Wednesday 25 May 2016

The Senatorial Gravy Train

21 senators currently receiving pensions from government as ex-governors and deputy governors.

The current senators who once served as governors are Bukola Saraki of Kwara, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of Kano, Kabiru Gaya of Kano, Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom, Theodore Orji of Abia, Abdullahi Adamu of Nasarawa, Sam Egwu of Ebonyi, Shaaba Lafiagi of Kwara, Joshua Dariye of Plateau Jonah Jang of Plateau, Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko of Sokoto, Ahmed Sani Yarima of Zamfara, Danjuma Goje of Gombe, Bukar Abba Ibrahim of Yobe, Adamu Aliero of Kebbi, George Akume of Benue and Isiaka Adeleke of Osun. 

The  former deputy governors in the Senate are Ms Biodun Olujimi of Ekiti and Enyinaya Harcourt Abaribe of Abia. Danladi Abubakar Sani served as the acting governor of Taraba state.

Many former governors are also in Buhari's Cabinet as Ministers. This includes: Ngige, Fayemi, Amaechi and Fashola (SAN).).

In Akwa Ibom State, the ex governors and deputy governors receive pension equivalent to the salaries of the incumbent. The package also includes a new official car and a utility vehicle every four years; one personal aide; a cook, chauffeurs and security guards for the governor at a sum not exceeding N5 million per month and N2.5 million for his deputy governor.

In Rivers, the law provides 100 percent of annual basic salaries for the ex-governor and deputy, one residential house for the former governor “anywhere of his choice in Nigeria”; one residential house anywhere in Rivers for the deputy, three cars for the ex-governor every four years and two cars for the deputy every four years. 

In Lagos, a former governor will get two houses, one in Lagos and another in Abuja, estimated at N500 million in Lagos and N700 million in Abuja. He also receives six new cars to be replaced every three years; a furniture allowance of 300 percent of annual salary to be paid every two years, and a N30 million pension annually for life.

This is the reality for all the 21 ex govenors and deputy governors who are currently serving as senators. This same is also true of ex governors who are now serving as Ministers.

NOW I ASK: 
How many years did these guys serve their states as governors and deputy governors? Is it more than 8years? Is that a reason to be entitled to pensions for life? Even if they are entitled to pension for life, must it be so outrageous?

As if that is not enough: HOW on earth can any public servant with conscience collect salaries and allowances as a senator or minister, and still have the audacity to claim pensions equivalent to the salaries of a serving governor in Nigeria?

IT ISN'T ROCKET SCIENCE......

Once you are elected a senator or appointed a minister, you must forfeit any pension accruing to you from government at any level until you vacate office. This should also apply to senators collecting military pensions like former Senate President David Mark. (Copied)

Wednesday 18 May 2016

Femi Gbajabiamila on fuel hike

FROM FEMI GBAJABIMILLA 
-------------------

.....I was at the Presidential Villa on Wednesday May 11th where a stakeholders meeting involving the leadership of the National Assembly, governors, Labour leadership, minister of state for Petroleum, ministers of Information and that of labour held. The meeting was chaired by the Vice President. It was a consultative meeting ostensibly to get the buy in of stakeholders. I was pumped and ready to challenge any proposition for an increase in pump price and my position was known to most people I spoke with.

However by the time the Honourable minister for petroleum finished his doomsday prognosis and gave a graphic account supported with facts and figures of where we are and where we would be in a matter of months if we did not alter the approach or fundamentally change the status quo, I had no option but to capitulate. It was the first time I had been confronted with such a gloomy picture. I found myself between a rock and a hard place. The facts were incontrovertible and the prognosis and consequences dire. We were in an economic cul-de-sac and the country was spiraling down fast due to no fault of this present administration. In fact it was clear that any responsible administration needed to apply the brakes, bring this to a screeching and painful halt and at least for now remove subsidy and deregulate. It was a short term remedy which, all things being equal, would produce a long term solution when the economy would have recalibrated. I struggled with my inner angel and knew this was the only way out. It was made abundantly clear to all seated that in two months there would be no federal allocation to states and no state would be able to pay salaries, including the buoyant ones. The Nigerian nation was on tenterhooks. That’s how bad a picture it was. Indeed I was the first to ask questions after the presentation still looking for a way out when I knew there was none.

