Good luck, Jonathan -New Nigeria President vows for Electoral reform

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Read Time:3 Minute, 21 Second

Nigeria’s new president says he will make sweeping electoral reforms before next year’s nationwide vote. He has laid out an aggressive agenda to complete the term of former President Umaru Yar’Adua, who died late Wednesday.

In their time of mourning, President Goodluck Jonathan says Nigerians must aspire to uphold the values that Mr. Yar’Adua represented.

“We must, in the midst of such great adversity, continue to garner our collective efforts towards upholding the values which our departed leader represented,” said President Jonathan. “In this regard, our total commitment to good governance, electoral reform, and the fight against corruption will be pursued with greater vigor.”

President Yar’Adua and then-vice-president Jonathan came to power in a 2007 election that was widely criticized by political opponents for voter intimidation and ballot-box stuffing. Mr. Yar’Adua recognized the flawed nature of that vote and set out to make Nigerian elections more transparent.

President Jonathan says that mission must now be completed before local government, legislative, and presidential elections scheduled for next year.

“We must enshrine the best standards in our democratic practice,” he said. “One of the true tests will be  to ensure that all votes count and are counted in the upcoming general elections.”

U.S. President Barack Obama says Mr. Yar’Adua was committed to creating lasting peace in Nigeria and continuing that work is an important part of honoring his legacy.

U.S. State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley:

“President Yar’Adua was working towards building strong democratic institutions based on constitutional processes, and we know that he would want Nigeria to continue on this civilian democratic path,” said P.J. Crowley. “We urge all Nigerians to place their faith and support firmly behind orderly, democratic, and constitutional mechanisms.”

The change of leadership is not so dramatic for Nigeria as President Jonathan has been running the country for the last several months because of Mr. Yar’Adua’s prolonged medical absence. He had already appointed a new Cabinet and started leading efforts to boost electricity supplies.

“I want to reassure Nigerians that the pledges which we have made to improve the socio-economic situation which we face through improved access to electricity, water, education, health facilities, and other social amenities will continue to be given the needed emphasis,” said Goodluck Jonathan.

Improving the economy in Africa’s largest oil producer means preventing a resurgence of violence in the oil-rich Niger Delta.

“The efforts at ensuring the sustenance of peace and development in the Niger Delta as well as the security of life and property around the entire country will be a top most priority in the remaining period of this administration,” he said.

President Yar’Adua secured an amnesty deal with Niger Delta militants last year. But the plan to supply job training and a monthly stipend to former rebels lost momentum because of his health problems. Nigerian security forces now say former gunmen frustrated with the pace of the amnesty plan are once again stealing oil.

Akwa Ibom Senator Effiong Bob says it is up to President Jonathan and the National Assembly to follow through with Mr. Yar’Adua’s strong start in the Niger Delta.

“Militancy has drastically reduced because of his action,” said Effiong Bob. “What we need now is the continuation and completion of the policy initiated by him.”

At the most, President Jonathan has just one year to accomplish these goals before voters go to the polls to choose a new leader.

Under an unofficial power-sharing agreement between northern and southern Nigeria, the ruling party would name a northern politician to run for what would have been President Yar’Adua’s second term.

President Jonathan is from the south so would not be a candidate under that arrangement. But there is no constitutional provision stopping him from running for his own mandate, and he has not ruled out doing so.

How much he can get done in the next year may well determine whether President Jonathan challenges the ruling party’s regional apportionment or decides to run as an independent.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Could Nuhu Ribadu be the choice of Jonathan as Vice President

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Read Time:1 Minute, 34 Second

Following the death of Nigeria leader, Mr.Umaru Yar’Adua on Wednesday and the swearing in of acting president, Mr.Jonathan Goodluck as the President of Nigeria, Nigerians in various online forums have been clamoring for erstwhile boss of Nigeria’s anti-graft agency, EFCC, Mr.Nuhu Ribadu to be made Vice President.

At the moment, there is a vaccum for the position of Vice President. It is expected that the President would be looking at a Northerner who must also be a Muslim just like the late Yar’Adua to balance political and religious equations. Several posts by readers on our networkFacebook, Saharareporters and several websites and monitored by gistmaster online indicate that many Nigerians think that Ribadu would be a good man for the Vice President position.

