Tag: Solutions

  • Osinbajo proffers solutions to Nigeria’s security challenges

    Osinbajo proffers solutions to Nigeria’s security challenges

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, has proffered solutions to Nigeria’s security challenges, noting the need to step up local production of military weapons.

     

    He said Nigeria’s recent security challenges require the country’s military and other relevant stakeholders to be several steps ahead of perpetrators.

     

    He made this statement late Wednesday, August 3, after receiving a presentation on “Defense Transformation and National Security: Strategic Options for Nigeria of the Future”, by the National Defense College Course 30 participants during a virtual interaction.

     

    He further said: “If you look at the challenges that we are facing and the nature of those challenges, it is evident that we need to be many steps ahead of non-state actors in particular who are perpetrators of this asymmetric warfare that we are experiencing.”

    Osinbajo proffers solutions to
    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo

     

    He added that “it is clear that given current realities in our security situation, there is absolutely every need for us to fast-forward all our plans for the future so that we can be much more effective in dealing with the current threats and the threats that we will experience as we go into the future.

     

    “One of the most critical areas is the question of local production of military hardware and I think it is low-hanging fruit when it comes to manufacturing some of the hardware that we will need. I think that there is a need, especially now to really look very closely at local production of our hardware, beginning with armament.

     

    “We mentioned India, Brazil, and even the more developed economies of the world, during the First World War, the Second World War, it was these challenges that led to the development of their military-industrial complexes. We have a challenge today, there are so many zones where there are conflicts. Our law enforcement is spread out everywhere.

     

    “If we say the local companies should produce some of the mobile platforms like Armored Personnel Carriers (APCs) and Multi-Role Armored Vehicle (MRAV), if we give them the contracts, they will produce, but if we choose to import rather than produce locally then we will never develop our military-industrial complex.”

     

    Osinbajo also spoke about the need for transparency in the management of resources meant for the acquisition of hardware for the defense and security agencies.

     

    He said: “There needs to be more accountability because every time you hear, ‘we do not have enough equipment,’ but there must be accountability. I would like to see a framework for greater accountability within the Ministry of Defence that ensures that they are able to account for military expenditure.”

     

  • Grieving Sen Bala Ibn Na’Allah says: I hope my son’s death provides solutions to Nigeria’s challenges

    Grieving Sen Bala Ibn Na’Allah says: I hope my son’s death provides solutions to Nigeria’s challenges

    The senator representing Kebbi South, Bala Ibn Na’Allah, has said the life of his slain son, Abdulkarim, is not better than that of any other Nigerian.

    In a statement on Monday in Abuja, Na’Allah said those who killed his son did not carry guns.

    Abdulkarim, a pilot, was reportedly killed at his home in Malali GRA in Kaduna State.

    The senator said he hoped the death of his son would play a major role in finding a solution to Nigeria’s problems.

    “They simply gained access to his house through the roof and strangulated him. As a family, we will continue to love him, even in death, because he was such a wonderful person in his life,” he said.

    Na’Allah added: “His life is not better than any other Nigerian’s. As a family, we leave everything in the hands of Almighty Allah to whom we have since surrendered in pursuit of the strength to bear the loss of Abdulkarim in our family. By the numerous calls, messages and visits we have received so far, we have every cause to thank Almighty Allah for His love and mercy to the family.

    “We assure the public that though we feel greatly diminished in the manner he was killed, we shall remain steadfast in our unshakable belief in the will of Allah.

    “We shall persevere and overcome this tragic loss of one of the finest Ambassadors of our family who has done us proud in his life. We express the hope that his death will play a major role in finding solutions to the problem facing our great nation.”

  • Let’s Make 2021 Year for Finding Solutions, Saraki urges Nigerians

    Let’s Make 2021 Year for Finding Solutions, Saraki urges Nigerians

    Immediate past Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki has urged Nigerians to devote the new year 2021 to sourcing for and administering solutions to the multifarious problems confronting the country.

    In his New Year message released in Abuja, Saraki congratulated Nigerians, at home and abroad, who survived the various difficulties experienced in the just ended year and are witnessing the beginning of a new year. He also prayed to God to give fortitude and strength to those who lost their loved ones due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the brutal acts of terrorists, kidnappers and other criminals as well as to families of security agents who died in active service.

    “Congratulations to those of us who benefitted from the mercy of Almighty God and are alive today. Last year was very tough and we know how difficult it was for many families to put food on their table. Yet, surviving all the difficulties that we witnessed in 2020 is a testimony to the kindness of God and we deserve to celebrate and praise God for the new year. Happy New Year to all of us”, he stated.

    The former Senate President advised further that both leaders and the rest of the citizens should focus on how to generate ideas towards solving the problems of insecurity, economic recession, dearth of necessary infrastructure, collapse of national values, threat to national unity, lack of social welfare and youth restiveness.

    He added that the period of lamenting about the problems or trading blames between leaders and followers, between people of different faiths, ethnicity and age groups had gone with 2020.

    “We should all focus on finding solutions. We should build conversations on what needs to be done to ensure that our security agencies can work together and have the necessary facilities to eliminate insurgency, kidnapping, robbery and harassment of innocent citizens and foreigners engaged in genuine businesses.

