Tag: Tinubu

  • 2019: Atiku’s men attack Tinubu, say his fall his near

    Tinubu living a jungle life…his certificate, parental background, other credentials questionable – Sowunmi

    Some of the ardent supporters of the presidential flag bearer of the Peoples Democratic Party [PDP] , Atiku Abubakar, have launched an onslaught against the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu – thefrom political grace was imminent.

    Speaking with journalists in Abuja, spokesman of Atiku Presidential Campaign Organisation, Segun Sowunmi, said Tinubu’s remarks about the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Atiku Abubakar, was self delusional.

    He said: “It is only a man of questionable pedigree whose certificate are dogged with a lot of confusion;whose parental background is pretty much unknown; whose state of origin is opaque and unclear that can understand how life is in the jungle.

    “If Asiwaju Bola Tinubu means that his life is in a jungle, we want to say to him that pride goes before a fall.Those who disdain men that are going to contend with them for the goodwill and votes of the Nigerian people with careless talk is what we find even with Buhari.

    “I pity him (Tinubu) because his arrogance will fall-off his eyes like a scale when the votes are counted in 2019. Let him just understand that nobody is going to allow them run a chaotic, opaque and corruption-marred election. Let me also tell them that INEC will not help them. We shall all meet on the day of the election. bola can deceive himself but Nigerians are not easily deceived.”

    He further said his principal would, if given the mandate in 2019 and beyond, do four things for Nigerians- job creation, expansion of the economy, uniting the country through restructuring, and overhaul of the country’s security architecture.

    Similarly, Doyin Okupe, declared that the opposition party will retire the former Lagos State Governor into his “political shrine at Bourdillon” in 2019.

    Okupe said this while berating Tinubu over his comment rubbishing the strategic meeting the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar had with some eminent personalities in Dubai.

    Tinubu, had yesterday said, “We don’t fear. Whether it is in the jungle, or it is in Dubai or it is in Abu Dhabi, people are free to meet and strategise in any way they want but we are not going back to the illusion of the PDP.

    Okupe in a statement he posted on his Facebook said: “The comments made by Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the national leader of the APC concerning Alhaji Atiku’s prospects in the coming 2019 presidential elections are essentially not meant for the serious-minded, and quite unexpected from the leader of a party in power whose popularity and national acceptability are receding faster than the waters of lake Chad.

    “Asiwaju’s statement is extremely presumptuous. It assumes that he as a person or whatever political platform he stands on will have anything to do with who emerges as president in 2019.

    “I assure Asiwaju that he does not, and will not have any serious influence on who will emerge as president after the 2019 elections. He had such opportunity in 2015 but it was wasted on a moribund, unproductive and lacklustre presidency.

    “Hence, it is a fact that Asiwaju had a tremendous influence and did play a significant role in the emergence of President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015.

    “This was due to the fact that he and the APC were able to successfully hoodwink the Nigerian electorates into wrongly believing that the incumbent at that time was weak, inept and clueless.

    “The prevailing feeling in Nigeria then was that a change was necessary to “save” the country.

    “However, things are quite different now. Without prompting, propaganda or mass-brainwashing, Nigerians have come to realise that a victory for Buhari in 2019 is an existential threat not only to the peaceful coexistence of the nation, but also to individual wellbeing and survival of families, breadwinners and jobs across the country.

    “Based on this undeniable fact, Tinubu, APC and their candidate, Muhammadu Buhari have lost the elections even before the set date.

    Asiwaju should not worry about where ATIKU is holding meetings to unseat Buhari, or where ATIKU is “going” in 2019. Rather, he should seriously give urgent thoughts to his own destination after 2019.

    “I want to assure him (Tinubu) that the PDP will retire him gracefully to his political shrine at Bourdillon. While the expired and rejected product he is dutifully carrying to the political market in 2019 heads to Daura; hale and hearty.”

  • 2019: Watch your public utterances against Atiku – PDP warns Tinubu, others

    2019: Watch your public utterances against Atiku – PDP warns Tinubu, others

    The Peoples Democratic Party has cautioned the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, not to draw himself out by joining in what it calls “the smear campaign” and “unsavoury comments” against its presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar.

    It said that Tinubu, as an elder, should “not reduce his pedigree” by engaging in what it called indecorous utterances which it said had become the trademark APC.