Ribadu already indicated his willingness (before the death of Mr.President) to return to Nigeria and contribute his quota to the progress of the nation. However, in a statement of condolence, the former Economic and Financial Crime boss prays that may GOD grant the remains of Yar’Adua eternal rest.

Ribadu, who has been on self imposed exile following his sack and alleged threat has been discharged of all charges that the Federal Government of Yar’Adua made against him. Coincidentally, the government discontinued the case against him at the Code of Conduct Bureau, on Wednesday 5 May 2010, the same day that Mr.Yar’Adua died.

Ribadu is credited for waging the biggest and the most successful war against anti-graft in Nigeria.

Meamwhile,Mr.Olusegun Obasanjo, former President of Nigeria and political mentor of the late Mr.Yar’Adua was visibly absent at the burial in Kastina State. The newly sworn in president,Mr.Goodluck Jonathan was also absent due to what many described as security reasons.

Biography of Nuhu Ribadu

 

 

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Nigeria’s anger at the BBC’s Welcome to Lagos film

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Read Time:3 Minute, 11 Second

Once again, the Lion of Africa is upset. This time, with the BBC. From Nobel Laureate to hoi polloi, Nigerians have, over the past many days, roared a range of emotions in reaction to the BBC documentary, Welcome to Lagos, which showed a side of our beloved city that some of us have never seen – real, live Lagosians subsisting on refuse dumps.

“There was this colonialist idea of the noble savage which motivated the programme,” Wole Soyinka said about the documentary. “It was patronising and condescending.” Dalhatu Tafida, Nigeria’s high commissioner to the UK, described the documentaryBBC’s Welcome to Lagos Part 2 – Raising Controversy as, “a calculated attempt to bring Nigeria and its hardworking people to international odium and scorn”. Facebook pages and blogs have also been ablaze. “They are giving us a bad image,” many Nigerians fume. Meanwhile, the Lagos state government has submitted a formal complaint to the BBC, calling on the corporation to commission an alternative series to “repair the damage we believe this series has caused to our image”.

But hardly have I come across passionate expressions of “Oh my goodness! There are people in our country living like this? What shall we do about them? How fast can we act?”

The Nigerian obsession with image often approaches neurotic proportions. What people think of us appears to take manic precedence over who we really are. You might imagine that the rational response to some of the infamies we are accused of across the globe would be: “Are we really like this? If we are, then let’s do something about it – quick.” Instead, we perpetually harangue and speechify to “correct” the world’s impressions of us. If it isn’t moaning about the depiction of Nigerians as criminals in the movie District 9, it is berating Hillary Clinton for daring to describe the situation in our country as heartbreaking and our leadership as a failure, or boycotting Oprah for warning against Nigerian 419 scams on her show.

This curious attitude goes beyond high-profile situations like the BBC documentary where our dirty linen were yanked from our very loins and aired on the international veranda. It also manifests in how we deal with everyday shames. I’m continually shocked by the number of Nigerian families frantically hiding away relatives with obvious mental health issues rather than seeking help for them, simply because they are more worried about the news getting out. Even physical ailments and high crimes often get hidden away. Like Nigeria, many of these families are busy chasing rats while their houses burn. Protecting the family image is more important to them than finding solutions to the dire problems at hand.

But then, image does matter tremendously in our part of the world. Perceived flaws automatically put a family or tribe in a position of disadvantage. I still hear comments like, “Don’t marry him; his father used to stand in front of their house talking to the sky” or “How can you hang out with her? Girls from her village are very diabolical”. Plus, an amateur surveillance of Africa’s history shows stronger tribes regularly treating weaker ones as vermin. To survive, groups need to be seen as superior.

Apart from the obsession with keeping up appearances, collective anger against documentaries like the BBC’s Welcome to Lagos appears to serve an additional benefit for Nigerians. It is extremely rare to find us united in common purpose. We more often unite with common hatred. Therefore, it doesn’t matter whether it is against neo-colonialists or Gaddafi or the BBC, that brotherly bond which ethnocentrism and savagery rarely allow us to enjoy, suddenly waxes strong when there is someone against whom to direct our rage.

And, quite frankly, I’d rather we were united in attacking the BBC than consumed with the usual pastime of hunting one another.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Watch out – Obama Administration Seems to Be Planning for a Lot More War

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Read Time:11 Minute, 24 Second
Judging by the Barack Obama administration’s reports, pronouncements and actions in recent months point to even greater war-making across the planet.

