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NIGERIA STATE OF IMPUNITY, HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE AND ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR – WHERE WOULD GANI HAVE STOOD?

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NATIONAL CONSCIENCE PARTY OF NIGERIA
7TH GANI FAWEHINMI
MEMORIAL LECTURE
SERIES
NIGERIA STATE OF IMPUNITY, HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE AND ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR – WHERE WOULD GANI HAVE STOOD?
(Being text of paper delivered at the 7th Year Memorial Programme for late Chief Gani Fawehinmi, LL.D, SAN, SAM, on Monday, September 5, 2016 at the International Event Centre, Igbatoro Parliament Road, Alagbaka, Akure, Ondo State)
BY  EBUN-OLU ADEGBORUWA, ESQ.
INTRODUCTION
It is not surprising to have this discourse at this time, when our dear country is in dire need of leadership. The heroes gone by, in times past, had helped to guide Nigeria right, with their struggles of commitment, selfless sacrifices and nation building.
I do humbly urge that we maintain a minute silence in honour of Chief Gani Fawehinmi and all other heroes of our nation.
When I was approached to be the Guest Speaker for this occasion, I felt some sense of unease, arising mainly from my personal disenchantment with the community of activists and pro-democracy campaigners, in regard to all the recent ugly developments in our nation, to which they have either directly acquiesced or indirectly encouraged.
It is now seven years that Chief Gani Fawehinmi (Gani) passed away and I believe that myself and other Nigerians miss him a lot.
WHO WAS GANI?
To be able to understand or speculate on how a person would react in any given situation, one must at least know that person, to some extent. So, the question then is: Who was Gani?
Gani was born as Ganiyu Oyesola Fawehinmi, on Friday, April 22, 1938, into the family of Chief Saheed Tugbogbo Fawehinmi, the Seriki Musulumi of Ondo and Alhaja Muniratu Fawehinmi. He was married in his lifetime to Mrs. Ganiat Ibukun Fawehinmi and Mrs. Abike Fawehinmi, with many children and grand children.
Gani had his early education at Ansar-Ud-Deen Primary School, Iyemaja, Ondo, from 1947-1953 and his secondary school at Victory College, Ikare, from 1954 to 1958. Whilst in the College, he was popularly known as ‘Nation’ because of his passionate interest in national, legal and political affairs of Nigeria.

