Tag Archives: President Muhammadu Buhari

Nigerian 2023 Presidency: Why the Number So Alarming?

Nigeria: More Candidates Emerge As The Battle for 2023 Presidency Hits Up

By Damilare Adeleye

The growing number of presidential aspirants ahead of the forthcoming general elections may easily intrigue the appetite to know if Nigerian politicians are genuinely making call to serve and save the country from the current shambles. Despite the humongous one hundred million naira for the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC) nomination forms, aspirants which have officially declared are more than seventeen. Similarly, the main opposition party, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has at least seventeen aspirants who have purchased the party’s N50 million presidential forms to jostle for the presidential ticket of the party. Undoubtedly, these patriotic individuals have unchallenging right to run for any positions in the country inasmuch as the prerequisites, as contained in the constitution are met, and have the resources to run the electioneering. However, the rising number is suspiciously raising some awareness among the Nigerian people.

When asked, one of the presidential hopefuls, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, told journalists at the State House, Abuja on Tuesday that the higher number the more the merrier. Besides, our democratic disposition allows every eligible citizen to contest any positions in the country, and there is no restriction of number to that constitutional provision. Politics is a playing field for anyone interested in the game, but Nigeria itself is not a game.

According to the recent report from the  World Poverty Clock (WPC), Nigerian was ranked as the second world poverty capital with over seventy million people living in extreme poverty. Similarly, data from global sources pegged the rate of unemployment in Nigeria at 33.3 per cent of the overall  population with many who are youths. And, over the last decade, the incessant security challenges have become unabated, and the economy has persisted on fluctuation. These are daunting challenges which these aspirants should take cognizant look before their quest to become the next president of the country. As a matter of concern, radical steps and pragmatic solutions should be proffered to these challenges during their various declarations.

Though, while many among the magnitude of these presidential hopefuls have established to consolidate on the achievement and foundation which the current administration led by President Muhammadu Buhari has attained, and others from the opposition party have unequivocally stated to reinstate the glory of the country lost in the hands of the ruling party. It is now imperative for the average Nigerian populace to take critical scrutiny on these aspirants in their number, to ensure the emergence of competent and capable leader. Their plethora of unending promises are not enough, their body language towards national issues, past records in governance and leadership position, cultural and religious morality, and educational background, among others should also be the parameters to scrutinize these aspiring individuals, and even when some become candidates.

As this moment, Nigeria truly needs a radical and transformational leader who is ready to confront the nation’s problems without bias or prejudice to any group or individual. We are in urge for someone who will critically take the bull by the horns against non-state actors who are wreaking havoc on the lives of innocent citizens on a daily basis.  We are in demand for the right person who will well-manage our economy,  socio-cultural and political diversities; and not the cohort of those who will only fend on our public treasury, lavish with our common wealth, leaving the  masses to languish in the state of penury.

It is sad that at the time when the political space is tense as everyone is busy towards the 2023 general elections, our public universities are shut, and average Nigerian students are on the streets protesting against the strike action of academic universities unions (ASUU, SSANU and NASU). This should be a frontline concern for the presidential contenders. Unfortunately, those primarily saddled with responsibilities of managing the affairs of our education sector are among the increasing number of presidential optimists.

To end, the back-to-back declaration for presidency by politicians is, certainly, making the race interesting for mass participation. Nevertheless, the mantle of presidency is not a mere office for retirement. It is a sensitive office with the most tedious duties and responsibilities  whose effectiveness count on our national lives. Therefore, it is crucial for we, the electorate, to remain vigilant on the politicians during this period to avoid being sidelined again after the elections!

Damilare Adeleye writes from Lagos  State University.

Shameful! Nigeria President Buhari’s son-in-law Gimba Yau Kumo, two others declared wanted over US$65m fraud

Gimba Yau Kumo, the son-in-law of President Muhammadu Buhari

ABUJA-(MaraviPost)-Gimba Yau Kumo, the son-in-law of President Muhammadu Buhari, has been declared wanted by The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).

Kumo, was declared wanted alongside Tarry Rufus, and Bola Ogunsola in connection with issues bordering on misappropriation of National Housing Funds and diversion of the sum of Sixty Five Million dollars (US$65,000,000).

