Tag: Nigerians

  • Over 1549 Nigerians deported from Libya, UK, South Africa, others – Official

    Over 1549 Nigerians deported from Libya, UK, South Africa, others – Official

    A development economist and former staff of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, Lucy George, has advised Nigerians to remain in Nigeria and contribute to its national and economic development

    George gave the advice in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Saturday.

    She said Nigerians should pay attention to the overwhelming number of Nigerians that had been deported from various countries while escaping the poor economic level of development in Nigeria.

    We as Nigerians have a problem that should be tackled and that is the development of Nigeria.

    We can’t sit down and expect the Federal Government to do everything because developing a country requires the people in it to be productive strengthening the private sector.

    All the developed countries in the world are dominated by the private sector which creates massive employment opportunities and eliminates poverty,” she said..

    George said that she was surprised that a large number of Nigerians had been sent back, especially from Libya.

    We have had an overwhelming number of Nigerians deported or voluntarily returned this year which is embarrassing.

    The largest number of Nigerian deportees for this year comes from Cameroon which deported about 100,000 Nigerians who escaped the Boko Haram disasters and sought refuge in Cameroon.

    That was seen to be an illegal deportation which still is being denied by some Cameroonian officials however, we are not including that in the embarrassing statistics.

    I am surprised by the number of Nigerians that have been deported and have volunteered to return to Nigeria from Libya just this week as 161 people arrived on Thursday and 257 people did same on Tuesday.

    There were also 164 people deported in May, 171 in March and another 171 in February.

    In February and May, South Africa had deported 97 and 90 Nigerians respectively in midst of the xenophobic attacks.

    We saw it to be a discriminatory at first but later realised they actually did commit immigration related offences causing them to be deported by the South African authorities,” she said.

    She added that Nigerians should remain in the country to develop it so that they won’t lose out when Nigeria becomes better.

    If everyone is leaving the county for greener pastures, who is expected to remain in Nigeria to develop it; anyone who doesn’t grow in the system will lose out when the country becomes better.

    Imagine a scenario where a young man graduates from the university then leaves Nigeria in search of greener pastures but after arriving, fails to succeed in the new land.

    He realises that things are not as fabulous as portrayed in movies as these countries have tougher systems, especially because he doesn’t meet the requirements for career jobs in their country.

    He spends time being too embarrassed and broke to return to Nigeria but finally gets deported after many years.

    In that time, he has lost the opportunity to put his education to practice, develop productive skills and has lost contact with friends who would have helped him develop himself or place him in a prominent position.

    Nigerians should learn to be hardworking and patient to see their hard work reap its benefits because riches don’t come overnight.

    The countries they are running to didn’t develop overnight so you can’t expect to comfortably reap what you didn’t sew thinking the roads are paved with gold.

    In summary, I will emphasise on the fact that there is no place like home so I hope Nigerians learn from these numerous Nigerians that have been brought back home.

    NAN reports that there has been a minimum of 1549 Nigerians sent back to Nigeria with exemption of the controversial 100,000 sent from Cameroon.

    Figures show there was a minimum of 23 Nigerians deported from Spain,187 from South Africa, 924 from Libya, 110 from Italy, 41 from the U.S, 146 from the UK and 118 from six other European countries.

    The countries include Austria, Germany, Hungry, Switzerland, Norway and Denmark.

     

    NAN

     

  • Nigerians should develop their country to avoid deportation – Economist

    Lucy George, a development economist and former staff of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, has advised Nigerians to remain in Nigeria and contribute to its national and economic development .George gave the advice in Abuja on Saturday.

     

    She said Nigerians should pay attention to the overwhelming number of Nigerians that had been deported from various countries while escaping the poor economic level of development in Nigeria.

     

    “We as Nigerians have a problem that should be tackled and that is the development of Nigeria.

     

    “We can’t sit down and expect the Federal Government to do everything because developing a country requires the people in it to be productive strengthening the private sector.

     

    “All the developed countries in the world are dominated by the private sector which creates massive employment opportunities and eliminates poverty,” she said..

     

    George said that she was surprised that a large number of Nigerians had been sent back, especially from Libya.

     

    “We have had an overwhelming number of Nigerians deported or voluntarily returned this year which is embarrassing.