Whilst I still believe in the principles I held on to so passionately years ago, including the need to bring any deregulation exercise in conformity with the law and the constitution, I believe this is such a time when we should look at the times we are in and our practical situation as a country. I believe (without sounding Trumpist) that Nigeria will be great again but we must rejig and reboot our economy and take another look at the subsidy regime. Many will say, but why did some of us kick in 2012 and if it was not good then why is it good now? It’s a great question and they are right, but again the times are different. In 2012, we were earning a lot of money from oil. Oil was selling at about 100 dollars or thereabout. We had foreign exchange and petro dollars to continue with subsidy. Now things are different. The economy is comatose and Nigeria is on life support. Oil is selling at below 40 dollars and the currency (dollar) needed to purchase the refined petrol is no longer available.

I want to plead with my constituents and all Nigerians to work with the government. You are the most important stakeholders, never mind those of us that gathered around a long table and cushy chairs in the Vice President’s Office on Wednesday May 11th to take this far reaching decision. We did so only in a representative capacity. I urge that you please give this government the benefit of doubt and lets take a chance on whether or not the analogy and parallel often drawn by proponents of deregulation in the oil industry to telecommunications industry may end up a truism and that the price of fuel in a laissez-faire, free market will come crashing in months. Lets consider it a temporary sacrifice for the greater good, with the hope that as promised we will be better off in the long term. This problem is not peculiar to Nigeria. It is instructive that other oil producing countries e.g. Bahrain, have been hit hard by the crash in oil price and are towing the same line and reviewing their subsidy policies.

With this new development I intend to fight with all I have for a review of the minimum wage of all workers in Nigeria. Our country was built on social justice and I cannot, no matter the realities, accept a situation where the cost of living will be increased without a corresponding increase in wages. The sacrifices that we need to make must be comprehensive. Indeed I believe the “wealthy” must not only pay their fair share of taxes, if need be, there must be an upward review of taxes paid by the highest income earners to enable government review the wages of those on the lower rung. It is time to be our brothers’ keepers.

I know this is a painful road to take and I hate that I have to flip flop on this one, but isn’t what they say true, that “no pain, no gain”.

Femi Gbajabiamila is Leader of Nigeria’s

Wednesday 11 May 2016

Take people for who they are

An elderly Chinese woman had two large pots, each hung on the ends of a pole which she carried across her neck.
One of the pots had a crack in it while the other pot was perfect and always delivered a full portion of water.
At the end of the long walks from the stream to the house, the cracked pot arrived only half full.
For a full two years this went on daily, with the woman bringing home only one and a half pots of water..
Of course, the perfect pot was proud of its accomplishments.
But the poor cracked pot was ashamed of its own imperfection, and miserable that it could only do half of what it had been made to do.
After two years of what it perceived to be bitter failure, it spoke to the woman one day by the stream.
  'I am ashamed of myself, because this crack in my side causes water to leak out all the way back to your house.
The old woman smiled, 'Did you notice that there are flowers on your side of the path, but not on the other pot's side?'
'That's because I have always known about your flaw, so I planted flower seeds on your side of the path, and every day while we walk back, you water them.' 
For two years I have been able to pick these beautiful flowers to decorate the table.
Without you being just the way you are, there would not be this beauty to grace the house.'
 Each of us has our own unique flaw. But it's the cracks and flaws we each have that make our lives together so very interesting and rewarding.
 You've just got to take each person for what they are and look for the good in them

