Wednesday, 30 March 2016
A True Democrat and Bridge-Builder. - Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola described Tinubu
In a statement by the Director, Bureau of
Communications and Strategy, Mr. Semiu
Okanlawon, Aregbesola said: “Asiwaju Bola
Ahmed Tinubu means many things to many
people but there are certain things that
everyone agrees about him: a political think-
thank, master strategist, promoter of politics
of inclusion, political futurist and fearless
activist and top politician per excellence.
“His life is packed with personal
achievements and involvements as a senator
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, a pro-
democracy activist, two-time governor of
Lagos State, mentor of successful leaders and
currently a major player and factor on the
national political scene.
“He strikes as a consummate politician and
very strategic, original political thinker.
“When he became governor of Lagos, the
state was financially incapacitated but
Tinubu’s knowledge of public finance changed
the fortune of the Lagos Internally Generated
Revenue from mere N600m. The rest is
history as Lagos today stands on firm, sure
footing of unimaginable development
proportion.
“There is no denying the fact that Asiwaju is a
rare breed politician, patriot and a true
democrat. Through his political efforts and
strategies, progressive politics for which the
South West was noted now dominates the
realm.
“No doubt, the accounts of modern Nigerian
political evolution would not be complete
without ample recognition of the roles of this
selfless political leader.”
On Environment and Sustainable Development in Nigeria in the 21st Century
POSTED BY ADEPOJU ADEYEMI
Protocols,
It gives me great pleasure to be at this great citadel of learning once again and be part of the Faculty of Social Sciences 2016 National Conference. I must therefore thank the Dean of the Faculty for the kind invitation to this conference which theme, ‘Environment and Sustainable Development in Nigeria in the 21st Century’ will always be relevant to mankind, far beyond the shores of Nigeria.
Since the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1972 and the subsequent conferences on Climate Change, the awareness of the international community on the degradation of the environment and the adverse effects on lives generally, has been put in the front burner for mitigation in all ramifications. The developing nations are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. For instance, the combined effects of desertification and soil erosion in the Northern and Southern parts respectively continue to adversely affect agriculture, energy and water resources.
Permit me to enter this caveat. Development has a cost. We must choose, for instance, whether to ease transportation by constructing roads, during which green vegetation would have to be cleared or preserve the forest in its virginal state. To provide decent accommodation for people, new houses have to be built on land. There are other imperatives of human development that impinge on nature, even food crop cultivation. To make an omelette, an egg must be broken.
However, this is only half of the story. The challenge before humanity is how to have development without hurting or jeopardising the environment. On September 25 last year, many countries came together at the General Assembly of the United Nations to adopt a set of goals which includes to end poverty, banish hunger, protect the environment, and ensure prosperity for all as part of a new sustainable development agenda.
The upshot is that there must be development. Nigeria needs rapid development. According to the UNDP, Nigeria is ranked 152 out of 188 countries, five places below Pakistan and 10 behind Bangladesh. The major indices are not encouraging at the national average. Though our life expectancy has increased slightly to 52.8 years from 48.7 in 2005, we are still far from the advanced countries with over 80 figure. The only encouraging index is mobile phone subscribers per 100 people which stands at 77.8, better than sub-Saharan Africa figure of 77.1 but still far below the developing countries average of 91.2.
But we see here the crushing effect of underdevelopment. On our inauguration we saw that a lot of the youth are idle. That was why we engaged 40,000 of them in the Keynesian mode in the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES) for public works. We have the evidence of this shortly after when Osun ranked among the states with the lowest unemployment and crime rates in the country. When we introduced free school feeding programme, school enrolment shot to the roof by 25 per cent. We already have the report that parents have been withdrawing their children from private schools and enrolling them in our new schools, thus stretching their capacity to the limit. The home grown school feeding programme alone engages 3,000 cooks and indirectly engages farmers and other food producers since, to be able to feed these 252,000 pupils, 15,000 whole chickens, 254,000 eggs, 35 heads of cattle and 400 tonnes of catfish are purchased weekly from farmers and food vendors. This is empowerment for farmers and job creation opportunity for thousands of others in the state. This programme covers only pupils in elementary 1–4. You can just imagine what its impact would be nationally if all pupils in school are fed in all the states of the federation. It will primarily boost agriculture and provide directly and indirectly at least five million jobs with unlimited multiplier effect.