    The PDP was reacting to a statement made by Tinubu in Abuja on Wednesday, when he boasted that the APC would defeat the PDP and its presidential candidate in the 2019 presidential election.

    He said the country would not allow the PDP, which, he alleged, ran the country badly while in power for 16 years between 1999 and 2015.

    He said wherever Atiku, who is presently in Dubai, holds meetings, the APC would come out triumph.

    Tinubu had said, “We don’t fear, whether he is meeting in the jungle, in Dubai or in Abu Dhabi. People are free to meet and strategise in any way they fell, but we are not going back to the illusion of the PDP. It is not possible, Nigerians will not do that.

    They say slow and steady wins the race. We inherited that from our forefathers and knowledgeable people.

    We can’t go back to the pit that we inherited for 16 years. They can strategise from anywhere, but a leopard cannot change its skin.”

    But the PDP in a statement by its National Publicity secretary, Mr. Kola Ologbondiyan in Abuja on Thursday said
    it was regretable that someone like Tinubu could recourse to the use of what he called indecent language.

    He said, “It is also instructive to state that a person of Asiwaju status can conduct his political activities without recourse to indecent language that is lacking in respect for a personality, such as Atiku, whom Nigerians, across board, have generally resolved to be their next President.

    For the avoidance of doubt, despite the ludicrous disposition of APC and its leaders towards the 2019 Election campaign, the repositioned PDP and our presidential candidate remain committed to our promise to focus on solutions to the myriad of problems facing our people and transform their lives for the better.

    The PDP therefore cautions Asiwaju Tinubu to redirect the discourse of his party to productive issues instead of this unbridled resort to lies, deception, beguilement, propaganda, smear campaign and uncouth language, which Nigerians now resent. “

     

  • 2019: Tinubu speaks on Atiku’s chance, backs Oshiomhole’s leadership

    A national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Tinubu, has said the alleged meeting by some leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Dubai to strategize on how to defeat President Muhammadu Buhari will fail.

    The presidential candidate of the PDP, Atiku Abubakar, is currently in Dubai and has allegedly been holding series of meetings with high ranking members of the party to adopt best ways to unseat Mr Buhari.

    Speaking Wednesday, after meeting with Mr Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Mr Tinubu said, “We don’t fear, whether it’s in the jungle, or it’s in Dubai or it’s in Abu Dhabi, people are free to meet and strategize in any way. But we are not going back to the illusion of the PDP.”

    The former governor of Lagos State said he believes it is not possible for Nigerians to return the PDP to power.

    The PDP governed Nigeria for 16 years from 1999 before losing the 2015 general election to the APC.

    Speaking with State House correspondents, Mr Tinubu said APC’s style of governance is what is good for Nigeria.

    “They say slow and steady wins the race; we inherited that from our forefathers and knowledgeable people. We can’t go back to the pit that we inherited for 16 years. They can strategize from anywhere but a leopard cannot change its skin,” he said.

    Speaking on what he discussed with the president, Mr Tinubu said “the meeting is about the nation, the country, our people, peace, stability and economic progress.”

    Meanwhile, Tinubu also offered his support to the national chairman of APC, Adams Oshiomhole, who is under pressure from some of the party’s governors to vacate his position

    Recall that reported how Oshiomhole, who earlier met with Buhari on Wednesday, had said only about three of the APC’s 23 governors were against him. The embattled party chairman, however, got the support of Mr Tinubu.

    “We all have to respect the party supremacy. You were all here when we had the congress, we elected the new executives at the convention,” Tinubu said.

    “The NEC was formed and we surrendered – to avoid conflict, to avoid domination, to avoid abuses of power – we surrendered our rights, all rights to the National Working Committee headed by Adams Oshiomhole.”

    Those angling to remove Mr Oshiomhole accuse him of mishandling the primaries recently held to pick candidates of the party for the 2019 elections.

  • JUST IN: Buhari, Tinubu meet behind closed doors in Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday met behind closed doors with the national leader of the All Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Tinubu arrived the State House around 4pm.

    While the agenda of the meeting was unknown, the meeting came at a time the President is trying to resolve the crisis that followed the party’s primaries across the country.

    It was still in progress at the time of filing this report.