Monday 2 May 2016

FFK explodes on Fulani

By Former minister of aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode.
Last week I wrote an essay titled “The Road To
Kigali” which was widely published.
The callous response of the Northern governors
to the horrendous events in Enugu state has
compelled me to write this contribution as
something of a follow-up.
These are difficult and troubling times and
these are times that the truth needs to be
spoken. I appreciate those who publish my
contributions in my various columns because, in
a country that hates to hear the truth and
that finds it difficult to comprehend and
grasp reality, that in itself takes courage.
I also appreciate the increasing large number
of Nigerians from all over the world that take
the time to read my contributions because
without them there would be no point in
writing.
On April 30th, 2016 Mr. George Akinola wrote
the following words on Facebook:
“When the Fulani exploded on the geographic
space later christened Nigeria in 1804, they
did not negotiate power with the Hausas, they
seized it from them on the battlefield.
When the same Fulani appeared in Ilorin in
1823, purportedly to assist Afonja, the Are-
Ona-Kakanfo of Oyo and the ruler of Ilorin, in
revolt against his sovereign, Alafin Aole, the
Alafin of Oyo, it was to gain his confidence for
a while and a vantage position to murder him.
Ilorin has been under Fulani rule since then
and up until today.
When the British colonized all these empires,
kingdoms and fiefdoms in the 19th century, it
was not out of love for the black man.
It was an imperialistic push for more land,
more territories to exploit minerals and other
resources from. If you did not agree by subtle
pressure, they simply applied the brute force.
To hell with you and all you cared for!
When the Fulani attacked Yorubaland in 1825,
they gave all our ancestors notice that they
intended to bury the Quran in the sea at the
backyard of the Yoruba empire and kingdoms.
Meaning? They will kill, destroy, maim, trample
on men, women, children and all that we hold
dear to achieve this goal. This was not by
negotiation or a bargaining deal.
Blood was on the cards and red was its colour.
Thank God for the fierce resistance of the
Yoruba, rallying at Ibadan.
If not, maybe we will be doing “ranka dede” to
one clown Emir of Ado-Ekiti or another
comedian Emir of Abeokuta today.
Power does not give way to persuasion. Power
only succumbs to superior power.
Fast forward to 1960. The new nation had just
gained independence. But the drums of
drunken power was already pulsating with
madness in the heart of Ahmadu Bello, the
leader of NPC, the party that won the 1959
elections, and which assumed the reins of
power to lead Nigeria at independence.
Note that this was the great grandson of
Uthman Dan Fodio, the leader of the 1804
Fulani Jihad. He made his intention, and the
intention of the Fulani, clear in this now
infamous statement: Hear Ahmadu Bello in the
Parrotnewspaper of October 12th, 1960:
“The new nation called Nigeria should be an
estate of our great grandfather Uthman Dan
Fodio. We must ruthlessly prevent a change of
power. We use the minorities in the North as
willing tools and the south as a conquered
territory and never allow them to rule over us
and never allow them to have control over
their future.”
I am sure you did not read any entreaties of
love, affection and camaraderie disposition in
that statement. It was harsh, callous, wicked,
sadistic, exploitative, intimidating and
wholesomely damning.
That is drunken power talking with inspiration
from the lunatic fringe.
When he eventually paid for it with his life, his
inheritors found a way to re-invent their
stranglehold on Nigeria.
They came in through the military and
continued, in a more draconian fashion, the
bleeding exploitation of Nigeria. What we
inherited from the British was “self-governing
Regions of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”
Now we are forcibly united by an unfeeling
centre. What we inherited was a revenue
allocation formula that was largely derivative.
Now it is almost ‘allocative’ . At a point,
Mohammed Buhari reduced the 50 percent
derivation formula to one percent.
These parasites are barracudas and Shylocks of
the highest order.
The only language these savages understand is
the one that brought them there in the first
case: force.
This may be subtle through the use of the
instrumentality of guerrilla journalism,
protests, occupation, civil resistance, civil
disobedience, referendum, United Nations
appeal, international coalition of forces, etc.
On the other hand it may boom through the
barrel of the gun in a violent uprising or
revolt, civil or guerrilla warfare.
Either way, force is force.
The irreducible decimal is that the Yoruba
reject enslavement, the appropriation of their
resources without their approval and illegal
occupation of their God given land with all iota