There’s more war in America’s future – a great deal more, judging by the Barack Obama administration’s reports, pronouncements and actions in recent months.

These documents and deeds include the Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), the Nuclear Posture Review (NPR), the Ballistic Missile Defense Report, the nuclear security summit in New York and the May 3-28 United Nations nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty review conference, as well as the continuing wars in the Middle East and Central Asia, and the 2011 Pentagon war budget request.

The United States government presides as a military colossus of unrivalled dimension, but the QDR, which was published in February, suggests Washington views America as being constantly under the threat of attack from a multitude of fearsome forces bent on its destruction. As such, trillions more dollars must be invested in present and future wars – ostensibly to make safe the besieged homeland.

The NPR says the long-range US goal is a “nuclear-free” world, but despite token reductions in its arsenal of such weapons, the Pentagon is strengthening its nuclear force and bolstering it with a devastating “conventional deterrent” intended to strike any target in the world within one hour. In addition this document, published in April, retains “hair-trigger” nuclear launch readiness, refuses to declare its nuclear force is for deterrence only (suggesting offensive use) and for the first time authorizes a nuclear attack, if necessary, on a non-nuclear state (Iran).

Meanwhile, Obama is vigorously expanding the George W Bush administration’s wars, and enhancing and deploying America’s unparalleled military power.

The Obama administration’s one positive achievement in terms of militarism and war was the April 9 signing in Prague of the new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with Russia that reduces deployed strategic nuclear weapons to 1,550 warheads each. It was a step forward, but all agree it was extremely modest, and it does not even faintly diminish the danger of nuclear war.
The QDR is a 128-page Defense Department report mandated by congress to be compiled every four years to put forward a 20-year projection of US military planning. A 20-member civilian panel, selected by the Pentagon and congress, analyzes the document and suggests changes in order to provide an “independent” perspective. Eleven of the members, including the panel’s co-chairmen – former defense secretary William Perry and former national security adviser Stephen Hadley – are employed by the defense industry.

Although the Pentagon is working on preparations for a possible World War III and beyond, the new report is largely focused on the relatively near future and only generalizes about the longer term. Of the QDR’s many priorities three stand out.

# The first priority is to “prevail in today’s wars” in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen and wherever else Washington’s post-9/11 military intrusions penetrate in coming years. Introducing the report February 1, Bush-Obama Defense Secretary Robert Gates issued this significant statement: “Success in wars to come will depend on success in these wars in progress.” The “wars to come” were not identified. Further, the QDR states that military victory in Iraq and Afghanistan

is “only the first step toward achieving our strategic objectives”.

# Second, while in the past the US concentrated on the ability to fight two big wars simultaneously, the QDR suggests that’s not enough. Now, the Obama administration posits the “need for a robust force capable of protecting US interests against a multiplicity of threats, including two capable nation-state aggressors.”

Now it’s two-plus wars – the plus being the obligation to “conduct large-scale counter-insurgency, stability and counter-terrorism operations in a wide range of environments”, mainly in small, poor countries like Afghanistan. Other “plus” targets include “non-state actors” such as al-Qaeda, “failed states” such as Somali, and medium-size but well-defended states that do not bend the knee to Uncle Sam, such as Iran or the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, and some day perhaps Venezuela.

# Third, it’s fairly obvious from the QDR, though not acknowledged, that the Obama government believes China and Russia are the two possible “nation-state aggressors” against which Washington must prepare to “defend” itself. Neither Beijing nor Moscow has taken any action to justify the Pentagon’s assumption that they will ever be suicidal enough to attack the far more powerful United States.

After all, the US, with 4.54% of the world’s population, invests more on war and war preparations than the rest of the world combined. Obama’s 2010 Pentagon budget is US$680 billion, but the real total is double that when all Washington’s national security expenditures in other departmental budgets are also included, such as the cost of nuclear weapons, the 16 intelligence agencies, Homeland Security and interest on war debts, among other programs.

Annual war-related expenditures are well over $1 trillion. In calling for a discretionary freeze on government programs in January’s state of the union address, Obama specifically exempted Pentagon/national security expenditures from the freeze. Obama is a big war spender. His $708 billion Pentagon allotment for fiscal 2011 (not counting a pending $33 billion Congress will approve for the Afghan “surge”) exceeds Bush’s highest budget of $651 billion for fiscal 2009.