    Details Later…

  • Tinubu's arrogance, disrespect for Obasanjo no longer acceptable – Yoruba youths

    …ask him to tender unreserved apology to the former president
    The Yoruba Youth Forum has cautioned the national leader of the All Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, “not to put the Yoruba nation on fire with his utterances,” especially his alleged derogatory remarks about former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
     
    The youth said they took serious exception to Tinubu’s alleged description of Obasanjo as “an unserious man who should not be taken seriously.”
     
    They expressed sadness that the APC leader, a Yoruba man, would allow himself to be used to attack Obasanjo “who is one of the highly respected Yoruba leaders of this generation.”
     
    The YYF, therefore, called on Tinubu to “repent and tender an unreserved apology to Chief Obasanjo,” saying his statements about Obasanjo were capable of causing “chaos and disrupting the peace that we enjoy in the South-West.”
     
    The YYF said this in a statement on Wednesday signed by its Chairman, Olusegun Bolarinwa.
     
    It said, “It was not just by a mere coincidence that Obasanjo ruled Nigeria as a civilian and as a military man; it was an act of God.
     
    “Today, Obasanjo still remains the issue because he is a true, detribalised Nigerian who puts Nigeria as his priority above ethnic consideration and he has not been sentimental about this.
     
    “Because of his boldness, and intellectual ability, he remains an international figure whose opinions are highly respected all over the world.
     
    “For casting aspersions on such a highly respected leader who has done so much for Nigeria and the international community, one would say that Tinubu has exhibited arrogance and disrespect for a leader that has been championing the unity of Nigeria.
     
    “This is not expected of Tinubu since he claims to be a Yoruba and political leader who should know better.
     
    “Tinubu, who claims to be one of the Yoruba leaders, should have known that it is a taboo to disrespect an elder.”
     
    The YYF also complained about Tinubu’s alleged insult on the people of Osun State during the campaign for the governorship election in the state.
     
    “Tinubu openly insulted the people of Osun State with his statement that he was richer than the people of Osun State put together and that he presented Gboyega Oyetola of the APC because he wanted to bail the people of Osun State out of poverty.
     
    “The Yoruba Youth Forum regards this statement as an insult on the Yoruba race and this is not expected of Tinubu who should have known better than an ordinary politician,” it said.
     
    However, when contacted, Tinubu’s media aide, Mr Tunde Rahman, said he was unaware of the alleged insulting statement by Tinubu that the YYF was complaining about.
     
    As for Tinubu’s statement in Osun State, Rahman reiterated that Tinubu was misconstrued, explaining that the point that the APC leader made was that Oyetola was a self-made man who sought to lead Osun State, not for personal aggrandisement.

  • 2019: Fayemi speaks on alleged fight with Buhari, Oshiomhole, Tinubu

    Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State on Tuesday reacted to news making the rounds that he is not on good terms with President Muhammadu Buhari, National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole and a national leader of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.
     
    The governor said he enjoys the best of relationship with the trio of President Muhammadu Buhari, Oshiomhole and Tinubu.
     
    Fayemi described the claim of a political pressure group, Buhari Support Group that he is working against the President as “baseless and unfounded.”
     
    The Ekiti governor also dismissed the allegations that he is working to remove Oshiomhole and that he is fighting Tinubu.
     
    Speaking through his Chief Press Secretary, Olayinka Oyebode, Fayemi wondered how the group came about the alleged feud with the three senior party figures.
     
    Fayemi said he holds Buhari, Oshiomhole and Tinubu in high esteem noting that the trio contributed immensely to his victory in the last governorship election in Ekiti.
     
    He said: “Governor Fayemi holds President Buhari, Asiwaju Tinubu and Comrade Oshimohole in high esteem and he still maintains a good relationship with them which is not hidden.
     
    “We don’t know where the Buhari Support Group got their story from; Governor Fayemi has the best of respect for these eminent party leaders and he has no reason to be working against them.
     
    “Let us ask ourselves, on what basis will Dr. Fayemi will be working against the President? This was the man who appointed him Minister and supported him to regain the governorship seat.
     
    “Why will he fight Comrade Oshiomhole? It was under his chairmanship that APC won back Ekiti and everybody knew the role played by the national chairman.
     
    “Asiwaju Tinubu is a mentor to the governor; both of them had come a long way in a relationship that has lasted over two decades.
     