    “Both leaders and followers should focus on how we can get the economy working, produce youths who can take advantage of new technology and become key players in the communication technology world, attract foreign direct investments, diversify the economy and make the country more relevant and important in the comity of nations.

    “Our focus now should be how to ensure that our youths are gainfully engaged and that we create avenues to appropriate their modern ideas, energy and creativity for the purpose of national development. We should be talking about how to ensure that our education and health systems become revived and able to serve the interest of all.

    “In my view the need to concentrate all government, corporate, group and individual efforts towards devising solutions to the various problems should be the pre-occupation of all of us this year. Thus, if we are to give a caption or theme to the new year, it should be ‘2021 – The Year of Search for Solutions to Nigeria’s Problems’. We might not get all the solutions in one year. However, we need to be ready with them such that in the next two or three years or by 2023, we can take off on the journey of rebuilding, rebranding and repositioning the new country we all desire. Anything short of this mindset will not produce the desired results to turn around the fortunes of our dear country and her people”, Saraki stated.

    He therefore called on political leaders to suppress the talk about 2023 politics, post-Buhari politics and the ambition to occupy political offices and push all these to the background while concentrating efforts on making 2021 the year to genuinely attend to the problems of the country.

    “However, let me reiterate my prayers for our security agents and health officials on the frontlines in the trouble areas of our country and in the various health facilities, combating the criminals in our midst and the Covid-19 pandemic ravaging our country. May Almighty God continue to protect them as they keep their fellow country men and women safe.

    “May Almighty God heal our land, protect and unite us, as well as restore the prosperity of our dear country”, Saraki added.

  • #EndSARS: Buhari coming up with certain solutions in few hours- NSA

    #EndSARS: Buhari coming up with certain solutions in few hours- NSA

    The National Security Adviser, Major General Babagana Monguno (retd.), on Thursday stated that the President, Muhammadu Buhari , would come up with solutions to the current crisis erupting in parts of the country “in the next couple of hours.”

    Although he did not reveal the nature of the solutions, he said they would be delightful to all parties concerned.

    Monguno revealed this in an interview with State House correspondents at the end of a meeting of the National Security Council presided over by the President.

    He said, “The President himself, I have just left his office, is also going to deal with these issues in a specific manner apart from what has just taken place in council.

    “I believe in the next couple of hours, Mr President will come up with certain solutions that will be agreeable to the entire federation.”

    In addition, the NSA also did not reveal whether the President will announce the solutions through a national telecast.

    Details later….

     

  • Boko Haram/Banditry: Nigerians in Diaspora seek working solutions, partnership from US, UK others

    The Association of Nigerian Professionals in Europe (ANPE) has challenged the United States, United Kingdom and European Union to support Nigeria with a working solution against Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists.

    In a statement signed by its President, Dr. Agwu Oyekwe and 13 others on Friday, ANPE believes threats posed by the terrorist group has assumed both regional and international dimension, such that only collaborative effort can bring it to a halt.

    While acknowledging the sacrifices of the Nigerian government, the group said that much more can be achieved with added support of world’s superpowers.

    In the regard, ANPE expressed disgust at the UK, US and EU for seating on the fence, routinely issuing statements rather than a proactive action each time a carnage and atrocity is committed by the terrorists.

    According to the group, the solution to the crisis is by arresting the sponsors and promoters of conflict in Africa.

    Consequently, ANPE charged the US, UK and EU to identify and prosecute those culpable in the various acts of killings in Nigeria and profiling of such persons for the world to know.

    It further urged the EU to expose countries selling arms and ammunitions to the Boko Haram/ISWAP group in line with international best practices

  • #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 Budget: Atiku better at criticizing with no tenable solutions – Presidency

    2019 Budget: Atiku better at criticizing with no tenable solutions – Presidency

    The Presidency on Thursday declared that former Vice President and Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar’s criticism of 2019 Budget proposal was high on rhetoric and low on real solutions.

    Atiku Abubakar had last weekend issued a statement in which he described President Muhammadu Buhari’s 2019 budget proposal as fundamentally flawed and failing to address current realities.

    A statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, pointed out that the “current realities” identified by Atiku were issues already highlighted in President Buhari’s budget speech and further amplified in the detailed presentation by the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma.

    According to him, Atiku Abubakar regrettably didn’t offer substantive and workable solution to the identified “realities”.

    He said “Atiku describes the underlying assumptions of the budget as generous, wild and untenable but does not propose alternative assumptions that would have been more appropriate.

    He argues that the economy is yet to recover from the 2016/2017 recession. Unfortunately, he cannot create his own definition of an economic recession, which is a technical term with a universally applicable meaning. When an economy experiences two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, it is said to be in recession and whenever it returns to positive GDP growth of whatever rate, it is said to have exited recession. It is doubtful if he understands the simple meaning of recession.

    Atiku attributes the sustained accretion to foreign reserves to “increases in international prices of Brent Crude and foreign borrowing”. But he conveniently forgets that under the immediate past federal administration oil prices were at an all-time high with substantial growth in foreign borrowings, and yet foreign reserves nose-dived from a peak of $62billion to as low as $24 billion.