At present, US military power permeates the entire world. As the QDR notes: “The United States is a global power with global responsibilities. Including operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, approximately 400,000 US military personnel are forward-stationed or rotationally deployed around the world.”

The Pentagon presides over 1,000 overseas military bases (including those in the war zones), great fleets in every ocean, a globe-spanning air force

, military satellites in space and nuclear missiles on hair trigger alert pre-targeted on “enemy” or potential “enemy” cities and military facilities. A reading of the QDR shows none of this will change except for upgrading, enlarging (the Pentagon just added six new bases in Colombia) and adding new systems such as Prompt Global Strike, an important new offensive weapon system, which we shall discuss below.

The phrase “full spectrum military dominance” – an expression concocted by the neo-conservatives in the 1990s that was adopted by the Bush administration to define its aggressive military strategy – was cleverly not included in the 2010 QDR, but retaining and augmenting dominance remains the Pentagon’s prime preoccupation.

The QDR is peppered with expressions such as “America’s interests and role in the world require armed forces with unmatched capabilities” and calls for “the continued dominance of America’s Armed Forces in large-scale force-on-force warfare”. Gates went further in his February 1 press conference: “The United States needs a broad portfolio of military capabilities, with maximum versatility across the widest possible spectrum of conflicts.” Obama bragged recently that he commanded “the finest military in the history of the world”.

Evidently, the Pentagon is planning to engage in numerous future wars interrupted by brief periods of peace while preparing for the next war. Given that the only entity expressing an interest in attacking the United States is al-Qaeda – a non-government paramilitary organization of extreme religious fanatics with about a thousand reliable active members around the world – it is obvious that America’s unprecedented military might is actually intended for another purpose.

In our view that “other purpose” is geopolitical – to strengthen even further the Pentagon’s military machine to assure that the United States retains its position as the dominant

global hegemon at a time of acute indebtedness, the severe erosion of its manufacturing base, near gridlock in domestic politics, and the swift rise to global prominence of several other nations and blocs.

The QDR touches on this with admirable delicacy: “The distribution of global political, economic and military power is shifting and becoming more diffuse. The rise of China, the world’s most populous country, and India, the world’s largest democracy, will continue to reshape the international system. While the United States will remain the most powerful actor, it must increasingly cooperate with key allies and partners to build and sustain peace and security. Whether and how rising powers fully integrate into the global system will be among this century’s defining questions, and are thus central to America’s interests.”

At the moment, the QDR indicates Washington is worried about foreign “anti-access” strategies that limit its “power projection capabilities” in various parts of the world. What this means is that certain countries such as China and Russia are developing sophisticated new weapons that match those of the US, thus “impeding” the deployment of American forces to wherever the Pentagon desires. For instance:

China is developing and fielding large numbers of advanced medium-range ballistic and cruise missiles, new attack submarines equipped with advanced weapons, increasingly capable long-range air defense systems, electronic warfare and computer network attack capabilities, advanced fighter aircraft and counter-space systems. China has shared only limited information about the pace, scope and ultimate aims of its military modernization programs, raising a number of legitimate questions regarding its long-term intentions.

To counter this trend in China and elsewhere, the Pentagon is planning, at a huge and unannounced cost, the following enhancements: “Expand future long-range strike capabilities; Exploit advantages in subsurface operations; Increase the resiliency of US forward posture and base infrastructure; Assure access to space and the use of space assets; Enhance the robustness of key ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance) capabilities; Defeat enemy sensors and engagement systems; and Enhance the presence and responsiveness of US forces abroad.”

In addition, the US not only targets China with nuclear missiles and bombs, it is surrounding the country (and Russia as well, of course) with anti-ballistic missiles. The purpose is plain: In case the US finds it “necessary” to launch ballistic missiles toward China, the ABMs will be able to destroy its limited retaliatory capacity.

According to an article in the February 22 issue of China Daily, the country’s English-language newspaper: “Washington appears determined to surround China with US-built anti-missile systems, military scholars have observed … Air force colonel Dai Xu, a renowned military strategist, wrote in an article released this month that ‘China is in a crescent-shaped ring of encirclement. The ring begins in Japan, stretches through nations in the South China Sea to India, and ends in Afghanistan’.”