In January 1959, Gani headed for Lagos and worked as a Clerk in the High Court, Lagos. On 29th of April, 1961, Gani travelled out of Nigeria by Sea to the United Kingdom, where he enrolled in the Holborn College of Law for the LL.B degree of University of London (External) in 1961. He was forced, by the circumstance of the death of his father in 1963, to drop out of the College as a full time student and had to be engaged as Toilet Cleaner in Russell Square Hotel in Southampton Row, London. He also combined this with the job of Sweeper in the old Gatwick Airport, managing to complete his training.
Gani came back to Nigeria in September, 1964 and enrolled at the Nigerian Law School, Lagos. He was called to the Nigerian Bar on 15th of January, 1965.
He practiced briefly with his elder brother, Hon. Justice Rasheed Fawehinmi in Ebute-Metta, before establishing his own Chambers in 1965. In 1974, he moved his Chambers to his house in Surulere. In 1978, he finally moved the Chambers to its permanent site in Anthony Village.
As of 2002, Gani had over 290,000 collection of law and law-related books on various subjects, in his Chambers and had a staff strength of about 201. The notable characteristics of his Chambers include a high sense of responsibility to professional duties, professional ethics, dedication to research, hardwork, truth, honesty, obedience to the rule of law and due process, protection, defence and advancement of fundamental rights.
Between 1965 and 2002, Gani had handled about 5,700 briefs, traversing all courts in virtually all the states of the federation. He was in deep love with the poor and the less privileged, whose cases he handled free of legal charges and whose causes he fought tirelessly.
Gani changed the course of legal practice in Nigeria, with the establishment of the Nigerian Weekly Law Reports, NWLR, IN 1985. He has also published several cases.
Gani used his knowledge and skill of law to fight societal injustice and oppression, following which he filed and prosecuted so many cases in court, amongst which is the famous Fawehinmi v Akilu cases, Fawehinmi v Abacha, Fawehinmi v IGP, Fawehinmi v INEC, etc.
Gani established the National Conscience Party in 1994, principally to rally nationwide support for the activation of the June 12, 1993 election mandate, for the entrenchment of democracy in Nigeria, to provide a platform for genuine change in Nigeria and for the emancipation of the masses from political, economic and socio-cultural enslavement. The NCP had the unique motto of: Abolition of Poverty. He declared his intention to contest election as the presidential candidate of the NCP in April 2002.
His love for the masses and less privileged led him to set up a scholarship scheme since 1971. Every year, scholarships are awarded to brilliant children all over Nigeria, to support their education in various schools.
Gani suffered in the hands of the powers that be, having been arrested and detained not less than 32 times in various police stations and prisons across Nigeria. His passport was seized several times, his houses and chambers searched at random and without notice, his books were confiscated and several trumped up criminal charges were filed against him, as a way of silencing him. He was physically assaulted on several occasions, one of which was on Wednesday, October 20, 1999, at the Federal High Court, Lagos, when rented political thugs attempted to kill him, but could only smash the glass of his Pajero Jeep, on account of the case he instituted in court to compel the Inspector-General of Police to investigate allegations of certificate forgery and false declaration, against the former Governor of Lagos State, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
Gani won several laurels and awards, in recognition of his struggle for the masses, amongst which was membership of the Ghandi Foundation in 1971, Senior Advocate of the Masses, 1988, Bruno Kriesky Award for the defence of human rights in 1993, American Bar Association Award for human rights in 1996 and the prestigious Bernard Simons Memorial Award by the International Bar Association in1998. He was voted Man of the Year by several newspapers and organisations. He was elevated to the Inner Bar as Senior Advocate of Nigeria in September, 2001.
GANI’S PRINCIPLES
Now that we know a bit of Gani, the next thing is to know his principles, as bench mark for determining his likely reaction to events in Nigeria presently.
When Gani declared his presidential bid in April 2002, he launched THE 10-CARE Programme, which essential deals with:
1.            Employment                      2.            Food Care
3.            Health Care                        4.            Housing Care
5.            Education Care  6.            Water Care
7.            Electricity Care  8.            Transportation Care
9.            Telecoms Care  10.          Security Care
On the platform of the NCP, Gani promised four fundamental action points, to sanitise the Nigerian society.
1.            Corruption                          2.            Unemployment
3.            Cost of Funds                    4.            Exchange Rate Mechanism
STATE OF THE NATION
To be able to discern what Gani would have done in any given situation, it is important to examine and x-ray that situation critically. And this necessarily leads us to the state of the Nigerian nation.
Without any doubt whatsoever, I believe that Nigerians are now united in their opinion that the General Muhammadu Buhari regime is the worst that Nigeria has ever experienced in its national life.
There is palpable hunger, suffering, poverty, inflation and hopelessness, in the land, across Nigeria. It has never been this bad. Let us look at a few examples.
In Ilorin, Kwara State, it was reported that a housewife lamented her situation when she was cooking and went out to fetch some things and her pot of soup had been stolen before she returned.
In Ilesha, Osun State, it was reported that a man used his daughter to deceive a shop owner to release a bag of garri to him and abandoned the child in the process.
In Akwa Ibom State, it was reported that a father of two committed suicide on account of poverty and economic frustration, leaving a suicide note, for  Gen Buhari as the cause of his death.
In Lagos last week, a middle aged man jumped into the Lagos Lagoon, shouting Buhari, Buhari, as the reason for his attempted suicide. The list is almost endless.
In many states of the federation presently, workers are not paid, for months, some are being forced to combine working with farming, by their governors, as a means of short changing them of their legitimate salaries. As a result of this, children are being withdrawn from schools, since their parents cannot pay their school fees, marriages are facing challenges for lack of basic amenities.
The President does not seem to care, truly, given his utterances and actions. He has expressed a preference for the 1984/85 period of doom, whereby Nigerians will be forced to queue for essential commodities, whereby dictatorship and totalitarianism will become the style of governance. In most states presently, democratic governance in the local government system is suspended for caretaker committees, who are nominees and stooges of the governors. Even in Lagos State where the NCP won a court judgment compelling the conduct of local government elections, the government has blatantly refused to obey the judgment of the court, even where there is no order for a stay of execution pending appeal. In the case of Lagos State, executive lawlessness took a new dimension when the Governor, not only dared the court by disobeying the judgment on local government elections, but proceeded to appoint new sole administrators, after the judgment of the court, clearly in contravention of section 7 of the 1999 Constitution.
It took the President over six months to constitute his cabinet, as he preferred to be a lone ranger, and this eventually trickled down to the states. In Osun State, Governor Rauf Aregbesola has been a sole administrator for the past two years, ruling the state without a single commissioner, no special advisers, in contravention of section 192 of the 1999 Constitution, that there must be regular meetings of the State Executive Council, consisting of the Governor and his Commissioners. Worst still in Osun, the Osun State House of Assembly has been romancing with the Governor as a dictator, approving yearly budgets prepared and submitted by the Governor as a single individual without commissioners. The Assembly in Osun even approved the creation of LCDAs, in a state without commissioners!
This dictatorship is replicated in Oyo State and indeed in many other States. Only last week, it was reported that the Governor of Rivers State, sacked four of his commissioners, including the State Accountant General, for alleged indiscipline. They all follow the body language of dictatorship.
The present administration has great hatred and contempt for the judiciary, whose orders and judgments are never obeyed. Since March 2014, the Federal High Court in Lagos, declared the collection of toll fees illegal, but the Lagos State Government has continued to collect the tolls; in 2015, the same Federal High Court declared the restriction of movement for the monthly environmental sanitation in Lagos State as illegal but the government has continued to force people indoors, despite the judgment. The same Federal High Court, had restrained the federal government from implementing the callous electricity tariff increase, but the government has wantonly disobeyed the order of the court and has continued to force consumers to pay the new tariff.
The judiciary generally, is under some form of siege from the Buhari administration, as so many judges have been sacked in very controversial circumstances, including Justice Oloyede, in Osun State, who was booted out of office for allegedly confronting the Governor of the State. Judges are being intimidated directly, through the agencies of government, like the EFCC and the ICPC. It is worse for lawyers and activists alike, all of whose life are now in great danger. Just last week, human rights lawyer, Ken Atsuwete, was murdered in cold blood. Telephone lines of most defence lawyers have been hacked into and bugged by the agencies of government, denying them of any privacy, as guaranteed by the Constitution. The intolerance of the Buhari regime climbed to the roof last month, when a young man, Fortunates Chinakwe, was arrested, locked up and eventually arraigned in court, for daring to give a name to his dog, that resembled the name of the President. He ended up in prison custody and his life has been in danger, ever since.
CORRUPTION
Yes, Gen Buhari claims to be fighting corruption, as his main programme of action. Yes again, Gani hated corruption with all his veins. So he promised to set up a Ministry of Anti-Corruption, MAC, which will compile the names of all past leaders, their assets and publish them publicly. So, without any doubt, Gani would have supported the anti-corruption war of the Major-General Muhammadu Buhari (Retd.) administration, in all its ramifications. He held on tightly, to section 15 (5) of the 1999 Constitution which enjoins the State to “abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of powers”.
However, Gani being a stickler for the rule of law and due process, would have disagreed with the operational methodology of the anti-corruption campaign, which is presently lopsided and selective. He would have put pressure on Gen Buhari to first probe his campaign funds and all members of his own political party who have held power in the past. By now, Gani would have filed several cases in court to compel all public officers to declare their assets publicly, in line with the campaign promises of the president.
And we know that the so-called fight against corruption by the General Buhari regime, is part and parcel of the hidden agenda, to perpetuate himself in power, beyond 2019, even in the face of his dwindling popularity. Opponents of government, members of the opposition party, and even business rivals of those in government, indigenes of ethnic groups different from the ones preferred by those who are in power, are the ones that end up in court or in custody of the agencies of government. The anti-corruption war is simply a game of giving a dog a bad name to hang it, solely for the purpose of frustrating the electoral fortunes of opposition candidates, who may likely stand against those candidates of the ruling party.
The dictatorship is then extended to the Legislature, where the leaders of parliament, who emerged contrary to the preferred candidates of the President and his party, have been subject of criminal trials, all in an attempt to remove them from office. The latest one is that of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, whom we are told will now be arraigned in court, in consequence of the incompetence of the President, who signed the Appropriation Bill into law, after months of his acclaimed scrutiny and then turn around to claim that it was padded. So, with the judiciary and the legislature under lock and key, with watchers breathing down on them daily, the atmosphere of dictatorship has finally ripened.
Let us now examine other possible ways that Gani would have reacted to the state of our nation presently, were he to be alive today.
ECONOMY
Gani believed in a liberal transparent exchange rate policy that is consistent. He believed that the exchange rate is determined by a combination of corruption in the banks and in the corridors of power. He would have kicked against the present system whereby only a few people determine the destiny of the economy of Nigeria.
FUEL PRICE INCREASE
Without any doubt, Gani would have opposed and mobilized Nigerians to resist the recent increase of fuel prices. He did so on all previous occasions.
The two things that seem to determine the economy of Nigeria are the price of petroleum products and the exchange rate of our currency. So Gani always wanted a system that would guaranty a friendly package for all the masses of our people. These two items determine the rate of inflation and now that they are both out of reach of the ordinary people, Nigerians have been thrown into unprecedented suffering, whilst our leaders go about in luxury and opulence, in their jets and convoys. Whether we like it or not, with this sliding exchange rate, the price of petroleum products will be increased soon.
THE POLITY
The present administration has wrecked the political landscape of Nigeria. The electoral umpire is now INCONCLUSIVE National Electoral Commission (INEC), as most elections are inconclusive, due mainly to the overbearing influence of the ruling party on the agency. It has been stated by Dr. Junaid that most of the senior officers of INEC are relatives and adopted children of the President, over whom he has tremendous influence. Most of the key members of the staff working in the Presidency are said to be related to the President in one way or the other. The level of nepotism in appointments is so great, against section 14 of the 1999 Constitution on federal character.
Unofficially, we are in a one party state presently, with only APC as the ruling party and at the same time the opposition. The party that should play the role of the opposition, PDP, has been bugged with sponsored internal crisis and most of its prominent officers have been harassed into silence by the government, the hidden agenda being to give a soft landing to all the candidates of the APC in all coming elections.
This can only explain the reason why the government has been ruling as if the people do not matter. Except it has perfected the process of its transition to power, to perpetuate itself, no reasonable government that seeks to win a free and fair election, can proceed to be implementing the anti-people policies of this government.
TRANSPORTATION
The manifesto of the APC talks about constructing at least 3,500 kilometres of national highways every year but no single road has been commissioned so far. Our people die daily in avoidable road crashes.
The Kaduna-Abuja rail that was recently commissioned was a project started by the previous administration.
Air transportation has more or less collapsed, presently, with local airlines such as AERO, 1st Nation, etc, packing up. Flights are cancelled abruptly or delayed unduly, due to the absence of aviation fuel and the exchange rate has forced many foreign airlines to close shop and relocate to other countries. The same goes for admiralty as most shipping companies have since wound up their businesses.
EDUCATION
This is topmost priority for Gani as he devoted his life and resources to promote education. The President had promised to feed school children during his campaign but after the election, he has denied the helpless pupils.
Admission into unity schools has been highly politicised, making the expensive private schools the best option for education at that level. University admission has become elusive, with inconsistent policies of government. Government interference in the autonomy of the universities has stagnated the progress of these institutions, whose governing councils are dissolved at will, contrary to law. The universities are not funded to achieve research and academic excellence, resulting mostly in exodus of students to neighbouring countries such as Ghana, Kenya, South Africa.
And when students eventually graduate in the face of these hiccups, they are confronted with unemployment, inflation and violence.
HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES
The government of General Buhari has never hidden its disdain for human rights and freedoms. It descended on armless Shiite Moslems in Kaduna, killed thousands of their members, destroying their houses and keeping their leaders in perpetual custody. As of today, nobody truly knows the state of Ibrahim El-Zak Zakky, whether he is alive or dead. Amnesty International estimated that over 3,500 members of the sect were killed and given mass burial.
Members of the Independent Peoples of Biafra, IPOB, who were only celebrating the anniversary of the Biafra, we felled by the bullets of soldiers and policemen all the South East region of Nigeria. It is estimated that over 1,000 members of IPOB have been killed on the orders of the Buhari government.
There is pogrom going on in the Niger-Delta region presently, where soldiers have taken over virtually all the streets and homes of their leaders, all in an attempt to silence the agitation for resource control. The police stations across the country are filled with citizens who have been arrested on charges relating to civil disputes on land, commercial transactions and landlord and tenant. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has become a tool of oppression of all opposition voices in the land, where suspects are denied bail, to the extent that some of them die in the custody of the agency.
Gani would not have tolerated such wanton disregard for peoples’ rights and freedoms, which has characterised the Buhari administration, since its inception, even up till this moment.
GOVERNMENT OF NATIONAL UNITY
Without any doubt, Gani would have called for a broad based government of national unity, wherein all talented and experienced Nigerians, would be encouraged to contribute to our national development, given that the APC led government has more or less loss its sense of direction, thereby running the economy aground.
Gani would have mobilized the human rights community and civil society and labour to embark upon peaceful protests, all over the land, to reject the poverty and suffering that this government has imposed upon the people of Nigeria.
We can no longer leave our national destinies in the hands of the politicians alone, we must all come together and rescue our land from predators, promise breakers and clueless leaders.
RESTRUCTURING
Upon the establishment of the Government of National Unity, Gani would have advocated for proper restructuring of Nigeria, into a proper federation, with the devolution of power to the regions and the local governments. With Gani, the courts would have been agog with myriad of cases on the countless acts of impunity that we have been forced to put up with in this country.
Adieu, Gani, for Nigeria can never have another gadfly, another stormy petrel, another enigma, like you.
Gani’s personal motto, which he published boldly in his chambers, was:
“Stand up for what is right, even if you stand alone.”
Adieu Gani, and all our past heroes.
Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, Esq.

