Thursday, September 5, 2013

Police Are Not VIPs’ Guards

Police Are Not VIPs’ Guards



Former chairman of the Police Service Commission Mr Parry Osayande once revealed, on the floor of the Senate, that over 100,000 out of the 330,000 policemen in the country were attached to “a few fortunate” individuals to carry handbags for their wives. On many occasions, former inspectors-general of police had made policy statements threatening the withdrawal of police officers from such “illegal” duties. A few days after he came into office, the current IGP Mohammed Abubakar, like his predecessors Tafa Balogun, Sunday Ehindero, Mike Okiro, Ogbonna Onovo and Hafiz Ringim, issued the same directive. On February 13, 2012, he said his order was with immediate effect.
But the withdrawal of all approved police guards -- including those donated by the Special Protection Unit and the Mobile Police Unit as well as conventional policemen sent out as guards to companies and influential citizens -- has not been implemented. Yet, the directive, if it had been heeded, would have bolstered professionalism, efficiency and integrity in the performance of police duties and raised the bar of public security. By law, only the president, vice-president, governors, council chairmen, magistrates and judges are entitled to police guards. The privilege has, however, been abused by senior police officers in charge of police commands and formations who assign junior officers to privileged individuals for pecuniary gains.
It is an absurdity carried far. The use of policemen as personal aides and guards has become a status symbol in the country. Sometimes, these officers are used for personal vendetta and in settling political scores and personal grudges against less privileged citizens.  There are instances of some public officers, who are not authorised by law but parade more than 50 armed security agents each in their entourage. Many heads of government agencies, special task forces and ministers have policemen and other security personnel drafted to protect them, their spouses and children immediately they assume office. A majority of Nigerian lawmakers are among the privileged citizens that have coveted the services of the few available security personnel in the nation.
For a country that is far behind the recommended one policeman to 10,000 persons, this is unacceptable. We know that this odious practice has endured because the beneficiaries are usually politicians, wealthy businessmen and the like that the successive IGPs could not afford to offend. Nevertheless, the police authorities are quick to acknowledge the escalating crime rate in the country, especially attacks by undesirable elements that kill, kidnap and maim innocent and law-abiding Nigerians.
It will serve greater public interest for the IGP to muster the courage to stop this patently unethical, unjust undertaking by evenly deploying the few officers available to strategic places. The police are meant to protect all of us, not just the wealthy, powerful and influential few who can afford to pay them extra fees.


ASUU DEMANDS WILL CRIPPLE GOVT – FG

ASUU DEMANDS WILL CRIPPLE GOVT – FG


Labaran Maku
The Federal Government has said that the nation will shut down if all the demands by striking university lecturers were to be met.
Information Minister Labaran Maku stated this in Abuja yesterday while addressing State House correspondents after the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting.
He was specifically reacting to why the government was yet to reach a compromise with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) amidst its claim of spending huge resources on the development of tertiary education in the country.
Maku appealed to the ASUU to have a rethink on its demands and understand that there were many competing demands from other sectors.
He said the huge funds spent to restore normalcy in some hitherto crisis-torn parts of the North could have been used to develop the educational sector. 
“If we say we will not work until every particular problem we face in this country is resolved, then, I am sure there is no sector that will work. If we all insist that every sector’s problem must be completely solved, that we will down tools and that we will not work, then, the country will stop working,” he said.
“We are partners of the ASUU. We are friends. They are our patriots, and we understand the critical role that the universities teachers are playing in creating a new society that we are hoping to have. But at the same time, this is a reality question that we need to look at and we have to put the nation first.
“I know that all of us desire more from the system, but the truth is that there are limitations and from the limitations we have, we believe that the ASUU really needs to do rethink and ensure that we reopen our universities because really, we are feeling the pain of our children being at home and this, indeed, is completely avoidable,” Maku said
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ASUU Strike: Sex Workers Invade Kaduna

