Thursday, 19 December 2013
DEFECTION OF PDP MEMBERS: AN OLD WINE IN A NEW WINE SKIN
Since the return to democracy in 1999, a single party has dominated the political scene and has remained relevant till date. One must state here that the PDP like other parties at that time, was not established with any clear cut ideology. They were merely created as a platform to transform Nigeria from military to civilian rule. Thus, these political parties were hurriedly put together, because of the peculiar circumstances. This lack of ideological structures, has seen other parties like the Alliance for Democracy (AD), All People Party (APP), disappear into thing air. Although some of them metamorphosed into other parties through change names, their existence was short lived because the ideological frame work required to form a party remains lacking.
In fairness to Nigerians, one cannot accuse them of being ignorant of the fact that these parties were ideologically depraved. The parties came at a time when the Military held sway and Nigerians were more than willing to accept anything, to save themselves from the pains and agony of Military rule. So, the people were left with no choice than to accept things as they were. If Nigerians think a change from Military to civilian rule will mean a change in their standard of living and circumstances generally, they were gravely mistaken. We elected a President who did not give a hoot about the people's welfare and his tenure was characterized by subversion of the constitution, widespread corruption, abuse of office, clamp down of perceived political opponents and enemies. In fact Nigerians witnessed massive political killings, they remain a mystery as our security outfit are yet to unravel or arrest the killers. To make things worst, he sought to perpetuate himself in power, when this failed, he imposed a sick president on us. His party the Peoples Democratic Party, gave him the nudge to go ahead.
In the midst of all these, the opposition parties merely looked on. Well the truth is, the opposition parties didn't just look on, they were powerless! Most of these parties simply existed because of what they were getting as grants from INEC. Another reason is because most opposition parties were an extension of the PDP, that is why a man like Chief Don Etiebet, a strong member of the PDP, will be the National Chairman of All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP). Immediately after his tenure as ANPP Chairman, what did he do? He returned to base! There was also the problem of proliferation of opposition political parties, which made if difficult for them to pose a serious challenge to the PDP, a party which has become an albatross, and is leading Nigeria into the Lagoon.
This situation made well meaning Nigerians including yours sincerely, to call for a two party system, and an opportunity for Independent Candidacy. The reason for this call is not far fetched, we need a robust opposition party that can stand up to the PDP. We believe that the PDP cannot withstand a party that is ideologically driven and grass roots oriented. We do not seek a party that would merely wrestle political power from the PDP. No, we want a party that is rooted on ideology and is pro people. Unfortunately the doors for an independent candidate was shut during the last amendment of the 1999 constitution, and the quest for an ideologically driven opposition party, remains a mirage.
We are indeed not comfortable when people say that the All Progressive Congress (APC), is that party we seek. The APC is a political party made up of people whose primary objective is to wrestle power from the PDP, and not about delivering good governance to the people. It shows a clear disconnect between the party and the people. What the people want is not just another party, but a party that will uphold the tenets of democracy where the people will enjoy the dividends of democracy. A party can only achieve this if it is founded on clear cut ideology. Sadly, this is grossly lacking in the APC. The leaders of the APC as it stands, are those who have had an opportunity of leading before, and their performance remains poor, just like the PDP leaders. And in States where the APC holds sway, the people have not fared any better.
The APC in its quest to wrestle power from the PDP, has been romancing with all kinds of people, including those who have brought Nigeria to its knees. This is why I am amused when people openly celebrate the defection of certain individuals to the APC. One is inclined to ask, are these not the people who destroyed Nigeria under the PDP? How can someone we all tagged a criminal under the PDP become a saint under the APC? Is this what the APC is created for, to celebrate criminals and wear them the garb of sainthood? I laughed when Asiwaju Bola Tinubu praised the 37 members of the House of Representative and the G5 governors, who defected from the PDP to the APC, as patriotic. Is that the level patriotism has degenerated to? I know the APC will roll out its drums to celebrate the 'triumphant' entry of men like Alamasiegha and James Ibori, and Tinubu will be there to wear them the cloak of saints and sing their praise to high heavens. I won't be surprised therefore, if the APC is already planning to visit a Prison in London.
The defection of these people to the APC therefore is just like an old wine in a new wine skin. Nothing has changed and nothing will change. They will not stop stealing and embezzling our resources, they will not build good roads, nor goods schools nor hospitals. They will not stop sending their children to schools abroad. The only thing that will change is that they will share our resources with a different political party. Nigerians must be alive their the responsibility and must not repeat the mistakes of 1999. If we voted for a party because we wanted a change to civilian rule, we must not vote a party because we want to merely change the party in power. We must elect a leader in the true sense of the word, no matter where he comes from or who he is, not minding his party. The APC should also know that the people are no longer gullible. What we need is not a change of party, but an installation of democratic tenets, where the will of the people reign supreme. If it is not ready to provide this, then let it dissolve itself and become relegated to the zone of pretenders and not contenders. God bless Nigeria.
Frank O. Ijege
frankijege@yahoo.com
@foijege on twitter
Thursday, 12 December 2013
Obasanjo’s 18-page letter entitled “Before it is too late”, dated December 2, 2013.
BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE
I am constrained to make this an open letter to you for a number of reasons. One, the current situation and consequent possible outcome dictate that I should, before the door closes on reason and promotion of national interest, alert you to the danger that may be lurking in the corner. Two, none of the four or more letters that I have written to you in the past two years or so has elicited an acknowledgment or any response. Three, people close to you, if not yourself, have been asking, what does Obasanjo want? Four, I could sense a semblance between the situation that we are gradually getting into and the situation we fell into as a nation during the Abacha era. Five, everything must be done to guard, protect and defend our fledgling democracy, nourish it and prevent bloodshed. Six, we must move away from advertently or inadvertently dividing the country along weak seams of North-South and Christian-Moslem. Seven, nothing should be done to allow the country to degenerate into economic dormancy, stagnation or retrogression.
Eight, some of our international friends and development partners are genuinely worried about signs and signals that are coming out of Nigeria. Nine, Nigeria should be in a position to take advantage of the present favourable international interest to invest in Africa - an opportunity that will not be open for too long. Ten, I am concerned about your legacy and your climb-down which you alone can best be the manager of, whenever you so decide.
Mr. President, you have on a number of occasions acknowledged the role God enabled me to play in your ascension to power. You put me third after God and your parents among those that have impacted most on your life. I have always retorted that God only put you where you are and those that could be regarded as having played a role were only instruments of God to achieve God’s purpose in your life. For me, I believe that politically, it was in the best interest of Nigeria that you, a Nigerian from minority group in the South, could rise to the highest pinnacle of political leadership. If Obasanjo could get there, Yar’Adua could get there and Jonathan can get there, any Nigerian can. It is now not a matter of the turn of any section or geographical area but the best interest of Nigeria and all Nigerians. It has been proved that no group – ethnic, linguistic, religious or geographical location – has monopoly of materials for leadership of our country. And no group solely by itself can crown any of its members the Nigerian CEO. It is good for Nigeria.
I have also always told you that God has graciously been kind, generous, merciful and compassionate to me and He has done more than I could have ever hoped for. I want nothing from you personally except that you should run the affairs of Nigeria not only to make Nigeria good, but to make Nigeria great for which I have always pleaded with you and I will always do so. And it is yet to be done for most Nigerians to see.
For five capacities in which you find yourself, you must hold yourself most significantly responsible for what happens or fails to happen in Nigeria and in any case, most others will hold you responsible and God who put you there will surely hold you responsible and accountable. I have had opportunity, in recent times, to interact closely with you and I have come to the conclusion painfully or happily that if you can shun yourself to a great extent of personal and political interests and dwell more on the national interest and also draw the line between advice from selfish and self-centered aides and advice from those who in the interest of the nation may not tell you what you will want to hear, it will be well. The five positions which you share with nobody except with God and which place great and grave responsibility on you are leadership of the ruling party, headship of the Federal Government or national government, Commander-in-Chief of the Military, Chief Security Officer of the nation, and the political leader of the country. Those positions go with being the President of our country and while depending on your disposition, you can delegate or devolve responsibility, but the buck must stop on your table whether you like it or not.
Let me start with the leadership of the ruling party. Many of us were puzzled over what was going on in the party. Most party members blamed the National Chairman. I understand that some in the presidency tried to create the impression that some of us were to blame. The situation became clear only when the National Chairman spoke out that he never did anything or acted in any way without the approval or concurrence of the Party Leader and that where the Party Leader disapproved, he made correction or amendment, that we realised most actions were those of the Chairman but the motivation and direction were those of the Leader. It would be unfair to continue to level full blames on the Chairman for all that goes wrong with the Party. The Chairman is playing the tune dictated by the Paymaster. But the Paymaster is acting for a definitive purpose for which deceit and deception seem to be the major ingredients. Up till two months ago, Mr. President, you told me that you have not told anybody that you would contest in 2015. I quickly pointed out to you that the signs and the measures on the ground do not tally with your statement. You said the same to one other person who shared his observation with me. And only a fool would believe that statement you made to me judging by what is going on. I must say that it is not ingenious. You may wish to pursue a more credible and more honourable path. Although you have not formally informed me one way or the other, it will be necessary to refresh your memory of what transpired in 2011. I had gone to Benue State for the marriage of one of my staff, Vitalis Ortese, in the State. Governor Suswam was my hospitable host. He told me that you had accepted a one-term presidency to allow for ease of getting support across the board in the North. I decided to cross-check with you. You did not hesitate to confirm to me that you are a strong believer in a one-term of six years for the President and that by the time you have used the unexpired time of your predecessor and the four years of your first term, you would have almost used up to six years and you would not need any more term or time.
