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Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

FULL RESULT OF THE 2015 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION ANNOUNCED BY INEC | #NIGERIADECIDES


Here is a full list of the Presidential Election votes from all 36 States and the Federal Capital announced by INEC.

Ekiti: APC 120,331 -  PDP 176,466
Ogun: APC 308,290 - PDP 207,950
Enugu: APC 14,157 - PDP 553,030
Kogi: APC 264,851 - PDP 149,987
Osun: APC 383,603 - PDP 249,929
Ondo: APC: 299,889 - PDP: 251,368 
FCT: APC 146, 399 - PDP 157,195
Oyo: APC 528,620 - PDP 303,376
Nassarawa: APC 236,838 - PDP 273,460
Kano: APC 1,903,999 - PDP 215,779
Jigawa: APC 885,988 - PDP 142,904
Katsina: APC 1,345,441 - PDP 98,937
Kwara: APC 302,146 - PDP 132,602
Kaduna: APC 1,127,760 - PDP 484,085
Anambra: APC 17,926 - PDP 660,762
Abia: APC 13,394 - PDP 368,303
Akwa Ibom: APC 58,411 - PDP 953,304
Imo: APC 133,253 - PDP 559,185
Plateau: APC 429,140 PDP 549,615
Ebonyi:  APC 19,518 - PDP 323,653
Niger: APC 657,678 - PDP 149, 222
Lagos: APC 792,460 - PDP 632, 327
Bayelsa: APC 5,194 - PDP 361,209
Gombe: APC 361,245 - PDP 96,873 
Cross River: APC 28,368 - PDP 414,863
Rivers: APC 69,238 - PDP 1,487,075
Adamawa: APC 374,701 - PDP 251,664 
Zamfara: APC 612,202 - PDP 144,833
Kebbi: APC 567,883 - PDP 100,972
Benue: APC 373,961 - PDP 303,737
Bauchi: APC 931,598 - PDP 86,085
Yobe: APC 446,265 - PDP 25,526
Edo: APC 208,469 - PDP 286,869
Taraba: APC 261,326 - PDP 310,800
Sokoto: APC 671,926 - PDP 152,199
Delta: APC 48,910 - PDP 1,211,405
Borno: APC 473,543 - PDP 25,640

Muhammadu Buhari Wins Election | #NigeriaHasDecided


The past few years has been filled with so many roller coasters for Nigerians, with the constant bomb blasts, kidnapping, high unemployment rate, lack of security, blood shed and so much more. But on March 28, 2015, the people of Nigeria decided that enough was enough. They marched out and voted for change. A vote that proves that people's lives matter. Now the voices have been heard. We have a new leader.

This is not just a win for General Muhammadu Buhari, this is a win for the Nigerians. We have decided. And now we are keeping our fingers crossed to see what President Buhari has planned for Nigeria for the next four years. We hope for peace to reign in his term and for God to give him the strength to rule Nigeria.

Say hello to our President - Sai Muhammadu Buhari! 

VIDEO: PDP Loses It As Orubebe Accuses INEC Chairman, Jega Of Being Tribalistic, Selective And Partial


Former Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Elder Godsday Orubebe on Tuesday accused the Chairman of the Independent National electoral Commission (INEC), Prof Attahiru Jega of being " tribalistic, selective and partial" in dealing with issues of irregularities raised during the just concluded Presidential and National Assembly elections.

LIST OF THE 2015 ELECTIONS RESULTS ANNOUNCED BY INEC SO FAR | #NIGERIADECIDES


Unfortunately, we have to wait till 8PM Nigerian time to get the rest of the results for the 2015 elections, but so far, these is the list of the results we have from INEC.

8 States and The Federal Capital 

Ekiti: APC 120,331 -  PDP 176,466
Ogun: APC 308,290 - PDP 207,950
Enugu: APC 14,157 - PDP 553,030
Kogi: APC 264,851 - PDP 149,987
Osun: APC 383,603 - PDP 249,929
Ondo: APC: 299,889 - PDP: 251,368 
FCT: APC 146, 399 - PDP 157,195
Oyo: APC 528,620 - PDP 303,376
Nassarawa: 236,838 - PDP 273,460

After 8 states and Abuja votes: 
APC = 2, 302,986 votes 
PDP = 2,322, 734 votes
The candidate that has the most votes wins, provided they get at least 25% of the vote in 24 states, not by the number of states.
Follow us on Twitter & Facebook for LIVE updates. 

WATCH THE 2015 NIGERIAN ELECTION RESULTS STREAMING LIVE


As we all know, today is a very important day for all Nigerians across the world. Several pictures have been displayed all over the internet, mostly showing false election results. So, why don't we all just sit back and watch it together and just hope for the best. Watch the live streaming below.

WATCH LIVE STREAMING 



PRESIDENT JONATHAN SPEAKS WITH OREKA GODIS AND PANELISTS ON THE SET OF MTV BASE CHOOSE OR LOSE.