ASUU Strike: Sex Workers Invade Kaduna



The strike action embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) over two months ago has taken another dimension as female students in Kaduna Metropolis have turned to prostitution.
LEADERSHIP checks revealed that the number of sex workers in the state has shot up since the strike action.
The sex workers are mostly seen along Rabah road, Muhammadu Buhari way, Constitution road and Independent road, all in Kaduna metropolis while others have moved into the Obalande area located around Cameroon road where they rent rooms in small hotels for their business.
Other student sex workers were also seen around Gwari avenue road, Barnawa and other hotels in the state capital where they meet their patrons.
One of the sex workers confided in LEADERSHIP that she was in the business to enable her meet her needs till the strikeis called off.
Another lady who claimed to be a final year student of one of the federal universities hailed ASUU for the strike.
According to her, “The strike, though will delay my graduation, is helping me gather funds for my upkeep when the strike is finally suspended.”
Another female undergraduate, who spoke with LEADERSHIP at one of the popular spots in the state capital, said, “we contribute money to pay for hotel rooms and we sometimes hire the rooms for several weeks to do business.
“Most of us do not have anybody that will take care of us and we even have our younger ones to cater for. So we have to do this business anytime we are on strike or holiday to survive.”
Asked when she intends to stop the business, she said, “anytime the strike is suspended, I will go back to school. But, I hope to stop this business as soon as I get a job after graduation.”

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Presidency’s Dilemma Over Nwabueze’s Remark, Atiku’s Shocker