Compared to the Bush administration’s 2006 QDR, there has been a conscious effort to tone down the anti-China rhetoric in the current document. But it is entirely clear that China is number one in the QDR’s references to “potentially hostile nation states”.

According to the February 18 Defense News, a publication that serves the military-industrial complex, “Analysts say the QDR attempts to address the threat posed by China without further enraging Beijing. ‘If you look at the list of further enhancements to US forces and capabilities … those are primarily capabilities needed for defeating China, not Iran, North Korea or Hezbollah,’ said Roger Cliff, a China military specialist at Rand. ‘So even though not a lot of time is spent naming China … analysis of the China threat is nonetheless driving a lot of the modernization programs described in the QDR’.”

Incidentally, according to the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, this year’s Chinese defense budget, for a country four times larger than the United States, is $78 billion, compared to the $664 billion for the Pentagon (without all the national security extras harbored in other department budgets). China possesses 100-200 nuclear warheads compared to America’s 9,326 (when both deployed and stored weapons are included). China is contemplating the construction of an aircraft carrier; the US Navy floats 11 of them. China has no military bases abroad.

In our view, China appears to be constructing weapons for defense, not offense against the US – and its foreign policy is based on refusing to be pushed around by Washington while doing everything possible to avoid a serious confrontation.

Russia as well is treated better in the new QDR than in 2006, but it is included with China in most cases. Despite Moscow’s huge nuclear deterrent and abundant oil and gas supplies, it’s only “potential enemy” number two in terms of the big powers. Washington feels more threatened by Beijing. This is largely because of China’s size, rapid development, fairly successful state-guided capitalist economy directed by the Communist Party, and the fact that it is on the road to becoming the world’s economic leader, surpassing the US in 20 to 40 years.

It seems fairly obvious, but hardly mentioned publicly, that this is an extremely dangerous situation. China does not seek to dominate the world, nor will it allow itself to be dominated. Beijing supports the concept of a multipolar world order, with a number of countries and blocs playing roles. At issue, perhaps, is who will be first among equals.

Washington prefers the situation that has existed these 20 years after the implosion of the Soviet Union and much of the socialist world left the United States as the remaining military superpower and boss of the expanded capitalist bloc. During this time Washington has functioned as the unipolar world hegemon and doesn’t want to relinquish the title.

This is all changing now as other countries rise, led by China, and the US appears to be in gradual decline. How the transition to multi-polarity is handled over the next couple of decades may determine whether or not a disastrous war will be avoided.

Jack A Smith is editor of the Hudson Valley Activist Newsletter in New York State and the former editor of the Guardian Newsweekly (US). He may be reached at jacdon@earthlink.net

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Deconstructing Stereotype – Let men and women be good human beings

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Read Time:3 Minute, 26 Second

Give me a handful of energetic youth and I will transform India, had said Vivekanand, who recognised the potential of youth power and had said this long back. Today, from government to voluntary sector, everyone is talking about youth to tackle a plethora of problems by involving them. Continue reading

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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A new stage of the Nigerian Revolution

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Read Time:8 Minute, 11 Second
At the last count the Nigerian revolution was at the stage of choices. Honestly I thought it had reached a climax when President Obama met with our [Acting] President Goodluck Jonathan in Washington recently, but I was proved wrong by recent events. Continue reading

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Some people think I’m a womanizer – Majid Micheal

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Read Time:6 Minute, 1 Second
A while back, our correspodent (Ananse) did an interview with an up and coming actor, the person we all know today as Majid Micheal. Continue reading

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Nollywood voodo acting is giving Nigeria bad image

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Read Time:1 Minute, 35 Second

The Minister of Information and Communications, Prof. Dora Akunyili, has said that the Nigerian film industry has contributed to the nation’s poor international image.

Akunyili blamed the key operators of Nollywood for focusing on voodoo, crime and advance fee fraud (419) in their plots, to the exclusion of positive attributes of Nigerians in a bid to market their films.

Akunyili spoke at a training and community building workshop on film production organised by the Nigerian National Volunteer Service and Del York International in Abuja on Tuesday.

Interestingly, a versatile actor and prominent member of the Nollywood, Chief Pete Edochie, is the Rebranding Ambassador of the committee set up by Akunyili.