Ahead of the forthcoming Nigerian elections, MTV Base and STV have teamed up to produce a special pre-election programme with President Goodluck Jonathan and a few young Nigerian voters to discuss the some burning issues facing youth in Nigeria.

The programme, “Choose or Lose: President Goodluck Jonathan” was recorded at the Presidential villa, Aso Rock, Abuja. It premieres on Friday February 13, 2015 at 6pm on MTV Base and STV with Oreka Godis as host.

The panelists are a Barrister, Anu Hundeyin, a Student, Yagana Bukar, TV Producer/
Director, Jackleen Nnely and HR Consultant, Aniekan Nya-Etok. Others are Lawyer, Jake Okechukwu Effoduh and Healthcare Professional, Fadekemi Akinfaderin Agarau, all of who engaged the President on matters including Education, Power, Leadership, Healthcare, Security and Popular Culture. 

The programme is part of MTV Base’s “Choose or Lose” campaign which encourages youth to be politically active.

Personalities like Ben Murray-Bruce, 2Face, Banky W, Ebuka Obi-Uchendu, Sound Sultan, Omojuwa, Yemi Alade, Stanley Azuakola and a few others have in the past lent their voices to the campaign. 

CHIMAMANDA ADICHIE DESCRIBES THE POSTPONED ELECTIONS AS A 'STAGGERINGLY SELF-SERVING ACT OF CONTEMPT FOR NIGERIANS'.

By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Last week, Victor, a carpenter, came to my agos home to fix a broken chair. I asked him whom he preferred as Nigeria’s next president: the incumbent, Goodluck Jonathan, or his challenger, Muhammadu Buhari.

“I don’t have a voter’s card, but if I did, I would vote for somebody I don’t like,” he said. “I don’t like Buhari. But Jonathan is not performing.”

Victor sounded like many people I know: utterly unenthusiastic about the two major candidates in our upcoming election.

Were Nigerians to vote on likeability alone, Jonathan would win. He is mild-mannered and genially unsophisticated, with a conventional sense of humor. Buhari has a severe, ascetic air about him, a rigid uprightness; it is easy to imagine him in 1984, leading a military government whose soldiers routinely beat up civil servants. Neither candidate is articulate. Jonathan is given to rambling; his unscripted speeches leave listeners vaguely confused. Buhari is thick-tongued, his words difficult to decipher. In public appearances, he seems uncomfortable not only with the melodrama of campaigning but also with the very idea of it. To be a democratic candidate is to implore and persuade, and his demeanor suggests a man who is not at ease with amiable consensus. Still, he is no stranger to campaigns. This is his third run as a presidential candidate; the last time, in 2011, he lost to Jonathan.

This time, Buhari’s prospects are better. Jonathan is widely perceived as ineffectual, and the clearest example, which has eclipsed his entire presidency, is his response to Boko Haram. Such a barbaric Islamist insurgency would challenge any government. But while Boko Haram bombed and butchered, Jonathan seemed frozen in a confused, tone-deaf inaction. Conflicting stories emerged of an ill-equipped army, of a corrupt military leadership, of northern elites sponsoring Boko Haram, and even of the government itself sponsoring Boko Haram.

Jonathan floated to power, unprepared, on a serendipitous cloud. He was a deputy governor of Bayelsa state who became governor when his corrupt boss was forced to quit. Chosen as vice president because powerbrokers considered him the most harmless option from southern Nigeria, he became president when his northern boss died in office. Nigerians gave him their goodwill—he seemed refreshingly unassuming—but there were powerful forces who wanted him out, largely because he was a southerner, and it was supposed to be the north’s ‘turn’ to occupy the presidential office.

And so the provincial outsider suddenly thrust onto the throne, blinking in the chaotic glare of competing interests, surrounded by a small band of sycophants, startled by the hostility of his traducers, became paranoid. He was slow to act, distrustful and diffident. His mildness came across as cluelessness. His response to criticism calcified to a single theme: His enemies were out to get him. When the Chibok girls were kidnapped, he and his team seemed at first to believe that it was a fraud organized by his enemies to embarrass him. His politics of defensiveness made it difficult to sell his genuine successes, such as his focus on the long-neglected agricultural sector and infrastructure projects. His spokespeople alleged endless conspiracy theories, compared him to Jesus Christ, and generally kept him entombed in his own sense of victimhood.

The delusions of Buhari’s spokespeople are better packaged, and obviously free of incumbency’s crippling weight. They blame Jonathan for everything that is wrong with Nigeria, even the most multifarious, ancient knots. They dismiss references to Buhari’s past military leadership, and couch their willful refusal in the language of ‘change,’ as though Buhari, by representing change from Jonathan, has also taken on an ahistorical saintliness.