Ugwumba: The Pride Of His People – By Onwuasoanya FCC Jones

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Ugwumba: The Pride Of His People – By Onwuasoanya FCC Jones
Names are not just given for its sound to the ears, but mostly for its melody to the head and also the heart. Names are the most important identities a person can have. Parents give names to their children based on what they expect their children to turn out to be in future, their wishes from them or even as reflections of their personal experiences either as it directly affects the child in question or experiences that are personal to either of the parents. A good number of the time, these names direct the fate of these children and more.
 
Chieftaincy titles provide an opportunity for communities to appropriately name those around them according to what roles they have played in that community. Unlike names given to people at childhood, chieftaincy titles tell the story of those who bear them. It is the story of how the community views you and how you have contributed to the growth of that community. Even in the present age, while a good number of chieftaincy titles are given to highest bidders without enough regard for how such names reflect in their daily living and in their activities within the community or its neighbours, there are still chieftaincy titles that are wholly meritorious and the choice of titles fitting.
Ugwumba is not the kind of chieftaincy title that should be accorded to just about anybody, maybe because of his position in government or his status, financially. You must have become somebody worth the name by the things you do for the community or the things you do on your individual capacity that bring pride to the community. For instance, a philanthropist whose source of wealth is not clearly known may take such titles as; Omereoha, Omepuru Onye odiara, Ochiriozuo, etc. these titles do not have anything to do with their integrity as individuals but with what they do with what they have got. It does not also necessarily need to be that their philanthropic gestures are extended to the communities in question, but could be as a result of their philanthropic activities anywhere.
Ugwumba simply means the pride of the land, or the pride of a people. It can also be Onye Mba ji eme onu, meaning, he whom the land or the people gloat about. Ugwumba is an ambassador of the land, a torch bearer, a pacesetter and a role model, who must not only project the community in good light through his actions and adventures, but also stand out in all things good.
Ugwumba Uche Nwosu has so many reasons why he is so deserving of the title. In truth, some of us had disparaged him in the past, arguing that he got to where he is in the present day government, merely because he is the son-in-law to the Governor, or as a result of his longstanding relationship with the Governor. This argument has with time and more research being proven not to be completely correct. One of those I engaged on this topic recently, flogged sense into me with better argument, and some of the questions he asked me that got me rethinking so many things are; Is Uche Nwosu the only person who has ever served Owelle Okorocha? Could there not be something special in him that made him win the confidence of the Governor more than even those aides of the Governor who are even connected with him in blood? Is there any position, the present Chief of Staff has occupied within the lifespan of this government that he does not deserve?
That is the good thing about engaging in polemics with the constructive minded. They will not waste their time and saliva insulting or threatening you, they will take you on, point for point, fact for fact and in any other constructive ways. I was not able to find a way to answer those questions in the negative, and I haven’t completely lost hope of defeating this stubborn defender of the Rescue Mission, so I leave these questions for my readers here to please provide answers for me that I will hit him back with, the next time we shall be talking about this. For your information, I will be most glad to get answers to this question, in the negative. However, I am sure that Uche Nwosu is not the first ever person to have served Owelle, he is not also related to the Governor in blood, before his marriage to the Governor’s daughter. I am also sure that the youthful Chief of Staff is qualified for every position he has ever being appointed into by this government.
In the meantime, the gentleman in question was able to convince me that Ugwumba Uche Nwosu must have been able to rise to where he is today through diligence, honesty, patience, modesty, and some other attributes that are in scarce supply among today’s youths. There are few big men, who will allow the son of someone who does not belong in the class of those assumed to own Nigeria, to marry their daughters. That chap must have shown unusual promises and merited the confidence of not just the man, but also the mother.
This reminds me of a short article I wrote sometime last year, precisely, after the Social Media Merit Award event where the duo of Uche Nwosu and Chike Okafor were recognized with merit awards. The Chief of Staff used that event to tell the youths some secrets of his success. He told a story of how he has remained with the Governor from times when things were very tough till now when things seem to be looking up. He also told a story of how some people who were with the Governor left him after his failed bids at the Senate, governorship, presidency, but he stuck on. A man who remains consistent in the right things, is worth being conferred with the honour of the pride of his people. This is because consistency is rare among people today, both the young and the old. I must be fast to add too, that being consistent in non-beneficial endeavors is a sign of madness. You don’t continue cutting an iroko tree with a razor blade, just because you think that consistency pays.
In government, Ugwumba Uche Nwosu has done a lot for his people, too. He has ensured that utilizes every opportunity that presents itself to bring development to his people of Eziama-Obaire, Nkwere people in general and the entire people of Imo State. I did not have any argument with someone who described him as the shining light of the Rescue Mission Government, for I can confirm that he works overtime. He is one appointee of this government, who is most passionate about the success of the government and the political programs of the Rescue Mission.
For someone with the kind of influence he has in the present Imo State government, Uche Nwosu’s humility is sterling. There are few youths who will have the influence he presently has in both State and Federal government of today, and not become unbearably arrogant. But, the Nkwere born Estate Surveyor turned politician has remained true to himself- humble, accessible and passionate about development.
Apart from his community, another group of people to whom, the young Chief of Staff is a pride to, is the youth community in Imo State. The young politicians has being instrumental to ensuring that a good number of Imo youths are brought in to serve in the government than any other person has done. Instead of alienating his fellow youths for fear of being competed against, he has continued to leave his doors open to them and allowing them opportunities to bring their talents to bear in the service of the State.
Also, Imo State University community also agrees that Chief Nwosu is truly the Ugwumba of that university, as he has continued to do his best to give back to the university where he cut his political teeth for the very first time, having served as the Director of Transports in that University’s Students Union Government, in the early days of that university. It was also in his days as a student activist that he made his first contact with Owelle Rochas Okorocha. In the last five years that he has being serving in this government, Hon. Nwosu has created an endowment fund for the best graduating students from his department, built public toilet for the institution and extended assistance to the Lake Nwaebere campus of that university in more ways than one.
For us in the Alumni Association, there is no single individual who has contributed more than Uche Nwosu to the development of the Alumni Association. The first ever Homecoming event organized by the Alumni was majorly funded by the Chief of Staff, who contributed both finance and assisted in providing logistics for the success of the program. The plan by the leadership of the Alumni to set up a Ten Million Naira Endowment Fund for the University has also received a big boost from the youthful and development loving Chief of Staff.
This is congratulating the ebullient Imo Chief of Staff on the conferment of the chieftaincy title of Ugwumba Nkwere by HRM, the Eshi of Nkwere. May more feathers decorate his cap, as I pray that he gets more insight on how best to serve the people of Imo State in particular and Nigeria in general, as I am sure that the future holds better promises.

