminds me of Joseph Stalin win his last days. Towards the end, he was adjudged as somewhat unhinged by the public and his close lieutenants. But he insisted that he was acting rationally and in the best interests of the nation. Somehow, his  derangement had progressed so far that he could not distinguished between illusion and reality. He mistook each act of deluded autocracy as illustrious service to the nation.

    He noticed that the attendance at his weekend garden parties was getting  unusually scanty. On one occasion, when he made his usual grand entrance, he asked aloud: ‘Where have all my friends gone?’ An aide leaned over and whispered into his ears: ‘All gone, all purged…’ Stalin, in his delusion, failed to see that his sweeping purges of ‘anti revolutionary elements’ had also wiped out majority of his friends and allies. Close to 6 million had perished on Stalin’s orders. The man of power had eroded and destroyed the very nation in whose name he was wielding the power of the state. But the suffering and death of the masses meant little to him. As he famously said: “The death of one man is a tragedy. But the death of many is statistics…”

    To Buhari in is final days in power, Nigerians were no more than mre subjects and statistics. The nation was a playground. The nation of his legacy is best described as a field after a locust invasion. For President Tinubu to see his presidency as a continuation of this legacy is political hara-kiri. He needs to choose now.

  • Damaged economy: Garba Shehu lambasts Tinubu’s wife

    Damaged economy: Garba Shehu lambasts Tinubu’s wife

    Garba Shehu, spokesman to the former President Muhammadu Buhari, has insisted that his principal brought Nigeria’s economy out of crisis.

    Shehu made the remark while reacting to claims that Buhari’s administration threw Nigeria into myriads of problems leading to the current hardship in the country.

    In an interview with BBC Hausa Service, Shehu said no past administration found itself in economic hardship like Buhari’s.

    He noted that no government in the world can solve all the problems a nation faces.

    According to Shehu: “If there were hardships or problems, these should be looked into, to know how they came about.

    “No administration in this country found itself in economic issues like Buhari’s because of our dependence on oil and prices, which went down.

    “We also had the Coronavirus pandemic. Nations shut their doors, and the economy plummeted. But, Alhamdulillah, Buhari brought the Nigerian economy out of that crisis.”

    This came after the First Lady, Remi Tinubu, noted that President Bola Tinubu inherited a damaged economy from Buhari.

    She noted that Tinubu is not a magician but will work to fix the things damaged in the country.