Saturday, January 26, 2019

The Poet Lied: Still on the Suspension of the Nigerian Chief Justice.

The Poet Lied.

The Code of Conduct Tribunal is not a court or a tribunal of unlimited or final jurisdiction. The CCT cannot direct the President to take action on a pending suit before it involving the head of another equal branch of government. This is a bald-faced coercion - a travesty. The President's action has no support in law or reason. Especially when the injunctive relief issued by the Appeal Court on the same issue has not been vacated. Even if there is no subsisting injunction; even if the injunction has been vacated, the CCT has no case against the CJN warranting the action of the President via an ex parte order as the President alluded to in resolution #1 of the Presidential address. Such an action is absurdly a travesty. Due process is not alien to the Nigerian legal system.

By the way, the #17 resolution is the most ludicrous and self-serving Presidential mumble jumble ever written, in light of the continued incarceration of Col Dasuki. Mr. President, I am not questioning your audacity or your understanding of the principle of Rule of Law, but suffices it to say that your Legal Advisors and the authors of that paper that you signed, purportedly suspending the Chief Justice, do not deserve a day longer in the Nigerian Bar or in our Judicial system. Simply put, there is no law in our jurisprudence supporting your action. The main reason the authors didn't cite any.

The Nigerian Bar Association Press Statement on the Removal of the Chief Justice of Nigeria.

25 January 2019

NIGERIA BAR ASSOCIATION PRESS STATEMENT ON THE REMOVAL OF CJN

COUP AGAINST THE NIGERIAN JUDICIARY AND SUSPENSION OF THE NIGERIAN CONSTITUTION

1. The news media has been awash this evening with the news of the purported suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Honorable Mr. Justice Walter S C Onnoghen, GCON by President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR and the swearing in of Hon Justice Ibrahim Tanko Mohammed as the acting Chief Justice of Nigeria. We are told that this was pursuant to an Ex-Parte Order that was issued by the Code of Conduct Tribunal on Wednesday, 23 January 2019.

2. The Nigerian Bar Association unequivocally rejects and condemns this attempted coup against the Nigerian Judiciary and evident suspension of the Nigerian Constitution by the Executive arm of the Federal Government. The action of the Executive portends a slide into anarchy and complete deconstruction of the Rule of Law and due process. It amounts to an absolute breach of the Constitution and the usurpation of the powers of the Senate and the Nigerian Judicial Council. 

3. It is unfortunate that the Executive Branch of Government purports to suspend the CJN on the basis of an alleged ex-parte order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal – the same Tribunal that, to the knowledge of the Executive, had, only the previous day, Tuesday, 22 January 2019 adjourned its proceedings to Monday, 28 January 2019 and has before it a Motion on Notice that is yet to be argued, seeking the same reliefs as were contained in the purported ex-parte application, to wit, the suspension of the CJN, amongst others.

4. We call on the Federal Government to avert the looming constitutional crisis precipitated by its ill-advised action. In particular, the Nigerian Bar Association demands the reversal of the purported suspension of Honorable Mr. Justice Walter S C Onnoghen, GCON. We also call on the National Assembly to assert its 
constitutional authority and powers and prevent this slide into chaos and erosion of 
the Rule of Law.

Paul Usoro, SAN
President

Nigeria: The President Buhari's Coup Against the Judiciary.

ADDRESS BY HIS EXCELLENCY, MUHAMMADU BUHARI, PRESIDENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA, ON SUSPENSION OF HONOURABLE JUSTICE WALTER NKANU SAMUEL ONNOGHEN AS CHIEF JUSTICE OF NIGERIA AND SWEARING IN OF ACTING CHIEF JUSTICE, 25TH JANUARY 2019

Fellow Nigerians,

A short while ago, I was served with an Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal issued on Wednesday 23rd January 2019, directing the suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Honourable Justice Walter Nkanu Samuel Onnoghen from office pending final determination of the cases against him at the Code of Conduct Tribunal and several other fora relating to his alleged breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers. 

2. The nation has been gripped by the tragic realities of no less a personality than the Chief Justice of Nigeria himself becoming the accused person in a corruption trial since details of the petition against him by a Civil Society Organization first became public about a fortnight ago.

3. Although the allegations in the petition are grievous enough in themselves, the security agencies have since then traced other suspicious transactions running into millions of dollars to the CJN’s personal accounts, all  undeclared or improperly declared as required by law. 

4. Perhaps more worrisome is the Chief Justice of Nigeria’s own written admission to the charges that he indeed failed to follow the spirit and letter of the law in declaring his assets, citing ’’mistake’’ and ’’forgetfulness’’ which are totally unknown to our laws as defences in the circumstances of his case.

5. One expected that with his moral authority so wounded, by these serious charges of corruption, more so by his own written admission, Mr. Justice Walter Onnoghen would have acted swiftly to spare our Judicial Arm further disrepute by removing himself from superintending over it while his trial lasted.

6. Unfortunately, he has not done so. Instead, the nation has been treated to the sordid spectacle of a judicial game of wits in which the Chief Justice of Nigeria and his legal team have made nonsense of the efforts of the Code of Conduct Tribunal to hear the allegation on merit and conclude the trial as quickly as possible considering the nature of the times in which we live.