Presidency’s Dilemma Over Nwabueze’s Remark, Atiku’s Shocker



It is not news any more that the erudite professor and  expert on constitutional law, Ben Nwabueze (SAN), came visiting Aso Rock last week with his colleagues in the Patriots to confer with President Goodluck Jonathan on how to chat a new course for the country. The outcome of that visit shook the political scene and pundits of Nigerian political equation say its memory will remain fresh like wind in the minds of many Nigerians. Right inside the Presidential Villa, the legal luminary spoke categorically, advising the president not to contest the 2015 presidential election if he wanted to occupy an enviable place in the history of the country.
“I still believe that the problem of this country is national transformation. You can’t combine national transformation with contesting election. The two are so different because once you get involved in election campaigns, you undermine your authority to lead the nation for national transformation, and I said if I were the president of Nigeria, I would restrict myself to serving the nation, transforming the country in creating a new Nigeria, in creating a new society”, Nwabueze had stated when he addressed State House correspondents after group, the Patriots had met with the president. For avoidance of doubt, however, he made it clear that President Jonathan is eligible to seek re-election but said it was up to him (president) to choose between the two options. If he was in Jonathan’s position, he said he would decline to contest the 2015 election, pointing out that the president would become an instant hero if he restricted himself to national transformation.
As clear as that admonition appeared, some people are asking questions about the ‘true’ motive of the former minister of education. You may ask, what is it in such a lucid enjoinder by a prominent citizen of a country to his president that is not clear? What is the difficulty in understanding the simple truth that Jonathan would indeed become a hero should he announce to the nation today that the 2015 presidential election is not for him afterall? His popularity will instantly increase more than 100 fold and he will be placed well and above many of the nation’s leaders before him.
The Prof. may be right; his estimation is indeed the public perception in this part of the globe where leaders (African leaders) are notorious for their penchant to cling to power at all cost. But in our kind of politics, in which the survival of the fittest is the law is more of the norm and where comments and opinions are guarded in order not to be misinterpreted, misconstrued and then misrepresented and of course victimised, Nwabueze may have stared the hornet nest.
Worst still, in a political topography where a visible line drawn between two political camps- the ruling party and the opposition- the professor’s pronouncement may have also given credence to the political propaganda of one camp to the detriment of the other. The thinking is that, telling President Jonathan not to contest could be easily misinterpreted to mean what he did not mean, which could be paying off for the opposition.
Another fear from the camp of the ruling party about Nwabueze’s position is that, barely a week after he asked the president not to contest, his client, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar led seven governors of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) to stage a walk out on the party’s special convention at the Eagle Square. Recall that Nwabueze was Atiku’s lead counsel at a time and this line of thinking would be understood. He led about 25 other senior advocates of Nigeria (SANs) to fight Atiku’s political battles against former President Olusegun Obasanjo via the court. For President Jonathan’s men, Nwabueze may be playing the script of Atiku, his political associate as well as client.
And to demonstrate how anything relating to Atiku is handled with the utmost suspicion in the country’s political arena, Obasanjo who was absent at the PDP’s convention quickly went to the Presidential Villa to pledge loyalty to his political godson who not too long ago was purported to be maintaining a frosty relationship with him. For the Ota farmer, the worst sins of Jonathan could be condoned, far better than the best of a repentant Atiku. Obasanjo may have developed goose pimples when he heard of how Atiku took off with seven governors of the PDP to form a parallel PDP within the party. He may have reasoned that this ‘traitor’ called Turakin Adamawa is at it again.
On Sunday, Obasanjo had first met behind closed doors with Jonathan for close to two hours in his official residenc before the president proceeded to meet with about 18 of the PDP governors, including four of the seven governors that formed the splinter group called the “New PDP”. Some observers suspect that Obasanjo may have facilitated the meeting between President Jonathan and the party leadership on one hand and the PDP governors on the other, all in a bid to bring the faction back under the torn umbrella of the ruling party.
The Presidency too has said it is still on the drawing board, trying to farthom the correlation between Nwabueze’s comment and Atiku’s action. A source in Aso Rock told LEADERSHIP that the Presidency believes strongly that these two political characters can’t be acting in isolation given their relationship as associates. To this effect, the Specially Adviser on Political Matters to the President, Ahmed Gulak on Monday said, “I am surprised because Atiku is supposed to know more than another person that there is no party like PDP. He left PDP and went to ACN and he came back to PDP, because he discovered that outside PDP there is no party. So, he had to come back and he was even given the waiver to contest the primaries election in 2011. Atiku should be grateful to PDP. Atiku is indebted to PDP and the best way to continue to pay the debt is to protect PDP”.
On Nwabueze’s comment, Governor Gabriel Suswam of Benue said the pronouncement was baseless and unsolicited. Wondering what informed Nwabueze’s opinion that the president shouldn’t contest, he said, “constitutionally, the president has the right to contest; and so, I don’t know what laws anybody could use to disturb him from contesting if he wishes to do so. I don’t know of any reason Nwabueze gave, whether it is based on the constitution or it is based on any other law. But you know that the constitution is the grand norm of the country. So, the constitution overrides any other law. I don’t think there is an issue with that. If the president decides to contest, he has the constitutional right to do so and legitimately he will do so”.
Bayelsa State governor, Seriake Dickson also waded into the laboratory of this disputation when he also described Nwabueze’s pronouncement as unsolicited. He said “the unsolicited comment by Prof. Nwabueze, which he is very well entitled to are, of course what they are- some personal views and opinion. But let me quickly say that those views, however, well intended are premature; firstly because the president for now has not expressed an intention to re-contest.
“But I am very happy that the erudite Prof. acknowledged the president’s legal right and constitutional liberty to re-contest if he so wishes. But having said that, ultimately in the end, the decision whether or not to contest is that of the president. If you ask me my own views as to whether he should or shouldn’t contest, I can venture an opinion even though it is premature for now. I believe that the president is concentrating sufficiently on the transformation agenda based upon which he was elected. The country is steadily changing for good. All sectors of our nation’s life are receiving due and proper attention and the signs are there.