Later, I heard from other sources including sources close to you that you made the same commitment elsewhere, hence, my inclusion of it in my address at the finale of your campaign in 2011 as follows:
“…PDP should be praised for being the only party that enshrines federal character, zoning and rotation in its Constitution and practises it. PDP has brought stability and substantial predictability to the polity and to the system. I do not know who will be President of Nigeria after Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. That is in the hand of God. But with PDP policy and practice, I can reasonably guess from where, in term of section of the country, the successor to President Jonathan will come. And no internal democracy or competition will thereby be destroyed. The recent resort to sentiments and emotions of religion and regionalism is self-serving, unpatriotic and mischievous, to say the least. It is also preying on dangerous emotive issues that can ignite uncontrollable passion and can distabilise if not destroy our country. This is being oblivious to the sacrifices others have made in the past for unity, stability and democracy in Nigeria in giving up their lives, shedding their blood, and in going to prison. I personally have done two out of those three sacrifices and I am ready to do the third if it will serve the best interest of Nigerian dream. Let me appeal to those who have embarked on this dangerous road to reflect and desist from taking us on a perishable journey.
With common identity as Nigerians, there is more that binds us than separates us. I am a Nigerian, born a Yoruba man, and I am proud of both identities as they are for me complementary. Our duties, responsibilities and obligations to our country as citizens and, indeed, as leaders must go side by side with our rights and demands. There must be certain values and virtues that must go concomitantly with our dream. Thomas Paine said “my country is the world”; for me, my country I hold dear.
On two occasions, I have had opportunity to work for my successors to the government of Nigeria. On both occasions, I never took the easy and distabilising route of ethnic, regional or religious consideration, rather I took the enduring route of national, uniting and stabilising route. I worked for both President Shagari and President Yar’Adua to succeed me not just because they are Moslems, Northerners or Hausa-Fulani, but because they could strengthen the unity, stability and democracy in Nigeria. We incurred the displeasure of ethnic chauvinists for doing what was right for the country. That is in the nature of burden of leadership. A leader must lead, no matter whose ox is gored.
In the present circumstance, let me reiterate what I have said on a number of occasions. Electing Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, in his own right and on his own merit, as the President of Nigeria will enhance and strengthen our unity, stability and democracy. And it will lead us towards the achievement of our Nigerian dream.
There is a press report that Dr. Goodluck Jonathan has already taken a unique and unprecedented step of declaring that he would only want to be a one-term President. If so, whether we know it or not, that is a sacrifice and it is statesmanly. Rather than vilify him and pull him down, we, as a Party, should applaud and commend him and Nigerians should reward and venerate him. He has taken the first good step.
Let us encourage him to take more good steps by voting him in with landslide victory as the fourth elected President of Nigeria on the basis of our common Nigerian identity and for the purpose of actualising Nigerian dream…”
When you won the election, one of the issues you very early pursued was that of one term of six years. That convinced me that you meant what you told me before my Speech at the campaign. Mr. President, whatever may be your intention or plan, I cannot comment much on the constitutional aspect of your second term or what some people call third term. That is for both legal and judicial attention. But if constitutionally you are on a strong wicket if you so decide, it will be fatally and morally flawed. As a leader, two things you must cherish and hold dear among others are trust and honour both of which are important ingredients of character. I will want to see anyone in the Office of the Presidency of Nigeria as a man or woman who can be trusted, a person of honour in his words and character. I will respect you for upholding these attributes and for dignifying that Office.
Chinua Achebe said, “One of the truest test of integrity is its blunt refusal to be compromised.” It is a lesson for all leaders including you and me.
However, Mr. President, let me hope that as you claimed that you have not told anybody that you are contesting and that what we see and hear is a rumbling of overzealous aides, you will remain a leader that can be believed and trusted without unduly passing the buck or engaging in game of denials.
Maybe you also need to know that many party members feel disappointed in the double game you were alleged to play in support of party gubernatorial candidates in some States where you surreptitiously supported non-PDP candidates against PDP candidates in exchange for promise or act of those non-PDP Governors supporting you for your election in the past or for the one that you are yet to formally declare. It happened in Lagos in 2011 when Bola Tinubu was nocturnally brought to Abuja to strike a deal for support for your personal election at great price materially and in the fortune of PDP gubernatorial candidate.
As Chairman of BOT, I spoke to you at that time. It happened in Ondo State where there was in addition evidence of cover-up and non-prosecution of fraud of fake security report against the non-PDP candidate and his collaborators for the purpose of extracting personal electoral advantage for you. In fact, I have raised with you the story of those in other States in the South-West where some disgruntled PDP members were going around to recruit people into the Labour Party for you, because, for electoral purpose at the national level, Labour Party will have no candidate but you. It also happened in Edo State and those who know the detail never stopped talking about it. And you know it. Ditto in Anambra State with the fiasco coming from undue interference. If you as leader of the Party cannot be seen to be loyal to the PDP in support of the candidates of the Party and the interests of such Party candidates have to be sacrificed on the altar of your personal and political interest, then good luck to the Party and I will also say as I have had occasions to say in the past, good luck to Goodluck.
If on the altar of the Party you go for broke, the Party may be broken beyond repairs. And when in a dispute between two sides, they both stubbornly decide to fight to the last drop of blood, no one knows whose blood would be the last to drop. In such a situation, Nigeria as a nation may also be adversely affected, not just the PDP. I wish to see no more bloodshed occasioned by politics in Nigeria. Please, Mr. President, be mindful of that. You were exemplary in words when during the campaign and the 2011 elections, you said, “My election is not worth spilling the blood of any Nigerian.” From you, it should not be if it has to be, let it be. It should be from you, let peace, security, harmony, good governance, development and progress be for Nigeria. That is also your responsibility and mandate. You can do it and I plead that you do it. We all have to be mindful of not securing pyrrhic victory on the ashes of great values, attributes and issues that matter as it would amount to hollow victory without honour and integrity.
Whatever may be the feud in PDP and no matter what you or your aides may feel, you, as the Party Leader, have the responsibility to find solution, resolve and fix it. Your legacy is involved. If PDP as a ruling Party collapses, it will be the first time in an independent Nigeria that a ruling political party would collapse not as a result of a military coup. It is food for thought. At the prompting of Governors on both sides of the divide, and on encouragement from you, I spent two nights to intervene in the dispute of the PDP Governors. I kept you fully briefed at every stage.
I deliberately chose Banquet Hall at the Villa to ensure transparency. Your aides studied all the recordings of the two nights. But I told you at the end of the exercise that I observed five reactions among the Governors that required your immediate attention as you are the only one from the vantage point of your five positions that could deal effectively with the five reactions which were bitterness, anger, mistrust, fear and deep suspicion. I could only hope that you made efforts to deal with these unpleasant reactions.
The feud leading to the factionalisation of the Party made me to invite some select elders of the Party to mediate again. Since I was engaged in assignment outside the country, I was not able to join the three members of the elders group that presented the report of our mediation to you. I was briefed that you agreed to work on the report. It would appear that for now, the ball is in your court as the Leader of the Party. I can only wish you every success in your handling of the issue. But time is not your friend or that of the Party in this respect. With leadership come not just power and authority to do and to undo, but also responsibility and accountability to do and to undo rightly, well and justly. Time and opportunity are treasure that must be appreciated and shared to enhance their value and utilitarianism.
It is instructive that after half a dozen African Presidents have spoken to me to help you with unifying the Party based on your request to them and I came in company of Senator Amadu Ali to discuss the whole issue with you again, strangely, you denied ever requesting or authorising any President to talk to me. I was not surprised because I am used to such a situation of denial coming from you. Of course, I was not deterred. I have done and I will continue to do and say what is first, in the best interest of Nigeria and second, what is in the best interest of the Party. I stand for the aims, objectives, mission and vision of the founding fathers of the Party, to use it as a wholesome instrument of unity, good governance, development, prosperity and progress of Nigeria and all Nigerians. I have contributed to this goal in the past and no one who has been raised to position on the platform of the Party should shy away from further contribution to avoid division and destruction of the Party on any altar whatsoever.
Debates and dialogues are necessary to promote the interest and work for the progress of any human institution or organisation. In such a situation, agreements and disagreements will occur but in the final analysis, leadership will pursue the course of action that benefit the majority and serve the purpose of the organisation, not the purpose of an individual or a minority. In that process, unity is sustained and everybody becomes a winner. The so-called crisis in the PDP can be turned to an opportunity of unity, mutual understanding and respect with the Party emerging with enhanced strength and victory. It will be a win-win for all members of the Party and for the country. By that, PDP would have proved that it could have internal disagreement and emerge stronger. The calamity of failure can still be avoided. Please, move away from fringes or the extremes and move to the centre and carry ALL along. Time is running out.