     

    “The largest number of Nigerian deportees for this year comes from Cameroon which deported about 100,000 Nigerians who escaped the Boko Haram disasters and sought refuge in Cameroon.

     

    “That was seen to be an illegal deportation which still is being denied by some Cameroonian officials however, we are not including that in the embarrassing statistics.

     

    “I am surprised by the number of Nigerians that have been deported and have volunteered to return to Nigeria from Libya just this week as 161 people arrived on Thursday and 257 people did same on Tuesday.

     

    “There were also 164 people deported in May, 171 in March and another 171 in February.

     

    “In February and May, South Africa had deported 97 and 90 Nigerians respectively in midst of the xenophobic attacks.

     

    “We saw it to be a discriminatory at first but later realised they actually did commit immigration related offences causing them to be deported by the South African authorities,” she said.

     

    She added that Nigerians should remain in the country to develop it so that they won’t lose out when Nigeria becomes better.

     

    “If everyone is leaving the county for greener pastures, who is expected to remain in Nigeria to develop it; anyone who doesn’t grow in the system will lose out when the country becomes better.

     

    “Imagine a scenario where a young man graduates from the university then leaves Nigeria in search of greener pastures but after arriving, fails to succeed in the new land.

     

    “He realises that things are not as fabulous as portrayed in movies as these countries have tougher systems, especially because he doesn’t meet the requirements for career jobs in their country.

     

    “He spends time being too embarrassed and broke to return to Nigeria but finally gets deported after many years.

     

    “In that time, he has lost the opportunity to put his education to practice, develop productive skills and has lost contact with friends who would have helped him develop himself or place him in a prominent position.

     

    “Nigerians should learn to be hardworking and patient to see their hard work reap its benefits because riches don’t come overnight.

     

    “The countries they are running to didn’t develop overnight so you can’t expect to comfortably reap what you didn’t sew thinking the roads are paved with gold.

     

    “In summary, I will emphasise on the fact that there is no place like home so I hope Nigerians learn from these numerous Nigerians that have been brought back home.

    There has been a minimum of 1549 Nigerians sent back to Nigeria with exemption of the controversial 100,000 sent from Cameroon.

     

    Figures show there was a minimum of 23 Nigerians deported from Spain,187 from South Africa, 924 from Libya, 110 from Italy, 41 from the U.S, 146 from the UK and 118 from six other European countries. The countries include Austria, Germany, Hungry, Switzerland,

  • Give Buhari till 2023 to complete his ‘good works’ – Senate Leader, Lawan tells Nigerians

    The Leader of the Senate, Sen. Ahmed Lawan has said President Muhammadu Buhari will complete the good works he started in 2015 at the end of his second tenure in 2023.

    The Senate Leader reiterated that President Muhammadu Buhari and Nigerians have a future beyond 2019.

    He expressed the hope that the President would be able to complete the programmes his administration had initiated by 2023 when he would have served two terms of four years each in office.

    Lawal said this in an interview with State House correspondents after joining members of the Buhari Support Group to meet with the President at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He said he and other members of the group across the country would continue to support the President and his administration.

    He said, ” We will continue to identify with and support all the programmes that this administration has set forward.

    ” l believe that we have every justification to be happy because, the President campaigned on three major pillars of anti-corruption, fighting the insecurity across the country and revitalising the economy of Nigeria.

    “It has been a very, very good journey so far and I also believe that Mr. President and Nigerians have a future beyond 2019.

    “What he has started, by the grace of God, he should be able to complete, up to 2023.”

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that President Muhammadu Buhari resumed office on May 29, 2015 and his first tenure ends by May 29, 2019. If he seeks re-election in 2019 and wins, his second tenure will end by 2023.

  • Adopt birth control to avert population disaster, NPC warns Nigerians

    The Chairman, National Population Commission (NPC), Eze Duruiheoma (SAN), has advised families to adopt birth control measures to avert population disaster and harness demographic dividend in Nigeria.

    Mr. Duruiheoma gave the advice on Tuesday in Abuja while briefing newsmen as part of the activities to commemorate the 2017 Annual Population Lecture Series (APLS) scheduled to hold on October 30.