I remember the Buhari years as a blur of bleakness. I remember my mother bringing home sad rations of tinned milk, otherwise known as “essential commodities”—the consequences of Buhari’s economic policy. I remember air thick with fear, civil servants made to do frog jumps for being late to work, journalists imprisoned, Nigerians flogged for not standing in line, a political vision that cast citizens as recalcitrant beasts to be whipped into shape.

Buhari’s greatest source of appeal is that he is widely perceived as non-corrupt. Nigerians have been told how little money he has, how spare his lifestyle is. But to sell the idea of an incorruptible candidate who will fight corruption is to rely on the disingenuous trope that Buhari is not his party. Like Jonathan’s People’s Democratic Party, Buhari’s All Progressives Congress is stained with corruption, and its patrons have a checkered history of exploitative participation in governance. Buhari’s team is counting on the strength of his perceived personal integrity: his image as a good guy forced by realpolitik to hold hands with the bad guys, who will be shaken off after his victory.

In my ancestral home state of Anambra, where Jonathan is generally liked, the stronger force at play is a distrust of Buhari, partly borne of memories of his military rule, and partly borne of his reputation, among some Christians, as a Muslim fundamentalist. When I asked a relative whom she would vote for, she said, “Jonathan of course. Am I crazy to vote for Buhari so that Nigeria will become a sharia country?”

Nigeria has predictable voting patterns, as all democratic countries do. Buhari can expect support from large swaths of the core north, and Jonathan from southern states. Region and religion are potent forces here. Vice presidents are carefully picked with these factors in mind: Buhari’s is a southwestern Christian and Jonathan’s is a northern Muslim. But it is not so simple. There are non-northerners who would ordinarily balk at voting for a ‘northerner’ but who support Buhari because he can presumably fight corruption. There are northern supporters of Jonathan who are not part of the region’s Christian minorities.

Last week, I was indifferent about the elections, tired of television commercials and contrived controversies. There were rumors that the election, which was scheduled for February 14, would be postponed, but there always are; our political space is a lair of conspiracies. I was uninterested in the apocalyptic predictions. Nigeria was not imploding. We had crossed this crossroads before, we were merely electing a president in an election bereft of inspiration. And the existence of a real opposition party that might very well win was a sign of progress in our young democracy.

Then, on Saturday, the elections were delayed for six weeks. Nigeria’s security agencies, we were told, would not be available to secure the elections because they would be fighting Boko Haram and needed at least another month and a half to do so. (Nigeria has been fighting Boko Haram for five years, and military leaders recently claimed to be ready for the elections.)

Even if the reason were not so absurd, Nigerians are politically astute enough to know that the postponement has nothing to do with security. It is a flailing act of desperation from an incumbent terrified of losing. There are fears of further postponements, of ploys to illegally extend Jonathan’s term. In a country with the specter of a military coup always hanging over it, the consequences could be dangerous. My indifference has turned to anger. What a staggeringly self-serving act of contempt for Nigerians. It has cast, at least for the next six weeks, the darkest possible shroud over our democracy: uncertainty.

First published by The Atlantic

THE 2FACE FOUNDATION LAUNCHES VOTE NOT FIGHT, ELECTION NO BE WAR CAMPAIGN

As the 2015 elections gathers momentum with its attendant apprehension it stirs within the polity, The 2face Foundation in partnership with Young Stars Foundation, National Democratic Institute (NDI) , and other partner organisations, have flagged off the “VOTE NOT FIGHT – ELECTION NO BE WAR" campaign, geared towards a violence free electoral process in 2015.

This timely initiative was officially unveiled at a press conference held at The Events Centre, Alausa, Ikeja on theSeptember 30, 2014. The "VOTE NOT FIGHT, Election No Be War" campaign is an initiative championed by iconic music star, 2face Idibia, and targeted primarily at the youth demographic which incidentally constitutes by far the largest voting population in the country and also the main culprits in election violence. In attendance were a cross section of the press and a heavy representation of civil society organisations from far and near, who responded enmasse, united by one common cause - a desire to work towards violence-free elections in 2015, as well other concerned citizens including the matriarch of the Kuti family, Ms. Yemi Ransome kuti, among others.

Also unveiled at the launch was the project theme music recorded by 2face Idibia as part of the Million Voices for Peace (MVP) project, and a Public Service Announcement video by the BBC Media Action to sensitize the electorates on the need to VOTE NOT FIGHT. Fielding questions from members of the press as well other civil society organisations present, the panel made up of 2face Idibia, Maxwell Machill (Senior Program Manager – NDI), Mrs. Ijeoma Okey-Igbokwe (HOD, Voters Education – INEC), Kingsley Bangwell (Youngstars Foundation and Efe Omorogbe (representing The 2face Foundation), gave insightful answers and offered clarifications where required. Also to lend support to the campaign was the United States Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle, who though not physically present, delivered a pre-recorded speech via multi media. The highlight of the launch was the signing of the pledge by 2face Idibia, Now Muzik artiste and collaborator on the MVP "Break the Silence" single, Henry ‘K Slim’Kosiso, Ms. Ransome-Kuti and EiE's Yemi Adamolekun, followed by the other attendees.