PRESS RELEASE: IMO STATE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL DECISIONS

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PRESS RELEASE

IMO STATE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL DECISIONS

During the Imo State Executive Council meeting held yesterday at the Ndubuisi Kanu Executive Council Chambers, Government House Owerri, the Executive Council made the following approvals among others:-

1. To employ 5 graduates per ward (from the 305 Inec wards) to beefup the civil service of Imo State. The graduates MUST be computer literate.

2. To pay the pensioners in the State for the Month of August 2016, while Government continues its negotiations with the Pension Union on how to clear the rest of the pension arears.

3. Imo State Independent Electoral Commission to conduct the Local Government Council Election by January, 2017

4. The relocation of the Eke-ukwu Owerri Market, Ama Awusa, Yam sellers all at Douglas Road and all the street traders along Douglas Road Owerri by September 30, 2016. By this, the affected traders have been given till September 30, 2016 to relocate.

Dr. Vitalis Orikeze Ajumbe
Hon. Commissioner for Information, Tourism and Public utilities
Imo State.

FIGHT FOR WOMEN’S EQUALITY

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FIGHT FOR WOMEN’S EQUALITY
A true humanist, Thomas Sankara grasped that the fight for women’s equality was part of the fight for racial equality. The following excerpts are from
The revolution cannot triumph without the emancipation of women speech, which he held to a rally of several thousand women in Ouagadougou, the capital city of Burkina Faso, commemorating International Women’s Day on March 8, 1987.
(Source: Thomas Sankara Speaks Copyright © 1990, 2007 Pathfinder Press)
·         Posing the question of women in Burkinabè society today means posing the abolition of the system of slavery to which they have been subjected for millennia. The first step is to try to understand how this system works, to grasp its real nature in all its subtlety, in order then to work out a line of action that can lead to women’s total emancipation. In other words, in order to win this battle that men and women have in common, we must be familiar with all aspects of the woman question on a world scale and here in Burkina. We must understand how the struggle of the Burkinabè woman is part of a worldwide struggle of all women and, beyond that, part of the struggle for the full rehabilitation of our continent. Thus, women’s emancipation is at the heart of the question of humanity itself, here and everywhere. The question is thus universal in character.

·         Women’s fate is bound up with that of an exploited male. However, this solidarity must not blind us in looking at the specific situation faced by womenfolk in our society. It is true that the woman worker and simple man are exploited economically, but the worker wife is also condemned further to silence by her worker husband. This is the same method used by men to dominate other men! The idea was crafted that certain men, by virtue of their family origin and birth, or by ‘divine rights’, were superior to others.
·         From the first beginnings of human history, man’s mastering of nature has never been accomplished with his bare hands alone. The hand with the opposable thumb reaches out for the tool, which increases the hand’s power. It was thus not physical attributes alone–musculature or the capacity to give birth, for example–that determined the unequal status of men and women. Nor was it technological progress as such that institutionalized this inequality. In certain cases, in certain parts of the globe, women were able to eliminate the physical difference that separated them from men. It was rather the transition from one form of society to another that served to institutionalize women’s inequality. This inequality was produced by our own minds and intelligence in order to develop a concrete form of domination and exploitation. The social function and role to which women have been relegated ever since is a living reflection of this fact. Today, her childbearing functions and the social obligation to conform to models of elegance determined by men prevent any woman who might want to from developing a so-called male musculature.
·         For millennia, from the Paleolithic to the Bronze Age, relations between the sexes were, in the opinion of the most skilled paleontologists, positive and complementary in character. So it was for eight millennia! As Frederick Engels explained to us, relations were based on collaboration and interaction, in contrast to the patriarchy, where women’s exclusion was a generalized characteristic of the epoch. Engels not only traced the evolution of technology but also of the historic enslavement of women, which occurred with the appearance of private property, when one mode of production gave way to another, and when one form of social organization replaced another….
·         Humankind first knew slavery with the advent of private property. Man, master of his slaves and of the land, became in addition the woman’s master. This was the historic defeat of the female sex. It came about with the upheaval in the division of labor and as a result of new modes of production and a revolution in the means of production. In this way, paternal right replaced maternal right. Property was now handed down from father to son, rather than as before from the woman to her clan. The patriarchal family made its appearance, founded on the sole and personal property of the father, who had become head of the family. Within this family the woman was oppressed….
·         Inequality can be done away with only by establishing a new society, where men and women will enjoy equal rights, resulting from an upheaval in the means of production and in all social relations. Thus, the status of women will improve only with the elimination of the system that exploits them….
·         Her status overturned by private property, banished from her very self, relegated to the role of child raiser and servant, written out of history by philosophy (Aristotle, Pythagoras, and others) and the most entrenched religions, stripped of all worth by mythology, woman shared the lot of a slave, who in slave society was nothing more than a beast of burden with a human face.