7. Whether deliberately or inadvertently, we have all seen the full weight of the Chief Justice of Nigeria descend on the tender head of one of the organs of justice under his control. There is simply no way the officers of that court, from the Chairman to the bailiffs, can pretend to be unaffected by the influence of the leader of the Judiciary. 

8. Not only the trial court, but others have been put on the spot. Practically every other day since his trial commenced, the nation has witnessed various courts granting orders and counter-orders in favour of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, all of them characterised by an unholy alacrity between the time of filing, hearing and delivery of judgment in same. 

9. The real effect has been a stalling of the trial of Justice Onnoghen, helped along by lawyers who insist that these orders, whether right or wrong are technically valid, and must be obeyed till an appellate Court says otherwise. No doubt that it is the proper interpretation, but is it right disposition for our nation?.

10.  Nigeria is a constitutional democracy and no one must be, or be seen to be, above the law. Unfortunately, the drama around the trial of the Chief Justice of Nigeria has challenged that pillar of justice in the perception of the ordinary man on the street. For it is certain that no ordinary Nigerian can get the swift and special treatment Justice Onnoghen has enjoyed from his subordinates and privies in our Judicature.

11.   In the midst of all these distracting events, the essential question of whether the accused CJN actually has a case to answer has been lost in the squabble over the form and nature of his trial. This should not be so. 

12.   If Justice cannot be done and clearly seen to be done, society itself is at risk of the most unimaginable chaos. As a Government, we cannot stand by wailing and wringing our hands helplessly but give our full backing and support to those brave elements within the Judiciary who act forthrightly, irrespective of who is involved.

13.   As you are all aware, the fight against corruption is one of the tripod of policies promised to Nigerians by this administration.  Needless to say that it is an existential Policy which must be given adequate attention and commitment by all the three arms of government. The efforts of the Executive will amount to nothing without the cooperation of the Legislature and especially the Judiciary.

14.   It is no secret that this government is dissatisfied with the alarming rate in which the Supreme Court of Nigeria under the oversight of Justice Walter Onnoghen has serially set free, persons accused of the most dire acts of corruption, often on mere technicalities, and after quite a number of them have been convicted by the trial and appellate courts.

15.   Since there is nothing the Executive Arm can do after the apex court of the land has spoken on any matter, several of these individuals walk free among us today, enjoying what are clearly the proceeds of the corruption which for so long has defeated the efforts of this nation to develop and prosper.

16.  It is against this background that I have received the Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal directing me to suspend the Chief Justice pending final determination of the cases against him. It also explains why I am not only complying immediately, but with some degree of relief for the battered sensibilities of ordinary Nigerians whose patience must have become severely over-taxed by these anomalies.

17.   In line with this administration’s avowed respect for the Rule of Law, I have wholeheartedly obeyed the Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal dated 23rd January 2019.

18.   Accordingly, I hereby suspend the Honourable Mr. Justice Walter Nkanu Samuel Onnoghen, GCON as the Chief Justice of Nigeria pending final determination of the case against him at the Code of Conduct Tribunal.

19.   In further compliance with the same Order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, I hereby invite Honourable Justice Ibrahim Tanko Mohammed JSC, being the next most Senior Justice in the Supreme Court, to come forward to take the Judicial Oath as Chief Justice of Nigeria in an Acting Capacity.

20.  Fellow Nigerians, we can only stand a chance to win the fight against Corruption, and position our dear nation for accelerated development when we stand together to contend against it.

Thank you and may God bless our country.

Friday, January 25, 2019

The War Against the Boko Haram Sect in Nigeria is a Ruse.

The War Against Boko Haram is a Ruse.

The lingering battle to arrest and eliminate the surge of the Boko Haram sect is a ruse. Period. 

The Nigerian Federal Government and its Military hierarchy prosecuting the war against insurgency know exactly what to do to dismantle Boko Haram within a week. Even if they don't know or possess the expertise, they sure know where and how to find the right people with the requisite expertise to do the job for them.  I hold these views in good faith based on the nature of the damages they have inflicted on my privacy and my sources of income in the past few days.

About a week ago, they had the expertise to invade my Facebook account and edited out information that was not suitable for their master. And just a few days ago, they did override the firewall between my system and my employer, and took over my workflow 

They have the expertise, the technical know-how, and the financial wherewithal to go that length, yet they couldn't fathom the wisdom or common sense to mobilize similar resources to infiltrate the Boko Haram Networks and neutralize their power base. 

How does jeopardizing my job and earning potential enhance their ability to win an election or overcome the bloodshed of the Boko Haram set? Their agents on the ground are handsomely rewarded for their dirty jobs - corrupting my account and  jeopardizing means of come. But they are totally clueless and incapacitated in fending and protecting our unsung heroes fighting a war they can not define.

This is a democracy, and I have every right to my opinion. 

This morning, the all-powerful and upper-class debonair; the omnipotent Washington political insider, Mr. Roger Stone, was arrested by the FBI in connection with his clandestine balling during the last US Presidential election. In similar vien,  many prominent, and supposedly, untouchable Republicans, are already serving jail terms for their hacking and dirty jobs during the election. 