    He noted that Nigeria’s population was its greatest asset, but the population size can become a curse if investments were not adequately made in some key sectors.

    According to him, more investments should be made on education that would enable the youth to become equipped with the skills they need to succeed in life.

    He added that public and private sectors should also provide job opportunities for the youth after schooling; these efforts among others would lead Nigeria to the realisation of demographic dividend.

    It is not a matter of how many youths we have in Nigeria, but the youths we are talking about falls within the productive age of 14 to 40 years.

    This category of the population makes about 65 per cent of the population.

    We want families to decide the number of children they want to properly carter for, if we are able to start at this level we will effectively control our birth in Nigeria,’’ the chairman said.

    The 2017 APLS has a theme “Achieving Demographic Dividend: Strategic tool for national economic recovery and sustainable development’’.

    Mr. Duruiheoma said the theme was in tandem with the efforts of the government to revamp the nation’s economy through the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).

    He added that the APLS aimed to deepen government and other stakeholders’ awareness and understanding of the benefits of appropriate systems and sectors to reap demographic dividends.

    He said the meeting would arouse public interest on the need to key into the tenets of Nigeria’s Roadmap on Demographic Dividend, among others.

    Earlier, Muhammad Tola, the Chairman, APLS Media Sub-committee, said the lecture series was essentially designed to sensitise stakeholders to mobilise ministries, departments and agencies to harness the dividend of population.

    Mr. Tola, who represented the Chairman of the main Planning Committee Kole Shettima, added that the goal of the lecture series was to ensure that human resources are explored, developed and harnessed towards national development and improve the life of Nigerians.

  • Vacancies! Over 37 job openings for young Nigerians in UN – Amina Mohammed

    Vacancies! Over 37 job openings for young Nigerians in UN – Amina Mohammed

    The United Nations, UN, Deputy Secretary-General, Mrs. Amina Mohammed has said there are 37 career openings for young Nigerians under the United Nations bureaucracy.

    Mohammed disclosed this at a Cultural Night organised by Nigerians working at the United Nations Systems. She said the openings are available via the Junior Professional Officers’ (JPO) Programme, including internship for young graduates.

    According to her, Nigeria has the opportunity to sponsor its youth for UN careers through the JPO. But Nigeria has not seized the opportunity in a long while, she noted.

    JPO is a programme for the young people to come and grow their career at the UN and it has 37 positions for Nigeria – one for each of the 36 States and the Federal Capital Territory.

    The JPO programme provides young professionals with hands-on experience in multilateral technical co-operation, and is one of the best ways to gain entry level positions within the UN system.
    Some Nigerian UN staff at the event

    JPOs are sponsored by their own government, which fund their placement in one of a range of UN organisations.

    At the cultural night, Mrs. Mohammed asked older Nigerians to pave the way for the youth by creating leadership opportunities for them .

    She urged them to stop competing with the younger ones for employment opportunities.

    Whenever there are opportunities, try and pave the way for the young ones; you are getting old and we want to see the young ones in the system.

     

  • FG frowns at visa delay to Nigerians, vows to retaliate

    FG frowns at visa delay to Nigerians, vows to retaliate

    The Interior Minister, Lt.-Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazau (rtd) has warned that Nigeria would no longer tolerate delay in issuance of visa to its nationals from any country.

    The minister stated this on Monday in Abuja at a meeting with the Foreign Affairs Minister, Geoffrey Onyeama, to resolve some of the issues militating against visa issuance.

    The meeting also had in attendance, the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami and the Comptroller-General of Immigration, Mohammed Babandede.

    Dambazau said that the delay in the issue of visa to Nigerians was becoming an embarrassment and must be resolved.

    “It is embarrassing that one will want visa and will have unnecessary delay from the issuance countries.

    “We as a country needs to take our stand; we should deal with any country the way they deal with us on visa issuance.

    “They should not think that we need them more than they need us,” he said.

    Babandede, at the end of the meeting also corroborated Minister of Interior’s stand on the issue.

    He said: “What we are saying is that we as a country, we would also like to retaliate.

    “Anybody who delays visa for our nationals, we would also do the same as a country because we have a pride as a nation.”