A true humanist, Thomas Sankara grasped that the fight for women’s equality was part of the fight for racial equality. The following excerpts are from
The revolution cannot triumph without the emancipation of women speech, which he held to a rally of several thousand women in Ouagadougou, the capital city of Burkina Faso, commemorating International Women’s Day on March 8, 1987.
(Source: Thomas Sankara Speaks Copyright © 1990, 2007 Pathfinder Press)
·         Posing the question of women in Burkinabè society today means posing the abolition of the system of slavery to which they have been subjected for millennia. The first step is to try to understand how this system works, to grasp its real nature in all its subtlety, in order then to work out a line of action that can lead to women’s total emancipation. In other words, in order to win this battle that men and women have in common, we must be familiar with all aspects of the woman question on a world scale and here in Burkina. We must understand how the struggle of the Burkinabè woman is part of a worldwide struggle of all women and, beyond that, part of the struggle for the full rehabilitation of our continent. Thus, women’s emancipation is at the heart of the question of humanity itself, here and everywhere. The question is thus universal in character.
·         Women’s fate is bound up with that of an exploited male. However, this solidarity must not blind us in looking at the specific situation faced by womenfolk in our society. It is true that the woman worker and simple man are exploited economically, but the worker wife is also condemned further to silence by her worker husband. This is the same method used by men to dominate other men! The idea was crafted that certain men, by virtue of their family origin and birth, or by ‘divine rights’, were superior to others.
·         From the first beginnings of human history, man’s mastering of nature has never been accomplished with his bare hands alone. The hand with the opposable thumb reaches out for the tool, which increases the hand’s power. It was thus not physical attributes alone–musculature or the capacity to give birth, for example–that determined the unequal status of men and women. Nor was it technological progress as such that institutionalized this inequality. In certain cases, in certain parts of the globe, women were able to eliminate the physical difference that separated them from men. It was rather the transition from one form of society to another that served to institutionalize women’s inequality. This inequality was produced by our own minds and intelligence in order to develop a concrete form of domination and exploitation. The social function and role to which women have been relegated ever since is a living reflection of this fact. Today, her childbearing functions and the social obligation to conform to models of elegance determined by men prevent any woman who might want to from developing a so-called male musculature.
·         For millennia, from the Paleolithic to the Bronze Age, relations between the sexes were, in the opinion of the most skilled paleontologists, positive and complementary in character. So it was for eight millennia! As Frederick Engels explained to us, relations were based on collaboration and interaction, in contrast to the patriarchy, where women’s exclusion was a generalized characteristic of the epoch. Engels not only traced the evolution of technology but also of the historic enslavement of women, which occurred with the appearance of private property, when one mode of production gave way to another, and when one form of social organization replaced another….
·         Humankind first knew slavery with the advent of private property. Man, master of his slaves and of the land, became in addition the woman’s master. This was the historic defeat of the female sex. It came about with the upheaval in the division of labor and as a result of new modes of production and a revolution in the means of production. In this way, paternal right replaced maternal right. Property was now handed down from father to son, rather than as before from the woman to her clan. The patriarchal family made its appearance, founded on the sole and personal property of the father, who had become head of the family. Within this family the woman was oppressed….
·         Inequality can be done away with only by establishing a new society, where men and women will enjoy equal rights, resulting from an upheaval in the means of production and in all social relations. Thus, the status of women will improve only with the elimination of the system that exploits them….
·         Her status overturned by private property, banished from her very self, relegated to the role of child raiser and servant, written out of history by philosophy (Aristotle, Pythagoras, and others) and the most entrenched religions, stripped of all worth by mythology, woman shared the lot of a slave, who in slave society was nothing more than a beast of burden with a human face.

Race for Beauty and Brain: Mr. and Miss IMSU 2016 holds Sept. 14

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Race for Beauty and Brain: Mr. and Miss IMSU 2016 holds Sept. 14

 

The race is on  for the latest Beauty and Brain King and Queen of Imo State University Owerri (IMSU), as GistGate Media Group in collaboration with Imo State University 15th republic Students Union Government. Directorate of Socials is set to mark the 2016 edition of Mr. and Miss IMSU.
Tagged ‘The Extraordinary Version’, the pageant which has come to stay as the premium pageant of the campus (one of the most populated in South-East Nigeria), is set to assemble the most beautiful ladies and the most handsome gentlemen from different departments and Faculties of the University as they vie for the ultimate crowns for the two genders.

Founder of GistGate Media Group, Anaturuchi \”GreenBrain\” said that they are not just bringing the contestants together, but are also looking forward to bringing thousands of students and other top personalities together in an atmosphere of competition, fashion, style and fun.
“This is one event you don\’t want to miss. It\’s going to feature the best of the best from across the state and beyond in music, comedy, dance and more. “Online vote is on and tickets are already on rush sales and can be obtained from the contestants or at Rennys Fast Food, Imo State University, Owunna Recreation park (Love Garden). Regular guests will pay N500, VIP: N2000, while Table for 5 is up for just N15,000”, the source concluded.
The event which is expected to outshine the 2015 edition in both class and style will be taking place on September 14th, 2016, at the Imo State University Main Auditorium while Red Carpet will be kicking off by 12 noon Prompt.
 Proudly supported by Arise Afrika Int, GCFN Consult
 

Tickets and reservations contacts are 07035719745 (GreenBrain), 09036829380 (Queeneth), while sponsorship, partnership and other enquiries will be through 07035719745, 08066895533

EMPOWERING YOUNG ENTREPRENEUR: GCFN A TRAILBLAZER

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EMPOWERING YOUNG  people

The GCFN Consulting services in collaboration with  EBN and Arise Afrika , has begun a series of capacity enhancement workshops on Empowering Young Entrepreneurs , Human Capacity Development, teaching them how to gain Financial Freedom. Showing practically how one can make legitimate cash through our life-changing free but powerful seminar.  A lot of young people’s financial life has really become a standard for others to emulate after fews months with EBN.
 
The training programme, which has been runing for some months now, was declared open by 
Mr. Ikechukwu Anyanwu & Mr Smart Alozie Chief Executive Officer  EBN
 Mr. Anyanwu, at Imo State University, where he stressed the need for continuous update of knowledge to enable us play our roles in repositioning for better performance in their various places of work. He said that training and re-training ranked high in the priorities of GCFN consulting, noting that thispolicy was meant to empower staff with all necessary tools so that they could contribute effectively in their place of work.

Mr. Anyanwu said: “The importance of strategic planning in public service organizations cannot be overemphasized because as the saying goes, those that fail to plan; plan to fail. In public service, the goals are not as simple as making profit for the organization; but also include value for money, efficient service delivery, stakeholders’ satisfaction amongst others.”
“We must constantly strive to satisfy our communities and stakeholders, who are our customers. Our success in deploying sustainable development in our communities lies mainly in our ability to utilize the tools of strategic planning.”

He further said that the ongoing capacity enhancement workshop would expose Imo youths  to a new way of thinking, on how to increase the value through innovative ideas that would meet or exceed the expectations of the various stakeholders.

The facilitator of the training programme, Mr Anyanwu said that their role would be to stimulate exchange of ideas and inspire original thinking. “We have not come to train you, our responsibility is to rub minds with you, share ideas and explore ways of thinking outside the box, which will help you to bring out what you already know or have within you. The future is in the internet , gone are the days when we believe that the internet is only negative things. You can m. This training workshop was done in partnership with E – Business Network. To know more about how you can gain financial freedom and be empowered for the future. Join the group today to join visit www.ebn.biz/iksommies

NDDC TAKES FREE HEALTHCARE TO OIL-PRODUCING COMMUNITIES

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NDDC TAKES FREE HEALTHCARE TO OIL-PRODUCING COMMUNITIES
Several oil-producing communities in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local government Area of Rivers State were benefitting from the 7-day free medical programme organized by the Niger Delta Development Commission, (NDDC), in conjunction with Global Hands Medical Foundation. The free medical services, which will end on Saturday, is taking place at the Maternity and Child health centre in Ogbe Ukwu, Ndoni.
The Chief Medical Director for the programme, Dr. Titus Antai, said he was very impressed by the massive turn-out of the people to take advantage of the free health care, with over 500 patients in attendance within the first 2 days of the one one-week programme. “We have performed many major surgeries for fibroid, ovarian cyst, hernia, as well as caesarean sections. We have also performed cataract extraction for some patients with impaired vision.”
Dr. Antai highlighted the benefits of the NDDC free medical programme, noting that it was very useful for the poor and less privileged people. He said that many people in the rural areas find it difficult to access medical services on account of poverty, citing the case of two women whose delivery were delayed because they could not raise the money for a caesarian section in a private clinic.