    “In fact, Asiwaju attended the governor’s inauguration last week and the roles he played in the APC victory in Ekiti election cannot be forgiven in a hurry.
     
    “Governor Fayemi has no reason to fight or work against our revered President, our respected national chairman and our revered national leader.
     
    “The allegation is false, baseless, unfounded and exists only in the imagination of those peddling it.”
     

  • 2019: Oshiomhole, Tinubu, Osoba behind political crises in Ogun – Amosun

    2019: Oshiomhole, Tinubu, Osoba behind political crises in Ogun – Amosun

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun State, on Monday, accused the National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Adams Oshiomhole, a national leader of the party, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and former governor of the state, Aremo Olusegun Osoba of allegedly masterminding the political chaos in the state.
    The governor said the aforementioned party leaders are plotting to foist Dapo Abiodun on the party in the state, as its governorship candidate in the 2019 election.
    Amosun alleged that the trio of Oshiomhole, Tinubu and Osoba wrote a fake result showing Abiodun as the winner of the party’s primary election and thus its governorship candidate.
    He had alleged that the duo of Tinubu and Osoba had played roles in what he termed ‘electoral fraud’, adding that their silence over the matter smacked of complicity.
    The governor made the allegation in an interview shortly after swearing-in the new Chief Judge of the state, Mosunmola Dipeolu.
    The event held at the Governor’s office Chamber in Oke-Mosan, Abeokuta.
    He said, “The President already knows there was no election in Ogun State. He knows that they just went to Lagos, wrote all results and that what they did is fraud.
    “If the National Working Committee or the National Chairman said there was an election in Ogun State, it’s all fraud. That is what I said.”
    The governor insisted that the National Working Committee panel of the party sent to the state didn’t conduct a genuine primary election. He argued that the only authentic primary was the one which produced Adekunle Akinlade as governorship candidate.
    He added, “Mr President already knows, there was no election in Ogun State, other than the one we held.
    “The issue of Chief Osoba and Asiwaju and co, what we said was that there was a definite silence from their end, and silence means consent. You can record me and publish it in your newspapers.
    “We have not heard one word from any of them. Was there any election in Ogun State? Yes or No? They should come out.
    “People at this level should be courageous enough to take a position, to come out, to come and tell us whether there was an election.
    “The one governorship election that we had, there was live telecast, people even witnessed it.”