Other partners on the VOTE NOT FIGHT, ELECTION NO BE WAR Campaign include the Enough Is Enough (EIE) Coalition, Isa Wali Empowerment Initaitive, Development Initiative For African Women, Hip TV, The Bridge Youth Development Foundation, One Life Initiative for Human Development, The Bridge Youth Development Foundation, etc. To register and joining the growing campaign, visitwww.votenotfight.org


 Click to enlarge image(s)


 

#EKITIDECIDES ENOUGH IS ENOUGH NIGERIA HOSTS TELEVISED DEBATE FOR CANDIDATES

“Of all the institutions of a democratic society, there’s none as formidable as an awakened and conscious citizenry.” – Shehu Sanni

Ekiti’s governorship election on Saturday June 21, 2014 kicks of the 2014/2015 election season. Enough is Enough Nigeria (EiE Nigeria), a coalition of young Nigerians promoting good governance and citizen engagement will host a live televised debate for three of the leading candidates on Sunday, June 1, 2014.

This continues EiE’s tradition of hosting youth-focused debates, having co-hosted the first youth-focused presidential debate in the country in 2011. It has since hosted debates in Cross River and Anambra (in partnership with Channels TV).

There are 18 candidates vying for the position of Governor and the four leading candidates were invited to participate in the debate: incumbent
governor Kayode Fayemi, of the All Progressives Congress (APC); former governor Ayo Fayose of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP); Opeyemi
Bamidele of the Labour Party (LP); and Accord Party flagbearer, Kole
Ajayi.

Mr Fayose of PDP declined to participate in the debate. Candidates are expected to make public their plans for Ekiti youth with special focus on education, security, power supply and employment/enterprise.

The debate will be aired live on EKTV, NTA Ekiti & TVC.

About EnoughIsEnough Nigeria

EnoughisEnough Nigeria (www.eienigeria.org) is a coalition of individuals and youth-led organizations committed to instituting a culture of 
good governance and public accountability in Nigeria through advocacy, activism and the mobilization of the youth population as responsible citizens. The coalition includes The Future Project; Paradigm Initiative Nigeria (PIN); Education as a Vaccine (EVA); Kudirat Initiative for Democracy (KIND); LYNX Nigeria, Budgit, RISE Networks; Chocolate City Group and EME. EiE Nigeria created the RSVP (Register|Select|Vote|Protect) Campaign to leverage technology, especially social media to mobilize significant participation from citizens in the 18-35 age bloc in the 2011 elections and beyond.

BEYOND THE BLAME GAME: CITIZENS' SOLUTIONS TO END TERRORISM‎

The security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of
government.

- Chapter 2, Section 14 2(b), Constitution of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria

On Monday, April 14, Nigerians woke up to news of another heart-rending carnage at Nyanya Motor Park after a bomb detonated. Over 100 people were injured and over 70 people died. That same night, over 200 school girls were abducted in Chibok, Borno State. This was all after a bloody weekend in Borno that left over 90 people dead.

Tired of mere condemnations and the usual blame game, citizens on social media platforms responded to a call for suggestions on ways to 
combat this surge of terror. Over 1,000 suggestions were received in two days,
with the hashtag #CitizensSolutionToEndTerrorism trending on Twitter on both days.

10 key ACTION POINTS outlined below came out of the exercise:
1. Financing the Security Apparatus
2. Local Security Governance
3. Conclusive Prosecution
4. Protocol of Engagement with Citizens
5. Follow the Money
6. Immigration and Citizens’ Identification
7. Respect for the Dead
8. Risk Calculation & Mitigation
9. Promotion of Peace Education
10. Social Welfare

As we’ve seen in other countries, we cannot overemphasise that insurgency is not restricted to a particular part of the country – it is not a North East or Northern problem. It is trans-border and can move easily.

The number of casualties in the last 3 years is estimated at almost 20,000. In the first 4 months of this year, we have lost almost 1,500 Nigerians, especially students, and hundreds of women and children remain unaccounted for.

We call on the Federal Government to ensure that our security agencies are equipped adequately for the task; engage communities; provide a national emergency number; honour the dead; prosecute swiftly and harmonise our databases for ease of identification.

The assurances given by the Federal Government are no longer sufficient and they MUST match their words with visible action to rebuild the confidence of the citizens in the efforts to protect lives and property. Nigerian citizens are desperate to see that we are winning this war on terror and for us, results are defined by the absence of abductions and deaths; cutting off financial flows; capture & prosecution of terrorists, especially before they strike.

We call on Mr President for leadership that mobilises Nigerians to fight collectively against a common enemy. Mr President must extend a hand to ALL stakeholders in this war – governors, political party leaders, the National Assembly, traditional and religious institutions, civil society and citizens – and communicate clearly that this is not about party politics, ethnicity or religion, but about pursuing the common good of ALL Nigerians.