It has been estimated that to be able to provide adequate accommodation to Nigerians, we need 17 million new homes. Though providing this will impinge on the environment, this assignment will virtually wipe off unemployment in the country, if we also decide to locally produce at least 90 per cent of the building materials needed.
But the key here is sustainable development. Industrial capitalists are allergic to this concept. They have been largely opposed to sustainable development and where there is consciousness, they have only paid lip service. When there are adequate legislations, they have been so strident at subverting and side-tracking them.
But we must somehow come to the realisation that we have no alternative to the environment. There have been putative efforts at colonising space and other planets for human habitation. These have not gone beyond fantasies. We must therefore take to heart the admonition of Mohandas Gandhi that: ‘What we are doing to the forests of the world is but a mirror reflection of what we are doing to ourselves and to one another’. For as Franklin D. Roosevelt reminds us: ‘A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself. Forests are the lungs of our land, purifying the air and giving fresh strength to our people’. We agree with the wisdom of American conservationist and philosopher, Aldo Leopold, who pointed out that: ‘We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.’
For a developing country like Nigeria, we need knowledge based production to be able to overcome certain practices that amount to abuse of the environment. We need for instance cheap forms or alternatives to fossil fuel for our peasant to stop cutting down trees for firewood. Our research institutions too need to penetrate society with such little things as the industrial use for sawdust, instead of the constant burning at sawmills. We also need better social organisation with mass mode of transportation in order to reduce the number of personal cars on our roads, thereby cut down on carbon emission.
There is no alternative to trees. We must never shrink the carbon sink in order not to offset the oxygen-carbon dioxide balance most vital to human and animal existence. Since the inception of this administration, we have embarked on tree planting campaign and we have recorded a modest achievement. We successfully purchased and planted 2.5 million tree seedlings all over the state. The novelty about this is that we transferred ownership of the trees to individuals. These trees are therefore not anonymously planted but put in care of individuals in their homes, farms or offices.
Realising the importance of forests to social, economic and cultural life of the people of Osun State, it is imperative that the issue of the State Forest Estates will command better administrative attention where illegal felling, plundering and illegal farming will be stamped out. Afforestation programme that will reclaim all the degraded areas should be attended to with a view to restoring the status, integrity and health of the all the forest reserves.
All over the world, the issue of afforestation cannot be achieved by government alone. I am therefore making a clarion call to non-governmental organisations, community based organisations, religious bodies and private individuals to collaborate with the government in restoring and increasing the forest cover in the state, be it inside or outside government gazetted reserves.
But to be able to win the war on environment, we must first win hearts and minds. We must include and make environmental studies a compulsory subject from the kindergarten to the university. We used to have nature studies in schools. We should bring this back to our schools.
If we embark on development without consideration to the environment, we will soon discover that we have lost both development and the environment.
I thank you all for your kind attention.
This speech was delivered by Ogbeni Aregbesola at the Obafemi Awolowo University’s faculty of social sciences 2016 national conference, held at the university’s conference centre and guest houses on Tuesday March 29, 2016
Keeping Them In Our Hearts By Rauf Aregbesola
Protocols,
I welcome you all to this important occasion, the launching of the emblem to commemorate 2016 Armed Forces Remembrance Day. This has become an annual ritual for some time, but a ritual that came from the heart of a grateful nation and people to members of the armed forces who have served to defend the territorial integrity of this country and protect the people at home and abroad.