  • A Latter Day Tinubu Apostle, By Mideno Bayagbon

    By Mideno Bayagbon
    I have never really been a fan of the Jagaban of Lagos politics, Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Not when he was governor and controversies swirled round him. Not even when he, like biblical Jacob, wrestled the then emerging dictator, President Olusegun Obasanjo, to the ground leaving the retired General with a bruised nose and ego! Maybe I managed a clap when his appointee, Raji Fashola, turned the poster boy of Nigerian performing thiefitricians in politics; but definitely not when he attempted an ambode on Fashola and failed!
    I never really did like him then because he exemplified the contradictions of Nigerian progressive politics. For example, just because he did not belong to the Peoples Democratic Party, he is a saint, despite the massive unexplained wealth he parades, the Toronto certificate throwback, the mystery around his genealogy; but a James Ibori is a villain. He is in the same boat, frolicking with Adams Oshiomhole, Godswill Akpabio and even a die in the wool, irredentist, Buhari; and laugh with me, they are the progressives of Nigerian politics. Nothing wey eye no go see for Nigerian politics, as they say in Warri. But I digress.
    But I am beginning to like the man, his haters and lovers, call the Jagaban and/or the Lion of Bourdillon. He has shown himself to be the talk-na-do of Lagos politics. He has shown himself to be the owner of Lagos and all there is. Little wonder, the man who should claim to be the owner of Lagos, and who would have gladly commanded all those opposed to the Tinubu decree on Ambode recently, to be drowned in the Lagos lagoon, kowtows to his every whim. I am talking about my Benin brother and Oba of Lagos, His Royal Majesty, Oba Rilwan Akiolu.
    Who will not fall in love with Tinubu after the earthquake he caused a few weeks back in Lagos politics? He brought Governor Ambode to power. He decreed his fall and it came to pass with such overwhelming, shattering, thunder like exactitude. My developing likeness for the Jagaban is like a young lady tasting the delicious deceitfulness of lust for the first time. What joy untold! Oh what pain hides ahead!
    You should forgive me, all who I have badmouthed the real lord of Lagos state to. The man is a colossus whose word is law; in Lagos. And like most people, especially politicians or thiefitricians, I envy this giant of a man his enemies claim is Iragbiji born, but Lagos domineering god. I regret i did not join the large throng of admirers who worshipped at his shrine when he was governor, instead of writing often then what Dele Alake, his commissioner for information and strategy, described as “some nonsense.”
    If you were in Lagos, or you watched, or read what happened in Lagos during the primaries of the All Progressives Congress, APC, when the whole of Lagos state, well APC members and hirelings, thronged most of the voting centres in all the wards across the state, you cannot but envy, and maybe like me love, the devoted, unquestioning love poured on him; and the humiliating dung Governor Ambode was drenched with.
    Tinubu simply showed class, embellishing it with style while dishing well considered insults on those who question his suzerainty and authority in Lagos. In one deft stroke, he told those who question why he should remove a performing governor, to shut up and hide their disloyal faces in the cesspit of shame. Since Warri slangs are running riot in my head today, let me say it like a true Waffarian: the real king of Lagos politics has told the doubting thomases that “this na we thing, na somebody get am.” In this case, na Tinubu get Lagos, so he can do and undo. He can ambode anybody and sanworise whoever pleases him.
    Hate him as much as you like, is it not a thing of confounding joy, and a huge credit to the Lion of Bourdillon, that things have settled back quietly? Ambode has accepted his fate, mended fences with the Jagaban and his newly adopted son, Sanwo-Olu. The APC is as strong, and perhaps even stronger now than it was before the decree which brought Governor Ambode to his knees. For the lovers of the Jagaban, all is well that has ended well, at least for now.
    There are whimpers here and there, mostly among some elites, about a planned retribution against the Lion of the tribe Bourdillon come the main elections next February. These gladiators can be mostly found in the social media speaking high fallutin grammar, postulating and generally grandstanding about dealing a deadly blow to the Jagaban and his appointed contestants at the coming elections. And I laugh. Since when has grammar on social media won elections?
    We all know that facebook and twitter are not polling booths; we know that over 95 percent of those talking big in the social media might not walk the talk on election day. We know for sure they are not members of any of the major or even minor parties. They are neither candidates nor sponsors of candidates. They will happily sit back in the comfort of their homes, drinking beer or tea, watching the “wretched of the earth,” the stronghold of the man who has mastered the political terrain in Lagos, queue for hours, vote, hang around the polling venues and cause enough mayhem that will subvert the will of those who even bother to come out to vote, if they sense that the results are going the wrong way.
    As a reporter who took interest in the primaries of the APC in Lagos, it is clear why Tinubu will continue to have his way in Lagos politics. Even for those who watched on television, who did you see voting to enthrone the will of the Jagaban? Didn’t you see the market women, the unemployed, the touts, the drivers, the maiguards, the house boys? Did you see the elites, the facebook and twitter political juggernauts? Who did you see marshalling them? Tinubu boys!
    Lagosians, bury your heads in shame. Tinubu is a man who understands the true dynamics of Nigerian politics. He has spoken in Lagos where his is the only voice. If you don’t like it, the lagoon is still there! Any wonder why Nigeria is the heartache and disgrace it is to the African race!
     