    The Comptroller-General, however, said that Nigeria was committed to ensuring that business was done normally with friends of the country.

    “We are committed to issue visa on time and passport to our nationals wherever they are”.

    Earlier, Onyeama said that the meeting was to enhance ease of doing business in the country.

    He, however, noted that the nation was still having challenges regarding consular services.

    Onyeama said the parley was to see how in conjunction with sister ministries, the nation could find solutions to the challenges.

    “As part of the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council, the issue, as you know, some of the deliverables are there and it is for consular services that we also have to work hard together.

    “So, we have always felt that we should all try and be speaking to each other.

    “The Ministry of Interior, Immigration Services and ourselves, our embassies and missions and consulates are all working other one roof,” he said.

  • Pay your taxes regularly to stop external borrowings, Adeosun tells Nigerians

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun has allayed the fears of Nigerians over the incessant borrowings of the incumbent administration.

    Adeosun noted that if Nigerians truly want the nation to stop borrowing, they must all be ready to pay their taxes regularly.

    The minister spoke on Sunday at a joint press conference with the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, at the conclusion of 2017 International Monetary Fund (IMF)/World Bank Group Annual Meetings in Washington D.C,

    She explained that with Nigeria’s source of revenue dropping by nearly 85 per cent, the country had no option but to borrow. The option before the country was to either cut public services massively, which should have led to massive job losses, or borrow in the short-term, until it begins to generate sufficient revenues, she said.

    We felt that laying-off thousands of persons was not the best way to stimulate growth. Also, when we came into office, about 27 states could not pay salary. If we had allowed that situation to persist, we would have been in depression by now. So, we took the view as a government that the best thing to do was to stimulate growth and spend our way out of trouble, get the state governments to pay salaries, making sure that the federal government pays and invests in capital infrastructure,” Mrs Adeosun said.

    Emefiele said the apex bank was trying to encourage Nigerians in Diaspora to keep remitting funds home, and also invest in the country, as they do not have any other place they can call home but Nigeria. Nigerians in Diaspora remit $21 billion annually to the local economy.

    We will put in place policies that will continue to encourage them. We are working on how we can actually link credit bureau arrangement to the foreign borrowing arrangement so that once there is a link between Nigeria and the foreign credit system, it will be easy for them to even borrow from Nigeria,” he promised.

    The CBN boss said the apex bank was also planning to ensure that Nigerians in Diaspora get some form of attachments to the credit system that they have abroad, either in the United States or United Kingdom. That, he said, will make it easy for them to access credit and begin to build their businesses, so that when they retire, they retire back into Nigeria, and they do not retire in Diaspora.

    Mrs Adeosun said that once growth was restored, the country would begin to systematically reduce its dependence on borrowing. “Now, we are talking about tax and what we are saying is that people should be aware of their responsibilities to their nation. The solution to borrowing in Nigeria is that we must pay taxes. If you pay the taxes properly, there is no need to borrow. Of course, there is the responsibility on the part of government to be more responsible and efficient. We are really focusing on this. We are trying to find ways to cut cost. Fundamentally, we must invest. We don’t have the power we need, we don’t have the roads yet and there is a lot of money required to fund these projects,” the minister said.

    Continuing, she said that reducing Nigeria’s tax to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ration from six per cent to 10 per cent would significantly reduce the amount the country needs to borrow and that would have a wider effect on the economy and bring down interest rate.

    She added that such a move would also create some head room for the private sector to borrow, because they are being crowded out.

    On state borrowing, the minister said state governments’ get borrowing consent from the ministry, which performs Debt Sustainability Analysis and if the repayment is more than 40 per cent of their revenue, such request to borrow is turned down.

    So, many people are talking of how many loans we are approving; they don’t talk about how many loans we are turning down. Many do not go through and we are constantly monitoring state governments to ensure that the debts that they take on are sustainable. The problem with some of the states that have debt problems are legacy loans that were there before they came in. But since we came in, we have been very strict, trying to make sure states do not borrow more than they can service,” Mrs Adeosun said.