In a notice published on Thursday, Azuka Ogugua, spokesperson of the anti-graft commission, released contacts where useful information concerning the whereabouts of the three suspects can be directed to.

“Mr. Tarry Rufus, Mr. Gimba Yau Kumo and Mr. Bola Ogunsola are hereby declared WANTED by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) in connection with issues bordering on misappropriation of National Housing Funds and diversion of the sum of Sixty Five Million dollars (US$65,000,000).

Anyone who has useful information on their whereabouts should report to ICPC Headquarters Abuja, any of the ICPC State Offices or the nearest police station, or call ICPC toll-free lines: 0803-123-0280, 0803-123-0281, 0803-123-0282, 0705-699-0190, 0705-699-0191 and 0800-CALL-ICPC (0800-2255-4272) or send an email to info@icpc.gov.ng.”

Kumo, a former managing director of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, married Fatima, the president’s daughter, in 2016 at Daura, Katsina state.

His tenure at FMBN was characterised by allegations of corruption. He and three others allegedly paid themselves outrageous severance packages at the end of their tenure in October 2014.

In April, the senate committee on public accounts summoned Kumo to explain the alleged irregular award of N3 billion contract when he was still at the bank.

Source: www.expressiveinfo.com

Female Nigerian cadet chased from police academy for getting pregnant

KANO-(MaraviPost)-A female cadet has been dismissed from a Nigerian police academy after getting pregnant.

According to a report from Guardian, a senior police official named Ibrahim Zanna gave the information during a recent matriculation ceremony at the police academy in Kano.

The unnamed woman was one of 26 cadets dismissed ‘for flouting the code of conduct and academic deficiency’.

“We want to make it clear on the wall that you cannot misbehave and go away with it,” Mr. Zanna said, noting the introduction of drug and pregnancy tests.

Nigeria’s police law has discriminated against women for decades. First made in 1968, the Police Act of 2004 allowed the police to dismiss women on conditions that were not applied to men. 

Section 127 said, “An unmarried woman police officer who becomes pregnant shall be discharged from the Force, and shall not be re-enlisted except with the approval of the Inspector-General.”

There was no similar part in this law for unmarried men in the police.

The law also required women in the police to first apply to a state commissioner of police. A woman applying in writing this way had to give the police commissioner the name, address and profession of her fiancé, and she might be permitted to go on with the marriage only if she had served in the police for at least three years.

The law did not make a similar requirement for men in the police force who wanted to get married.

President Muhammadu Buhari signed into law the Nigeria Police Force (Establishment) Act in September this year. This new law repeals the 2004 version and prohibits every discrimination on the basis of sex.

Source: www.expressiveinfo.com

“I Will Only Reopen the Scoan When God Tells Me” – TB JOSHUA

LAGOS-(MaraviPost)Prominent Nigerian Pastor TB Joshua has reacted to the announcement from the Nigerian Government regarding the reopening of churches, insisting he will only open The Synagogue, Church Of All Nations (SCOAN) when he “hears from God” to do so.

Christians, do not make the mistake of thinking that you are ‘out of touch’,” Joshua stated

Joshua, whose church is one of Nigeria’s major tourist attractions, said he received a “revelation” from God about the church’s initial closure.

In a video posted to YouTube, the cleric can be heard forewarning of The SCOAN’s closure on three occasions – in February 2019, April 2019 and January 2020 – long before the coronavirus outbreak resulted in a ban on public gatherings.

“The thing God is still telling me – you will just get here one day and learn that there is no church,” he had stated during a regular Sunday service, adding that congregants would only view him on Emmanuel TV, the popular Christian channel.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXAJv01mRT0

“Viewers, that same God we are waiting to hear from on when to reopen – when things will go back to normal – as usual,” Joshua said in a statement released to his official social media channels. 

“God’s time is the best. We are waiting at His feet for that time. We are tarrying for the Holy Spirit’s instruction,” he continued, calling on his followers to “pray without ceasing”.

The cleric added he would continue his usual broadcasts on Emmanuel TV “until we hear from God when to reopen.”