I will only state that as far as your responsibility as Chief Security Officer of the nation is concerned for Nigerians, a lot more needs to be done to enhance the feeling of security amongst them. Whether one talks of the issue of militancy in the Niger Delta, the underlying causes of which have not been adequately addressed, if addressed at all, kidnapping, piracy, abductions and armed robberies which rather than abate are on the increase and Boko Haram which requires carrot and stick approach to lay its ghost to rest, the general security situation cannot be described as comforting. Knowing the genesis of Boko Haram and the reasons for escalation of violence from that sector with the widespread and ramification of the menace of Boko Haram within and outside the Nigerian borders, conventional military actions based on standard phases of military operations alone will not permanently and effectively deal with the issue of Boko Haram. There are many strands or layers of causes that require different solutions, approaches or antidotes. Drug, indoctrination, fundamentalism, gun trafficking, hate culture, human trafficking, money laundering, religion, poverty, unemployment, poor education, revenge and international terrorism are among factors that have effect on Boko Haram.
One single prescription cannot cure all these ailments that combine in Boko Haram. Should we pursue war against violence without understanding the root causes of the violence and applying solutions to deal with all underlying factors – root, stem and branches? Nigeria is bleeding and the hemorrhage must be stopped. I am convinced that you can initiate measures that will bring all hands on deck to deal effectively with this great menace.
Mr. President, the most important qualification for your present position is your being a Nigerian. Whatever else you may be besides being a Nigerian is only secondary for this purpose. And if majority of Nigerians who voted had not cast their votes for you, you could not have been there. For you to allow yourself to be “possessed”, so to say, to the exclusion of most of the rest of Nigerians as an ‘Ijaw man’ is a mistake that should never have been allowed to happen. Yes, you have to be born in one part of Nigeria to be a Nigerian if not naturalised, but the Nigerian President must be above ethnic factionalism. And those who prop you up as of, and for ‘Ijaw nation’ are not your friends genuinely, not friends of Nigeria nor friends of ‘Ijaw nation’, they tout about. To allow or tacitly encourage people of ‘Ijaw nation’ to throw insults on other Nigerians from other parts of the country and threaten fire and brimstone to protect your interest as an Ijaw man is myopic and your not openly quieting them is even more unfortunate. You know that I have expressed my views and feelings to you on this issue in the past but I have come to realise that many others feel the way I have earlier expressed to you. It is not the best way of making friendship among all sections of Nigeria. You don’t have shared and wholesome society without inclusive political, economic and social sustainable development and good governance. Also declaring that one section of the country voted for you as if you got no votes from other sections can only be an unnecessary talk, to put it mildly. After all and at the end of the day, democracy is a game of numbers. Even, if you would not need people’s vote across the country again, your political Party will.
Allegation of keeping over 1,000 people on political watch list rather than criminal or security watch list and training snipers and other armed personnel secretly and clandestinely acquiring weapons to match for political purposes like Abacha, and training them where Abacha trained his own killers, if it is true, cannot augur well for the initiator, the government and the people of Nigeria. Here again, there is the lesson of history to learn from for anybody who cares to learn from history. Mr. President would always remember that he was elected to maintain security for all Nigerians and protect them. And no one should prepare to kill or maim Nigerians for personal or political ambition or interest of anyone. The Yoruba adage says, “The man with whose head the coconut is broken may not live to savour the taste of the succulent fruit.” Those who advise you to go hard on those who oppose you are your worst enemies. Democratic politics admits and is permissive of supporters and opponents. When the consequences come, those who have wrongly advised you will not be there to help carry the can. Egypt must teach some lesson.
Presidential assistance for a murderer to evade justice and presidential delegation to welcome him home can only be in bad taste generally but particularly to the family of his victim. Assisting criminals to evade justice cannot be part of the job of the Presidency. Or, as it is viewed in some quarters, is he being recruited to do for you what he had done for Abacha in the past? Hopefully, he should have learned his lesson. Let us continue to watch.
As Head of Government, the buck of the performance and non-performance stops on your table and let nobody tell you anything to the contrary. Most of our friends and development partners are worried and they see what we pretend to cover up. They are worried about issue of security internally and on our coastal waters, including heavy oil theft, alias bunkering and piracy. They are worried about corruption and what we are doing or not doing about it. Corruption has reached the level of impunity. It is also necessary to be mindful that corruption and injustice are fertile breeding ground for terrorism and political instability. And if you are not ready to name, shame, prosecute and stoutly fight against corruption, whatever you do will be hollow. It will be a laughing matter.
They are worried about how we play our role in our region and, indeed, in the world. In a way, I share some of their concerns because there are notable areas we can do more or do better than we are doing. Some of our development partners were politically frustrated to withdraw from the Olokola LNG project, which happily was not yet the same with the Brass. I initiated them both. They were viable and would have taken us close to Qatar as LNG producing country. Please do not frustrate Brass LNG and in the interest of what is best for Nigerian economy, bring back the OK LNG into active implementation. The major international oil companies have withheld investment in projects in Nigeria. If they have not completely moved out, they are divesting. Nigeria, which is the Saudi of Africa in oil and gas terms, is being overtaken by Angola only because necessary decisions are not made timely and appropriately. Mr. President, let me again plead with you to be decisive on the oil and gas sector so that Nigeria may not lag behind. Oil with gas is being discovered all over Africa. New technology is producing oil from shale elsewhere. We should make hay while the sun shines. I hope we can still save the OK and Brass LNG projects.
Three things are imperative in the oil and gas sector – stop oil stealing, encourage investment, especially by the IOCs and improve the present poor management of the industry. On the economy generally, it suffices to say that we could do better than we are doing. The signs are there and the expectations are high. The most dangerous ticking bomb is youth unemployment, particularly in the face of unbridled corruption and obscene rulers’ opulence.
Let me repeat that as far as the issue of corruption, security and oil stealing is concerned, it is only apt to say that when the guard becomes the thief, nothing is safe, secure nor protected in the house. We must all remember that corruption, inequity and injustice breed poverty, unemployment, conflict, violence and wittingly or unwittingly create terrorists because the opulence of the governor can only lead to the leanness of the governed. But God never sleeps, He is watching, waiting and bidding His time to dispense justice.
The serious and strong allegation of non-remittance of about $7bn from the NNPC to central bank occurring from export of some 300,000 barrels per day, amounting to $900 million a month, to be refined and with refined products of only $400m returned and Atlantic Oil loading about 130,000 barrels sold by Shell and managed on behalf of NPDC with no sale proceeds paid into NPDC account is incredible. The allegation was buttressed by the letter of the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria to you on non-remittance to the central bank. This allegation will not fly away by non-action, cover-up, denial or bribing possible investigators. Please deal with this allegation transparently and let the truth be known.
The dramatis personae in this allegation and who they are working for will one day be public knowledge. Those who know are watching if the National Assembly will not be accomplice in the heinous crime and naked grand corruption. May God grant you the grace for at least one effective corrective action against high corruption, which seems to stink all around you in your government.
The international community knows us as we are and maybe more than we claim to know ourselves. And a good friend will tell you the truth no matter how bitter. Denials and cover-up of what is obvious, true and factual can detract from honour, dignity and respect. Truth and transparency dignify and earn respect. And life without passion for something can only achieve little. I was taken aback when an African Development Bank Director informed me that the water project for Port Harcourt, originally initiated by the Federal Government and to be financed by the bank, is being put in the cooler by the Federal Government because of the Amaechi-Jonathan face-off. Amaechi, whether he likes it or not, will cease to be governor over Rivers State, which Port Harcourt is part by the end of May 2015, but residents of Port Harcourt will continue to need improvement of their water supply. President Jonathan should rise above such pettiness and unpresidential act, if it is coming from him. But if not, and it is the action of overzealous officials reading the situation, he should give appropriate instruction for the project to be pursued. And there are other projects anywhere suffering the same coolness as a result of similar situation, let national interest supercede personal or political feud and the machinations of satanic officials.
Mr. President, let me plead with you for a few things that will stand you in good stead for the rest of your life. Don’t always consider critics on national issues as enemies. Some of them may be as patriotic and nationalistic as you and I who have been in government. Some of them have as much passion for Nigeria as we have. I saw that among Nigerians living abroad, hence, I initiated Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation, NIDO. You must also differentiate between malevolent, mischievous and objective criticism. Analyses, criticisms and commentaries on government actions and policies are sinew of democracy.
Please, Mr. President, be very wary of assistants, aides and collaborators who look for enemies for you. I have seen them with you and some were around me when I was in your position. I knew how not to allow them create enemies for me. If you allow them, everybody except them will be your enemy. They are more dangerous than identified adversaries. May God save leaders from sycophants. They know what you want to hear and they feed you with it essentially for their own selfish interest. As far as you and Nigeria are concerned, they are wreckers. Where were they when God used others to achieve His will in your life. They possess you now for their interest. No interest should be higher or more important than the Nigerian interest to you. You have already made history and please do nothing to mar history. I supported you as I supported Yar’Adua. For me, there is neither North-South divide nor Christian-Moslem divide but one Nigeria.
Let me put it, that talks, loose and serious, abound about possible abuse and misuse of the military and the legitimate security apparatus for unwholesome personal and political interest to the detriment of the honour, dignity, oath and professionalism of these honourable and patriotic forces.
Let me urge the authorities not to embark on such destructive path for an important element of our national make-up. The roles of the military and the security agencies should be held sacrosanct in the best interest of the nation. Again, let not history repeat itself here.
I believe that with what Nigeria went through in the past, the worst should have already happened. It must be your responsibility as the captain of the ship to prevent the ship from going aground or from a shipwreck. For anybody close to you saying that if the worst happens, he or she would not be involved is idle and loose talk. If we leave God to do His will and we don’t rely only on our own efforts, plans and wisdom, God will always do His best. And the power of money and belief in it is satanically tempting. As I go around Nigeria and the world, I always come across Nigerians who are first-class citizens of the world and who are doing well where they are and who are passionate to do well for Nigeria. My hope for our country lies in these people. They abound and I hope that all of us will realise that they are the jewels of Nigeria wherever they may be and not those who arrogate to themselves eternal for ephemeral.