You may say, that's America, buddy, we can do anything in Nigeria and go free. Wrong. To every one of you who participated and participating in the hacking of my account and jeopardizing my work, you have taken a loan that you must repay in the new future. Apology to Mallam El'Rufai. 

It took a single frustrated Tunisian roadside food seller to instigate the Arab Spring. You're fighting a wrong guy and a wrong war. 

Half of the expertise and the technology that you have deployed in the past few days to undermine my privacy and ruin my earning ability are sufficient to totally dismantle the Boko Haram sect and restore peace and security in the Northeast. 

The whole World knows those who are managing the war against insurgency in Nigeria. And the whole World knows those who are managing the IT and the War Room of this Presidential election on behalf of the incumbent. And when it's all over, what is going on right now in the US regarding election tampering, would be a child play. Stay away from my Facebook. Stay away from my work. And stay away from my life.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Osamudiamen. Enosamudiana Ekhide.

The Lord is My Strength and I am Unconquerable.

He who dwells in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the Shadow of the Almighty. I say of the Lord, He is My Refuge and My Fortress. My God in Him I have My trust. 

Surely, My Lord shall deliver me from the spying eyes of the hackers and the laughter of the boastful agents. The Lord covers me with His Feathers and under His Wings, I am protected. 

Osamudiamen. Enosa mudia na, ekhide. The Lord is My Strength, and I am inconquerable. The Truth of the Lord remains My Shield and Guidance. I am anointed and fully blessed. No weapon directed at me will prosper.

I am not afraid of the hackers at night time, nor of the arrow that flies by day. Nor daunted by the conspiracy of spying agents who walk in secrecy. On their heads and in their lifetime they will inherit and suffer the iniquities they perpetuate. 

A thousand shall fall at my side and ten thousand at my right hand, but no harm shall near me because Osamudiamen and I will not falter. With our eyes, we will witness the destruction of the wicked. 

Because I have made the Lord my Protector and the Most High my Shield, no evil shall fall on me, neither shall any evil forces and hacking agents come by my house or my business. For the Lord has sent His Angel charge over me to keep me all the way protected. 

The Lord and the Almighty shall be my Guide and I will not stumble or capitulate in the face of clear and present danger pose by man or demonic forces. I will triumph over forces of darkness as well as the iniquities of hackers and the infectious kisses of spying agents. 

I will tread upon the attackers and the young domestic hackers and their foreign agents. And I will trample them under my feet. 

Because I have set my love and trust upon the Lord; therefore, the Lord will deliver me and protect me. The Lord will set me in high places because I know His Name. His name is Jesus Christ the Son of the Almighty God. He died so that I can be saved. And I am saved.

I called upon the Lord, and He answered me. The Lord Almighty will be with me in time of trouble, in good time, and in every situation I find myself. The Lord will deliver me and honor me. With long life, the Almighty Lord will satisfy and show me His Salvation. In Jesus Christ Mighty Name, I pray, Amen.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Nigeria: The Needs For a Narrative of Accountability and Responsiveness.

In Nigeria, our penchant for citing and reciting the failure of the past administration to justify or excuse the inadequacies or failure of the present is legendary. Until we change the narrative from 'a Nigerian standard' to those of 'global standard', we will not experience the development that is commensurate with our natural resources. The benchmark is the emerging trends, not what the previous administration or President did or failed to do. 

The excuses in the past few days for President Buhari's "no show" at the just concluded Presidential debate, feed into that retrogressive mindset. We must move with time, and move forward. As we speak, some African countries, no longer the Western world, are moving ahead of us in terms of modern infrastructural facilities.

While Chinese Multinationals are building close to supersonic or modern Railway Transportation System in some African countries - countries that are not even at par with us in terms of available natural and human resources - we are busy celebrating the fact that the same Chinese Multinationals are building for us coaches of the 1970 era. 

It is the same story at the local level. A road contractor executes a road construction project in your community, without providing drainage (gutter) along the roadside. When you do that, you are sure to receive this comment from some dudes in your community:  OI'boy, take am easy na with these people, don't you know where we from dey come? I beg, make we dey thank them" And you're made to look like a fool. 

In less than two years, the road is washed away, because the asphalt on the ground is too shallow to withstand heavy downpour that has no escape route due to the absence of drainage. And once again, the people are back to square one. But not the contractor. He is richer and richer; having enough cash - your cash - to buy more influence and donate handsomely to the Governorship campaign fund in the next election.

To move forward, we must develop a coherent and consistent narrative for emerging trends and for a responsible government that thrives on accountability. The alleged inadequacies and failures of the past were rejected and voted out at the pool; otherwise, you would not have been in power.  Therefore, the benchmark on the assumption of office must be the emerging global standard or best practices. And not those of the predecessors.