He said: “The people complain that medical services in their communities are very expensive because they are seen as coming from oil-producing areas. The private clinics here are very expensive for the people. So, without the free health programme of the NDDC, most of them are more or less helpless.”
Elder Ita Onukak, the Vice Chairman of Global Hands Medical Foundation, said that he was pleased that the people of Ndoni and the neighbouring communities came in large numbers for the free health mission. “I am very happy with the set up and the people have testified that they were well treated by the doctors, nurses and other medical personnel,” he said.
One of those who benefitted from the free health programme, Mrs. Chigozie Isaac, was delivered of twins, a boy and a girl. Although the boy died at birth, the Ndoni woman was still full of praises to God and the NDDC for the surviving girl.
The popular Free Health Care Medical Programme, which covers different communities in the Niger Delta region, is part of NDDC’s commitment to enhance better healthcare delivery to the people.
“The Governing Board of NDDC has decided that henceforth every programme and project being embarked upon by the Commission must go through the proper strategic planning process. Management has directed that proponents of new projects/programmes must submit the Concept Notes before such projects or programmes can be included in the NDDC

VISION MANAGEMENT by Anyanwu Ikechuwku

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Vision Management
 BY IKECHUKWU ANYANWU

\”The vision that you glorify in your mind, the ideal that you enthrone in your heart, this you will build your life by and this you will become” Anonymous
 I was a Guest Lecturer at Fresh Minds Academy. I spoke to them as part of my goal in life to develop and raise effective leaders in various fields of life without cost. Here are some of the excerpts   
Why are we here today? It\’s all about People…. Leadership… Vision Management.      
Quality people differentiate good companies from mediocre ones. Intellectual capital and emotional capital (the discretional effort of motivated staff) are now the key measures today.
Let me begin with some quotable quotes.
I am not a genius. I am only passionately curious” Albert Estienne

What are you curious about? What is that thing that gives you joy and satisfaction the most. Build your life around that. Your success lies in that. That is why you must enjoy your work and not endure your work.
“The illiterate of the future is not the person who cannot read but the person who does not want to learn”
It’s important we learn how to manage our visions in life. That is why Fresh Minds Academy was established some years back. We are here to learn on so as to take our chance when it comes.
According to one of the greatest American President Abraham Lincom, he said  “ I will study , learn and get ready perhaps my chance will come”
His chance came. Yes or no?
What is the Vision of your life? What is the vision of your business?
To understand the above, one need to understand what vision is.
The empires of the future are empires of the mind “ Winston Churchhil
Where there is no vision the people perish  Proverbs 29:18
What is vision?                     
DEFINITION OF VISION
  • The power of sensing with the eyes, sight
  • The act or power of anticipating that which will or mau come to be: Prophetic vision, the vision of entrepreneur.
  • An experience in which a personage, thing or event appears vividly or credibly to the mind, although not actually present, often under the influence of a devine or other agency.
  • A vivid imaginative conception or anticipation . visions of wealth and glory.
Dream lofty dreams, and as you dream, so shall you become. Your vision is the promise of what you shall one day be. Your ideal is their prophecy of what you shall at last unveil”
. James Allen
 \”A leader has the vision and conviction that a dream can be achieved. He inspires the power and energy to get it done\”  Ralph Lauren
 I will like to share with you the story about the man who started the Disney world. He had this wonderful vision of Disney world and described it vividly to the wife, all  he had in mind about the project. Unfortunately, he died before the commissioning of the biggest project of his life. A man on the occasion said how he wished that Disney has seen this wonderful work before he could go on, the wife intercepted. He saw it from the very beginning  before we all are gathered here today. my husband saw it
 \”The vision that you glorify in your mind, the ideal that you enthrone in your heart, this you will build your life by and this you will become\”
There is a great relationship between vision and mission.
Vision differs from but complements Mission and philosophy.
Mission: States the basic purpose of the organization, defines it\’s relationships to other organizations and sets objectives
Vision : vision builds on mission statement to describe the future size, shape of the organization
Vision sets specific goals, drives and guide actions to achieve these goals
A person who has vision constantly has a picture of how things should be which ultimately leaves him with mental guidance /direction. On the other hand, a person who lacks vision dwells only on the immediate and often lacks the energy and courage to pursue the ideal” Prof BEB Nwoke
A visionless person lacks the drive and can not work towards a long term advancement or stability.
“The most pathetic person in the world is someone who has sight but has no vision” Helen Keller.
Vision And Perception :
if you want to be effective businessman you got to be a person with vision
Be an eagle!
Lesson from the Eagle According to Erudite Scholar Prof. BEB Nwoke
* The monarch of the sky
* The perfect flying machine
* In aerodynamics, wonder of the sky, king of the birds
*Eagle-eyed persons are capable of seeing to a great distance
*They are focused.
* Effective businessman are focused.
* Keep their mind on the task at hand and very good at the job.
*They are not distracted like the Eagle
\”The vision that you glorify in your mind, the ideal that you enthrone in your heart, this you will build your life by and this you will become” Anonymous
Today, I was a Guest Lecturer at Fresh Minds Academy. I spoke to them as part of my goal in life to develop and raise effective leaders in various fields of life without cost. Here are some of the excerpts   
Why are we here today? It\’s all about People…. Leadership… Vision Management.      
Quality people differentiate good companies from mediocre ones. Intellectual capital and emotional capital (the discretional effort of motivated staff) are now the key measures today.
Let me begin with some quotable quotes.
I am not a genius. I am only passionately curious” Albert Estienne
What are you curious about? What is that thing that gives you joy and satisfaction the most. Build your life around that. Your success lies in that. That is why you must enjoy your work and not endure your work.
“The illiterate of the future is not the person who cannot read but the person who does not want to learn”
It’s important we learn how to manage our visions in life. That is why Fresh Minds Academy was established some years back. We are here to learn on so as to take our chance when it comes.
According to one of the greatest American President Abraham Lincom, he said  “ I will study , learn and get ready perhaps my chance will come”
His chance came. Yes or no?
What is the Vision of your life? What is the vision of your business?
To understand the above, one need to understand what vision is.
The empires of the future are empires of the mind “ Winston Churchhil
Where there is no vision the people perish  Proverbs 29:18
What is vision?                     
DEFINITION OF VISION
  • The power of sensing with the eyes, sight
  • The act or power of anticipating that which will or mau come to be: Prophetic vision, the vision of entrepreneur.
  • An experience in which a personage, thing or event appears vividly or credibly to the mind, although not actually present, often under the influence of a devine or other agency.
  • A vivid imaginative conception or anticipation . visions of wealth and glory.
Dream lofty dreams, and as you dream, so shall you become. Your vision is the promise of what you shall one day be. Your ideal is their prophecy of what you shall at last unveil”
. James Allen
 \”A leader has the vision and conviction that a dream can be achieved. He inspires the power and energy to get it done\”  Ralph Lauren
 I will like to share with you the story about the man who started the Disney world. He had this wonderful vision of Disney world and described it vividly to the wife, all  he had in mind about the project. Unfortunately, he died before the commissioning of the biggest project of his life. A man on the occasion said how he wished that Disney has seen this wonderful work before he could go on, the wife intercepted. He saw it from the very beginning  before we all are gathered here today. my husband saw it
 \”The vision that you glorify in your mind, the ideal that you enthrone in your heart, this you will build your life by and this you will become\”
There is a great relationship between vision and mission.
Vision differs from but complements Mission and philosophy.
Mission: States the basic purpose of the organization, defines it\’s relationships to other organizations and sets objectives
Vision : vision builds on mission statement to describe the future size, shape of the organization
Vision sets specific goals, drives and guide actions to achieve these goals
A person who has vision constantly has a picture of how things should be which ultimately leaves him with mental guidance /direction. On the other hand, a person who lacks vision dwells only on the immediate and often lacks the energy and courage to pursue the ideal” Prof BEB Nwoke
A visionless person lacks the drive and can not work towards a long term advancement or stability.
“The most pathetic person in the world is someone who has sight but has no vision” Helen Keller.
Vision And Perception :
if you want to be effective businessman you got to be a person with vision
Be an eagle!
Lesson from the Eagle According to Erudite Scholar Prof. BEB Nwoke
* The monarch of the sky
* The perfect flying machine
* In aerodynamics, wonder of the sky, king of the birds
*Eagle-eyed persons are capable of seeing to a great distance
*They are focused.
* Effective businessman are focused.
* Keep their mind on the task at hand and very good at the job.
*They are not distracted like the Eagle