Nigerian soldiers and other professionals participated in the two world wars in the last century. Men and women of the armed forces again fought in the Nigerian Civil War, in the bid to keep the nation as one. They were also deployed for peacekeeping operations abroad, where they were given commendation for display of gallantry, honour and distinction.
Indeed, it was the participation of Nigerians in the Second World War that gave impetus to the nationalists’ efforts culminating in decolonisation. The superior courage and military valour displayed by our people in the jungles of Burma confounded their colonial handlers and demystified the notion of white superiority.
In most recent times, Nigerians have sacrificed precious lives to restore democracy to West African countries of Liberia and Sierra Leone and currently they are engaged in the war on terrorism in several parts of Nigeria.
War, as we all know, is bad business, but we cannot escape the insightful saying of Karl von Clausewitz that ‘to have peace, we must prepare for war’. And as the former American President, George W Bush, once said, ‘violent men (and women) must be restrained violently’. This, however, is always at a great cost.
It is one of the inscrutable ironies of life that those who keep us safe must first be prepared to lay down their own lives and many regrettably do lose their lives. Lives and limbs are lost while many are made permanently incapacitated in the course of war. Wives become widowed while children are made orphans. Family breadwinners are taken away as dreams are shattered.
The least we can do as a government and people is to keep the memory of these soldiers alive, support those that are alive and take adequate care of the families of the departed. This is why we are here today.
The emblem being launched is a reminder of their service and sacrifice and an obligation on us to support them. We should support this effort generously and wear the emblem with pride during this week of remembrance. President Muhammadu Buhari has encouraged Nigerians and visitors to wear the emblem throughout this week. We support and identify with this advisory. More importantly, we must keep their memories in our heart.
Though there have been occasional reports of bad behaviours, our veteran soldiers have been good citizens and are well behaved. In most cases, they have voluntarily constituted the vanguard of security in their communities, and sometimes at great risks. They are usually public spirited and quick to demonstrate civic responsibilities. They add to the stock of our social capital.
I enjoin our citizens and corporate organisations to donate to their cause generously. They must be well supported. They took up soldering as a divine call, or else they could have taken to other more lucrative and less tasking vocations. They should not be made to regret serving their fatherland in its defence.
Our own society must devise means to specially reward and support our veterans. Their plight should not be an annual event, during the Armed Forces Remembrance Day celebration only.
In other lands, stores give them special discounts; those returning to school have their tuition fees slashed while veterans are given free passes to gated events. In several instances, they enjoy free medical care and other social services.
They are made to feel appreciated every day, and not just on special occasions like this. We can draw many examples from this and build a reward system for our veteran soldiers into our social institutions.
We must also build industries around the sets of skills they have acquired in service. This by no means does not include hired assassination, since a soldier by definition must be a sharp shooter. But I am kidding.
The commonest engagement of veterans has been to hire them for sentry duties. This is hardly enough. In many cases it amounts to underutilisation of resources. There are diverse ways they can be engaged productively and maximally. Most of them have acquired advanced skills in many vocations that could be deployed into nation building and development, but are just lying fallow. Those of them with combat experience can be reprogrammed and put in a special police units needed to engage armed bandits and other violent criminals in our urban centres. They will be glad to resume their defence duties in civilian capacities.
It is also important that we review our philosophy of soldering by having a productive citizen’s army. In a peacetime like this, a lot of our teeming but idle youths can be absorbed into the armed forces. Apart from giving them excellent professional training, they should also be given excellent vocational training and deployed for services where needed.
The engineering corps for instance can be expanded and equipped for greater participation in infrastructure development across the length and breadth of the country. Individual soldiers should also be given training on providing household and corporate services. Through this, they would have acquired life sustaining skills and upon disengagement, with some empowerment, can be on their own and have seamless transition into civilian life.
I am aware there are programmes like this in the armed forces but they need to be expanded and brought into the core of the armed forces raison d’etre, such that every soldier returning to society would have a seamless transition and would not constitute a burden to himself or society.