Sunday, January 20, 2019

The Oracle Has Spoken: The Ranka Dede Republic By Sonala Olumhense

Published Jan 20, 2019
If you are reading this, you are most likely also a reader who has this month seen in circulation a 39-year old editorial authored by The Guardian (Nigeria).
Entitled “ The Arrogance of Power, ” it comes from another era when The Guardian inspired journalism through fearless reporting, follow-up, character, and judgment.
This reproduction is from TheBossNewspapers, as The Guardian itself sadly lacks an archive, but I was a member of its Editorial Board at the time and I authenticate it.
“ The Arrogance of Power, ” is so potent it could pass for one written this year, its re-circulator correctly implies, in its denunciation of the parochialism, inflexibility, and meanness of the 1983-1985 military regime of Muhammadu Buhari.
Thirty years later, Buhari returned as Nigeria’s elected leader. But that editorial was published hours after his government was sacked by a group which justified itself by pointing at Buhari’s failure to address “decades of government mismanagement and corruption.”
The following are three paragraphs from the editorial:
“…It did not take long before the Buhari administration, so openly and so warmly received by Nigerians when it came to power, began to show it’s true and frightful face. Soon enough, it became clear that his administration had a conception of government in which the governed were regarded as a hostile, adversary force, and in which government was virtually an end in itself…
“…Blackmailed into silence, Nigerians watched as the traditional foundations of the state were eroded. Ethnicity became a principle of state policy. The economy sputtered along. Educational policy was in a shambles. Our hospitals became graveyards. And all along we were invited to believe, as an article of patriotic faith, that we lived in the best of all possible worlds.
“Ultimately, it was the arrogance of the Buhari administration that led to its downfall. For arrogance always leads to moral and political blindness. Blindness leads to isolation, and when any government is isolated from the governed, its end is always predictable…”
Again, that was almost 40 years ago. History confirms that The Guardian, which had been critical of the government before the coup, had read the situation correctly."

What is sadder then, is the realization that Buhari read neither that nor similar comments that were widely available in the local and international media. There is no other explanation for a situation where receiving another opportunity 30 years later, Buhari chose to inflict as inspired and patriotic governance, the same ramshackle and retrogressive administrative philosophies and practice that collapsed the first time.
Last week, in continuation of the “arrogance [that] always leads to moral and political blindness,” he finally yielded to the questions swirling around him concerning the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, perhaps the most abysmal and ineffective leader of the force since independence, whose term of office had expired.
The transition was an excellent opportunity for Buhari to demonstrate that he is perhaps not as narrow-minded and nepotistic as he had appeared since he took his oath of office, leading to all related offices but one being occupied by Northerners and principally Muslims.
Buhari, a 77-year old man who has served in various federal posts in the past 40 years, had justified that appointment profile by claiming that he appoints people he can trust. To begin with, that cannot be the truth given that on several occasions he has declared that he made those appointments on “merit,” not previously knowing the individuals involved. On what basis do you trust people you do not know to such an extent that the ensuing demographic overwhelmingly tilts towards your village? The obvious and immediate interpretation of that claim, to the embarrassment of many northerners, is that southerners and non-Muslims are untrustworthy.
But while much of the criticism of this practice took place between 2016 and 2018, it might have been argued that at least in theory at that point, Buhari was not running for re-election, as any man running for office would try to avoid self-inflicted political wounds. Not Buhari: last week he had Idris replaced by yet another northerner, Mohammed Abubakar, whom, I believe, he “didn’t know.” It is safe to assume that the moment he heard the name, he saw colors and heard sounds of trustworthiness.
Of equal interest, last weekend was overrun by the news that based upon a petition, the trial for corruption of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Walter Onnoghen, would commence on January 7. I am always delighted whenever a high official is made to face justice, as is the Chief Justice. He certainly has a case to answer because being forgetful, like being ignorant, is no defense in law. The problem is that Onnoghen’s “trial” by the Code of Conduct Tribunal is deeply suspicious. First, the petition in question was received on January 4, a Friday, and his trial immediately set for the next work day! Second, the petitioner is an insider of the presidency, revealing a subterranean attempt to remove and replace a man who cannot be “trusted.” It is on record that last June, while Buhari was declaring Nigeria to be secure, Onnoghen publicly described “frightening” and “horrific incidents” of police brutality, inordinate arrests, detention and extortion of innocent people throughout Nigeria. Onnoghen should face the law, but only according to the established order, not politics, which is something Buhari has frustrated for four years through double standards.
But given his approach, the prosecution of Buhari himself could commence on May 30, one day after he loses immunity unless he wins re-election next month, among others for violating the constitution, the Code of Conduct laws and the Electoral Act through his acceptance in his re-election effort of a N45m campaign gift from the Nigeria Consolidation Ambassadors Network. But it really doesn’t matter what Buhari says in this campaign because we have his records in 1983-85 and 2015-19 as evidence not simply that Buhari is not going to change, but that he is going to get worse.
This has nothing to do with Abubakar Atiku, but with the menace that Buhari is, which is now worsened by his poor health as demonstrated by his scary performance on the campaign trail. In just one week, the world has been able to see how mentally, psychologically and physically fragile, incoherent and discombobulated he is.
Buhari is clearly a sick man: he appeared unable to hear; or hearing, to comprehend; or comprehending, to offer decent, relevant answers. The man did not know when he took office, or often what he was doing or saying. Anyone who advocates Buhari as being capable of leading even a local government insults that council.
Buhari should be in a hospital, not a political campaign, and that—not further power—is what his family should be fighting for if they love him. Upon review, perhaps the two men his wife blames for running her husband’s presidency are more heroes than sinners.
In my estimation, we have reached the end of this road, irrespective of what the options are. Only a suicidal zealot places prescription glasses on a blind pilot and gives him control of an aircraft of 300 people, including his own family.

