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NATION BUILDING IN TIME OF ANOMIE

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By PROF. IYORWUESE HAGHER 


It is my honor and privilege to be asked to speak to you at this awards ceremony, the fourth in the series of the Asset Newspaper Awards and Lectures.

I must first tell the organizers that I don’t find it funny that your team of searchers did not find me worthy of one of your fabulous and much coveted awards, but brought me here to merely be put on the spot to give a speech.

And you know, as the saying goes, talk is cheap.

I congratulate the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustafa and other recipients. You all richly deserve the honors you are receiving here today.


On my part as lecturer of the day, I have chosen to focus on the topic: “Nation Building in time of Anomie”, under the broad theme of Conflict Management, Peace building and Development in a Democratic setting.


We live in unusual times in our country today which I refer to as time of anomie. I defer to the French Sociologist Emile Durkheim (1890) who first utilized the anomie theory to refer to a situation of widespread lack of commitment to shared values, standards and rules needed to regulate the behavior of citizens.

He argued that anomie is caused by rapid social change and weakening of traditional institutions especially in the creation of social inequality. In contemporary times, anomie has been linked to how overemphasis on monetary success goals undermine law and order in the society. Robert Merton re-formulated the theory arguing how the high crime rate (anomie) situation in the United states was caused by the mal- integration of culture-structure constitution of modern society. This is exactly where the Nigeria anomie situations is now.

Tribalism, pandemic corruption and flaunting of unearned wealth by the politicians and the Nigerian elite has sparked the envy and bile of the dispossessed, uneducated, unemployed, and the moneyless precariat, to a systemic breakdown of law and order.

There is proliferation of dystopia as several theaters of breakdown of law and order in our country have created a criminal ecology making Nigeria one of the riskiest countries in the world to live in at the moment.


I argue that the culture of corruption and the structure of Nigeria as constituted in tribal enclaves recreate anomie, and undermine law and order. Corruption and Tribalism, the two angels of death, reinforce each other. You cannot get rid of one and retain the other. Nation building is meaningless without tackling these twin evils undermining democracy, and holding back peace and development of Nigeria, together.


Not many Nigerians are willing to link corruption with tribalism as the twin evils that have made our country an adolescent country when her age mates have advanced to maturity.

When Nigeria’s promise in the seventies made other nations like China envious, tribalism and corruption became the disruptive forces that twisted our growth trajectory to the extent that we appear to be going round and round blindly, in a never-ending circular pit of poverty, lack and odium, while we ride on our tribal horses singing songs “Our tribe, is bigger and better than your tribe,” “Our tribe, made your tribes slaves, and so you are our slaves.”  “Our superior tribe, did this and that while your inferior tribe did nothing worthwhile.” We go to enormous extent to quote from the play books of British imperialists and recreate profiles of hate that enable us to relive new forms of imperialistic violence on one another.


In this time, it seems as if the idea of a country called Nigeria does not fit into any discussion schema any longer.  We are ready now to eat each other up or wipe off the other tribes from the face of Nigeria, so that our own tribes can be the sole occupants of the Nigerian space. These are the sights and sounds of the country Nigeria today.

Tribalism is racism. It is a fallacy. It is unreasonable and foolish. It is not something we are born with. It is taught by bad leaders and families.  Tribalism engenders corruption while corruption sustains and nourishes tribalism.


The time of anomie in today’s democracy, is a time when democracy has been steadily rotting. This decay is sadly consequential because it touches the fundamental purpose of democracy.

Nothing matters in a democracy more than the protection of human life. Sadly, human life in Nigeria is cheap. Very cheap. We no longer feel any sense of outrage that five people were killed by bandits or ten killed by herdsmen or two hundred school children have been abducted by kidnappers and billions of naira are paid to them as ransom by the government from our treasuries. We feel normal when it is reported that underage girls with their mothers and grandmothers have been defiled sexually by bandits. Or even when our school-age daughter is kidnapped, raped and forcefully married to a monstrous bandit.