of their soul and with all the power in their
being.
Whether for one second or for 200 years, the
enemy shall not feel comfortable until they
leave.
With reference to how they will leave,
however, the choice remains theirs: either on
foot, running helter-skelter, on stretchers, in
trailers, buses, straddled on horses or loaded
in coffins.
But, leave, they shall, when superior power
speaks!
These are harsh and frightful words yet Mr.
Akinola’s historical analysis and assessment is
first class. He has spoken nothing but the
truth no matter how bitter that truth may be.
This takes courage and I commend him for it.
I deplore violence and I do not advocate or
condone it in any shape or form. I do not want
anyone to leave our land “loaded in coffins” or
in body bags and neither do I believe that
violence and bloodshed leads to anything but
even more violence and bloodshed. It is nothing
but a vicious cycle.
However the type of rhetoric that is now being
expressed by our southern youth and
intellectuals about the situation in Nigeria, and
particularly about the excesses of the Fulani
cannot be ignored or downplayed.
We ignore the words of people like Mr. George
Akinola, Mr. Babatunde Gbadamosi, Mr.
Grandson Soyemi and so many others at our
own peril.
Clearly there is tension and anger in the land.
The spirit of division is rife and it is getting
stronger by the day. Things are getting hotter
and tempers are flaring. Nigeria is beginning
to unravel at the seams. We must all be very
careful not to set a match to the tinderbox.
Thankfully there are still a number of Fulani
and non-Fulani voices in the North who
represent a moderate and sane disposition and
who have nothing to do with the hegemonist or
religious agenda of the bigots and the
hardliners.
I am talking about men like Colonel Abubakar
‘Dangiwa’ Umar, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, Alhaji
Kashim Ibrahim Imam, Alhaji Ibrahim Turaki
(SAN) and so many others. I know every single
one of these individuals and I can vouch for
them.
These are the sort of people who are still
holding the country together by giving
southerners hope that the voice of moderation,
reason and restraint still exists in the North,
and that that voice may eventually prevail. Yet
the fire continues to burn on the mountain and
tempers are still rising.
The insulting warning to the South from the 19
Northern governors just the other day made
matters worse. That contribution did not help
to calm the storm but instead it has further
frayed nerves. Simply put the Northern
governors have rubbed raw salt into our
Southern wounds.
They said that Southerners should “not insult
the Fulani again” and that even though they
deplored what their kinsmen, the Fulani
herdsmen, did in Enugu the other day, that
does not mean that “their people” ought to be
insulted.
This is all they had to say after thousands of
southerners have been killed, maimed, raped,
abducted and tortured in the sanctity of their
own homes and land by the Fulani militants and
herdsmen over the last one year alone, and
after over one hundred Igbos were
slaughtered in Enugu state just a few days
ago.
They even went a step further by saying that
they intend to take the cue from Kaduna
state and introduce the licensing of all
churches and preachers in all the states of the
North.
This is a deep insult to every christian worth
his salt, to the clergy and to the church. It is
also a surreptitious attempt to curb the
spreading of the gospel in Northern Nigeria.
If ever the Northern governors had an all-
time low, this is it.
Instead of them burying their heads in shame
and appealing to the rest of Nigeria to
forgive them and their kith and kin for their
collective and historical sins, the Fulani leaders
are still issuing threats to the rest of us
through their surrogates, leaders and
governors.
This is unacceptable. Such reckless arrogance
and callous insensitivity does not serve them
well and neither does it engender peace and
reconciliation in our country. Instead it is
provocative and insulting and can only lead to
a greater degree of alienation and more
misunderstanding.
Sadly the 17 southern governors could not
even muster the resolve to organize their own
meeting and respond to the slur in a virile and
responsible manner. Instead they all ran for
cover and chose to dwell in the safety and
comfort of a cowardly and conspiratorial
silence.
How I wish that men like Chief Obafemi
Awolowo, the Leader of the Yoruba; Dim
Odumegwu-Ojukwu, the Ikenga of Igboland Dr.
Chuba Okadigbo, the former Senate President;
Chief Alfred Rewane, one of the greatest and
most fearless southern elders that ever lived;
and Chief Harold Dappa Biriye, the Leader of
the Ijaw nation were still with us. How I wish
that men like Chukwuemeka Ezeife, Orji Uzor
Kalu and Chimaroke Nnamani were still
governors. How I wish that people like Ojo
Maduweke and Ebenezer Babatope were still