With no irony suggested, here are wise words from 1985: “ Blindness leads to isolation, and [the end] is always predictable…”
sonala.olumhense@

25 Things Obasanjo Said About Buhari, Osinbajo and INEC

ON INEC
1. “Democracy becomes a sham if elections are carried out by people who should be impartial and neutral umpires, but who show no integrity...”
2. “The transmission and collation of results are subject to interference, manipulation, and meddling. If the INEC’s favorite political party wins with all the above infractions, the result will be conclusively declared and if not, there will be a ‘rerun’.”
3. “The track record of the present INEC is fairly sordid and all men and women of goodwill and believers in a democracy must be prepared for the worst from INEC and their encouragers...”
4. “Amina Zakari has become too controversial a figure to be able to give assurance of free, fair and credible election for INEC.”
5. “A judge does not sit in judgment over a case once he or she becomes a cause for controversy... Madam Amina Zakari should, in honor, stay out and not be seen as a source of contamination of the election.”
6. “Amina Zakari is not the only Commissioner that can be in the Collation Centre. Let the INEC Chairman act boldly and impartially and prove his absolute neutrality and responsiveness...”
ON BUHARI
7. “Some men of God would hold President Buhari to his word on free, fair, credible and peaceful elections. I am a realist... I am not persuaded by a track record of hollow words, impunity, insensitivity, and ‘I-couldn't-care-less’ attitude.”
8. “It is no use, at this juncture, to keep lamenting about the failure, incompetence, divisiveness, nepotism, encouragement, and condonation of corruption by Buhari administration...”
10. “President Buhari and his hatchet men in the coming election think that the judiciary must be primed in their favor. Hence, the Chief Justice of Nigeria... has been harassed and prosecuted...”
11. “President Buhari and his people believe no stone should be left unturned to rig Buhari in. It seems to be a ploy to intimidate the judiciary as a whole in preparation for all election cases that will go before them.”
12. “Buhari has succeeded in deceiving us the first time and we will be fools to allow ourselves to be deceived the second time.”
13. “Even when figures, facts, and statistics are made clear to Buhari, he keeps repeating what is untrue, either because he cannot understand or for mischief purposes and that places him on the level of a pathological liar.”
14. “[Buhari] believes he can get away with impunity and deceit as he seems to have done on many occasions in the past.”
15. “Bola Tinubu’s statement about Muhammadu Buhari in 2003 is fairly prophetic, “Muhammadu Buhari is an agent of destabilization, ethnic bigot and religious fanatic who, if given the chance, would ensure the disintegration of the country. His ethnocentrism would jeopardize Nigeria’s national unity.””
16. “Buhari’s watch can be likened to what we witnessed under Gen. Sani Abacha in many ways. When Abacha decided that he must install himself as Nigerian President by all means and at all costs, he went for broke and surrounded himself with hatchet men who on his order and in his interest and at high costs to Nigeria and Nigerians maimed, tortured and killed for Abacha.”
17. “...we have heard of how Buhari and his party are going about his own self-succession project. They have started recruiting collation officers who are already awarding results based on their projects to actualize the perpetuation agenda...”
18. Buhari’s “henchmen are working round the clock in cahoots with security and election officials to perfect their plan by computing results right from the ward to local government, state and national levels to alot him what will look like a landslide victory irrespective of the true situation...”
19. “The current plan is to drape the pre-determined results with a toga of credibility. It is also planned that violence of unimaginable proportion will be unleashed in high voting population areas across the country to precipitate re-run elections and where [Buhari] will be returned duly elected after concentration of security...”
20. “Buhari’s scheme bears eloquent testimony to this road similar to Abacha whom he has praised to high heavens and as an arch-supporter and beneficiary from Abacha, he has seen nothing wrong done by him. “
21. “It is clear from all indications that Buhari is putting into practice the lessons he learned from Abacha. Buhari has intimidated and harassed the private sector, attacked the National Assembly and now unconstitutionally and recklessly attacked and intimidated the Judiciary to cow them to submission.”
ON OSINBAJO
22. “Osinbajo must have gone for, “if you can’t beat them, join them”. A great pity indeed and which makes people ask the questions, “Any hope?”
23. “Osinbajo has shown the human weakness and proved the saying that the corruption of the best is the worst form of corruption.”
24. “What is the connection between taking the number of PVC of the ‘traders’ and the forthcoming election? There is something sinister about it, and Professor Osinbajo, of all people, should know that.”
ON DEMOCRACY
25. “This is a time for vigilance to fight to safeguard our votes and defend our democracy. The price of liberty and sustenance of our democracy is eternal vigilance and appropriate reaction to ward off iniquities... We must all be ready to pay that price and not relying on hollow words of callousness. The derailment of Nigerian democracy will be a monumental disaster comparable to the disaster of the Nigerian first military coup...Nigeria must not be allowed to slip off the democratic path nor go into anarchy and ruin. No individual nor group has a monopoly of violence or gangsterism...”