Once again, I wholeheartedly welcome you all for being here and thank you for your kind attention.
Osun a dara!
This speech was delivered by the governor, state of Osun, Ogeni Rauf Aregbesola at this year’s Armed Forces remembrance day celebration
Bello denies report of crisis in Kogi State House of Assembly
DAILY TRUST
Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State, on Wednesday refuted claims that the House of Assembly as well as the entire state were in crises.
Addressing State House correspondents after meeting with the Chief of Staff to the President, Abba Kyari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Bello said the State House of Assembly was sitting and all legislative works were ongoing.
Bello’s remark follows a reports that the State House of Assembly has been in crises for the past three months due to leadership tussle.
The crisis was said to have assumed a new dimension as the complex was sealed by security operatives yesterday.
But Bello in his remark said, “My house is sitting and we have absolute peace in Kogi state, I am not aware of that. The National Assembly was supposed to have taken over, the state is absolutely in peace and the legislative activities are ongoing.
“I am the executive and the executive is functioning and we are doing the best we can, so legislature is their own business and they are on it.
“I have a speaker that is sitting right now. So I don’t know if there is any problem there,” he added
Stating that the state applied for the bailout funds, the governor said, “We applied for it and its under processing right now I have not gotten any bail-out yet.
“Well I think to the best of my knowledge, the last administration either did not go on with the process properly, we are now to trying to correct whatever was not done properly, so that we can access it for our people.”
Bello who called on people of the state to join him in fixing the state that has suffered for a long time, said, “This is not the time for political crisis. This is the time to work and I am here to work. I am not here to have any political fuss with anybody; whoever is ready should join me and let’s fix Kogi state.”
Charles “CharlyBoy” Oputa Writes Open Letter to President Buhari
My dear Presido,
I trust you are not letting the rot and the decay you met in the system overwhelm you. I was filled with expectation when you emerged winner. I prayed that you would be a catalyst in redirecting our drifting country; because many things spoil no be small.
I can’t say that I was too trilled with some of your selections for the ministerial posts, but I suspected you had a good reason for most of the choice you made. Your campaign was about change, which I hoped was all-encompassing- change in our mindset, our attitude to work, and above all, not business as usual.
It is based on one of your outstanding ministerial selections that I write this personal letter to you.
My Presido, please tell all them brown nosed praise singers, called politicians to hands off meddling and interrupting the flow of our Honorable Minister of Petroleum. Dr Ibe Kachikwu. We are all aware of the plots, nonsensical, local and ethnic intrigues called politics being thrown up to tamper with Ibe Kachikwu’s position. I warn that a stop must be put to this. We all know that corruption is fighting back the war against corruption. With the changes I have seen in NNPC and my personal interaction with this outstanding Nigerian of great repute, a humble, brilliant, intelligent and an outstanding scholar; one of the few patriots in your cabinet, it will be a disaster if we lose him. You know this is no lie.
While I don’t want to tow the line of ethnic or tribal propaganda, those claiming that this call for Kachikwu’s sack is entirely an ethnic proclivity may not be far from the truth, going by precedence we all know. At this stage and age of our democracy, such childish tendencies and immaturity ought to be dealt away with, if we all truly hold the interest of this nation dear. These useless yahoo yahoo leaders should desist from their frivolous, devisive, tribal, and ethnic politics and allow him do his job basically.
As a result of corruption, we have found round pegs in square holes; because of corruption, thieves and criminals took over leadership and because of corruption, our economy is in this mess. Even with your fight Sai Baba, you can see that winning the battle against corruption is not an easy one; it is worse than BokoHaram.
It is clear that most of the people responsible for our economic woes are fighting back, not knowing what you may do next. In my opinion, this is one of the ways they’re putting up the fight: they want to rid your government of the few who can make visible impact in a system that has hitherto been jeopardized.