Our hearts go out to members of the Chibok community as we pray for the speedy return of our daughters.

May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

###

The attached document was prepared by EiE Nigeria (www.eienigeria.org), a coalition of individuals and youth-led organizations committed to instituting a culture of good governance and public accountability in Nigeria through advocacy, activism and the mobilization of the youth population as responsible citizens.

EiE was supported by CLEEN Foundation (www.cleen.org), a non-governmental organization with the mission of promoting public safety, security and accessible justice through the strategies of empirical research, legislative advocacy, demonstration programmes and publications, in partnership with government and civil society.

The edited tweets can be found online here –
https://storify.com/EiENigeria/citizenssolutiontoendterrorism

WHY MEN DON’T HAVE A CLUE AND WOMEN ALWAYS NEED MORE SHOES - Bolaji Abdullahi

I wish to thank the organizers of The Future Awards for the excellent work you have been doing. Recognizing exceptional young people is a very positive process of identifying a successor generation of leadership in this country that is based on achievements, creativity and innovation. We at the Federal Ministry of Youth Development acknowledge you as a worthy partner. The Youth Champions component of our DriveTheFutureNigeria project speaks to the same objective. You can therefore be rest assured of our abiding interest in what you do.

As you all know, I took the title of my address from the best-selling book by Allan and Barbara Pease. This couple tries to teach us how to make our relationship work or at least understand why our wives or husbands behave the way they do: why men tell lies and like to flip the channels; what women really want and why they like to TALK. And so on. In the end, Allan and Barbara seem to conclude that men behave the way they do because they are men; and women, because they are women. Our behaviours, they say, are coded in our genes and we have evolved into who we are over the millenniums and there is nothing we can do to change that. But, we can at least try to understand each other and learn to live together in a more enjoyable relationship.
Now, you may wonder what this has got to do with the reason we are here today. But upon reading this book and the earlier one by the same authors, ‘Why Men Don’t Listen and Women Can’t Read Maps’, it is difficult not to draw a parallel between the complex relationship between men and women and the more loose but, perhaps, equally very serious relationship between the government and the people they govern. Government will always wonder what the people really want and why they are so difficult to please; and the people will always wonder why the government at all levels always appears so clueless and insensitive!

One of the central themes of this year’s event, I understand is the question of how young people should engage government or whether young people should engage with government at all. There is a critical assumption here which stands on moral high grounds. I have a feeling that the question you are actually asking is this: “with what length of the spoon they should employ in dining with the devil!” I must say that there is nothing in my experience suggesting that government is an exclusive den of devils and civil society is populated by saints. It is the people that make the government and the moral constitution of any government is mostly a reflection of its society. Rather than our constituencies, what I think is important is our commitment to positive change in our country.

All of us cannot be in government, and being in government is not the only way we can drive the process of change. However, we cannot expect to make any meaningful impact in the long run if we are not in a position to influence how things are done, especially in government. It is true that young people are distrustful of government at all levels. Therefore they want to change the government and change the way government business is done. These are legitimate aspirations that often fuel the passion that we see overflowing everywhere. The inevitable question that must follow however is ‘how’?

The central challenge that comes to mind is how to reconcile this passion and aspiration which fall within young people’s circle of concern, with their circle of influence. For young people, the take off position is to assume the moral high grounds. Most young people demand change on the grounds that they know better, they can do things better and they are generally better than the status quo that they seek to overthrow or improve. Well, one cannot help but wonder if the men and women in their 40s, 50s and 60s who currently populate the current regime that we seek to overthrow were not perched on the same mountain of superiority only twenty or thirty years ago. But you have said you are the turning point generation. This is great. The question is how does this turning point generation want to turn things around? Influence is central to change. How influential are you? Civil society, media (including the social media), the government (from LGs to FGs), the parliament, the political parties are all arenas of influence with immense opportunities for driving positive change. How many of these are currently occupied by you, directly or indirectly?

This brings me to the issue of political participation, especially the process of political recruitment. The question of how to get the ‘right’ people into government has pre-occupied political philosophers across the ages since Plato. In fact, it is this major concern that inspired Plato’s ‘Republic’. Plato proposed that the ruling class in a just society should be men who have been trained in the art of ruling and selected from the most rational and wise segment of the population. He noted that because nature itself does not produce these special people in sufficient number, a conscious process of eugenics has to be employed to nurture and breed them for the purpose of governance. He called them the ‘Philosopher-Kings’. “The philosophers must become kings in our cities, or those who are now kings and potentates must learn to seek wisdom like true philosophers, and so political power and intellectual wisdom will be joined in one.” For Plato, the reason for all wickedness (meaning all forms undesirable conducts) is lack of wisdom; and once people are wise they cannot be wicked.