Debating the Presidential Debate!

Introduction
A Presidential Debate is not the same as a Town Hall Meeting. It is called a debate because it provides an opportunity for the candidates to confront each other, present their agenda or manifesto, debunks one another as time permits, and at the same time, convincing the viewers (the electorate at home) that you're indeed the best of the park. Today, that did not happen.
President Buhari
There is no excuse for what happened today in Nigeria. I took the pain to read the response from the PDP Presidential Campaign Desk (shared on my Wall), signed by my friend, Mr. Festus Keyamo SAN, and I must confess, the excuses are not persuasive - not strong enough. I would have rather, he focuses solely on exhaustion or physical debility as a result of the fully packed engagements in the past few days. So, based on the advice of his Doctor, he respectfully asks to be excused. As simple as that.
Vice President Atiku Abubakar
With respect to Vice President Atiku's unscripted withdrawer, I would have suggested the contrary - take the plunge, Sir. Granted, Mr. Atiku would have been the main target by the other three candidates, but that strategy comes at a huge cost. The more time you spent attacking your opponent, the less time you have dissecting your agenda and marketing yourself to the electorate - the viewers at home. Yes, I would have compelled my candidate to go in there and ruffle heads. Yes, go there; be Presidential, stay focus on the message, prove that you're the missing link - the very best the electorates have been waiting for. Tell the voters that you have a plan, but the other guy doesn't, and that's why he couldn't show up, etc, etc, etc.
Mr. Omoyele Sowore
As for my friend Omoyele Sowore, the organizers of the debate own Nigerians some explanations for what they did to that young man. As at of this moment, there is no candidate on the Ballot who can boast of traversing the length and breadth of this country as Sowore has done. So, I really do not understand why he was excluded. It was profoundly a disappointing act. I am reluctant to call it a fiasco. Sowore deserves a spot. His denial is not only condemnable, but an indelible mark on our electoral process.
Analysis
Participating in a Presidential debate is not "it is my prerogative" kind of a thing. It's an essential component of a democratic dispensation. It is the only opportunity that the viewers have to assess all the candidates in one setting. It's about exuding Presidential attributes for the viewers at home. If you believe you have what it takes to be elected President, step forward and articulate it. 
If you cannot articulate it or explain it, it means you don't know it. If you don't know it, you cannot implement it when in office. I call it policy statement - the bedrock of your motivations in power. You must be able to articulate why you want to be President.
It is like discussing free education or free healthcare or affordable healthcare. Papa Awo prepared for it with the help of young brilliant experts. Same with President Obama with respect to the Affordable Healthcare Law. You must be prepared to be a purposeful performer in government. Idea deficit is a sin - a disqualification per se.
It is more than "I want to provide security and reliable electricity." How? What are you going to do differently? It is about audacity, vision, and intuitive instincts.
Papa Awo did not go about campaigning on Free Education at all levels alone. He tapped into the wisdom of the Alukos, Awokoyas, and Fafuwas, etc. The presidential debate is a big event - it provides ample opportunities for the candidates to absorb the enormity of the office they are about to occupy, and at the same time, the opportunity to learn and perfect the essentials of their agenda.
What happened today in Nigeria is a show of shame on the part of all the President's Men. Where is your audacity? Where is your honor? And where is your integrity, the intellectual in you? You had all the time in the world to coach and prepare President Buhari for this debate, only to come up in the last minutes with some bogus excuses. If the decision was on the ground of infirmity, why fielding him as a candidate? The electorate deserves better.

BUHARI’S CAMPAIGN EXPLAINS HIS ABSENCE AT DEBATE, SLAMS ATIKU

Saturday, January 19, 2019
PRESS STATEMENT BY APC PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN COUNCIL:
WHY PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI DID NOT ATTEND THE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE ORGANISED BY THE NIGERIA ELECTION DEBATE GROUP AND THE BROADCASTING ORGANISATIONS OF NIGERIA