These unscrupulous elements must not be allowed to find you predictable, they must not be able to hold you hostage in your own administration, they must not turn you to a mere stooge as it was the case in Nigeria in not too distant past. You no be zombie.
Let those who know the job be allowed to do it or else, I will be forced to mobilize 2,000,000 protesters to march against this useless agitation.
Enough is enough, you are the President, please take charge.
What you decide to do next will determine, to a great extent, how this Naija ship is steered.
We are all watching, and waiting.
Thank you Your Excellency, for reading.
Best Regards,
Charles ‘CharlyBoy’ Oputa.
JUST IN: Shell dragged into Nigeria oil corruption probe
Oil giant Shell has been dragged into a corruption probe linked to a major offshore deal in Nigeria, the company confirmed on Wednesday. Following revelations in the Italian media, the Anglo-Dutch group said that its offices had been “visited” by anti-fraud investigators. “We can confirm that representatives of the Dutch Financial Intelligence and Investigation Service (FIOD) and the Dutch Public Prosecutor recently visited Shell at its headquarters in The Hague,” a spokesman said. “The visit was related to OPL 245, an offshore block in Nigeria that was the subject of a series of long-standing disputes with the Federal Government of Nigeria. Shell is cooperating with the authorities and is looking into the allegations, which it takes seriously.” Italian daily Corriere della Sera reported earlier that the Dutch investigators were working in collaboration with Italian prosecutors looking into Shell and Italian energy group ENI’s 2011 acquisition of joint exploitation rights to OPL245, which is estimated to contain up to nine billion barrels of crude. Prosecutors in Milan have been investigating ENI executives involved in the deal since 2014. Under the licensing accord, ENI made a payment to the Nigerian government of $1.09 billion to secure joint ownership while Shell, which already owned a 40-percent stake, handed over $200 million. Most of this money was subsequently passed on to Malabu Oil and Gas, a company believed to be controlled by Chief Dan Etete, a former Nigerian Oil Minister. In an episode that has come to be regarded as emblematic of Nigeria’s problems with corruption, Etete had awarded the rights to the block to Malabu in 1998, at a time when he was close to Nigeria’s then-military dictator General Sani Abacha. The probe into ENI was triggered after an intermediary in the deal, Emeka Obi, sued Malabu in Britain’s High Court and won an order that the company pay him $110 million in unpaid fees. ENI has always maintained that its actions in Nigeria have been beyond reproach and that all the money it had paid in Nigeria had gone directly to the government. Shell also insisted it had not been involved in any wrongdoing. “Shell attaches the greatest importance to business integrity,” a spokesman said. “It’s one of our core values and is a central tenet of the principles that govern the way we do business. All employees are expected to uphold these principles and failure to do so will result in consequences up to and including dismissal.”
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/03/shell-dragged-nigeria-oil-corruption-probe/?
JUST IN: No Room For Anointed Candidate In Ondo APC, Says State Chairman
No Room For Anointed Candidate In Ondo APC, Says State Chairman
The Chairman stated that the opposition party would conduct a free, fair and credible primary election for all political aspirants jostling for party's ticket ahead of the November 26 governorship election in the State.
BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORKMAR 30, 2016
Isaac Kemeke, the Ondo State Chairman of the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC), has announced that there is no room for the imposition of an "anointed candidate" in the party as the race to the November 26 gubernatorial election gathers momentum.
Issac Kekemeke, Ondo State APC Chairman
The Chairman stated that the opposition party would conduct a free, fair and credible primary election for all political aspirants jostling for party's ticket ahead of the November 26 governorship election in the State.
He vehemently told the party’s candidates to embark on field campaigns and shelved the idea of imposing a chosen candidate on the party's members and supporters.
Mr. Kememke said that the leadership of the party through the State Executive is willing to provide a free and level playing ground for all the candidates at a soon to be announced State primary election.
He stated that the opposition party is currently the only veritable platform that could produce the next governor of the State with the caliber of candidates contesting for the party's ticket ahead of the forthcoming gubernatorial poll.