    According to the minister, Nigeria’s debt to GDP ratio is one of the lowest. “We are at 19 per cent, but most advanced countries have over 100 per cent. I am not saying we need to move to 100 per cent, but I am saying we need to tolerate a little more debt in the short-term to deliver the rail, the roads and power so as to generate economic activities, jobs, revenue, which would be used to pay back the debts. But I assure you that this government is very prudent around debt. We don’t borrow recklessly and we have no intention of bequeathing unserviceable debts on Nigerians,” she assured.

    The minister said the Voluntary Asset and Income Declaration Scheme (VAIDS) had so far got positive response from Nigerians. “I had discussions with some high net-worth individuals asking me to speak to the state governors to allow them time to pay. They needed to pay to the state governments. I have discussed with the governors that anyone that comes to them voluntarily for tax payment, should be given time to pay. We don’t want a situation where people willing to pay their taxes are stifling economic activities. We have told the governors, if someone comes willingly, quickly allow them plan to pay,” she said.

    Mrs Adeosun said revenues were needed to provide public services and the burden of taxation must be borne by those whose income allows them to bear it.

    So, those with higher income should bear greater part of the burden. The problem with Nigeria is that most of our taxpayers are at the lower level. The man on the streets passing traffic, his tax is deducted at source. Why will we not allow billionaires to proportionately pay their taxes? I think we need a mindset change on taxation in Nigeria. So far, we are encouraged by the response of those companies and individuals to this tax amnesty,” she added.

    In her view, the tax amnesty policy is on track. “We’re on track. We expect that at the end of the timeline, everybody will rush and we will raise significant money. We have every reason to believe that this tax mobilisation effort will work and hopefully bring long-term money,” she said.

    We are trying to do is create enough headroom to invest in capital projects that the country desperately needs. I do not think there is any Nigerian that will say we do not need to invest in power, do the roads, and that will not want us to fix 17 million housing deficits and build rails. These projects will generate economic activities and jobs. We do not need to continue hobbling as a poor nation. We are middle income country now. Nigeria, Angola, and South Africa are middle income countries. We do it jointly and efficiently, but the key thing really is revenue,” the minister said.

     

  • Another batch of 138 Nigerians arrive voluntarily from Libya

    About 138 Nigerians on Tuesday voluntarily returned to the country from Libya with the help of the International Organisation for Migration, IOM.

    The returnees, who were received by the officials of the National Emergency Management Agency with the help of other agencies, were said to have been stranded in Libya following failed attempts to cross over to Europe.

    They arrived at the Cargo Wing of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport at about 8.05 pm.

    The Zonal Coordinator of NEMA, South-West, Mr. Suleiman Yakubu, said four out of the returnees were critically ill and needed urgent medical attention.

    Yakubu, who represented the Director General of NEMA, Mr. Mustapha Maihaja, said the 138 people were made up of 65 female adults, two teenage girls and two female infants; 64 male adults, two teenage boys and three male infants.

    The 138 returnees were brought back to Nigeria on the expression of interest to return to the country through the assistance of IOM,” he said.

    He also urged the returnees to look forward to a brighter future ahead as the government had put various initiatives in place, to tackle challenges facing the country, with the aim of restoring hope to all Nigerians.

    Nigeria is already on the right track to its lost glory with efforts to create more job opportunities in various fields of endeavours,” he said

     

  • 57th Independence: Salvation of Nigeria lies in hands of youths – Charly Boy

    • Northern youths more passionate about #Ourmumudondo than South-East, South-West counterparts

    Maverick entertainer, Charles Oputa, alias Charly Boy, is the leader of the OurMumuDonDo Coalition which seeks to defeat political elitism, corruption, incompetence and redirect governance towards empowerment, dignity and freedom for the people. Born on June 19, 1951, the Area Fada, in this interview with TheNewsGuru.com, shares his thoughts on Nigeria at 57; how things were shortly after Independence and the particular point when things started going south. He also spoke on the forthcoming 2019 polls as well as efforts currently being made by his group to retrieve Nigeria from corrupt politicians who, according to him, are the real enemies of the people. Below are the excerpts…

    What can you say of Nigeria as a country?