“It is God’s work, not our work,” he added. “Here, our thanks go to the authorities for understanding. Jesus is Lord!”

On Monday 1st June 2020, President Muhammadu Buhari had announced the easing of lockdown restrictions in Nigeria, including the reopening of churches and mosques in line with “state government protocols”. 

Ihechukwu Njoku is a freelance Nigerian journalist…

Nigeria: Buhari reduces foreign trips of ministers to cut cost

President Muhammadu Buhari

 NIGERIA, (MaraviPost): The statement seen by The Maravi Post said, “In a bid to curb leakages and ensure efficiency in the management of resources of government, President Muhammadu Buhari has approved for immediate implementation, additional cost saving measures aimed at instilling financial discipline and prudence, particularly, in the area of official travels.

 “Henceforth, all Ministries, Departments and Agencies are required to submit their yearly travel plans for statutory meetings and engagements to the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and/or the Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation for express clearance within the first quarter of the fiscal year, before implementation.

 “Also, when a minister is at the head of an official delegation, the size of such delegation shall not exceed four, including the relevant director, schedule officer and one aide of the minister.

 “Every other delegation below ministerial level shall be restricted to a maximum of three. 

 Business and economy approved the use of business class for ministers, something some citizens were hoping is changed to economy class.

 Lower categories of government officials however will fly economy class during foreign trips.

 The statement gave details saying “For class of air travels, the President has approved that ministers, permanent secretaries, special advisers, senior special assistants to the President, chairmen of extra-ministerial departments and chief executive officers of parastatals who are entitled, to continue to fly business class while other categories of public officers are to travel on economy class.

 “Travel days will no longer attract payment of estacode allowances as duration of official trips shall be limited to only the number of days of the event as contained in the supporting documents to qualify for public funding.”

Nigeria shuts down 3 embassies abroad due to insufficient funds

The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, while speaking during a press conference on Tuesday, May 21, 2019, revealed that operations in Sri Lanka, Czech Republic and the Republic of Serbia have been shut down, while the embassy in Ukraine has been drastically downsized, Pulse NG reports.

Nigeria shuts down 3 embassies abroad due to insufficient funds

He said: “Every embassy has written to us about their huge financial demands and when we go to these embassies we see clearly very unattractive state that does not reflect well on the country.

“Very often the staff of the embassy really find things extremely difficult. Clearly, if we want to operate on the scale and scope in which we are at the moment with over a 100 missions around the world, we need to spend a lot more.

Added Buhari to Lailas News, “What I am saying is that rather than having this terrible circle of inadequate funding for missions, headquarters and so forth we have to reduce the scope.

“We should have foreign missions that we can fund, we might not necessarily close the embassies per se, it might be reducing the number of staff in the embassies.”

80 of Nigeria’s embassies abroad were not captured for funding in the 2019 appropriation bill submitted to the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari.

2019 Nigeria election: President Muhammadu Buhari takes early lead

Uche Secondus, chair of the opposition PDP, said the government had rigged the resultsImage copyrightREUTERS, chair of the opposition PDP, said the government had rigged the results

 

LAGOS-(MaraviPost)-President Muhammadu Buhari has taken an early lead as votes are being counted in Nigeria’s general election, amid allegations of manipulation.

Mr Buhari has won seven of Nigeria’s 36 states, while his rival Atiku Abubakar took four states and the capital Abuja.

According to BBC, as results came in, Mr Abubakar’s People’s Democratic Party (PDP) alleged that there had been irregularities in the vote.

Party chair Uche Secondus called the count “incorrect and unacceptable”.

He said there had been an “attempt by the government and other agencies to manipulate the result”, but did not give any evidence.

The EU, US and African Union have all expressed concern about delays and logistical problems with voting on Saturday, but no independent observers have suggested fraud.

Mr Buhari, a member of the governing All Progressives Congress (APC) party, is seeking re-election but faces a strong challenge from Mr Abubakar.

Each party says the other is working with the Independent National Electoral Commission (Inec) to influence the vote, which was initially scheduled for 16 February but delayed at the last minute.

Mr Buhari has promised to build on his accomplishments in office so far, while Mr Abubakar, a business tycoon, has accused the president of wasting his term.