    His repeated reference to the price of Brent Crude throughout his statement may be indicative of his lack of knowledge that Nigeria’s Bonny Light Crude trades at a premium of at least $2 per barrel over the price of Brent; just as his reference to Nigeria’s OPEC quota may also suggest that he does not know that Condensates do not count in measuring compliance with the quota.

    The PDP Presidential candidate faults the provision of N305 billion for NNPC’s cost under-recovery on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) but does not say exactly what he would do about PMS pricing.

    If however we are to go by an earlier statement from his campaign organisation, which promised to reduce the price of petrol to N87, then we can expect a much higher subsidy provision from an Atiku government; because he is not going to perform magic to get the refineries working at peak capacity immediately.

    He describes the 2019 budget as being very small, but does not offer any implementable options for improving domestic resource mobilization, which is the only sustainable means to achieving larger budgets. It does seem that he does not understand or is just feigning ignorance about the critical role of revenue in budget preparation.

    A careful look at Atiku’s statement would show that there is nothing original about his identified “realities.” These are areas President Buhari had already identified in his speech. For instance, the President recognised that the revenue performance of the Federal Government up till September 2018 has been less than spectacular.

    Leaving aside for a moment the fact that there has been a remarkable increase in Federal Account receipts in the last three months, a look at the budget speech will show that the President specified a number of actions to tackle revenue weakness including strengthening on-going efforts at tax collection, liquidation of recovered assets, immediate recovery of past due oil royalties charges and deployment of the National Trade Window to improve customs collections.

    His most laughable criticism perhaps was his claim that “there is little evidence to show that increased investment in agriculture has yielded positive results”. Even the worst adversary of the Buhari administration would acknowledge that significant progress has been made in the agriculture sector.” he added

    He said that in Atiku’s often desperate attempt to rubbish the 2019 budget, he confused foreign direct investment with capital inflows.

    This, he said, is wrong as capital inflows covers foreign direct investment, foreign portfolio investments, international borrowing and short-term deposits in money market instruments.

    He went on “He complains about movements in foreign portfolio investment which are often volatile and reflect monetary policy normalization in the United States, meanwhile he is silent on the positive trade surplus mentioned in the budget speech which truly reflects living within our means as a nation.

    Atiku also calculates the budget deficit as a percentage of current revenue rather than as a ratio of gross domestic product which is the preferred standard for inter-temporal measures of the deficit. Using this more appropriate measure the national fiscal deficit is 1.3% of GDP which is well below the 3% specified in the Fiscal Responsibility Act and well within the best global norms. So much for those who claim they have the magic wand to grow the economy.

    A most glaring weakness in the statement by Atiku is that he does not take a stance on issues of public interest in the budget, which is utterly regrettable from someone who aspires to lead Nigeria.

    As President Buhari explained, the subsidy/under-recovery has been retained to reduce the burden on ordinary Nigerians at a time of weak purchasing power in a manner that avoids the abuses of the past. The truth is that contrary to the belief of people like Atiku that low fuel prices only benefit the rich, a large number of ordinary Nigerians rely on PMS to operate ‘keke’, ‘okada’, taxi, and ‘danfo’.

    A lot of the generators used by small businesses also use PMS. Indeed, it is amazing that a man who has promised N87 per litre of PMS can criticize a process of under-recovery/subsidy that is not being abused as it was in the past.

    To further show Atiku’s lack of knowledge about basic issues in the petroleum market, he contradicts himself in his quest to make a non-existent point. He complains about the benchmark price of $60 per barrel used for crude oil exports in the budget and tries hard to show understanding of the dynamics of the global oil market by referring to US shale oil production and pressures on the Saudi regime. Yet Atiku expects that OPEC quotas will come into force, in which case the price of crude oil may rise in international markets. What is obvious is the fact that low oil prices impact negatively on shale oil production.

    For instance, recent reports from a Permian producer show that with West Texas Intermediate at near $45 per barrel, they have already cut back on rig count and use of completion crews. There is more over the demand side which remains extremely strong in the United States, while large economies like China and India will continue to grow at over 6% and 7% respectively in 2019, which will also impact on crude oil prices.

    Finally, Atiku moans about the capital budget without acknowledging the historically high capital expenditure over the past two budget cycles continuing into the current 2018 budget cycle.

    Apart from the fact that the Federal Government has kept to its promise to keep capital expenditure at 30% of the budget, the PDP Presidential candidate is quiet about his plans to raise capital expenditure and reduce recurrent spending. The reality is that it can only be done by retrenching public sector workers and by not increasing the minimum wage to which this government is fully committed.”

    He said that it was obvious that Atiku’s statement on the budget was a poor attempt at playing to the gallery.

    Without a doubt, the country faces significant fiscal challenges. The administration of President Buhari understands these challenges, as well as workable solutions thereto.

    The implementation of some of the solutions however needs to be paced and well-timed to avoid dislocating the growth trajectory of the economy. Atiku’s criticism of the 2019 budget proposal can best be described as high on populist rhetoric but low on any real solutions to the identified challenges.” he stated