  • Odumakin speaks on Tinubu's sinful silence on herdsmen killings in S/West

    *Odumakin calls Tinubu a chronic abuser of substance
    The spokesman for the pan-Yoruba socio-cultural group, Afenifere, Yinka Odumakin, rained invectives a former Lagos State Governor, Bola Tinubu, for allegedly keeping mute when Fulani herdsmen abducted elder statesman, Olu Falae, and attacked farmers in parts of South-West.
    He dismissed Tinubu’s claims that the South-West was not affected by herdsmen attacks, noting that the marauders had killed people in Yewa, Oke Ogun, Akure, Ekiti and other parts of the region.
    Reacting to a statement by Tinubu’s media aide, Tunde Rahman, in which he said the Afenifere chieftain was suffering from selective amnesia, Odumakin, in a statement on Thursday, accused the All Progressives Congress leader of living in denial and labelled him [Tinubu] as a chronic abuser of substance who is = suffering a disorder of the mind.
    He said, “Tinubu has maintained a sinful silence as herdsmen launched vicious attacks on the South-West and other sections of the country with thousands of lives lost in the last three years.
    “He can play the ostrich all he wants but we know he was mute when herdsmen kidnapped Chief Olu Falae. He could not find his voice when herders killed people in Yewa, Oke Ogun, Akure, Ekiti and the Middle Belt.
    “Neither did I hear a word from Tinubu when herdsmen kidnapped and killed a Permanent Secretary in Osun (where Tinubu and I are from).”
    The Afenifere’s spokesman said Tinubu only postured as a federalist when it suited him, noting that cattle herders as businessmen should apply to state governors for land allocation if they were interested in ranching.
    He accused the APC chieftain of launching a personal attack against him.
    “I do not intend to take issues with him in all the personal attacks and insinuations of disorder of the mind. Why should I when I know that it is chronic abusers of substance that are more prone to suffer from such? Thank God I am not one of them,” Odumakin quipped.

  • Tinubu, Ribadu, others proffer solutions to farmers/herders crisis, exonerate Buhari

    The National leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Monday identified the major challenges and also proferred solutions to recurring farmers/herders crisis in Nigeria.
    Tinubu noted that water, or more accurately the lack of it, is at the heart of consistent conflicts between farmers and herders in parts of the country.
    He suggested both short and long term solutions to the lingering crisis that has left many dead and others displaced.
    Also, a former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, said that because the nomadic Fulani have not been integrated into the country, they had been moving in search of land where they will be regarded and treated as other Nigerians.
    Ribadu underscored the fact that it was wrong to ascribe the clashes to President Muhammadu Buhari.
    He said that it was obvious that the native Fulani were angry with President Buhari for allegedly turning his back on them and not giving them audience like he does to other groups.
    Tinubu and Ribadu spoke at a two-day national summit on conflict resolution organised by The Nation and Television Continental (TVC) as part of their contribution to finding a lasting solution to the bloody farmers/herders clashes.
    Speaking through a Federal Executive Commissioner (South West) in the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Mr. Sunday Dare, Tinubu said the government must sustain wise policy and action to keep peace and prevent violent recurrences.
    According to him, the government must also maintain reasonable and effective military and law enforcement presence in the affected areas.
    The security operatives, he said, should work with leaders of the herders and the farmers in the communities as well as traditional and religious leaders.
    On the long term solution, Tinubu said that Nigeria needed to take the lead for Africa in international fora dealing with climate change as well as develop what he called “water catchment and conservation systems”.
    Tinubu said: “My contribution will not be filled with statistics, graphs and figures. It will have more of a conceptual or strategic bent.
    “I take this route because the challenges we discuss are complex and encompass more than meets the eye.
    ”In order to adequately address these challenges, we must sufficiently define what they are.
    ”Sensational media headlines and much of public opinion have concluded that the conflict between herders and farmers is inherently a religious or ethnic scrum.
    ”This conclusion is understandable. The most visible thing seen are two groups predominately of different religions and ethnicities contending against each other.
    ”However, wisdom counsels against hasty conclusions. Sometimes that which is unseen is more important than that which is visible.
    ”For instance, gravity and the magnetic field affect everything we do but we cannot see these fundamental forces of the physical universe. Yet, anyone who walks to the edge of tall building, but refuses to keep gravity in mind may quickly find that he has sacrificed himself to his own ignorance.
    ”Perhaps this conflict is not birthed of the religious identities of its antagonists as zealots on both sides of this equation would have us believe
    “Such a description might fit their notions of religious intolerance and bigotry but it is likely too simplistic to be correct.
    “Instead, we should ponder whether this conflict is but the manifestation of deeper forces at work. This conflict, for the most part, is not born of religious or ethnic differences.
    ”Many things contribute to this situation. However, if you forced me to identity one factor, I would do so in one word. And that word is: Water. Or, more accurately, the lack of it.
    ”Our physical bodies are predominately water as are the bodies of the flora and fauna we depend on for our existence.
     