CURRENT TRENDS OF EVENTS IN OUR STATE IMO OHAKIM GOT IT WRONG

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We write to thank the former Governor of Imo State and a friend, His Excellency Chief Ikedi Ohakim for his open and (sincere) letter to our governor, His Excellency, Owelle Anayo Rochas Okorocha.
While we appreciate Ohakim’s purported ‘good’ intentions and his expose of events and developments in the State after he left office in 2011, one may begin to wonder why he (Ohakim) has hidden under the cloak of protecting the interest of Imo People (who rejected him in 2011) to engage in furtive politics.
It is really ludicrous to read an expose of a man who has seen nothing good about the government after him since 2011 he was voted out of office. We honestly would not want to join issues with Chief Ikedi Ohakim, but to say that he (Ohakim) has not seen anything the Rescue Mission Government has done right in Imo State is plain mischief.  In the Igbo parlance, if you want to abuse a beautiful girl and you have nothing to say against her, you tell her to go and have her bath (Elechaa nwa mara mma, asi ya gaa saa ahu).

It is a well known fact that the Rescue Mission Government came into power when Imolites were fed up with the maladministration and the repugnant abuse of the sensibilities of Imo people by Chief Ikedi Ohakim.  The outcry and clamour for change was the major reason the Rescue Mission Government came into power to restore hope to the hopeless and offer to Ndi Imo the leadership of trust they had yearned for several Q. The government of His Excellency, Owelle Anayo Rochas Okorocha on its assumption rescued the State from the political merchants and godfathers who plundered her resources leaving the State under developed.
We are surprised, that no mention was made by Chief Ikedi Ohakim about the Imo free education policy – from Primary to tertiary level, with its attendant relief on the families of the less privileged and Imolites at large.  Do we begin to talk about the numerous achievements made by this administration – Is it the New Government House, Odenigbo Guest House, Owerri City School, 305 Storey School Buildings in all the electoral wards of Imo State, Befitting Imo Liaison Office in Abuja, the magnificent Heroes Square, Ikemba Ojukwu Centre, over 800 kilometres of Rural Roads across the 27 LGA and lots more.  We stopped just at this few in order not to sound boastful.  Imo people may also not have forgotten the security situation in the state before 2011 when Chief Ikedi Ohakim was the Governor, but today, the Rescue Mission Government has arrested this situation, bringing crime and criminality to its barest minimum. This infact, has helped to boost the investment and Tourism industry of the State as Imo State is now the Tourism hub of the South East.
In the event of your misrepresented findings about the state of affairs in the state since after you exited as governor, we wish to tell you Sir that our government has achieved milestones which you have unwittingly eulogized in your letter published in the various local tabloids of 31st August, 2016 and the social media. A careful perusal of this letter in question would tell where the former governor is coming from and driving at.  To say he is jealous of the feat achieved by the Rescue Mission government may be an understatement.  If indeed, he knows so much why then did he do little while in office? It would be unthinkable for anyone to adduce that the Rescue Mission Government which draws its strength from the masses would still go ahead to punish the same people it has come to rescue and serve.
We are happy that Chief Ohakim acknowledged the present economic downturn in the nation, yet it beats my heart that he has failed to commend our Governor, Dr. Rochas Anayo Okorocha’s Government for blazing the trail in opening up the socio – economic frontiers of the State.  What this government is doing is in the overall interest of the people of Imo State.
Owerri is the fasted growing city in the country at the moment, and we need to undertake certain developmental actions that would befit the city of our dream.  We are expanding and duallizing the roads. Ohakim never duallized any road, but he demarcated them.  We are building markets outside Owerri town to make it really a city we can all be proud of.
In all considerations, the relocation of Eke-ukwu Market is long overdue, if we are sincere to ourselves.  With the rapid growth of Owerri into a model city, it is no longer feasible to allow the Eke-ukwu market to remain at its present location.  It is a known fact that Douglas Road and some of the adjoining roads cannot be recovered from its deplorable condition if the market continues to exist there.
Granted too that those who built the market at that place meant well, but they must have done so in consideration of the prevailing scenario at that time.  The traders themselves should be happy about this development despite the temporary inconveniences associated with change.  What government is doing is to relocate the market to a more conducive place that will accommodate more traders and equally ease traffic congestion on and around Douglas Road.
The truth about the road expansion project within the Owerri Capital City is that this project will change the entire landscape of the capital city into a model city with free flow of traffic.
However, this government as a very responsible and people – oriented government has restrained itself from demolition of buildings that contravened the stipulated distance of about 15 meters from the road; rather what we did was to remove fences and other structures built within 10 metres from the affected roads as well as those that blocked water ways.
More so, the issue of broken water pipes and cables are actually consequences of road construction and all of these are receiving attention.  After all construction is not completed yet.  We are getting there and this government appeals to Imo people to remain patient.  This is a sacrifice we all will make for our generation and generations unborn.  Once again, we appreciate the former Governor, Chief Ikedi Ohakim and lots more who acknowledge that the Rescue Mission government has made some achievements.  Whether they say the cup is full or half empty, what is important is that something new has taken place in Imo.
Thank you and God bless you.
Dr. Vitalis Orikeze Ajumbe
Hon. Commissioner for Information, Tourism and Public utilities
Imo State

WHAT IS PRESIDENT BUHARI DOING WITH THE ECONOMY?

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WHAT IS PRESIDENT BUHARI DOING WITH THE ECONOMY?
LET me start by asking an important question: who wants to kill racy introspection?
There is a cacophony of voices telling the Muhammadu Buhari administration to close its eyes to the past; that given the enormous tasks that lie ahead, history and its consequences for our nation should be the least of the government\’s preoccupation at this juncture.
I disagree. Let us keep a fiery memory of the past so that we don\’t repeat its mistakes. Look back, look ahead. The future must of necessity be built on the foundations of the past.
The Conservative Party took power in Britain six years ago from Labour. Check the British press, they are talking about Labour 24/7, is anyone complaining?
Japheth Omojuwa, one of Nigeria\’s top three influencers seemed tasked in his patience reacting to calls that we must stop talking about the immediate past administration in this country. \”People are still talking about who ran governments in 1865 you want us to forget those who left government last year? (Expletive)\”
Music icon, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, who many agree was a philosopher disguised as Afro-musician taught in one of his songs that without knowing where you are coming from, you won\’t know where you are going. Wise men say that the empty can doesn\’t disappear by simply kicking it down the road.
To avoid repeating the past mistakes, Nigerians must come to terms with what went wrong with the past, how bad were things, what was done wrongly, what the past government should have done, before we come to what needs to be done to right those wrongs. Believe me, episodes from the Jonathan era can fill books, and other possibilities such as courtroom drama thriller.
Against this backdrop, I sought to hear our erudite Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun on where we are coming from, vis-a-vis the administration\’s chosen path to recovery and accelerated growth. What is the administration doing to revitalize the economy? She spoke at length on the many measures being put in place, many of which are not glamorous. They of necessity come with pain. Why should Nigerians be asked to endure pains? Why should they be asked to make adjustments?