Well, Plato’s proposal is very suitable and practicable in the society of his imagination, the Utopia. But that country is not on any map. Plato’s solution offers very little practical help. So, the problem is not solved and the question remains: how do we get the right people into government, if we consider government to be a very powerful arena for bringing about the change that we desire? The explosion of social media has opened a new arena of empowerment and influence, especially for young people. Recent political experience has proved this. The new media have made mobilization for mass action relatively easier and sometimes have helped in promoting demands for accountability or even in coordinating the removal of government. However, I suspect that the power, the ubiquity and glamour of the new media is also capable of generating some kind of hubris that inhibits real learning and understanding that are so crucial for constructive engagement across various platforms of influencing for change. Voice, defined as power to be heard, cannot be sufficient as an end by itself for the kind of change we aspire to bring about. We also need the power that comes with action and ability to influence others to change without necessarily alienating them of feel inferior to our position. Ability to build coalitions and allies across the various arenas is the hallmark of agents of change. Our passion and our youth, in fact, our good intentions are not enough credentials in this crucial enterprise. We need knowledge; knowledge of how things work and the realities that govern the behavior of various actors. The mentality of exclusion (A “them” versus “us” mentality) that positions young people as antagonists of other actors can only expand the boundaries of distrust and conflicts that can only contaminate our agenda and misappropriate our energy.

The dilemma faced by young people who have sought to work with or in government is real. Many have shied away for fear of losing that badge of presumed integrity that ‘not being in government’ or ‘not joining government’ confers. Many who have summoned the courage to work with government or join a political party have had to endure all kind of opprobrium and vilification by their peers who accuse them of “jumping ship” and losing their moral credentials by agreeing to work with government at whatever level. No doubt, the behaviour of political elites in our country in recent years has rendered anyone working in that sector suspect. And as long as so many people still believe that the easiest and shortest route to financial prosperity is through the political office; politicians and public office holders would continue to be presumed guilty until they prove their innocence. But surely not all migration is inspired by the logic of the stomach. We have seen many well-intentioned people digested by the system. We have also seen so many who have been able to rise above the murk to deliver real hope that even despite the tyranny of decay, individuals do, sometimes, make the difference.

We need to continue to seek greater clarity about what we really need to achieve and how. But more importantly, we need to identify our strategic allies and engage them accordingly. And we need to understand that no matter what we do, government, like men, will not always find it easy to listen and; women, like the people, will always need more shoes. The least we can do however is for both sides to understand each other and also accept that while they may see things differently, they are a not necessarily natural adversary, but necessary partners in our quest to build a society that works for all.

OKONJO-IWEALA DID NOT THREATEN TO RESIGN ...FUEL SUBSIDY IS A GOVERNMENT, NOT A PERSONAL DECISION

OKONJO-IWEALA DID NOT THREATEN TO RESIGN
...FUEL SUBSIDY IS A GOVERNMENT, NOT A PERSONAL DECISION

It has come to our notice that a well coordinated campaign of calumny against the Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, founded on outright lies and despicable distortions is being executed by cowardly persons hiding behind the ongoing controversy over the government’s decision to deregulate the petroleum sector.

For obvious reasons, the faceless campaigners have elected to tell their lies online because the normal journalistic principles of facts and balanced reporting are generally absent there.

For instance, we have received numerous enquiries regarding an alleged threat by the Coordinating Minister to resign if the government goes back on its decision to end the fuel subsidies. The threat was supposedly made during the emergency Federal Executive Council meeting which held yesterday.

This speculation, like numerous others is absolutely false. DR OKONJO-IWEALA WAS NOT AT THE MEETING BECAUSE SHE WAS OUT OF THE COUNTRY WHEN IT WAS GOING ON. In other words, they are saying that she made a threat at a meeting that she did not attend. She made no such threat physically or through any other means. She had no reason to.

The agenda behind the alleged threat and similar stories is obvious: to inspire public hatred and odium against her person by manipulating public opinion so that she is seen as the sole person pushing for the removal of subsidies.

Their calculation is that Nigerians are so angry and so gullible that they will believe anything if the lies are supported with manufactured “facts”. But we believe that fair minded Nigerians are not fools.

It is clear that governments and certainly the Jonathan administration do not work in the manner that the peddlers of falsehood are saying. It is not only naive but also highly disrespectful to the President and the government as a whole to suggest that the entire decision making machinery of government is the sole preserve of any official.

We urge the media and the Nigerian public to ignore the antics of people who obviously believe that Nigerians are fools.

For the avoidance of doubt, Dr Okonjo-Iweala supports the decision on fuel subsidy removal because she believes that ending the subsidies will drastically reduce corruption in the downstream sector.

Deregulation will also help to end the waivers enjoyed by powerful cabals at the expense of the Nigerian people. In addition, the vast majority of Nigerians will also gain as the proceeds will be redirected into safety nets, other identifiable social interventions as well as provision of sorely needed infrastructure projects nationwide.