Also, to my embarrassment at times, I learned more about what is going on in the public and private sectors of Nigeria from our development partners, international institutions and those transacting business in Nigeria most times I was abroad. On returning home to verify the veracity of these stories, I found some of them not only to be true but more horrifying than they were presented abroad. Other countries look up to Nigeria for regional leadership. Failure on the part of Nigeria will create a schism that will be bad for the region.
Knowing what happens around you, most of which you know of and condone or deny, this letter will provoke cacophony from hired and unhired attackers but I will maintain my serenity because by this letter, I have done my duty to you as I have always done, to your government, to the Party, PDP, and to our country, Nigeria. If I stuck out my neck and God used me and others as instrument to work hard for you to reach where you are today in what I considered the best political interest of Nigeria, tagging me as your enemy or the enemy of your administration by you, your kin or your aides can only be regarded as ridiculous to extreme. If I see any danger to your life, I will point it out to you or ward it off as I have done in the past.
But I will not support what I believe is not in the best interest of Nigeria, no matter who is putting it forward or who is behind it. Mr. President, I have passed the stage of being flattered, intimidated, threatened, frightened, induced or bought. I am never afraid to agree or disagree but it will always 13 be on principles, and if on politics, in the national interest. After my prison experience in the close proximity of and sharing facilities with an asylum in Yola, there is nothing worse for anyone alive and well. And that was for a military dictator to perpetuate himself in power. Death is the end of all human beings and may it come when God wills it to come. The harassment of my relations and friends and innuendo that are coming from the Government security apparatus on whether they belong to new PDP or supporters of defected Governors and which are possibly authorised or are the work of overzealous aides and those reading your lips to act in your interest will be counter-productive. It is abuse of security apparatus. Such abuse took place last in the time of Abacha.
Lies and untruths about me emanating from the presidency is too absurd to contemplate. Saying that I recommended a wanted criminal by UK and USA authorities to you or your aides to supplant legitimately elected PDP leader in South-West is not only unwise and crude but also disingenuous. Nobody in his or her right senses will believe such a story and surely nobody in Ogun State or South-West zone will believe such nonsense. It is a clear indication of how unscrupulous and unethical the presidency can go to pursue your personal and political interest. Nothing else matters. What a pity! Nothing at this stage of my life would prevent me from standing for whatever I consider to be in the best interest of Nigeria – all Nigeria, Africa and the world in that order. I believe strongly that a united and strong PDP at all costs is in the best interest of Nigeria. In these respects, if our interests and views coincide, together we will march. Putting a certified unashamed criminal wanted abroad to face justice and who has greatly contributed to corruption within the judiciary on a high profile of politics as you and your aides have done with the man you enthrone as PDP Zonal leader in the South-West is the height of disservice to this country politically and height of insult to the people of South-West in general and members of PDP in that zone in particular.
For me, my politics goes with principles and morality and I will not be a party to highly profiling criminals in politics, not to say one would be my zonal leader. It destroys what PDP stands for from its inception…
God is never a supporter of evil and will surely save PDP and Nigeria from the hands of destroyers. If everything fails and the Party cannot be retrieved from the hands of criminals and commercial jobbers and discredited touts, men and women of honour, principles, morality and integrity must step aside to rethink.
Let me also appeal to and urge defected, dissatisfied, disgruntled and in any way displeased PDP Governors, legislators, party officials and party members to respond positively if the President seriously takes the initiative to find mutually agreeable solution to the current problems for which he alone has the key and the initiative. I have heard it said particularly within the presidency circle that the disaffected Governors and members of PDP are my children. I begin to wonder if, from top to bottom, any PDP 15 member in elective office today is not directly or indirectly a beneficiary and, so to say, my political child. Anyone who may claim otherwise will be like a river that has forgotten its source. But like a good father, all I seek is peaceful and amicable solution that will re-unite the family for victory and progress of the family and the nation and nothing else.
In a democracy, leaders are elected to lighten the burden of the people, give them freedom, choice and equity and ensure good governance and not to deceive them, burden them, oppress them, render them hopeless and helpless. Nothing should be done to undermine the tenets, and values of democratic principles and practice. Tyranny in all its manifestation may be appealing to a leader in trying times of political feud or disagreement. Democracy must, however, prevail and be held as sacrosanct. Today, you are the President of Nigeria, I acknowledge you and respect you as such.
The act of an individual has a way of rubbing off on the generality.
May it never be the wish of majority of Nigerians that Goodluck Jonathan, by his acts of omission or commission, would be the first and the last Nigerian President ever to come from Ijaw tribe. The idea and the possibility must give all of us food for thought. That was never what I worked for and that would never be what I will work for. But legacy is made of such or the opposite.
My last piece of advice, Mr. President, is that you should learn the lesson of history and please do not take Nigeria and Nigerians for granted.
Move away from culture of denials, cover-ups and proxies and deal honesty, sincerely and transparently with Nigerians to regain their trust and confidence. Nigerians are no fools, they can see, they can hear, they can talk among themselves, they can think, they can compare and they can act in the interest of their country and in their own self-interest. They keenly watch all actions and deeds that are associated with you if they cannot believe your words. I know you have the power to save PDP and the country. I beg you to have the courage and the will with patriotism to use the power for the good of the country. Please uphold some form of national core values. I will appeal to all Nigerians particularly all members of PDP to respect and dignify the Office of the President. We must all know that individuals will come and go but the Office will remain.
Once again, time is of the essence. Investors are already retreating 16 from Nigeria, adopting ‘wait and see attitude’ and knowing what we are deficient of, it will take time to reverse the trend and we may miss some golden opportunities.
Finally, your later-day conversion into National Conference is fraught with danger of disunity, confusion and chaos if not well handled. I believe in debate and dialogue but it must be purposeful, directed and managed well without ulterior motives. The ovation has not died out yet and there is always life after a decent descent.
Accept, Dear Mr. President, the assurances of my highest consideration.
Olusegun Obasanjo
PS
I crave your indulgence to share the contents of this letter, in the first instance, with General Ibrahim Babangida and General Abdulsalami Abubakar, who, on a number of occasions in recent times, have shared with me their agonising thoughts, concerns and expressions on most of the issues I have raised in this letter concerning the situation and future of our country. I also crave your indulgence to share the contents with General Yakubu Danjuma and Dr. Alex Ekwueme, whose concerns for and commitments to the good of Nigeria have been known to be strong.
The limit of sharing of the contents may be extended as time goes on.
Olusegun Obasanjo
Saturday, 16 November 2013
YAHAYA MAHMOOD SAN: A QUINTESSENTIAL GENTLEMAN GOES HOME
"Nigeria is a Great Country. Nigerians are a Great People. We got Independence as a Divided People. The Military further divided us. They handed Power to Divided Politicians. The Constitution is not helping matters. I am not sure a National Conference or Dialogue will help. What may help is Purposeful Leader and Leadership. I have faith in God Almighty that it is possible." -Yahaya Mahmood SAN, 14 November 2013.
I do not consider this article a tribute for two reasons. First, I think myself unworthy and not qualified to write a tribute on the man Barrister Yahaya Mahmood SAN. Secondly, I find it difficult to believe and come to terms with the fact that he is no more. My reason is hinged on the above quoted comment by him on my facebook post just a day before his death.
As a young boy I have always wanted to study law. This quest drove me to read a lot about lawyers and people who have succeeded in the profession. Yahaya Mahmood SAN happens to be one of the lawyers I read about because he stood tall among his peers and was highly principled when it came to issues bothering on national development. I longed and prayed for the day I would meet this beacon of light in the noble profession. Destiny would bring us together through social media, because immediately I discovered he was on Facebook, I sent a friend request to him, and to my surprise, he accepted to request almost immediately. That would be the beginning of great and wonderful experiences for me, because I tapped immensely from his robust knowledge of law and issues bothering on the Nigerian state.
From my discussions and conversations with him, I discovered he is a man with great love and passion for this country, and desires to see Nigeria better than where we are currently. Barrister Yahaya Mahmood would go out of his way to explain everything in detail to me until he is satisfied that I have adequately understood. His desire for a great Nigeria, blended so well with my quest for a better country and he has been a pillar of support to me, in the struggle I have been doing on Facebook and other social media platforms. His death is a heavy blow to me as I have lost one of my greatest pillar of support and encouragement, both in the struggle and in my pursuit of becoming a lawyer.
One area where Barrister Yahaya Mahmood SAN and I, have discussed extensively is in the ongoing process to convene a National Dialogue or Conference. My argument is that the we do not need a National Dialogue before we can have good governance and purposeful leadership, and he agreed wholeheartedly. In fact he told me that the Dialogue was a distraction by President Jonathan, and I completely agreed with him completely. It is also his view that we cannot convene a National Conference with our current Constitution still in place and the institutions of government. This is again another truth. Hear him "those who convinced the President to initiate this at this time had in mind to divert our attention from 2015, PDP crisis, Boko Haram, Kidnapping etc. The conference biggest problem will be its legitimacy in view of existing structures." He espoused his view again on Thursday evening, 14 Novermber, 2013, exactly a day before this death, and I have quoted him above. That is the man Yahaya Mahmood SAN for you, he was never afraid to hold an opinion even if he will stand alone.