The minister noted that while the Federal Government was not against Nollywood’s choice of featuring existing vices in films, it was necessary for them to highlight these alongside the good attributes of Nigerians.

She commended the Managing Director of Del-York International, Mr. Linus Idahosa, for embracing human capital development in the film industry by planning to bring a foremost film training institute in the United States, the New York Film Academy, to Nigeria to train actors in February 2010.

Akunyili said that the time had come for Nollywood to positively project the image of the country.

She said, “We want extra commitment from Nollywood to stop projecting Nigeria negatively. We plead with you to project Nigeria, to tell the world the bad things we do. We cannot hide them.

“But let us also portray the good things we do so that we do not allow a few individuals to incriminate our innocence.”

She argued that if Nollywood had featured the financial contributions made by Nigerian civil servants to the struggle against apartheid in South Africa in the 70s and 80s in film production, the present generation of South Africans would not display hatred towards Nigerians.

 

 

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Now that Yar’adua is buried What next ?

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Read Time:6 Minute, 19 Second
Finally, it has come to pass. Umaru Musa Yar’adua, the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria until Wednesday, May 5th 2010 is no more. Death, the inevitable visitor lurking in every home, has finally snatched the President of Nigeria’s 150 million people. The Qur’an, that luminous eternal book, has already prepared the minds of the believers: “…Everything will perish save His Face. His is the Decision, and to Him you shall all be returned” (Qur’an 28:88). “And no person can ever die except by Allah’s leave and at an appointed term… (Qur’an 3: 145). “Wheresover you may be, death will overtake you even if you are in fortresses built up strong and high!”… (Qur’an 4:78).

Yet, it is only expected that, as humans, we are bound to receive the death of the nation’s President with extreme shock and anguish. This is particularly so because all through the late President’s ill-health, irresponsible politicians from both sides of the divide (the so-called pro-Yar’adua and pro-Jonathan camps) were playing dirty politics with his agony. Those of us outside the polished and slippery corridors of power watched with disgust the brazen manner in which both sides struggled for the control of political power, even as he was going through dire pains that needed care and support from all and sundry. Now that he is dead, I hope that both sides will be responsible enough not to play politics with his grave, and allow him to rest in peace with his Lord.

While the late President was recuperating from the ailment that finally led to his death, his so-called supporters were behaving and acting as if all that matters in life was the control of political power and the ephemeral glitter that goes with it. From November 2009 when he was flown to Saudi Arabia for treatment until his death on May 5th 2010, this group was always evasive on the condition of the late President. Every piece of information about his health that could help the nation was either distorted or concealed. The ultimate objective was to keep the balance of political power in its favour as long as possible…the group finally lost out when Goodluck Jonatahn was sworn in as the Acting President.

Similarly, the Pro-Jonathan group behaved so recklessly in its quest for power, and acted as if the former Vice-President and now the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria was elected on a different ticket with the late President. Indeed, the hurried manner in which the then Acting President dissolved the cabinet suggested as if there was a serious rift between him and the late President; as if all along, the cabinet was deeply divided. Beneath the surface, however, it was not a sign of any rift as such but the manifestation of an unrestrained desperation to take over the mantle of leadership while Yar’adua was still alive. All the while, President Jonathan was going about as if he was loyal and fully in support of Yar’adua but beneath his veneer of loyalty, there were manifest signs of a determined desperation to wrest control.

Now that God has passed his judgement and clearly exposed our human follies, both sides must have realised that all the bitterness and struggles were absolutely unnecessary. Umaru Musa Yar’adua is dead. He has paid the ultimate debt every living being must eventually pay. To be cont’d

Goodluck Jonathan is now the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces. What was desperately sought after has come to pass through a natural decree. Now the journey has commenced in earnest for the new President. Even as the nation mourns the loss of its humble leader, President Jonathan and his camp must ponder very deeply: now that he is fully in control, what next?

Unfortunately, it is a troubling question, with no ready answer in sight. As soon as he settles down after the seven days of mourning, various groups will inundate him with solidarity and congratulatory calls. Many among the callers will complain of marginalisation and seek for a share of the national cake—politically and economically.