    I’m sure that a lot of people just as I do feel frustrated. There is this air of uncertainty. We’ve have noticed systemic failure and this type of failure cannot be sustained. There is failure in government and leadership. My primary concern is the young people in this country; for them to try and recreate a paradigm shift in the system because things cannot continue like this without something breaking and my advice has always been that rather than stray aloof or hang around in the corridor waiting for handouts, they better be in the same place with those steering the country and talking about their own future which has so far been stolen. Even the future of their children has been stolen by the kind of criminality and impunity found in government.

    Since Nigeria attained independence on October 1, 1960, at what point can you say its failure started?

    The things Fela talked about in those days have in fact gotten worse. So, I think we started to deviate after the Civil War. Between the Civil War and the early 90’s Nigeria had the biggest brain drain because people were not too sure whether the military was going to leave at all. So the best of the best of us left the shores of this country. The remaining ones went into hiding. There were a few people who were speaking up at the time but like everything else they gradually fizzled out themselves so the political landscape was left to people without pedigree, people without any moral compass. People who had no value, no honour jumped into the whole scene. Then, we lost most of the values we used to hold sacred before the war like: I’m a baby of the early 60’s, I know at that time, if a little boy is naughty on the street, people would ask who are your parents; who is your father. In those days, we worshiped truthfulness, we worshiped people who were straightforward. There was premium for moral standards but immediately after the war everything seem to have gone to the dogs because you can’t have a society that is not built on ideology, on values and principles. You can’t have a government that does anyhow and is controlled by nincompoops, riffraff and people without pedigree.

    Are you saying that the problems of Nigeria started with military’s incursion into politics?

    Yes. It was then that the decay started to become very visible and the war contributed. A lot of the Easterners then were displaced and were made to start life afresh with 20 pounds.

    Do you think the civil war is still haunting Nigeria?

    There have been a class war; them verses us, the rich verses the poor, the people in leadership positions verses the led. The led has not been any more useful because they have for a while been docile. They have not bothered to engage the government, to struggle for their rights, to hold government accountable for its action. There has always been this attitude of siddon look.That is why we say: our mumu suppose to don do.

    When you say our mumu don do, does that mean you are not satisfied with the status quo?

    How can anybody be satisfied with the status quo. The status quo is the problem! The thing that sometimes irritates me about us as a people, I keep wondering whether we realize who our enemies are. We have been so brainwashed by religion, ethnicity and all the rest of it that we forget who the enemy really is. The enemy is not your mother-in-law, your father-in-law, your gateman or your driver. The enemies are those in leadership position who would steal millions and millions of maybe funds meant to build hospital and do you know how many people will die as a result of the money not getting to where it is supposed to get to, to do those things for which it was meant. Those criminals are the enemies. Like I said, I am a baby of the early 60’s, at that time we worshipped integrity, we worshiped people with honour but because of the swap in the value system and the decay in morality, we now worship money by any means necessary and so far nobody has been reprimanded. They have been shouting war against corruption, has anybody been thrown into jail yet? So who are they fooling?

    How would the present set of leaders who you have described as the enemies be sacked from the scene?

    It would happen through a few number of persons. We are only interested in a critical mass. It is not an all-on-board statistics. Not every slave would want to be freed in the first place. I have come to realize that it just takes a few people to change things. As the PMAN president, it took just two or three of us to be able to change the fate of the Nigerian artiste. The things they are enjoying today can be traced to what we did in those days; fight for respect, fight for copyright… The things is that journalists do not dig up information from the past. Nigerians have a very short memory. A lot of things have happened but it needs dedication, tenacity and people with love of country not to divide the country. Was the resume or resign not effective, didn’t Mr. President come back? Didn’t you see their own supporters who they had to pay? Did anybody pay the resume or resign peaceful protesters? They were not up to 10 people yet it was something that was started in the city of Abuja and spread like wild fire to New York, London, Sweden, to Houston and if Mr. President hadn’t come back when he came back it would have been a movement all over the world. So, it takes a few people to change things.

    Have you identified those few people and are you working with them now?

    Over the past 40 years, I have been involved in youth advocacy. I have always said that the salvation of this country lies in the hands of exceptional youths. When I’m talking of exceptional youths, I’m not referring to those in Ajegunle or those in Maroko. I’m talking globally because if you go to NASA – the highest security outfit in America, a Nigerian is there. If you go to Havard, a Nigerian is there. If you go to British Parliament, Nigerians dey there. Nigerians are doing well in so many areas across the world. The people who are holding the little pride that is left of Nigeria in the eyes of the world are Nigerian youths. The criminal politicians and leaders when they travel abroad, shebi they go behave because there is a standard. Things work there based on structures and systems not on individuals. Look at Trump, he can’t do as he would want to in America because the system would not allow it.