On the ongoing strike by ASUU, Barrister Yahaya Mahmood SAN, was never happy that the strike was allowed to last this long. He did not particularly like the comment attributed to the Senate President that those who signed the agreement on behalf of government were ignorant. Hear him "I listened to the debate at the Senate. I think the Senate President did not follow the arguments. There is a difference between saying they were 'wrong' and they were 'ignorant'. For not understanding that, he is the one who is ignorant". There are many other instances where I have tapped from the fountain of knowledge of this great man and legal giant that I cannot relay here, for want of space.
Although he is no more, we owe it to his memory to ensure that we get our country back on the track of development, something he strongly believed in until the day he breathed his last. On the National Conference, like he said, we do not need a Conference before we can develop as a nation. What we need is a good leader and purposeful leadership. Despite several years of independence, Nigeria is yet to have a leader with genuine love for her. Until we find such a leader, the we shall continue to feet drag as a country. It behooves on us not let the ideals he stood and worked tirelessly for, die with him. And if the National Conference must hold, it must not be anything short of a Sovereign National Conference.
Let me use this medium to call on the appropriate authorities to immortalize this great Nigerian.
Like every mortal being, Barrister Yahaya Mahmood SAN may not be perfect, but he tried his best. He came, he saw and he conquered. To his dear wife, children, friends and admirers, the Almighty God who created Barrister Yahaya Mahmud SAN, without consulting us, has decided to call him to himself still without consulting us. We pray the Almighty Allah will lighten his grave, forgive his sins and welcome him into Paradise. Adieu my mentor, friend and to a large extent, father. Allah ya jikan shi. Amin
Frank O. Ijege
Kaduna,
frankijege@yahoo.com
Wednesday, 13 November 2013
The Rule of Law or the Law of the Ruler? By Ismail Ahmed
From time immemorial, man has always strived to create a balance and equality in what appears to be an increasingly unbalanced and unequal world; a community out of a society, an order out of a chaos, a structure out of a barren space, a governor from the ungoverned, freedom from tyranny and democracy from monarchy. In a democracy, somehow man thinks he has found a balance that will equalise all persons; the Rule of Law. The notion that all men who are equal before the same thing should be equal unto each other gave birth to the idea of a set of laws not men, to govern societies.
Democracy, at least on paper, guarantees some certain benefits that no other type of structural governance does; the right to determine how you are governed but most importantly, who governs you. The biggest selling point of Democracy by its most ardent proponents is the cardinal principle of the Rule of Law.
The Rule of Law basically means the superiority of laws over men. The subjectivity of every individual, group or institution within a defined parameters to a set of laws and rules that is blind to privileges and titles and that confers an equal status to all and sundry within its domain. It is this selling point that has won over many countries to the fold of democratic rule of which Nigeria was among them in the 1960?s. 53 years on however, in a democratic dispensation the true definition of democracy and it’s foundational principle of Rule of Law has been tested and stretched to limits that will make even the most despotic regimes envious.
There are numerous situations to cite as examples of the aberration of the principle of Rule of Law in the last fourteen years of civilian rule; the Salami saga will go down in history as one the most disgraceful acts of aberrations, not only the superiority of the law, but even the sanctity of justice. The Bola Ige murder, where the prime suspect who was under police custody won a senatorial election and was released to go and serve his full term in the senate. Then there is the Chris Ngige- Ifeanyi Ubah debacle in Anambra, where a sitting president admitted to a confused country that he called for a truce between a kidnapped incumbent Governor and the kidnapper, who was clearly more powerful than the Governor even in the eyes of the president.
The most recent of this ignominious acts is the attempt by the Nigerian police to stop some INCUMBENT governors who are tagged “rebels” to their party, not their country, from holding a meeting in a residence owned by a state government. I am a lawyer albeit a young one, but I do know there is no section or provision either in the constitution of the FRN or the Police Act, that empowers a police constable (DPO) to force himself into a private residence (a Governors lodge is privy only to a sitting Governor) to disrupt a meeting of a peaceful association of like minded individuals who are immunity-clad by the way, on a subject of which is still before the court and without a search warrant. Now, I know politics can be nasty and petty, but when law enforcement agents are involved then it becomes a matter of standard procedure and rule of law. Law enforcement agents are by default suppose to obey the letters of the law not the utterance of the ruler. Where the ruler, in a civilian dispensation feels that his words and ways are laws, the dangerous trend of a chaotic decay has been set that may result in to the crumbling of the democratic infrastructure and brutish state of a lawless society. For even in the jungle, the Lion became King by hunting out of need not out of greed. It is only when the rule is superior that the ruler is secured.
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Barr. Ismaeel Ahmed holds a Law Degree (LL.B) from University of Abuja, a Master of Arts Degree in International Relations and Diplomacy from Webster University, St. Louis, Missouri, United States of America.
Ahmed also holds a Masters of Law (LLM) from the University of Chicago, USA. He is a lawyer and a politician. He is currently the chairman of the All Progressives Youth Forum (APYF), a Youth body under the newly registered APC.
Monday, 11 November 2013
Nigeria: Nation Under The Captivity Of Hurricane Corruption By Odusote Oluwakayode
As the flood waters of corruption refuses to recede in Nigeria and the survivors of poverty continue to wallow in penury, one truth has become achingly clear over the past few weeks: Our government is not ready to go into war with corruption and save its own citizens from a catastrophe.
As usual, the Nigerian people have always forged ahead with courage in a fate that “one day e go better”. But despite the courage, this can-do spirit has been stifled the more by a can’t-do government that seems to think it has no role in solving great national challenges or rallying a country to a cause. The National Conference is a typical example.
I guess Nigerians forget easily, at least, by the continuous silence to acts of corrupt practices by persons in position of authority. By the last count, the number of “Gates” in the life of the present administration is alarming.
Public funds are stolen at will and due to a possibly controlled judiciary; justice is always merciful with those sometime described to have misappropriated money – There are several definitions for theft and stealing when it is being perpetrated by officials of government. When elite steals, they steal with preparedness to fund the aftermath. The end result will be several adjournments upon adjournment, a people of a nation will shout and brag, journalist will write the ink dry, opposition camps will condemn till the throats are thirsty and the “mumu” society will let go to face another political distractions.
I guess the masked man (Lagbaja) was right about the “Two Hundred Million Mumu”.
We have a government that’s content with simply protecting the interests of alleged corrupt associates than protecting the lives of the governed. A government that’s content with giving tax breaks to corporate industries loyal to the government without considering the feeling of its own people.
Corruption is not new in our political landscape, it is not a challenge peculiar to Nigeria, it is a general problem which had existed in societies for a long period of time. It is killing and the way to stop it from further destruction is to stem the tide of its incursion in our society. That is how developed nations have reacted to it. Developed nations aren’t immune from corrupt practices but they have a system devoid of personal handling to challenge it.
We have allowed corruption to eat deep into our national system and it has become a cancer. Corruption is robbing the nation of the opportunities to develop and progress, create jobs, social and basic amenities, good road networks, rural development and success the people deserve.
We have heard of strong defence by the Minister of Finance & Coordinating Minister of the Economy that our economy is strong and buoyant, alas, in the midst of all these reports and emotional defence, the vast majority of people in this country desperately stagnate in poverty. Poverty has even become a rhyme. It doesn’t move the government to tears, to them, it your choice to be poor or rich. It is painfully obvious that corruption stifles development – it siphons off scarce resources that could improve infrastructure, bolster education systems, and strengthen public health. It stacks the deck so high against entrepreneurs that they cannot get their job-creating ideas off the ground.
Corruption in itself has become a career which costs millions to sustain. It is a choice of career that the rich and poor have taken to. Corruption pay some salaries, it secures judgements and enters into plea bargain. The judiciary system is totally messed up with sound administers of the law that take time to twist the law just to satisfy the survival quest of corruption. The enforcers of the law have also taken the poisoning apple of corruption with their services rendered to pervade such practices at will.
The arm of corruption has also provided succour for criminals. Communities have stories of armed robbers arrested, taken to the police station and later released by the police only to go back and hack down the patriotic minds that arrested them in the first place.
Corruption takes care of criminals – the stories of the former Inspector General of Police, Tafa Balogun and his six month imprisonment for corruption and money laundering; the two-year imprisonment of ex-governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha of Bayelsa State for corruption and money laundering – a criminal that eventually got pardoned by President Jonathan; James Ibori, former governor of Delta State, who was surprisingly set free by Justice Awokulehin , only for him to be found guilty and sentenced to 13 years imprisonment by the British authority; the six-month imprisonment with an option of N3.5ml ($23,000) fine for ex-governor of Edo State, Lucky Igbinedion, for corruption; and the 30-month imprisonment of Bode George, former Chairman of the Nigerian Ports Authority, and national vice-chairman, southwest zone, of the People’s Democratic Party for contract fraud are reference points.
Erastus Akingbola who is being charged for money laundering is still playing the legal game of hiding away from justice with the huge funds he siphoned – by seeking safe haven for a time and robbing all humanity of the opportunity to bring the criminal to justice. Cecilia Ibru had a stint also, after all acts of fraud; she spent most of her sentence on hospital bed.