Paul C Nwabuikwu
Senior Special Assistant to the Coordinating Minister for the Economy/Minister of Finance

A Short Film On Subsidy By Capital Dreams Pictures & Team Capital

With the present subsidy implementation causing chaos all over our "great" Nation,Nigeria.The individuals at Capital Dreams Pictures & Team Capital, Nigeria's most formidable visual & media content provider took in upon themselves to show the ugly side effects it can cause on the citizens.

A comical interpretation well plotted out,and an impressive display of acting by the musician/artist Tha Suspect & Directed/edited by X.Y.Z.

NIGERIAN UNEMPLOYED YOUTHS MUST BE PAID MONTHLY UNEMPLOYMENT ALLOWANCES.

WHEREAS the problem of youth unemployment in Nigeria has reached most alarming proportions and in 2011 elections, almost candidates and political parties in the country promised the electorates that they would provide solutions if they were elected or by any other means found themselves in the positions of authorities they sought..

Unfortunately more than 100 days in the life of the new administrations, not much has been seen by way of seriousness on the part of the federal as well as state governments towards generating the employments that the president, governors and legislators promised the long suffering masses of Nigeria.

The result is that while more than 85% of all Nigerian graduates who are yearly churned out of our numerous universities, polytechnics and colleges of education roam the streets in search of jobs to the extent that our daughters and sisters are turning to prostitution to such an extent that a front line senator was reported to have even called for the legalization of prostitution. The youths go about in search of jobs amidst hunger and other natures of deprivations, while the legislators both at the federal and state levels continue to enjoy their outrageously fat salaries and other numerous allowances and holidays, the state governors continue to collect their billions of Naira by way of so called security votes and the president continues smiling………….why not? Everything is okay as far as he is concerned .

As if to rub salt on painful injury, the government is bent on removal of what it calls subsidy on petroleum products.

President Jonathan on his part as the number one citizen so to say, whose offices should be setting stirring example in providing succor to the masses had just finished a retreat with the private sector and would have us believe that it is the duty of the private sector to provide employment for Nigerians, assuring us that on its part, the federal government would provide about 400,000 jobs within the next 4 years whereas more than 40 million youths are jobless.

Meanwhile, inflation is on the increase and is sure to astronomically increase if what the government calls subsidy is removed to ensure radical concomitant increase in the price of petroleum products and further spill over on all other commodities and services to turn life for the Nigerian masses into pure hell.

Everyday, former governors, speakers etc are being paraded before our television and being charged to our deliberately snail paced courts of even slower process except when they want to jail the poor man caught committing petty theft. The former governors and speakers are always accused of stealing billions (never millions……that is too small for their thieving attentions) of Naira and nothing really ever comes out of the charges, while government continues to refuse to pay the paltry N18,000 minimum wage..

The unemployed Nigerian graduates and other skilled and unskilled Nigerians must continue to feel hungry like everyone else, when they are sick, they certainly need medical attention like everyone else, they need housing accommodation, clothing, and other things just like everyone else. While going about looking for the ever elusive employment, they need transportation, telephone services and so on

NOW THEREFORE, we make bold to put forward the following propositions:

1. All unemployed Nigerian youths must be paid monthly unemployment allowance of not less than the N18,000 minimum wage pending such a time as government and its collaborating private sector shall provide him or her employment.

2. The security votes of the state governors and all amounts above the salaries of senior lecturers in Nigerian universities from the salaries and allowances of the federal and state legislators shall be pulled together in a Nigerian unemployment youth fund and from which the unemployment allowances shall be paid to the teaming unemployed Nigerian youth who wish to work but cannot find employment.

3. The reports of all panels and commissions of enquiries set up over the years by government must all be made public forthwith and all indicted of stealing public monies from such reports must be compelled by law to refund monies so stolen to the Nigerian nation from where all development needs of the nation would be met.

4. All calls for foreign investment to our nation Nigeria must cease pending the full pursuit and recovery of all stolen pubic funds after which it will be determined if the nation has any need at all for foreign capitals to meet its development needs.

5. All unemployed Nigerian are advised to:

I. constitute themselves into groups wherever they reside and list their names , qualifications, skills and job preferences

II. Elect an chairman and a secretary from amongst them who would be furnished with the addresses and contacts (including phone numbers and email address where available) for purposes of communication and coordination.

III. Get familiar with their representatives at the national and state assemblies as peaceful demonstrations and other peaceful persuasive activities shall be embarked upon from 1st January 2012 to compel government to commence the payment of the said monthly unemployment allowances to unemployed Nigerian youths.

IV. Await further advises from the national headquarters of the PEOPLES MOVEMENT FOR A NEW NIGERIA

6. No president, Vice president, Governor, Deputy Governor, Senator, Representative, Minister, Commissioner, Director…in fact no government functionary whomsoever shall go for medical treatment outside the borders of Nigeria and no son or daughter or ward of any government functionary shall further their educational activities outside Nigeria as this appears to be the only way to get government to give education and healthcare the priority they deserve in Nigeria.