He might then be prodded to play ethnic, regional and religious cards particularly in key appointments. He might be tempted to sack the service chiefs and replace them with those who are ‘loyal’ to him—whatever loyalty means in Nigerian politics. He might be enticed to keep hunting and hacking real and imaginary enemies in all sectors, as he did recently in the NNPC. The trouble is vindictive changes in ministries and government departments and agencies have never taken the nation anywhere precisely because many of such changes were often made out of selfish interests rather than a patriotic drive for change.

The powerful corruption mafia in Nigeria, which is akin to the drug mafia in Columbia, might even prod him to reverse key progress made in the area of banking reforms by the incorruptible Sanusi Lamido Sanusi. If he chooses to be guided by the whims and caprices of such groups, he might end of enmeshed in problems far deeper than where he took over from the late President.

Furthermore, addressing the Niger Delta conflict will no doubt prove quite challenging for President Jonathan. Even as son of the soil, I imagine what else President Jonathan can do for the restive youth of the region more than what the late President did, as evident, for example, in the amnesty programme and the establishment of a ministry for the Niger Delta.

Consider, also, the lingering problem in the power sector. With every passing day, the power supply situation in the country seems to be worsening. Right now, as I write this piece on Thursday, May 6th 2010, I haven’t seen a blink of electricity supply from the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) for more than 48 hours! President Goodluck Jonathan must ask himself what he can do in the power sector to make a difference.

More than anything else, however, the new President might end up pre-occupied with the struggle for 2011. Rather than use the little time he has to work for the actualisation of even a one-point agenda such as electricity supply, he might be tempted to ‘consolidate’ his power, dabble with re-structuring the PDP to serve his purpose, to be precise, to ensure that he contests the 2011 elections notwithstanding the internal party arrangements to the contrary. The struggle for President Goodluck Jonathan has just started! Henceforth, things will longer be left for ‘luck’ to decide. Some political scheming must go with the ‘luck’.

Otherwise, the lucky road may not go beyond 2011. In the final analysis, what next, what new and noble things can he do other than keep struggling to remain in power?

To the family of the late President and a bereaved nation, I say, in accordance with the tradition of the Holy Prophet Muhammad, (peace be upon him): “Verily, to Allah belongs what He has taken and to Him belongs what He has given. For everything he has set a term. So be patient and be content”.

May Allah forgive him and reward him with endless bliss; away from the world of sullied politics and its worthless troubles. Ameen.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Nigerian workers ready to hold politicians accountable

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Read Time:6 Minute, 38 Second

With the sacking of Prof. Maurice Iwu as Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, FIDELIS SORIWEI writes that organised labour is determined to press for holistic electoral reforms.

After 50 years of restricting its relevance mainly to the defence of the Nigerian workers and protection of their welfare interests, the organised labour has expanded its concerns in the country.

The labour leadership used the last May Day celebration to highlight the fact that workers had assumed additional responsibility of holding the political leadership of the country accountable.

What this means is that the clenched fists and street protests while demanding for better living wages and welfare for workers, which are the regular features of labour/government relations, would not suffice. Because of the prevailing societal challenges, Labour has come to accept that it has become imperative for workers to indicate interests in the political process of the country.

The 2010 May Day celebration entitled, ”50 Years of Nationhood: Challenges of Good Governance, Unity and Credible Election” gave an insight into the turning point in the labour movement. Before the main event, a rally held at the Eagles Square, Abuja, a Deputy President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Mr. Promise Adewusi, had said that Nigerian workers would take more than passing interest in the politics of the country.

Adewusi also revealed that in looking inward, the workers had taken the deliberate rational step to shed the toga of complacency in issues of sensitive concern to the progress of the country. Specifically, he said henceforth, sitting on the fence would never be an option for workers when the leadership of the country was the issue.

According to him, it is also the view of Labour that the bane of Nigerian leadership which shows in underdevelopment, festering corruption and embezzlement of public funds, crime and related vices, is traceable to a flawed electoral system in the country. Thus, he said, henceforth, Labour would join other stakeholders to hold politicians and those in public offices accountable.

Expectedly, last Saturday, the day set aside for the celebration of workers all over the world, the NLC and the Trade Union Congress went beyond the traditional emphasis on labour related issues like minimum wage and general welfare package for the Nigerian workers. In their respective addresses at the Eagle Square, presidents of the NLC and TUC, Messrs. Abdul-Waheed Omar and Peter Esele, called the attention of the then Acting President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan and indeed, the political leadership, to burning issues in the country.