Whoever wins in Africa’s most populous nation and largest economy faces a range of problems including power shortages, corruption, security threats, and an economic slowdown.

What are the allegations?

Final results are not expected until later in the week. But Mr Secondus has criticised the initial tallies, saying the government was using “impeachments, manipulation, incarceration” to influence the outcome.

Two men listen to the radio as Nigerians await the results of the Presidential election, in Kano, Nigeria February 24, 2019.Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionNigerians are anxious to find out the winner of the election

In turn, the federal government accused the PDP of trying to “scuttle the polls” and prompt a constitutional crisis.

The initial vote was postponed early on 16 February, five hours before polls were due to open. Voters were also choosing members of the House of Representatives and Senate.

Most of the country was calm but there were reports of attacks by the Boko Haram Islamist militant group in the north, and voter intimidation and attempts to steal ballot boxes, especially in the southern states of Rivers, Lagos, and Anambra.

A coalition of civil society groups reported that a total of 16 people were killed around the country – fewer than in previous elections.

Destroyed ballot boxes in the Isolo district of the commercial capital, Lagos.
Image captionBallot boxes were destroyed in the Isolo district of Lagos

Two people were arrested in Lagos after a group of armed young men attacked voters, eyewitness Ralph Onodike told the BBC.

“What they were saying was that if you were not [voting for the ruling party] APC, you’ll be attacked,” he said.

How does the election work?

The candidate with the most votes is declared the winner in the first round, provided that person gains at least 25% of the votes in two-thirds of Nigeria’s states. There are 73 registered candidates, but Mr Buhari and Mr Abubakar have dominated the presidential election.

 

Both are from the mainly Muslim north of the country and both are in their 70s, while more than half of Nigeria’s 84 million registered voters are under 35.

Main presidential candidates

What are the main issues?

Nigeria is Africa’s largest oil producer but corruption and a failure to invest the proceeds from the industry have hampered development.

A slow recovery from a recession in 2016 means there are not enough jobs for the large number of young people joining the employment market. About a quarter of the working age population is unemployed.

Presentational grey line

Election in numbers

  • 73 million have voters’ cards
  • 51% of the electorate under the age of 35
  • 73 registered presidential candidates
  • 120,000 polling stations
Presentational grey line

Mr Buhari has quelled a militant Islamist rebellion in Nigeria’s north-east, but Boko Haram remains active. There has also been an upsurge in violence in the country’s Middle Belt as traditional herders and more settled farmers have clashed.

Until 1999 Nigeria was governed by either short-lived civilian administrations or military rulers. But this year marks 20 years since the return of democracy.

Mr Buhari was elected in 2015 – the first time an opposition candidate had defeated an incumbent to become president.

Nigeria election 2019: Election office burnt down six days before polls

Nigeria election 2019
An office for Nigeria’s election commission has been burned down

An office for Nigeria’s election commission has been burned down just six days before the country is due to vote in a general election.

The fire in Plateau State has destroyed everything needed to vote, including ballot boxes and voting slips.

A spokesperson called it a setback for the preparations for the election

On Sunday President Muhammadu Buhari warned of potential electoral fraud.

“The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has raised concerns over laundered money being funnelled into vote buying,” he said an editorial published in the Pulse newspaper.

He is running for re-election in Saturday’s poll where more than 84 million people are registered to vote.

Although there are many presidential candidates, analysts say Mr Buhari’s main contender is former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar.

Kidnapped Dapchi schoolgirls; no ransom paid-Gvt

The majority of the 110 Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped by militants in the town of Dapchi last month have been returned, the government says.

A presidential aide said 101 schoolgirls were dropped back in the town in the early hours of Wednesday.
The government said the army allowed the militants through, so “lives were not lost”, but denied paying a ransom.

However, reports suggest at least five girls died during their kidnapping, and that a Christian girl remains captive.

One of the freed girls, in a phone conversation with a relative, said the five had been crushed to death as they were herded into vehicles and driven away.

The girl said they were taken into the bush, to an “enclosed place”. When asked whether they were well fed, she said they had to cook their own food.

The government did not make any mention of deaths.