The list is limitless. Hon. Farouk Lawan In January 2012 chaired the House of Representatives committee that investigated the Nigerian government’s fuel subsidies.The committee was set up in the wake of nationwide strikes in Nigeria after President Goodluck Jonathan removed a fuel subsidy that resulted in the doubling in the price of fuel. The Committee’s report released in April the same year revealed a huge scam in which Nigerian fuel companies were being paid hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies by the government for fuel that was never delivered. It was estimated the scam cost the country $6.8 million.
In February 2013, Lawan was charged with corruption after he allegedly accepted $500,000 from Femi Otedola, as part of a $3 million bribe Lawan had solicited from Otedola. Otedola claimed that Lawan demanded the bribe in order to have his company, Zenon, removed from the list of companies that the committee had implicated in the scandal. The initial fuel subsidy report said that Zenon owed more than $1 million to the government, but legislators later voted to remove the firm from the final report. Lawan said that he accepted the money in order to expose blackmail and informed the committee and Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). Till today, a supposed “Honourable” Farouk Lawan is still legislating and making laws.
Officials in positions of governance and Civil servants are most confronted by the serious temptation of bribery especially when the take home pay is not enough for just basic needs. Government contracts are awarded without recourse to due process, even when it is called due process, the process is tainted by undue hand from above.
It has been suggested that to curb corruption, government should be downsized by reducing ministries, especially the ones that are not necessary and duplicating efforts. Government should not be seen as a payback time for good deeds of political followership. Government should be about employing merit for needed performance. Offices should not just be created from the blues; a situation where the elected officers would have multiple PAs and SAs doing nothing but occupying capacities to steal.
The Boko Haram insurgency which has shed innocent blood of Nigerians are facilitated by unscrupulous officers who can be paid off because they are so crippled by corruption that they do not care for the personal safety of Nigerians they swore to protect. These kinds of movements germinate as a result of endemic corruption.
The people are the sufferers of these consequences of corrupt practices and in the end, if the people cannot trust the government to protect them, promote good governance and provide basic amenities, insurgency may increasingly surface.
The recent scandal involving the Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah is a clear case of corrupt practice that will, as usual, be swept under the carpet.
When a serious government, committed to work, employ people that are judged by merit, not connections, when a country have responsible and noble men in the Legislature and a legal system have incorruptible judges, then the best and brightest can lead the country, people will be committed to working hard, there will be productivity, economic growth and development.
Odusote Oluwakayode
Twitter: Actionkay
NANS Is Sick and The President Is Confused; Don’t Take Him Serious By, Maxwell Adegbenro
NANS, National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) have had different presidents leading them cutting across zones. I have had an engagement with Past Leaders as a students and activist in Ekiti, Ogun, and Edo State. Cataloguing from Femi Osabinu, Lekan Soyombo, Jude Imagwe and all seems to have gotten it far fearer below the best the students movement can produce.
NANS was birthed in 1980 as a successor to the National Union of Nigerian Students (NUNS) has been terribly ill and in sequence abused, exploited, factionalized, and wickedly politicized. The emergence of Mr. Yinka Gbadebo a.k.a Ayefele was to be breather been the only President whose emergence was not marred by chaos and electoral discrepancies as the 26th president of NANS until the recent activities popular at the unfocused leadership is gradually becoming an embarrassment to the movement and the
student, a mistake of history.
Ayefele is of course a house hold name in student movement, having played the game with previous national leaders like Saddam and Nwoye. He was before now an utter example of student’s liberation leading and following rebellious policy of management and government to grave in his days at EKSU. Though, rusticated from the Ekiti State University (EKSU), for assaulting the University’s Vice Chancellor is currently a diploma student of Local Government Studies at the OAU. Thus, one would have expected him to take cognizance of the historicity of his emergence as NANS president.
But nay, under the watchful eyes of Yinka Gbadebo as NANS president, the blood of innocent Nigerian students have been the root of his pride and fame with atavistic impunity. A historical foreclosure of events that characterized the last few months under the watchful eyes of a student Leader turned Politician may re-open a can of wounds and hatred against their national officers especially those that housed demanding worries for the future of Nigeria students within the periscope of his terrain. In adverse ordinate not to defeat the purposes of this piece one must at least mention few examples in suffice.
On 25th February, 2013, four students of the Nasarawa State University were gruesomely murdered while protesting against water scarcity and power outage. About seventeen students were arrested, one would have expected a rigorous investigation by the President and prompt checks on the IGP, Abubakar in line with defending the right and welfare of its students but this seems to be far from his consideration.
Two days after, on February 28, 2013, Seyi Fasere, a 400 level student of the Ekiti State University was shot dead by the Police. He had gone to his home town Ilupeju to collect his tuition and on his way back, the bus conveying him ran into armed robbers at Oye Ekiti. All occupants disembarked and fled into the bush. Several minutes after the armed robbers had left; Police came, found Seyi Fasere hiding like all others. However, the one hundred thousand naira he had collected from his parents for his school fees was found on him and this as far as the Police were concerned was enough evidence that he was an armed robber. He was taken to the Police Station and shot dead by a Police man notoriously known as “Akobi Esu” (Devil’s Firstborn).
Again, on 27 May, 2013, Ahmed Dayo, an ND I student in the Department of Accounting of Kwara State Polytechnic was shot inside a cab by Police men escorting a bullion van belonging to a first generation bank. Reportedly, the armed Police escort stopped the taxi and attempted to shoot at one of its tyres because it was getting too close to the bullion van. Unfortunately, instead of the bullet hitting
the tyre, it hit Dayo in the vehicle and damaged one of his legs. On 12th June, 2013, students of University of Uyo (UNIUYO), during a peaceful protest, anti-riot police men supposedly invited to suppress the protest claimed the life an innocent student through the fired teargas canisters and live bullets endlessly leading to the death of Kingsley Udoette, a 200 level Zoology student of the University.
44 innocent and poor students were indiscriminately arrested mostly at the male hostel of the University at Udi Street in Uyo which is situated outside the premises of the University and on the streets. I did not see any reaction of Yinka Gbadebo till date instead he reneged; he totally turned a blind eye and deaf ear to this case.
Many more students have been murdered in cool blood under the dispensation of Yinka Gbadebo, including those killed by the Boko Haram sect in the Kano College attack and other places like Nassarawa. Yinka Gbadebo-led NANS has done practically nothing to arrest the lust for blood of Nigerian students by the Police or bring the culprits to justice except pockets of compromised protests and empty press statements. I doubt if NANS has a record of these killings.
With developments grating in our faces and the catastrophe of misrepresentation before the scavenge, Asuu face off with Federal government; It is not stunning to state that the movement have fallen into abyss of derailed and confused leader whose major interest is found in the culvert of selfish intents and greed. Obvious, that nothing to the best of my knowledge, in memory, has been heard from the NANS in the “democratization” process that is currently taking root in Nigeria. Instead the seal of power vested in the hands of Ayefele has been daunted by his whip of interest in negotiating positions and interest among political leaders, Governors and Senators and the hard question asked, therefore, is whether NANS and its leadership have not loose is focus?
Nigerian students and Nigerians in general should stop taking Yinka Gbadebo and his gang seriously. He had since lost the legitimacy to remain in office. Whenever the history of student’s movement in Nigeria is told, the name Yinka Gbadebo will be remembered not for accountability, integrity or principles but for treachery, indiscipline and inanities.
In the 80s, NANS was organizationally and operationally effective, efficient to the core, and, was the most feared and respected entity within the Nigerian body polity. When it comes to mobilization, operations against societal-ills, military tyranny, national challenges, capacity building and capacity retentions programming[s], NANS, is indefensibly a force to count. Additionally, within the
Nigerian civil society community, internationally and domestically, you cannot do without NANS organization and its operational mobilization grid-lock. I am afraid, things seems to be on a downward spiral if not total collapse.
Under the military dictators from the 80s came with it challenges and difficulties, with its constraints, NANS, was there knavery, unfettered, battled these national challenges explicitly. This it did regardless military spruce of illegal massive arrests, massive secrete killings, massive secrete tortures, massive disappearances, and heavy handedness across the Republic. Yet, NANS remained action parked, equal to these tasks, difficulties and why not now when the weather has changed to a democratic dispensation. We still have the interest of students trampled and mortgaged. A close shave with Ayefele in one of his usual visit to Ekiti when begging for money to finance his ambition to lead the students under the tree at Ekiti State Governors office, Yinka Gbadebo allured with determinism to rescue the students from the shackles of intimidation and oppression given the Ekiti State University dilemma under his Vice Chancellor a surgical illustration where students leaders fall victims. That impression if I were to be a senator of NANS is enough to defeat my diverse interest, he was in company of Yomi Oso, Williams (willie), Sunday Asefon and incumbent JCC Noah to meet with a top notch in the state for support. Apparently forgotten the trail of support petted on his dream, he loudly make commotion of a killing in Emure charging the human right activists to launch an investigation into the crisis, an attempt that will have tamed public love and sympathy if said without political coloration.
A HOUSE THAT DIVIDED AGAINST ITSELF WILL FALL
In swift reaction to his outburst on Gov Fayemi, the zonal leadership remarked heavily to sound a note of warning to students that the President is not to be trusted and taken serious.
“Although, we accept that our organization at the national structure is fast losing its credibility and reputation considering the Anambra Election in which the same President of NANS, Mr. Yinka Gbadebo, declared the organization support for Ifeanyi Uba of the Labour Party and just yesterday has also declared support for the former NANS President Tony Nwoye. This is a clear justification that the statements made by Mr. President of NANS shouldn’t be taken so serious, because information at our disposal is that Mr. Gbadebo may be charged for legal actions.