The scourge of flawed elections and urgent need to ensure a holistic implementation of the Justice Muhammed Uwais-led Electoral Reform Committee‘s report, insecurity, decay in infrastructure and poor state of the power sector, alongside the traditional May Day agitation for a living wage and improved general welfare for the workers, were brought to the fore.

before then, in November 2009, organised labour had allied with a Coalition of Civil Society Organisations to demand the adoption of the Uwais‘ committee‘s report which is considered the antidote to electoral fraud and violation of the sanctity of the ballot Nigeria. The NLC and TUC had also demanded the sacking of the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Maurice Iwu, as a demonstration of government‘s sincerity on electoral reforms.

During their protest march against Iwu, labour had vowed to mobilise Nigerians to prevent the holding of the 2011 general election if the FG failed to heed their demand. The FG eventually eased Iwu out of the INEC last week.

But Labour is insisting that the removal of Iwu was the starting point in the struggle for the enthronement of genuine elections in the country. Omar said in his May Day address that only a holistic adoption of the Uwais committee‘s report in the Electoral Act would save the country from the frightening prediction made by the United States of America and some other international agencies about its continuing existence.

The NLC president said, ”One of the reasons for the failure of political leadership in our country is the way in which political leaders emerge. Our history shows that the majority

of those in political leadership arrived there through a heavily flawed electoral process. This is why the country as a whole has been clamouring for electoral reform. Of course, we have had various electoral reforms in our 50 years of independent statehood. However, at no other time is electoral reform more important than now.

”Comrades, over the last two years, government has dragged its feet on pursuing the implementation of the recommendations of the Justice Uwais Report on Electoral Reforms to their logical conclusion. We want to encourage government to see that implementing the programme of reforms is the surest path towards ensuring that the disaster that many have foretold will befall the country will be averted. It is the only way to returning to the path of building a sustainable and robust democracy that can meet the challenges in our political economy. In more specific terms, we demand the implementation of these fundamental recommendations, among others, as suggested by the Uwais Committee.”

Although, Omar‘s counterpart in the TUC, Esele, made similar comment, he devoted much of his address to the looting of public funds in the country. Esele challenged the Acting President to overhaul the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission with a view to re-energising the commission to fight corruption.

Esele, a unionist from the oil and gas industry, alleged that the deregulation of the downstream sector of the petroleum industry had been stalled because of the large-scale fraud involving the multibillion petroleum subsidy. He claimed that a good chunk of the money released to subsidise importation of petroleum products was being used to fund political campaigns.

He advised the FG to provide the infrastructure and necessary relief packages required for a full deregulated of the downstream sector as a solution. The activist also urged Jonathan to prove seriousness of the revival of the war against corruption by prosecuting all those involved in the $180m Halliburton bribery scandal.

”This administration must go beyond words in its fight against corruption by ensuring that all those whose fingers are in the till are brought to justice. There is no other way to prove this except by prosecuting those involved in the N27bn Halliburton contract scandal. We are using this opportunity to call on the Acting President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, to pursue this case to a logical conclusion and this administration must ensure that no one is above the laws of our land…

”We are of the opinion that the N340bn paid as subsidy, 20 percent of this amount is laced with fraud and inefficiency. This amount can be recovered if a comprehensive audit of the template used by the Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency to effect payment to the importers of petroleum product is carried out,” Esele said.

In summary, Labour identified corruption as the sole reason for the rot in infrastructure, citing the Niger Delta Development Commission, PPPRA and the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation as among government establishments where a culture of theft of public funds at a staggering scale had become endemic. Organised labour said the alleged missing N1.6tn from the PPRA and N1.2tn from the NDDC coffers should be investigated thoroughly.

However, apart from the quest for credible elections, demand for effective prosecution of the war on corruption, Nigerian workers expressed deep worry over the loss of value on human life, the country‘s slide into anarchy, adverse effect of the comatose power sector on the economy, among others.

The labour leaders did not leave the Eagles Square without telling President Jonathan labour‘s position on his decision to leave the Ministry of Power without a substantive minister. They insisted that the non-appointment of a minister would not yield better results than did the petroleum ministry under former President Olusegun Obansanjo.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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