    Water-based ecosystem
     
    “Our ecosystem is a water-based one. A civilisation’s success is keenly determined by its relationship with and management of water.
    ”Too much water – like in the tsunamis, hurricanes and floods seen across the globe – often kills man.
    ”Conversely, insufficient water turns man into a killer of himself.
    ”Throughout recorded history, civilisations have risen and fallen with changed rain patterns, with droughts and floods.
    ”What does that mean in the Nigerian context?
    “Perhaps through a combination of the natural climate cycle and man-made climate change, weather extremes are more frequent.
    ”When it rains, it floods. When dry season comes, little water is to be found. Land becomes swiftly parched as if water never ministered to it.
    ”In the North once marginally arable land has turned too barren to sustain life. Cattle herders, mostly unaware of this phenomenon called climate change, still sense something is wrong.
    “Places they once took their cattle are now nothing but blasts of hot air and inedible dust.
    ”Of necessity as they see it, they drive their herds onward, further south toward water and greenery.
    “But also toward farmers and their farmlands. Each year, the desert eats up thousands upon thousands of acres of land. This pushes herders and even some farmers southward.
    ”The result is that an increasing number of people and livestock seek to extract from a dwindling amount of fertile land enough water and feed to sustain themselves.
    ”This is a recipe for increased competition and conflict. Violence is almost inevitable in this situation of diminishing vital resources.”
     
    Other countries suffer same fate too
    In the view of the former Lagos State governor, ”this scenario is not unique to Nigeria”. “Other West African nations suffer it”.
    ”In some of these nations, both farmers and herders are of the same religion but that affiliation does not thwart conflict,” Tinubu said, adding:
    ”An acutely thirsty man remembers neither Bible nor Quran very well until his thirst is quenched.
    “Dire need often pushes a man to behave as if bereft of compassion for a person in equally dire circumstance.
    ”No doubt the problem has exacerbated during the past decade. We must assume climate change plays a role.
    ”Those of us who herald globalization and tout its promised rewards, better take a step back and lower the volume of their cheerleading just a bit.
    ”For climate change is but a portion of the malign underside of globalisation.
    “Africa now bears the greatest ecological brunt of a globalisation that has not even rendered to Africa its just economic rewards.
    ”First, Africa is shorted by the unequal exchange of its natural resources for more expensive finished goods.
    ”Compounding the injury, our weather patterns have been made to pay the price for the relative opulence of the West.
    ”This is not to absolve Nigeria and Africa of its share of the blame. We do not tend our environment sufficiently. We are guilty of wasteful, sometimes harmful, misuses of our land.
    “However, the damage done by others to the global ecosystem dwarfs our missteps.
    ”Thus, while we rightly see the situation as an immediate crisis that must be decisively and swiftly resolved so as to save lives, we must also see it as an alarm, requiring us to devise even more long-term changes that protect our people from environmental degradation.”
    Tinubu noted that though the violence has thankfully subsided, the government must sustain wise policy and action to keep peace and prevent violent recurrences.
    He advocated “a comprehensive remedial/rehabilitation strategy for victims of the violent crisis.”
    The government, he stressed, must help herders gradually shift from their traditional nomadic existence to a more static lifestyle.
    Tinubu said: “We have to face the reality that modernity is making the nomadic way counterproductive and inefficient.
    ”Unoccupied, isolated land can quickly be turned into grazing areas in the affected states.
    “In the long run, this will enable herders to better maintain their livestock and thus their own livelihoods.
    ”Government should establish a permanent panel as a forum for farmers and herders to discuss their concerns and identify ways to mitigate contention. This will also help educate the general public.”
    The APC leader, who preferred long term solution to the crisis of herders/farmers clashes, said: “Nigeria needs to take the lead for Africa in international fora dealing with climate change.
    “Water catchment and conservation systems must be developed. This includes the prudent use of dams and irrigation sub-systems maintainable at the local level.
    ”More water efficient farming techniques must be employed. Projects to protect the land for additional desertification must take adequate priority.”
    He noted, however, that “these recommendations are suggestive and not at all comprehensive.”
    ”However, I think they convey the idea that dealing with the immediate crisis is essential. But we also must position ourselves to deal with these larger forces, which are at the deepest root of this challenge.
    “If we cannot get to this root, our short-term efforts may be successful but over time they will be of decreasing utility.
    “This is a problem that is mostly not of your doing but one that you must solve for the future of this nation and its people.
    ”If you allow your greatness as a nation to show, you shall succeed in securing the benefits of a good life and suitable environment for people and generations to come. That is the Nigeria I see and believe in.”
    To Ribadu, Nigeria’s major challenge is that most of the nomadic Fulani do not have a place to call their own and are, therefore, constantly on the move in search of land for their animals.
    Ribadu said that apart from the nomadic education programme put in place by the government a few years ago, there has not been any concrete effort to integrate the nomadic Fulani into the scheme of things.
    He said “As a developing country, we will continue to have challenges and problems. But it is important for us to address the problems confronting us. Whatever we are going through, other countries have gone through it. Why don’t we look at what we must do.
    “Nomadic tribes are not new. They exist all over the world. Most of the native tribes of America are nomads. In India alone, we have about 350 nomadic tribes. Even in sub Saharan Africa, there are nomadic tribes. If you go to the southern part of Africa, you go to Kenya, Tanzania and other places you have nomadic tribes up to Namibia.
    “There had always been a problem and they were able to do something about it. But the question is, why have we not been able to address it? In Namibia, we had a big problem too of nomadic and pastoralists.
    “Nomads are normally landless people who have animals to take care of and, in doing that, there is likely going to be a problem. There is also the issue of continuous migration and the attendant problem on ecology and this has continued to put pressure on the system. That is why in Nigeria today, there has been a problem and we have failed to address the fundamental issue.
    “We forget that people who are landless will continue to be a problem and part of the problem we are facing today is these people fighting to say we are part of this country. They want a place of their own where they will be taken care of, but there is resistance. That is why you see what is going on in Zamfara, Birnin Gwari and most of the places.
    “The Fulani in the town who claim to be part of them, or even their traditional rulers who claim to be their leaders, don’t understand what they are going through. They are people who are completely out of everything.
    “You can hardly see any nomadic Fulani man that is part of state assembly or the National Assembly and they form about 15 to 20 million of the population and they are marginalised. They are not in any way benefiting from what is happening in the country today.”
    According to Ribadu, “there has been only one attempt to address the problem and that was the nomadic education programme”.
    “ Many of those who participated in the nomadic education programme are PhD holders today and those are working are helping their communities. Other than that, I have not seen any effort geared towards solving their problem.
    “The crisis of the nomadic Fulani are even more at home with non Fulani communities. Today, because of the problem of internal migration, they will rather go to the southern part of Nigeria and stay there and live in comfort because of the insecurity in northern Nigeria.”
     