One of the reasons why we appealed to the Governor and Government of Ekiti not to take him serious, was primarily because, some few months ago, Mr. Gbadebo, under the guise of being the President of NANS, having communicated the Ekiti State Government in writing, notified Ekiti State leadership that he wants to give Governor Fayemi an award as the Best Governor in Nigeria* based on his style of *GOOD GOVERNANCE, EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, HUMAN CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT and REDUCTION IN THE UNEMPLOYED ARMY OF YOUTHS” which Gov Kayode Fayemi rejected is believed to have angered Mr President coupled with the defeat invoked on his political interest not to have supported the appointment of Adeolu Oyebode as the Special Assistant Students Matters to the Governor.
Of logical sympathy while piling the piece together was a reaction of South-West leadership of Nans to the lousy vituperation of Com Yinka Gbadebo aka Ayefele online where the Zone D leadership quickly ascribed that Nans is Sick and under siege.
Of course the killing of students and all the money usurp by mortgaging the interest of students will speak volume after his tenure. Instead of taking a responsible and pro-student stance in the likely to be ended four months old ASUU strike, he chose otherwise, the oppressor. He is now bred by propaganda and blackmail of a government that does not appreciate the inviolability of agreements from. Today, we have a NANS president who speaks out of the abundance of the stomach, a NANS president without integrity, principles and accountability, a NANS president who is a tool in the hands of a corrupt political class.
Evidence of his porous and confuse state of mind was evident in the Onitsha, Anambra State endorsement of the candidature of Mr. Ifeanyi Ubah for the forthcoming gubernatorial election in Anambra State (a man linked to fuel subsidy fraud and whose company, Capital Oil and Gas, has been taken over by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria because of his indebtedness). Also just last week as embedded in the press statement of his lower comrades (officers), Yinka Gbadebo is retorted to be ignored for endorsing Tony Nwoye again after several criticisms from his media aide and facebook agents.
“Yinka Gbadebo finds it pertinent to issue a strong worded press statement castigating the political killing(s) in Ekiti State which he blamed on Governor Kayode Fayemi but cannot secure the release of UNIUYO students in custody or bring to justice those who take delight in shedding of innocent blood of Nigerian students.
Of particularity, is, the recent grave and sad events this past months, the suffering of Nigerian-students is increasing, there is no end in sight and there is no fixed route in respect to planning and effective leadership in the land. NANS has not sent condolence letter to the Parents and students its government on the recent grave killing disaster. Also the students have been on season long loan back to their homes owned to Industrial action. I stand to be corrected, and my question is why and will the able leadership accept his mistake and take correction?
Lives could have been saved if our hospitals were refurbished and equipped, life of our late comrade Oyebode aka Ibile could have been saved, if the roads were refurbished and paved; lives could have been saved if our Aviation Rescue Management Committee or Department were properly trained and equipped; lives could have been saved if this administration did its part, the Odua-gate perilous corruption is not dutiful for Mr President concern. The stealing and corruption log in Aviation, Oil industry seems not to appeal to Yinka Gbadebo but because a Governor refused his forlorn attribute form dolling cheap award on him, it broke his camel back and is willing to retaliate shamefully and the students leaders in South West refused to find that funny.
My question is what has become of NANS today? Who leads NANS today in Nigeria and what are SUGs actions and inactions on these disturbing national challenges and difficulties?
Let me end by re-writing minds of Yinka Gbadebo that the government and good people cannot be moved by your vile and torment against the person of Fayemi and the student leaders who does not belong to his cast of mind trading with the blood of innocent, watering the tree of his administration with innocent students blood. There is a ghost of stewardship that will hunt them in the fullness of time.
MAXWELL ADEGBENRO writes from Ado Ekiti
A public Affairs Analyst and Journalist.NANS, National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) have had different presidents leading them cutting across zones. I have had an engagement with Past Leaders as a students and activist in Ekiti, Ogun, and Edo State. Cataloguing from Femi Osabinu, Lekan Soyombo, Jude Imagwe and all seems to have gotten it far fearer below the best the students movement can produce.
NANS was birthed in 1980 as a successor to the National Union of Nigerian Students (NUNS) has been terribly ill and in sequence abused, exploited, factionalized, and wickedly politicized. The emergence of Mr. Yinka Gbadebo a.k.a Ayefele was to be breather been the only President whose emergence was not marred by chaos and electoral discrepancies as the 26th president of NANS until the recent activities popular at the unfocused leadership is gradually becoming an embarrassment to the movement and the
student, a mistake of history.
Ayefele is of course a house hold name in student movement, having played the game with previous national leaders like Saddam and Nwoye. He was before now an utter example of student’s liberation leading and following rebellious policy of management and government to grave in his days at EKSU. Though, rusticated from the Ekiti State University (EKSU), for assaulting the University’s Vice Chancellor is currently a diploma student of Local Government Studies at the OAU. Thus, one would have expected him to take cognizance of the historicity of his emergence as NANS president.
But nay, under the watchful eyes of Yinka Gbadebo as NANS president, the blood of innocent Nigerian students have been the root of his pride and fame with atavistic impunity. A historical foreclosure of events that characterized the last few months under the watchful eyes of a student Leader turned Politician may re-open a can of wounds and hatred against their national officers especially those that housed demanding worries for the future of Nigeria students within the periscope of his terrain. In adverse ordinate not to defeat the purposes of this piece one must at least mention few examples in suffice.
On 25th February, 2013, four students of the Nasarawa State University were gruesomely murdered while protesting against water scarcity and power outage. About seventeen students were arrested, one would have expected a rigorous investigation by the President and prompt checks on the IGP, Abubakar in line with defending the right and welfare of its students but this seems to be far from his consideration.
Two days after, on February 28, 2013, Seyi Fasere, a 400 level student of the Ekiti State University was shot dead by the Police. He had gone to his home town Ilupeju to collect his tuition and on his way back, the bus conveying him ran into armed robbers at Oye Ekiti. All occupants disembarked and fled into the bush. Several minutes after the armed robbers had left; Police came, found Seyi Fasere hiding like all others. However, the one hundred thousand naira he had collected from his parents for his school fees was found on him and this as far as the Police were concerned was enough evidence that he was an armed robber. He was taken to the Police Station and shot dead by a Police man notoriously known as “Akobi Esu” (Devil’s Firstborn).
Again, on 27 May, 2013, Ahmed Dayo, an ND I student in the Department of Accounting of Kwara State Polytechnic was shot inside a cab by Police men escorting a bullion van belonging to a first generation bank. Reportedly, the armed Police escort stopped the taxi and attempted to shoot at one of its tyres because it was getting too close to the bullion van. Unfortunately, instead of the bullet hitting
the tyre, it hit Dayo in the vehicle and damaged one of his legs. On 12th June, 2013, students of University of Uyo (UNIUYO), during a peaceful protest, anti-riot police men supposedly invited to suppress the protest claimed the life an innocent student through the fired teargas canisters and live bullets endlessly leading to the death of Kingsley Udoette, a 200 level Zoology student of the University.
44 innocent and poor students were indiscriminately arrested mostly at the male hostel of the University at Udi Street in Uyo which is situated outside the premises of the University and on the streets. I did not see any reaction of Yinka Gbadebo till date instead he reneged; he totally turned a blind eye and deaf ear to this case.
Many more students have been murdered in cool blood under the dispensation of Yinka Gbadebo, including those killed by the Boko Haram sect in the Kano College attack and other places like Nassarawa. Yinka Gbadebo-led NANS has done practically nothing to arrest the lust for blood of Nigerian students by the Police or bring the culprits to justice except pockets of compromised protests and empty press statements. I doubt if NANS has a record of these killings.
With developments grating in our faces and the catastrophe of misrepresentation before the scavenge, Asuu face off with Federal government; It is not stunning to state that the movement have fallen into abyss of derailed and confused leader whose major interest is found in the culvert of selfish intents and greed. Obvious, that nothing to the best of my knowledge, in memory, has been heard from the NANS in the “democratization” process that is currently taking root in Nigeria. Instead the seal of power vested in the hands of Ayefele has been daunted by his whip of interest in negotiating positions and interest among political leaders, Governors and Senators and the hard question asked, therefore, is whether NANS and its leadership have not loose is focus?
Nigerian students and Nigerians in general should stop taking Yinka Gbadebo and his gang seriously. He had since lost the legitimacy to remain in office. Whenever the history of student’s movement in Nigeria is told, the name Yinka Gbadebo will be remembered not for accountability, integrity or principles but for treachery, indiscipline and inanities.
In the 80s, NANS was organizationally and operationally effective, efficient to the core, and, was the most feared and respected entity within the Nigerian body polity. When it comes to mobilization, operations against societal-ills, military tyranny, national challenges, capacity building and capacity retentions programming[s], NANS, is indefensibly a force to count. Additionally, within the
Nigerian civil society community, internationally and domestically, you cannot do without NANS organization and its operational mobilization grid-lock. I am afraid, things seems to be on a downward spiral if not total collapse.