‘No ransom paid’
The father of one girl said she was being kept by the militants – thought to be from the Boko Haram group – because she refused to convert from Christianity to Islam. In a radio interview he said he was happy that she had not renounced her faith.

The BBC’s Tomi Oladipo says the government is likely to have given something in return for the girls’ release.

But Nigeria’s Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, told Reuters that “no ransom was paid”.

In Dapchi there was jubilation and shock at the unexpected arrival of the girls.

One of the girls’ parents, Kundili Bukar, told the BBC the militants drove into the town in a motorcade in the early hours of Wednesday morning and surrendered the girls to the community.

The militants are said to have left immediately. However, another parent told the BBC the extremists left them with a warning not to send their daughters back to school, threatening to return and kidnap them once more – only this time, there would be no chance of release.

The girls, who are described as being hungry and looking tired by parents, have been taken to hospital.

Tomi Oladipo, the BBC’s Africa security correspondent, explains why an IS-backed faction of Boko Haram, suspected to be behind the Dapchi girls abduction, is using a different playbook.

The return of more than 70 Dapchi schoolgirls indicates that a Boko Haram faction, led by Abu Musab al-Barnawi, is taking a different approach to kidnappings.

Negotiations for the Chibok girls’ release proved difficult under Boko Haram’s leader Abubakar Shekau. More than 100 of them still remain in captivity.

But despite reports, Wednesday’s release did not come free. Boko Haram definitely got something in return for waltzing back into Dapchi and dropping off the girls.

The problem going forward is that this will encourage the IS-linked militants to hit jackpot once again by raiding another community and abducting another set of people.

The Nigerian government might feel like it has averted the kind of global disrepute that plagued the administration of the former president, Goodluck Jonathan, following its poor response to the kidnapping of the Chibok girls.

But this is only a minor PR victory for President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration. Boko Haram and its various factions suffered no losses on Wednesday and they will remain a scourge in Nigeria.

The girls were taken from their school on the evening of Monday, 19 February, by a group of militants who had attacked the town of Dapchi.

Originally, it was claimed many of the girls had escaped and no-one had been kidnapped. But a week later, authorities admitted they were taken by the Islamist militants.

Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari came under increasing pressure to secure the girls’ release, especially as the kidnapping raised uncomfortable parallels with the abduction of the Chibok girls, who were taken from their school in neighbouring Borno state in April 2014.

More than 100 of the 276 kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls remain in captivity.

Herdsmen Killings: Faulting Buhari’s Management of Security Challenges

There is something wrong with the way that President Muhammadu Buhari is tackling the security challenges in the country. Something is fundamentally amiss in his security policy and modus operandi. That very thing needs to be expressly pointed out and highlighted before it is too late.

Vague references have already been made to the flaws and flops in letters that some concerned Nigerians have written, and in statements that have so far been released. Some have equated it to a form of political patronage. Others called it nepotism.

Whichever way that people may choose to describe this anomaly, security-wise, Buhari is increasingly becoming a polarizing figure. The Nigerian president is driving the country to the edge, fueling division and tension nationwide. Simply put, Buhari’s government has become a huge security threat.

Why do I say so?
President Buhari, a former military head of state, took office in 2015 vowing to focus on three priority areas, and one of them was security. Specifically, he pledged to root out Boko Haram. And to be fair to him, Buhari has tried to respond to that problem. Soldiers have made significant gains in containing the threat of Boko Haram.

Although going by recent developments, Boko Haram has not been defeated as Buhari claimed.
The security challenges that Buhari faced actually became more complicated and multifaceted with the agitation for Biafra and increased cases of kidnapping and militancy in the Niger Delta. But Buhari has in trying to address these challenges worsened the security situation.

A cursorily look at the way and manner that Buhari has addressed these security challenges including the case of El Zak Zaky and the Shiites indicate ethnoreligious bias, hatred, and prejudice.

By the way, some eminent Nigerians have already expressed concerns over Buhari’s lopsided appointments especially the security chiefs noting that he ignored the internal political dynamics. Some of Buhari’s supporters have dismissed these concerns as wailings by political jobbers and losers. Well if one takes a critical look at the breeding tensions and animosities in many parts of the country as a result of the activities of the security agencies, it is obvious that those concerns and criticisms were not totally misplaced.