YAHAYA EZEEMOO NDU
CONVENER
PEOPLES MOVEMENT FOR A NEW NIGERIA

YOUWiN! - GOVT EXTENDS AGE LIMIT TO 40

The Federal Government entrepreneurship and jobs creation initiative Youth Enterprise with Innovation in Nigeria, popularly known as YouWiN! has extended the age limit for candidates to age 40. The reason, according to Dr. Olasupo Olusi, Special Assistant to the Coordinating Minister of the Economy & YouWiN! Project Coordinator, is so that more young Nigerians can have the benefit of showcasing their business acumen at the business competition and thereby access the funds that would help take their businesses higher.

According to Dr. Olusi, the YouWin! Secretariat has been besieged by calls and emails since the inception of the competition from young Nigerians who couldn’t make the initially advertised cut of age 35. ‘So seeing as we actually have more “on-the-ground” business men in that age bracket’, he explained, ‘the government has decided to lift the bar to allow the entry of 40 year olds and under’.

Elaborating further, he said ‘Government believes that the wealth of experience that the under 40s have will help make the competition even keener’. He was quick to stress, however that age would not be a factor in deciding who gets the prizes eventually. ‘This is a competition of ideas. Our job is to see that at the end of the day, the best and most innovative ideas come tops, and for us to help support those ideas and their backers so that they can make good success in Nigeria’s business terrain’.

The elated Project Coordinator revealed that going by the submissions that have come in so far, it is obvious that Nigeria is brimming with business talents who, if encouraged and given adequate support can help propel Nigeria’s economy to much greater heights through value creation and the opening of opportunities to other young Nigerians.

I-N-C-R-E-D-I-B-L-E ! JONATHAN PLOTS 6-YR TENURE.

Barely twenty-four hours after his inauguration for a four year term,strong indications started emerging that president Goodluck Jonathan may be angling for a single term of six years in office.

Although Jonathan has yet to make public his intention to have the tenure of the president and that of the state Governors raised to six years from from the current four years, reliable presidential sources said the president and his spin doctors will soon set about effecting constitutional amendment that would guarantee him to spend six years,instead of the four years stipulated in the constitution.

To set the scheme afoot, sources said, the presidency, supported by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, will before long approach the National Assembly, seeking amendment to relevant portions of the country’s constitution that prescribe four year tenure for the president and state governors.

It is expected that with the PDP still in commanding majority in both the Senate and the House of representative, the executive bill that may likely be sent to the two chambers seeking the said amendment will scale all hurdles to become law.

Giving reasons for the plot to extend Jonathan’s tenure, party chieftains who spoke to National Life on condition of anonymity said it might not be unconnected with the fact that seeking another term after the expiration of the current term may be difficult as the constitution allows for an oath of office to be administered on the occupier of the office only twice.

President Jonathan on Sunday May 29, took his second oath of office, having already taken one following his transition from Vice-president to President after the death of President Umaru Yar’ Adua in May 2010.

Í am not aware of the plot, but I can tell you that six year single term idea is that of our party. It is not president Jonathan’s Idea. If that is what the party has resolve to pursue, then I’ll say it is in line with what the PDP has always believed is good for the country,” a chieftain of the party in Lagos said.

The female politician who confirmed that the issue was mooted in the days leading to the general elections, said since Jonathan would not be seeking another term in office as he promised during his campaign, the six-year single tenure Idea is needed now.

NIGERIA-JONATHAN INAUGURATION (O)

Jonathan himself dropped a hint of what he had in mind last two week in Lagos while speaking to the business community. Hewever,the president gave different reasons why a four year tenure was not too ideal.

While reeling out some of his policy plans for the country, following his victory at the April Presidential election, Jonathan said four years was not enough to realize his vision for the country.

Hear him: “I will not talk about the tenure of the government, the constitution has said four years though some believe that four years is too short to make any change, which also I believe. I believe because if you are elected as governor today, it will take one to one and half years for you to really stabilize.”

Politcal pundits, while subjecting Jonathan’s statement, believed to be a tongue, to scrutiny said the statement was not to be dismissed as he may actually be flying a kite when he made that statement last week in Lagos. Continuing, Jonathan argued that “you also know that some members of your cabinet are not good enough and that is why in most cases, after one or two years, Mr. President reshuffles cabinet and by the time you want to go for another two and half years, it is another election time and you are busy about winning election.”

Findings by National Life revealed that the plan to seek a six-year term in office preceded the 2011 Presidential election.

Following the declaration by some presidential aspirants led by General Ibrahim Babangida that they would serve only one term in office if elected, Jonathan was forced to make the same promise in order to win the support of the Igbo of south East.

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