"The development has seen many genuine governorship aspirants trooping in to contest on the platform of the party as more and more people are joining the party in droves on regular basis,” Mr. Kekemeke said.
According to him, a formidable party like the APC is needed in the State to crush the incumbent government of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) led by Governor Olusegun Mimiko.
A SaharaReporters investigation has revealed that there are at least forty-five candidates competing for the APC gubernatorial ticket, including Rotimi Akeredolu, Robert Ajayi Borrofice, Segun Abraham, Olusola Oke, Victor Olabimtan, Tayo Alasoadura, Steve Ayorinde, and Bukola Adetula.
Our correspondent in Akure reported that many of the aspirants have begun wooing the party's leadership through the State Working Executive with donations and gifts, such as cars and wristwatches.
Political observers in the party told SaharaReporters that the constant visitation of the gubernatorial candidates to the party's secretariat could be described as a show of "wealth and strength" in a bid to get the party's ticket for the race to the Alagbaka Government House in Akure.
"Any aspirant that visits the party for an official declaration to contest for the governorship poll donates something tangible, like heavy cash for the State Executive Council members and brand new Toyota vehicles for the party,” an observer stated.
"They now turned their visit to the party secretariat into a show of wealth and strength, donating millions of naira through checks and cash gifts in a flamboyant manner.”
The APC Chairman emphasized the need for unity in the party. He openly cautioned some of the candidates and their supporters against insulting other candidates on social media platforms.
Mr. Kemeke said such actions display indiscipline among members and advised the aspirants to campaign as team players regardless of who emerged as the party's candidate.
He stressed that the main goal of the party is to win the forthcoming gubernatorial election in the State and to liberate the people from the hands of the incumbent PDP government.
"In a football match, opposing teams do not deliberately injure themselves, more so as team players. We are all under the APC and our concern should be how to reach out to the suffering masses of Ondo State and spread the change mantra of the party that would liberate them from the squalor they are living in," Mr. Kemeke said.
Aregbesola Free Train in Osun
"From #6M, Rauf paid Jan salaries,injects more funds 2 sch and road projects,provides grants for Agriculture and free train for Easter" - Wale Alabi
Ambode pays condolence visit to Braithwaite’s family
Ambode pays condolence visit to Braithwaite’s family
March 30, 2016
Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode (left), with widow of late Dr. Tunji Braithwaite, Mrs. Grace Braithwaite (right)and granddaughter, Miss Dara Rhodes (2nd right) during his condolence visit to the family at their residence in Lagos on Wednesday, March 30, 2016.
Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode on Wednesday paid a condolence visit to the family of late elder statesman and legal luminary, Dr. Tunji Braithwaite, saying that his contributions to the emancipation of the masses and constitutional development in Nigeria would remain indelible.
Governor Ambode, who visited the family House of the late sage in Victoria Island area of the state in company with some members of the State Executive Council including the Secretary to the State Government, Mr. Tunji Bello; Chief of Staff to the Governor, Mr. Samuel Olukunle Ojo, and others, said Dr. Braithwaite consistently fought for the masses throughout his life time, and so deserved to be celebrated for a life well spent.
The Governor, while commiserating with Braithwaite’s widow, Grace and the children, said their father paid his dues, assuring that the State Government will continue to celebrate the ideals he stood for during his lifetime.
“No matter the side he was on, the political divide, his message was consistent, constant and he was always thoroughbred and that is why I have come here not only to console the family but to say that everything that I’m also doing is on the side of the masses and is on the side of the majority which he also believed in, which he confessed, which he stood for notwithstanding whatever trepidations or challenges on his way,” Governor Ambode said.
Responding on behalf of the family, the first daughter of the late politician, Dr. Omowunmi Braithwaite thanked Governor Ambode for finding time to commiserate with them in this trying moment despite his busy schedule.
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