The simple explanation is that the economy was broken, and just as they do the broken leg, you must bear the pain of fixing it. The current situation was caused by years of mismanagement and corruption.
As explained by President Buhari again and again, trumpeted by Madam Adeosun and other senior officials, we solely relied on oil, the price of which was as high as US$140 per barrel. Government simply reticulated oil revenue through personal spending by corrupt leaders, wasteful expenses and salaries. This was done rather than investing in what would grow the economy. Economies grow due to capital investment in assets like seaports, airports, power plants, railways, roads and housing. Nigeria has not recorded a single major infrastructural project in the last 10 years. In short the money was mismanaged.
In addition to failing to spend money on what was needed, no savings were made by Government unlike other countries like Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Norway.
To compound the problem, the previous government was borrowing heavily and owed contractors, and international oil companies. When this government took over we had accumulated debt back to the level it was before the Paris Club Debt Forgiveness.
All these factors were building up to Nigeria heading for a major crisis if the price of oil fell. Nigeria did not have fiscal buffers to withstand an oil shock.
The oil shock should and could have been foreseen.  These are matters that both the Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II and Professor Chukwuma Soludo, both of them eminent former Central Bank Governors had occasions to warn the government of the day about, but they were clobbered. The dire warning was written all over the wall, but they were ignored by Nigeria’s economic managers.
What should they have done?
They should have had the courage and vision to do as the present administration is doing through the Economic Team, the Ministry of Finance under Madam Adeosun and the various agencies of the state to envision a better future by first of all fighting corruption. Look at what a civilian administration is today doing to the military, investigating their finance and accounts that the military could not do to themselves.
See what the current administration is doing sanitize the huge salary bill by eliminating payroll fraud. So far, the federal payroll has been rid of about 40,000 ghost workers. More than eight billion Naira stolen monthly has been saved.
We are also saving on wasteful expenses like First Class Travel and Private jets for official trips.
The federal government is not limiting the reforms to the centre but forcing State Governments to reform their spending and build savings or investments.
Government is also increasing spending on capital projects especially on infrastructure needed to make Nigerian businesses competitive and create jobs. The administration is at the same time blocking leakages that allowed government revenues to be siphoned into private hands.
Currently, there is focus on key sectors (apart from oil) that can create jobs and or generate revenue such as Agriculture, Solid Minerals and Manufacturing. If these things had been done when the oil price was as high as US$140 per barrel, Nigeria would not be in the current predicament. We would not be suffering now if we had no cash reserves but we had regular supply of power, a good rail system, good roads and good housing.
Now that the oil has fallen as low as US$28 per barrel, it is very difficult to do what is needed but they must be done to save Nigeria. There is no other way if we want to be honest.
If PDP were still in power they would have continued deceiving people, by borrowing to fund stealing and wastage and the problem would have simply been postponed for future generations to face.
There are many who say that this Government’s economic strategy is unclear whereas the previous government seemed well co-ordinated. I will make the confession that we, the officials hired to communicate government policies, that includes myself, have not done as well as we should have.
The truth is that more than any other time before, there is a clear direction and strategy for achieving growth and development. Revisionists may not agree, but the truth of the matter is that the previous administration only had one issue, which was how to spend money (oil revenues and borrowed money).  As mentioned earlier this spending was focussed on the wrong things and even though the economy seemed to be growing it was not sustainable,  it was, as described by Minister Adeosun, a  classic “boom and bust”’ driven solely by the oil price.
Unemployment was and remained high (never forget the NIS jobs  that exploited thousands of desperate graduates in a scam that was used to fund house purchases in high brow areas and claimed so many lives)
Inequalities were growing (our then President boasted about the highest number of private jets when most Nigerians could barely afford to eat).Terrorism and social unrest were growing. Real development was lacking. As soon as the oil price fell, these vulnerabilities were exposed.
 From its records so far, this administration is trying to reset the Nigerian economy and ensure that it attains its potential and is diverse and resilient. We are doing this at a time when the global economy is in crisis due to the oil price collapse. Even rich nations like Saudi Arabia are experiencing problems
The Government is people-focussed and wants the economy to grow in a way that will create a more stable future which is not dictated by world oil prices (over which we have no control). No more boom and bust (thanks Minister Adeosun).
Nigeria wants to take responsibility for its own destiny, therefore our policies will ensure that Nigeria returns to growth in a sustainable manner. No more dependence on oil. Every part of Nigeria has a role to play in contributing to our growth. We will create an environment where people can thrive and where business can grow.
To this effect, all relevant agencies have been reoriented to:
·         Focus government spending on infrastructure which will create jobs and opportunities for Nigerians across a number of sectors (not just oil).
·         Ensure that we reduce our reliance on oil by developing other revenue streams such as taxes, efficient customs collections and other government revenues.
·         Develop key sectors in which we have comparative advantage.
·         Encourage development of agriculture to ensure food security for our huge population.
·         Develop petro-chemical industry on the back of the oil industry.
·         Develop solid mineral extraction and
·         Develop light manufacturing to provide locally made basic needs and reduce importation.
If you are an official of this administration and a mixer, that is someone who mingles with citizens high and low, a charge you are forced to defend is that this Government seems to be bringing austerity and suffering to the people. Blame not, Buhari.
The current pain is due to the mismanagement of the past. What Nigeria is currently experiencing was inevitable. This government is simply being honest with the people instead of piling up debts and concealing the truth by pretending all was rosy. This government believes that Nigerians deserve to know the truth.
People stole unbelievable amounts of money. The kind of money some of these ex-officials hold is itself a threat to the security of the state. Since it is not money earned, they feel no pain deploying just anyhow to thwart genuine and well-intentioned government efforts.
Sadly, even that which was not stolen was wasted. Government coffers were left empty, with huge debts unpaid and unrecorded (this government is working to quantify the amount owed). Even the current high food prices can be traced to past deceit.  For example, the previous government purchased fertiliser in 2014, worth N65Bn and left the bill unpaid. In 2015 the suppliers could not supply fertiliser which resulted in a low harvest, shortages and high food prices. This government had to pay off the debt so that the suppliers could begin to supply fertiliser again.  Across Nigeria a green revolution is occurring as Nigerians are going back to the farms, from rice in Kebbi and Ebonyi to Soya and Sesame in Jigawa and Kano. At the same time Nigerians are looking inwards to identify commercial opportunities from agri-businesses.
Most of our road contractors had not been paid since 2012, many of them had sent their workers away adding to the unemployment problem. This government has released capital allocations in the last three months that is more than the whole of 2015. In 2015 Nigeria spent a paltry N19Bn on roads, in three months we have spent N74Bn and we are already releasing more.
In the transport sector in 2015, government spent just N4.2Bn; we have spent N26Bn with more to follow. We are starting a concession that will revive our old rail system for freight, whilst we build a new high speed rail system. Moving heavy goods by rail will reduce our transport costs which will reduce food prices and will save our roads from damage from heavy loads. Government will embrace the private sector through PPP, concessions and other collaborations to deliver services and infrastructure efficiently.
 Nigerians expected a lot from President Buhari and are right to have done so. Many feel disappointed. While much of this warranted, a lot more is arising from opposition politics.
A man who has promised good things is being accused of failing to use the palm to cover the sun or that he is unable to stop the rain. Nigerians are right to be disappointed but they must direct their anger at the right quarters. The bad management and corruption of the past are firmly to blame.
This government is fighting corruption. It is working hard to do things right and do them in a manner that will endure. No government has ever considered the poor like this one. Under the current budget, the administration devoted N500Bn for social intervention programmes for those who need and deserve support.
There are also programmes for affordable housing with mortgages which will transform thousands from tenant status to homeownership.
Any process that will endure, must involve some pain but things will begin to improve. There is always a time lag between policy and effect. That is why the bad effects of past policies are manifesting now. Similarly, the positive impact of the work being undertaken to fix Nigeria’s problems will soon begin to show and we will emerge from this period stronger, wiser and more prosperous.
There is hope for Nigeria, a hope that was previously clouded by corruption, greed and lack of focus.
Nigeria is starting over and everyone has a role to play. Look back, look ahead.
Garba Shehu, Senior Special Assistant to the President (Media and Publicity)
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