    Now you are talking about system which the clamour for restructuring is basically about, what’s your take on restructuring?

    I’ve been married for going to 40 years and it is not an easy exercise and if you desire longevity in your marriage, both partners need to be at their communicative best – talking all the time. If things are not working the way it should work, I think what we need to do is to sit on the table and talk about how we solve the problems and carry on from there and I want to believe that that is what the restructuring is about: how do we carry on as a nation because the world is shrinking.

    In clear terms are you in support of a restructured Nigeria?

    I’m in support of anything that would move us forward, anything that would create more peace, anything that would create a better environment for our children to express themselves and to have hope not finding themselves in a state of hopelessness.

    With this your movement, are you considering getting involved in the political process by maybe forming a political party?

    Our mission is about a ballot revolution, our mission is about creating a paradigm shift and all of these cannot be achieved without youth involvement and this is why we are concentrating on the youths. If the youths decide to be careless about their future in Nigeria, there will be no future for them as it would now belong to the older people. So we are trying to sensitize, educate the docile, ignorant Nigerian youths. Like it was said in the Bible: many are called, few are chosen and we believe in a critical mass. Fortunately, the people that are more passionate about this Ourmumudondo things are those in the Diaspora. In Nigeria, northerner youths are more passionate about Ourmumudondo than those in the West or the East. So, something is changing. Like I tell youths, our biggest weapon is the social media because the people we are fighting are like Goliath while we are like David. A lot of us have been brainwashed to be arrogantly ignorant on so many things. We can’t just continue in this mumuness na. It’s enough!

    Would you support a youth to emerge President in 2019?

    This is what it is all about na. It’s all about us revisiting those values of old to start to promote them.

  • Nigeria @57: Our differences, challenges should not divide us as Nigerians – Ajimobi

    Nigeria @57: Our differences, challenges should not divide us as Nigerians – Ajimobi

    Oyo State Governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi, has appealed to Nigerians not to allow their differences and the challenges confronting the various ethnic nationalities to divide them as members of a united country.

    The governor made the appeal in his goodwill message issued in Ibadan on Saturday by his Special Adviser on Communication and Strategy, Mr. Yomi Layinka, on the occasion of the 57thindependence anniversary of Nigeria.

    While admitting that many things were wrong with the current federal arrangement in Nigeria which, according to him, had put some parts of the country at a serious disadvantage, he, however, said that things could be sorted out in a one and indivisible country.

    He said: “It is quite unfortunate that at 57, Nigerians are more divided along ethnic and religious lines than we used to be at independence in 1960. The drum of separation is being beaten now more than ever before.

    “Ethnic groups with separatist agenda are springing up on daily basis, while erstwhile brothers and compatriots are taking up arms against one another, with others shouting `To thy tent, O Israel’.

    “Right now, many of our countrymen see Nigeria as one alien enterprise from which they are very distant and which has no bearing on their existence. This alienation had led to the series of unwholesome developments which have put Nigeria on the map of violence-ridden countries.

    “While it is true that some ethnic nationalities have not fared better under the current federal arrangement, the solution does not lie in the disintegration of the country or issuance of quit notice by one ethnic group to another.

    “We are indeed better and stronger together with common aspirations in a united Nigeria.’’

    The governor also called for concerted efforts at combating the violence, maiming and wanton destruction of lives and property, all in the name of religious extremism.

    “More fundamentally, let us combat the demon of violence and crimes that is posturing as part of our clime. We must wean our country from the hands of this unwholesome tag that is a major disincentive to growth and development.

    “We should hold the relative peace in the country very sacred and deepen the confines of peace. We can do this by living peaceably with our fellow men and women and put Nigeria at the centre of our interpersonal relationships,’’ he said.

    The governor, while congratulating Nigerians on the occasion, called for more patriotism, resilience and determination on their part to ensure that the country attained greatness.