The President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, who is also the APC Presidential Candidate in the forthcoming Presidential Election, President Muhammadu Buhari, could not attend the Presidential Debate organised by the Nigeria Election Debate Group and the Broadcasting Organisations of Nigeria which held today, Saturday, January 19, 2019 for the following reasons:
Firstly, out of several opportunities afforded our candidate to interact with the Nigerian people directly by different organisations, our presidential candidate has taken full advantage of another town-hall meeting organized by another group which held on Wednesday, January 16, 2019. He was also joined at that town-hall meeting by our Vice-Presidential candidate who is also the Vice-President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, SAN. Nigerians from all walks of life who were physically present and through on-line platforms asked uncensored questions which were adequately answered. It was also transmitted live by various broadcast networks in Nigeria.
In addition, the busy and hectic official and campaign schedules of Mr. President clashed with this programme. Today, Mr. President commissioned the Baro Inland Water Port in Niger State and campaigned in Niger and Plateau States where his time was over-stretched by the tumultuous and mammoth crowds in both States, (as seen by Nigerians on live television) and only returned to Abuja late this evening.
Whilst we thank the organisers for the invitation, we want to assure Nigerians that we shall continue to hold these debate groups and Nigerians in high esteem which our candidate has demonstrated during past election debates when he honoured similar invitations. Nigerians will also recall that a few weeks ago, our Vice-Presidential candidate, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, also attended the debate organized by the same organisations.
Lastly, we note the statement of the candidate of the PDP, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar who actually came for the event and left the venue when he did not see Mr. President, who is our candidate. According to him, he would not want to “attack” Mr. President in his absence.
It should now be obvious to Nigerians that for Alhaji Atiku Abubakar and the PDP, this election is all about attacking the person and programmes of Mr. President and not about proffering their own solutions to the problems they created during their sixteen years of misrule, maladministration and looting of the nation’s resources. When they cannot see President Buhari to attack, the content of their campaign becomes hollow, empty and “full of sound and fury, signifying nothing”. Now that Atiku Abubakar had a unique opportunity to explain to Nigerians his own vision and mission without a President Buhari in the picture, he ran away. Afterall, he has his own eight years of crass and grand corruption as Vice President to defend before the Nigerian people.
On February 16, 2019 we urge Nigerians to demonstrate to Alhaji Atiku Abubakar and the PDP, through their votes, how empty indeed their campaign has always been and to vote massively for President Muhammadu Buhari and Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN who have started the rebuilding process of our great nation.
Thank you.
FESTUS KEYAMO,SAN, FCIArb (UK)
Director, Strategic Communications,
APC Presidential Campaign Council.
(Official Spokesperson).

Vice President Atiku Abubakar at the Presidential Debate Venue

Atiku Abubakar
We came for a Presidential debate, not a candidacy debate, and I, Atiku Abubakar cannot challenge or question an administration where the man at the helm of the affairs of the nation is not present to defend himself or his policies. After all, you cannot shave a man's head in his absence. I do not believe in attacking a man who is NOT here to defend himself. As a leader and former vice president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, let me first apologise to all Nigerians, my fellow candidates and the moderator for the APC Presidential Candidate’s absence in this debate. His non-appearance is a slight on ALL of us and our democracy.
Secondly, with all due respect to my fellow candidates, Fela Durotoye, Oby Ezekwesili, Kingsley Moghalu and to the moderator Mark Sugar and with apologies to all Nigerians here and at home expecting an interesting debate, I regret that I will not be able to go on with this debate due to President Buhari's absence.
I however challenge President Buhari to choose a date and time for a debate where he will be present and I will be there, hopefully with the other candidates as well.
Thank you and God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Atiku Abubakar. #2019debate

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Intimidation and Selective Persecution: The Invasion of My Facebook Acct by Unknown Forces Continues.

A few days ago, my privacy, my fundamental rights were invaded and violated. My Facebook account was literally taken over by unknown forces. I couldn't edit the short story I was working on, and I couldn't log out of my account as well. What they did was beyond human comprehension. At the time I regained control of my account, the story and picture I shared from the Daily Trust Newspaper were gone - they killed it. The cowards who invaded my account clandestinely expunged the attached Daily Trust story and picture about the unfortunate Nigerians on forced migration from their ancestral homeland (Baga and Doro villages) into the unknown.  
Initially, I thought it was Facebook that executed the unsolicited editing. But when I came back to Facebook later in the day, I discovered that the same story from the Daily Trust was still available elsewhere on FaceBook. Amazing. So, why the interest on the one that I shared?
Facebook does not engage in a selective pre-emptive strike or prior restraint. They would either take a video or a story down comprehensively across the board, or they would obscure it with a pointer: viewer discretion is advised.
Prior restraint has its constitutional limitations. Granted, we are at war with unknown bandits operating in the Northwest and the Boko Haram sect colonizing the Northeast. But that does not grant the Nigerian Armed Forces, security agencies, or the secret techy pros working for them an unqualified privilege to invade my privacy or embark on a course of conduct that undermines the privacy of Nigerians in the social media.
How does a newspaper's story that shows the picture of hapless Nigerians, hanging on to a few of their belongings, walking hundreds of miles out of their ancestral homes to unknown destinations in other to evade the indiscriminate killing and enslavement by the Boko Haram sect, constitute a security threat or  complicate the ability of the Nigerian Armed Forces to prosecute its war against the sect? Seriously, how? That was the story that I shared.
It takes expertise to be able to invade someone's account and yanked off an attached story from a different source, but not the accompanying comment. I am a Microsoft Certified System Engineer (MCSE); and to a certain degree, I am technologically savvy. But this one is beyond my understanding. It is totally beyond changing your password. Nothing private anymore, including all the messages that I have sent and received.
In the next paragraph, you will see a verbatim reproduction of the story, dated January 06, 2019, titled "The Journey to Nowhere" that prompted the invasion.
"Internally Displaced Persons: Homeless and Hopeless in their own country, while Abuja luxuriates in an ambiance of splendor and opulence. Baga or Doro, they are, but first, Nigerians like you and I. So, remember the victims of a stupid war, and of a journey to nowhere, when you cast your votes in February. Because the impacts of the broken promise of peace and security are not evenly shared."
I am not a subversive element. I have never advocated for the dismantling of Nigeria or agitated for a forceful overthrow of a democratically elected government. I study Government and Leadership at a graduate level, and I know what obtains when national security is under the threshold of 'Clear and Present Danger.' Those who invaded my account have access to my phone number, email address, and even messenger. Why not simply send a text or a phone call, advising me to take down the Daily Trust story? Trust me, I would have gladly complied. 
A few years ago, precisely, during President Jonathan's administration, I wrote a disparaging essay about a popular Kaduna-based Islamic scholar, Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi on this Blog. After the publication, I received a long and persuasively written email from an unknown Nigerian, advising me that trash-talking the Sheikh the way I did in my essay, is descending to the same level I condemned in him. The writer was most concerned about two sentences. and I promised him or her that I will delete them. And I did. I did not stop there, after considering the friendly tone of his email and the thank you note, I went back to my Blog, and kill the entire story. And more thanks from the unknown, followed. 
There are lots of essays on my Facebook Wall and this Blog that are not made public. I did that because of national interest. I don't want history to record me as the unknown writer who instigated the dismantling or the collapse of Nigeria as a nation-state. So, I do know when to draw the line and when to take a stand on sensitive national issues. I have always been an unrepentant advocate of True Federalism and Decentralization of power. That Abuja is incapable of managing our abundant natural resources and the highly talented brains of this great country is no longer in doubt. The Minister of Transportation, Governor Amaechi, can attest to that, based on his recent revelations.
Nigeria is not a Monarchy and we don't have an Emperor as a leader or ruler. No one is above the law. Not the citizens. And not those saddled with the leadership of this great nation.
I am not running away from social media. You must be a coward to invade and take control of my phone number and my Facebook Account. You could rent and hire some dubious experts to execute your clandestine and fruitless hacking but you couldn't do the same to restore peace and security in the land.