    Buhari is innocent
    Defending President Buhari against allegations of supporting his Fulani brothers, he said “People have continued to misunderstand what is going on. President Buhari has nothing to do with what is going on. In fact, the Fulani are even angry with him because they think he has abandoned them. They think he is listening to the others and that he gives audience to the people from Benue, Plateau and never gave them audience.”
    The Senator representing Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani, said the political elite must decide the type of country they wanted to preside over.
    Sani insisted that the political elite should make concerted efforts to address the security challenges facing the nation.
    Sani said: “We must look for how best we can solve these problems that has become cancerous in our society today. It is to the knowledge of every person that in the last twenty years there has been Forum and fora that provided opportunity for people to dissect the problem and proved solutions. Naturally, we are not a country that is short of solutions.
    “The problem is that a problem exists in our country and the solution exists in our group. So, the disconnect between problems and solutions kept us running round the circle of violence, bloodshed and hostilities that has become part of our daily lives.
    “If we are serious as a country determined to address these problems, it is something that we could have achieved. But it has always been talk, talk and talk with no solution in sight. The political establishment in this country must decide for themselves which kind of country they want to be saddled with.
    “Most of those people that are killed are the people living in the rural areas. Most often, those in the position of leadership and power have not been touched by these crises. That explains why it is what it is today. There have been blames on the security agencies.”
    “Each time we have violence, there are talks that they need to address the situation. But how can that be possible when people in position of power, like governors, control billions of Naira as security votes which they spend on political thugs and not on security agencies.
    “Security votes are used to oil political machinery and support violent criminals in the society or aimed at capturing power or preserving power. We spend so much time in politics. If a fraction of the the time and resources we spend on politics is spent on peace and security in this country, we could have gone very far, but that is not the case.”