Drama In Presidential Villa As Kwankwaso Rejects Jonathan

Drama In Presidential Villa As Kwankwaso Rejects Jonathan


There was a mild political drama at Nigeria’s Presidential Villa on Sunday night when Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of Kano State rejected the request of President Goodluck Jonathan to stand beside him as Tony Anenih, the chairman of the Board of Trustees of the People’s Democratic Party, read a communiqué at the end of their “peace” meeting.
Mr. Kwankwaso was the spokesman of a group of PDP governors who last Saturday walked out of the venue of the party’s mini-convention. 
He was at Aso Rock Villa to participate in a meeting called by Mr. Jonathan to iron out differences between the president’s faction of the party and a splinter group of governors and other party members who staged the dramatic walkout. 
At the end of the peace meeting, which was attended by 16 governors, Mr. Anenih was mandated to speak with reporters as Mr. Jonathan and his deputy, Namadi Sambo, were reduced to spectators. A presidential source revealed that President Jonathan had beckoned on Kwankwaso to stand beside him, but the Kano State governor refused.
“When Mr. President beckoned to Alhaji Kwankwaso to stand by his side as Chief Anenih read out the communiqué, the governor raised his finger and shook it several times. He then headed to the side of Chief Anenih,” said the source. He added that Mr. Jonathan, though clearly miffed, flashed a pained smile.
It wass learnt that Mr. Jonathan first met behind closed doors with former President Olusegun Obasanjo for close to two hours in the private residence of the president, and then met with 16 PDP governors, including four of the group that walked away from the mini-convention. The splinter group, led by former Vice President Abubakar Atiku, subsequently met at the Musa Yar’Adua Convention Center in Abuja and announced the formation of the “New PDP.” The rebellious governors include Babangida Aliyu of Niger State, Rabiu Kwankwaso of Kano State, Murtala Nyako of Adamawa, and Abdulfatai Ahmed of Kwara State.
Mr. Anenih read the communiqué flanked by President Jonathan on the right and Governor Kwankwaso on the left, with other governors behind them. The chairman of the fractious party’s board of trustees stated that “the leadership of the party and the PDP governors met today to discuss the incident that occurred during the PDP special convention on the 31st of August 2013, whereby some state delegations walked out of the convention ground to announce a faction of the party.” He added: “The meeting was smooth and encouraging and the discussions will continue on Tuesday with all the aggrieved governors in attendance."

ASUU STRIKE: FG, ASUU Call Off Negotiations

ASUU STRIKE: FG, ASUU Call Off Negotiations


photo
The future of university education in the country is in jeopardy, as the federal government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities call off their negotiation.
Over two months after the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, embarked on an indefinite strike to compel the federal government to implement part of the 2009 agreement reached between both sides, indications are that both sides are far from agreeing on the terms of settling the dispute. The negotiation to end the strike, which has entered the tenth week, appears to have reached a dead end, as government’s negotiation team and representatives of the academic union have abandoned the process in protest.
Two days after President Goodluck Jonathan directed the federal government’s negotiating team to take all the necessary steps to ensure a quick resolution of the dispute, ASUU pulled out of the negotiation, alleging insincerity on the part of government.
The federal government had offered the striking lecturers, N100 billion to pacify them and get them back to the classrooms. ASUU’s contention is that the distribution of N100 billion to universities by government was a half-hearted measure that would not tackle the monumental and myriads of problems facing the university education in the country.
Some critics have condemned the federal government for refusing to honour the terms of agreements it willingly signed. On the other hand, critics of ASUU say the union is “insensitive” to the plights of students.
While the federal government might not have met their demands, Kayode Oladimeji, a student, said ASUU should have accepted what was offered and call off the strike in the interest of students and the university education in Nigeria.

ASUU STRIKE: FG, ASUU Call Off Negotiations

ASUU STRIKE: FG, ASUU Call Off Negotiations


photo
The future of university education in the country is in jeopardy, as the federal government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities call off their negotiation.
Over two months after the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, embarked on an indefinite strike to compel the federal government to implement part of the 2009 agreement reached between both sides, indications are that both sides are far from agreeing on the terms of settling the dispute. The negotiation to end the strike, which has entered the tenth week, appears to have reached a dead end, as government’s negotiation team and representatives of the academic union have abandoned the process in protest.
Two days after President Goodluck Jonathan directed the federal government’s negotiating team to take all the necessary steps to ensure a quick resolution of the dispute, ASUU pulled out of the negotiation, alleging insincerity on the part of government.
The federal government had offered the striking lecturers, N100 billion to pacify them and get them back to the classrooms. ASUU’s contention is that the distribution of N100 billion to universities by government was a half-hearted measure that would not tackle the monumental and myriads of problems facing the university education in the country.
Some critics have condemned the federal government for refusing to honour the terms of agreements it willingly signed. On the other hand, critics of ASUU say the union is “insensitive” to the plights of students.
While the federal government might not have met their demands, Kayode Oladimeji, a student, said ASUU should have accepted what was offered and call off the strike in the interest of students and the university education in Nigeria.