Under the military dictators from the 80s came with it challenges and difficulties, with its constraints, NANS, was there knavery, unfettered, battled these national challenges explicitly. This it did regardless military spruce of illegal massive arrests, massive secrete killings, massive secrete tortures, massive disappearances, and heavy handedness across the Republic. Yet, NANS remained action parked, equal to these tasks, difficulties and why not now when the weather has changed to a democratic dispensation. We still have the interest of students trampled and mortgaged. A close shave with Ayefele in one of his usual visit to Ekiti when begging for money to finance his ambition to lead the students under the tree at Ekiti State Governors office, Yinka Gbadebo allured with determinism to rescue the students from the shackles of intimidation and oppression given the Ekiti State University dilemma under his Vice Chancellor a surgical illustration where students leaders fall victims. That impression if I were to be a senator of NANS is enough to defeat my diverse interest, he was in company of Yomi Oso, Williams (willie), Sunday Asefon and incumbent JCC Noah to meet with a top notch in the state for support. Apparently forgotten the trail of support petted on his dream, he loudly make commotion of a killing in Emure charging the human right activists to launch an investigation into the crisis, an attempt that will have tamed public love and sympathy if said without political coloration.
A HOUSE THAT DIVIDED AGAINST ITSELF WILL FALL
In swift reaction to his outburst on Gov Fayemi, the zonal leadership remarked heavily to sound a note of warning to students that the President is not to be trusted and taken serious.
“Although, we accept that our organization at the national structure is fast losing its credibility and reputation considering the Anambra Election in which the same President of NANS, Mr. Yinka Gbadebo, declared the organization support for Ifeanyi Uba of the Labour Party and just yesterday has also declared support for the former NANS President Tony Nwoye. This is a clear justification that the statements made by Mr. President of NANS shouldn’t be taken so serious, because information at our disposal is that Mr. Gbadebo may be charged for legal actions.
One of the reasons why we appealed to the Governor and Government of Ekiti not to take him serious, was primarily because, some few months ago, Mr. Gbadebo, under the guise of being the President of NANS, having communicated the Ekiti State Government in writing, notified Ekiti State leadership that he wants to give Governor Fayemi an award as the Best Governor in Nigeria* based on his style of *GOOD GOVERNANCE, EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, HUMAN CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT and REDUCTION IN THE UNEMPLOYED ARMY OF YOUTHS” which Gov Kayode Fayemi rejected is believed to have angered Mr President coupled with the defeat invoked on his political interest not to have supported the appointment of Adeolu Oyebode as the Special Assistant Students Matters to the Governor.
Of logical sympathy while piling the piece together was a reaction of South-West leadership of Nans to the lousy vituperation of Com Yinka Gbadebo aka Ayefele online where the Zone D leadership quickly ascribed that Nans is Sick and under siege.
Of course the killing of students and all the money usurp by mortgaging the interest of students will speak volume after his tenure. Instead of taking a responsible and pro-student stance in the likely to be ended four months old ASUU strike, he chose otherwise, the oppressor. He is now bred by propaganda and blackmail of a government that does not appreciate the inviolability of agreements from. Today, we have a NANS president who speaks out of the abundance of the stomach, a NANS president without integrity, principles and accountability, a NANS president who is a tool in the hands of a corrupt political class.
Evidence of his porous and confuse state of mind was evident in the Onitsha, Anambra State endorsement of the candidature of Mr. Ifeanyi Ubah for the forthcoming gubernatorial election in Anambra State (a man linked to fuel subsidy fraud and whose company, Capital Oil and Gas, has been taken over by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria because of his indebtedness). Also just last week as embedded in the press statement of his lower comrades (officers), Yinka Gbadebo is retorted to be ignored for endorsing Tony Nwoye again after several criticisms from his media aide and facebook agents.
“Yinka Gbadebo finds it pertinent to issue a strong worded press statement castigating the political killing(s) in Ekiti State which he blamed on Governor Kayode Fayemi but cannot secure the release of UNIUYO students in custody or bring to justice those who take delight in shedding of innocent blood of Nigerian students.
Of particularity, is, the recent grave and sad events this past months, the suffering of Nigerian-students is increasing, there is no end in sight and there is no fixed route in respect to planning and effective leadership in the land. NANS has not sent condolence letter to the Parents and students its government on the recent grave killing disaster. Also the students have been on season long loan back to their homes owned to Industrial action. I stand to be corrected, and my question is why and will the able leadership accept his mistake and take correction?
Lives could have been saved if our hospitals were refurbished and equipped, life of our late comrade Oyebode aka Ibile could have been saved, if the roads were refurbished and paved; lives could have been saved if our Aviation Rescue Management Committee or Department were properly trained and equipped; lives could have been saved if this administration did its part, the Odua-gate perilous corruption is not dutiful for Mr President concern. The stealing and corruption log in Aviation, Oil industry seems not to appeal to Yinka Gbadebo but because a Governor refused his forlorn attribute form dolling cheap award on him, it broke his camel back and is willing to retaliate shamefully and the students leaders in South West refused to find that funny.
My question is what has become of NANS today? Who leads NANS today in Nigeria and what are SUGs actions and inactions on these disturbing national challenges and difficulties?
Let me end by re-writing minds of Yinka Gbadebo that the government and good people cannot be moved by your vile and torment against the person of Fayemi and the student leaders who does not belong to his cast of mind trading with the blood of innocent, watering the tree of his administration with innocent students blood. There is a ghost of stewardship that will hunt them in the fullness of time.
MAXWELL ADEGBENRO writes from Ado Ekiti
A public Affairs Analyst and Journalist.
Tuesday, 5 November 2013
Bullet-proof Corruption By Ogaga Ifowodo
It was bound to come to this. The moment our “zero tolerance for corruption” president decided to fight tooth and nail against the public declaration of his assets, the moment he chose to declare instead “I don’t give a damn!” about any such nonsense as probity and leading by example, you knew the day was just around the corner when a minister could import bullet-proof luxury cars as personal gifts to herself. I say personal gifts as all the facts known so far about the “scandal de jour,” the current atrocity before another has us foaming at the corners of the mouth with unappeasable anger, point inescapably to that conclusion. Unless, of course, you believe that the said cars, which promptly disappeared from proper custody, were meant for visiting dignitaries. Yes, it was bound to come to the point where all that it would take to order, import, evade customs duties and take possession of bullet-proof luxury vehicles at prices so stupefyingly inflated you would think the whole thing was a prank is for a minister to say to her subordinate, “Do the needful.” That is all Minister of Aviation, Mrs Stella Oduah, says she did. And if she believes this pathetic attempt to save face — because she has a face to save, unlike the hundreds who have perished in several plane crashes under her watch — then how tragic is it that she is a minister?
I won’t bother with the shocking details of this latest act of daylight robbery, of the unending pillage and dispossession of the people. What would be the point? To establish that the armoured vehicles — BMWs, Germany’s vaunted “ultimate driving machines,” two Lexus limousines, and more, just in case you have been living in Mars for the past month or so — were bought without the “honourable” minister’s consent or knowledge? That transporting visiting dignitaries of international aviation regulation organisations from one point to another requires armoured vehicles, as if they would even come if Nigeria were at war, and if so to tour the war fronts? Or that it was all the fault of due process for failing to spot anything dubious about a transaction whose every line item screamed CORRUPTION! CORRUPTION! in red letters? Or that the number and price of the vehicles — N255 million or $1.6 million for two BMWs alone — can be justified even by a lunatic? No, the facts, such as we already have, are sufficient to hang a dog; no need to first give it a bad name. To my mind, the most worrisome thing about the seemingly untamable catastrophe of official corruption has to do with the abject failure of President Jonathan to lead anything close to a war against corruption, whatever his protestations to the contrary.
Recall, for instance, the president’s only action so far. On learning that his minister in charge of aviation, and, so, of air safety, had very likely been embezzling or misappropriating huge amounts of public funds while planes have been falling out of our sky like so many tattered paper kites flown by children, the latest being the Associated Airlines tragedy of 3 October 2013, what did he, enraged, do? Well, he set up a three-member panel to probe the minister. And then he proceeded on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem during which he took time from his personal devotions to perform some official business. (Sanctimonious officials are, of course, part of the problem of Nigeria. Their inability to separate the state from religion, their personal pieties from governance, will be the subject of my next column.)
The only remarkable thing about that action which unmistakably expresses the president’s incandescent rage is that one of the persons to probe the minister, National Security Adviser Colonel Ibrahim Dasuki (rtd), travelled with Jonathan, while the minister to be probed had preceded the pilgrims-cum-public-servants to Jerusalem! It is quite possible Jonathan is embarrassed that bullet-proof luxury vehicles are now the poster-image of his war against corruption. Perhaps the irony is plain to him, seeing that he has yet to fire a single bullet, even one filled with hot words, in this war. Rather, he has been far happier to be a nurse, binding the wounds of convicted corrupt politicians as shown by the state pardon to his mentor, D.S.P. Alamieyeseigha.
But why armoured cars? Security for her many important foreign visitors, says Mrs Oduah, though Nigeria is not at war, but how grateful she must be to Boko Haram! We know, however, that security was only a crude and clever ruse, and I hazard that this new trend among our politicians in high public office symbolises something else: armoured luxury vehicles as a triple-meaning metaphor for corruption: unabashed ostentation; a sign of their sense of invincibility, of absolute protection from prosecution; and protection from the people whom they so shamelessly dispossess and impoverish. Deep down, our politicians know that a thief lives in perpetual fear of being discovered by the owner, in this case the masses of the Nigerian people pauperised and dehumanised by official kleptomania. And our politicians know that the masses, unlike our president, give a bloody damn about corruption, and that a day of reckoning looms. But do our bullet-proof politicians know that no armour is proof against the rage of the people when they are finally roused to action?
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