They were not baseless and inconsequential, as some have suggested. These appointments have left Nigeria more divided and polarised.

Let’s just take a look at how the security agencies responded to four security challenges- the demonstrations by Shiites, the militancy in the Niger Delta, the agitation for Biafra, and the killings by Fulani herdsmen. It is so obvious. The management of these security issues drips with unfairness, imbalance, and bias.

First of all, soldiers responded to the demonstrations by members of Shiites by attacking and killing some of them including the children of the leader in Nigeria. Buhari has kept El Zak Zaky in detention refusing to release him. None of those behind the attack and killing of Shiite members has been brought to justice.

What exactly was the crime of El Zak Zaky and his Shiite members? On the other hand what happened to the perpetrators on blasphemy killings in Kano, Niger, and Zamfara? Nothing. Why have the security agencies not fished out and dealt with the blasphemy killers?

While in the Niger Delta, the security agencies have engaged in extrajudicial killings of real or imagined militants in the area.

There is virtually no place or option for prosecution and rehabilitation of suspects as Buhari has openly canvassed in the case of the herdsmen.

Buhari ordered similar military operation against all suspected agitators of Biafra. Videos and images of brutal attacks and killings of suspected members of IPOB by soldiers went viral on the Internet. Corpses of some real or imagined Biafra agitators who were shot and killed by Nigerian soldiers including those holding Biafran flags have been discovered in the bush.

The leader of IPOB and some of his associates have gone missing since soldiers invaded the home last year.

Now compare that to the case of the Fulani herdsmen. Buhari has been calling for caution, dialogue and disarming of the herdsmen. The attacks have often taken the soldiers by surprise. The attackers have been elusive.

Until recently, no arrest was made because the security agencies claimed that they could not trace these killer herdsmen. Neither the police nor the soldiers were able to apprehend any suspect.

Buhari did not send soldiers after the herdsmen the way he did in the case of the militants and agitators in the Niger Delta and in the Southeast respectively.

In fact, a sitting governor arranged and paid money to the herdsmen so that they could stop attacking and killing people in his own state. Buhari personally ordered that herdsmen be disarmed, suspected attackers should be taken to court and be prosecuted. Buhari did not declare the herdsmen association a terrorist organization.

Even after the incessant attacks and killing in Benue, the leader and his members have been moving about freely and the killings have are still going on.

Now let’s face it, actually, some Niger Delta militants have killed and kidnapped persons. But their murderous activities cannot in any way be compared with the bloodletting that Fulani herdsmen have unleashed on this nation. Shiite members and Biafra agitators staged demonstrations. Biafra agitators issued threats and engaged in incitement of hatred and violence.

The leader of IPOB asked for arms in a video. But the Buhari government has made it seem as if the Biafra agitations and the Shiite demonstrations posed more threat to the nation than the terror and savagery of the Fulani herdsmen. Comparatively speaking that is not the case.

Just look at how Buhari’s security agents dealt with Shiite members and their leader. They shot, killed and wounded them for staging demonstrations. Look at what happened to the Biafra agitators and their leader. But it was a different stroke for the herdsmen.

Nobody is calling for the extrajudicial attacks, execution, and detention of herdsmen and their leaders. Fulanis are Nigerians. Law-abiding Fulani herdsmen should be treated with dignity and respect. But the fact remains that Buhari’s bias in dealing with these security challenges has been so glaring.

In his inaugural speech in 2015, Buhari stated that he belonged to everybody and that he belonged to nobody. But today, Nigerians know better. Nigerians are in no doubt as to the body that President Muhammadu Buhari belongs. Buhari’s lopsided appointments have revealed where he belongs.

The way he is addressing the security challenges says it all. In fact, the way that President Buhari is managing the security issues in the country poses more challenge to the future and survival of the nation than the combined threats of Niger Delta militancy, Biafra agitation and attacks by Fulani herdsmen.

Leo Igwe is a regular contributor of the Maravi Post.

The views expressed in this article are not necessarily the views of the Publisher or the Editor of the Maravi Post.