federal ministers.
Meanwhile the people of the South are still
grieving and suffering immeasurable pain as a
consequence of the gratuitous violence and evil
that we have been subjected to at the hands
of these murderous Fulani herdsmen over the
last ten months.
We are still mourning our dead and indeed all
the innocent and defenseless souls, including
women and children, who were murdered in
cold blood in Enugu state just a few days ago.
The truth is that as long as those that
represent the Fulani militants and herdsmen
continue to try to justify or rationalise their
beastly behaviour and threaten the south
there will be people like Mr. George Akinola
who will respond with the sort of rhetoric that
he has expressed in this contribution.
There would also be far more than mere
rhetoric and this, more than anything else,
saddens me because I am a man of peace and I
deplore violence.
Yet you cannot expect people to sit by silently
and watch their loved ones and kith and kin
being slaughtered like Christmas turkeys and
Sallah rams on a daily basis by a bunch of
uncouth, vulgar and unlettered barbaric beasts
who are suffering from some kind of vampiric
blood lust, and who are plagued and afflicted
with a cult-like Janjaweed syndrome.
It would be most unwise for the Fulani leaders
and indeed the leaders of the north to ignore
such sentiments and dismiss them with the
usual contempt.
It is important that the Fulani militants and
herdsmen are reigned in and that they stop
killing southerners and occupying our land.
It is important that the Buhari administration
stops encouraging and covertly supporting
them in their mass murder and savage
butchery.
It is important that the greater and wider
agenda to conquer the south, to take our
lands, to dominate and Islamise our people and
to discredit, destroy, jail and kill all vocal and
credible Southern leaders that have opted to
stand up against them be brought to a halt.
It is important that the master plan to
subjugate the people of the south to perpetual
bondage and slavery at the hands of the
Fulani be stopped.
It is only when that happens that we can
guarantee lasting peace in our nation. It is
only when this is done that people like Mr.
George Akinola and all the other young rising
Southern stars will stop saying the sort of
things that they are saying.
It is only when that happens that they will stop
speaking and reflecting the minds of millions
of Southerners who are fed up with what is
going on in our country and who are prepared
to stand up, challenge the powers that be,
break the yoke of bondage and slavery and
fight for their freedom.
Permit me to end this contribution with the
reaction of Afenifere, the leading Yoruba
socio-cultural organisation, to the insults of
the 19 northern governors.
On May 1, 2016, the Sunday Vanguard
newspaper reported as follows:
The Yoruba group, which spoke through their
national publicity secretary, Mr. Yinka
Odumakin, told Sunday Vanguard:
“It (the northern governors’ position) is a sign
of unfeeling, uncaring for any group today to
come out and say that those who have been
causing problems and killing people in the
Middle Belt and the South are not Fulani
herdsmen. They have killed in Agatu land,
Enugu; a traditional ruler was killed in Delta
state; they killed Chief Olu Falae’s guard and
also kidnapped chief Falae himself. For some
people to gather and call themselves northern
governors, and have no sympathy for lives
than to be defending the Fulani herdsmen,
shows clearly that it is a tragedy of
monumental proportion to be in the same
country with these elements. You also begin to
wonder if the blood of human beings runs in
their veins because anybody that has human
blood running in his veins will not come and say
that Fulani herdsmen are not responsible. What
nonsense.”
The Afenifere spokesperson went on: “I think
the northern governors should bury their
heads in shame. I do not think they are fit to
be in the comity of civilized human beings. If
the attackers are not Fulani herdsmen, where
have they struck in the North-West? Why are
their activities only in the Middle Belt and in
the South? That is the question these
northern governors should answer. When
militants were blowing up pipelines in the
South-South, were they not called Niger Delta
militants? Do they want us to call them
Yoruba herdsmen?”
As always, Afenifere has done the Yoruba, and
by extension the entire South, proud with their
courageous and timely intervention. They have
spoken for every single one of us that still has
his dignity and self-respect intact.
Let us hope that the Northern governors and
the murderers that they seek to defend get
the message.
Let us hope that they can purge themselves of
the unwholesome and denigrating contempt
that they clearly have for the people of the
South before it is too late and before the
whole damn nation explodes and breaks into a
thousand pieces.