Thursday, January 3, 2019

Domesticating Our Presidential Campaign.

In the last Nigerian Presidential Election, it was widely reported that APC/Buhari Campaign Team, hired a celebrated American election guru to lecture Candidate Buhari on how to fall a victim of transcultural indoctrination by wearing ill-fitting suits, as well as Ndigbo and Niger-Delta traditional attire. I do not think Awo, Zik, or Balewa would have succumbed to that multicultural fraud in the cause of marketing their electability and national appeals. It demeans our sense of values and our democratic process. You don't need to wear my traditional attire to prove to me that you are an Esan man, as equal as the Yoruba man, the Kanuri man, the Hausa/Fulani man, or the Ndigbo in the allocations of federal power and positions.  How many Ishan guys or ladies do you have in your Aso Rock. That's the benchmark.

And just a few days ago, Senator Ojudu Babafemi, reported on his Wall the story and picture of a foreign-looking Social Media aficionado allegedly hired by the Atiku/Obi Campaign Team to manage their online presence. I want to pretend that isn't true. 

The Atiku/Obi Presidential Campaign Organization has a plethora of ready-made and readily available materials to harness and deploy for the dethronement of the incumbent.  The fact that APC went overseas in the last election to search for a Presidential Election Campaign Strategist, does not provide a cover for the alleged globe-trotting of the Atiku/Obi Team. 

It wasn't by accident that Mr. Mark Zuckerberg chooses Lagos, Nigeria as his first port of call in the Developing World. It was because of our powerful and domineering presence in social media. The powerful presence isn't consultant made, but by our total embrace of the nuts and bolts that the internet has to offer. As a people, yes indeed, we are telecom savvy.

Truth is, going overseas for consultants wasn't Buhari or Osibanjo's decisions, but those of their handlers. And I have no doubt in my mind that the emerging news of the alleged foreign foray by the Atiku/Obi Ticket is the handiwork of their handlers. In both cases, it is easy to draw a similar conclusion: the inadequacies of all the President Men in managing their candidates. In other words, if the materials are "white and foreign package" they are taken as God sent. Wrong, guys, wrong.

The Obama Campaign Team didn't go about hiring foreign consultants or spying eyes to win two Presidential elections. Instead, they focused on domestic commentators and analysts for useful materials on the ground. And if you think that wasn't smart, just take a look at how reliance on Cambridge Analytical and Russian undercover operatives in the last U.S. Presidential election is unmaking the Trump Presidency. 

Zamfara State is in turmoil. Sokoto and Katsina States are playing host to foreign armed bandits, terrorizing and confiscating the natives of their goods and herds for failing to pay a ransom. Borno State, the hotbed of the Boko Haram sect is almost 75% under the control of the sect. He reneges on the  N5000.00 monthly stipends his party promised unemployed Nigerians youths. And without consultation with his own party, he informed Nigerians in his 2018 New Year address that Restructuring is not a reality. What else do you want?

You're are wrong to go foreign. You must start trusting Nigerians.

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