Even when the mounting figures of horror and odium require disgust and opprobrium, we seem to lose the sense of empathy and outrage. We have become mummified and no longer men and women with hearts and brains for outrage and decisive action to end all this. This is the tragedy of the Nigerian situation. 

This loss of the sense of outrage is a fundamental stage of anomie when values are stood on their heads and wrong is right and no one knows what is right any more.


Our country is beset by a multiplicity of tragedies. Colossal on the one hand is the absence of any meaningful conversations by the ruling elite on the way out of the quagmire we have found ourselves bogged in. They trade insults on one another and then demand for apologies, and then the following day, as the death toll increases, there is the urge to move on without first addressing the reasons why these things are happening in the first place.  Leadership is absent or toxic, when it does not see the need to immediately de-escalate the war situation, pull back from the looming disaster we are heading into, and seek for a common ground of agreement.

Nothing is more important to world affairs than the idea that human life is precious. The whole notion of bringing people together, whether in families or communities, or nations is to ensure safety of life and provide security and individual liberties to the people.

The Magna Carta of 1215 in England is considered one of the most important documents in the history of democracy when the subjects of England successfully challenged the arbitrary rule of kings.

Nation states emerged for the first time in Europe when Europe’s thirty-year religious wars ended with the signing of the treaty at Westphalia in 1648. From this modest beginning the development of nations, nationalism and the ideas of democracy were handed to us through the 17, 18   and 19th Centuries.


The ideas of individual liberties and popular participation in  government, developed through the American Revolution of 1775-1783 and the French Revolution of 1789-1799 gave rise to the modern nation state. These nation states, propelled by nationalism in turn dominated other states.


Advances in science  led to the discovery of gunpowder (in China) and the spirit of greed and exploration, led to European conquest of other nations. Slave trade flourished for three hundred years from 15   to 19   century and was succeeded by colonialism, which reached its climax at the Berlin conference of 1884-85 as Europeans sat at table and partitioned Africa. The main purpose of the scramble was to get raw materials for their industries and markets for their industrial products but also to show racial mastery over the conquered.


Nigeria suffered double jeopardy, from the combined effects of the Atlantic slave trade and colonialism. Nigeria sold out her critical manpower and received little in return, except guns and gunpowder, mirrors, alcoholic beverages and some clothing items. The slave trade impaired the Nigerian ability to reproduce itself economically, socially and culturally and created rifts, which have existed even today!


Colonialism plundered Nigerian resources and set structures for insecurity today. It was a bad experience for Nigeria that it happened at all. But much worse than that, it was too short to establish British traditions or infrastructure, after indigenous cultures were destabilized and destroyed.
Nigeria as a nation state came in existence through a royal proclamation in 1914 when the British amalgamated the protectorate of Northern Nigeria, the Crown Colony of Lagos, and the Protectorate of Southern Nigeria.

Prior to the amalgamation, the territory of Nigeria as we know it was peopled by kingdoms, empires, emirates and republics. On 1  October 1960 Nigeria became an independent country. In 1963, it became a Republic.

At amalgamation, Nigeria’s population then was about 45.2 million people. In just fifty years, our population has grown by over 268% to 200 million people and is projected to be 400 million in 2050. Pray Nigeria gets there in one peace.


Lord Frederick Lugard


Since 1914 to date, the single most important issue guiding state policy is the security of the land and people within Nigeria. It is the single most important challenge and duty of the nation state and the most important aim of governance. Right from the amalgamation, Nigeria has struggled with issues of peace and security. All the past and present agitations for constitutional reforms, restructuring and even the civil war we fought were to provide for Nigeria, the best frameworks for a more secure and peaceful country. But nobody can force peace with force of arms. We must court peace, wage peace and think peaceful thoughts to be at peace.

Whereas the idea that human life is precious, is more important than anything else in World Affairs today, and wars are on the decrease world-wide; In our country civil wars have been brewing and being fought in several theaters across the country.


Nigeria’s Road to Anomie.


The amalgamation laid the foundation of the architecture of insecurity. The deep distrust between Northern and Southern Nigeria, and that between the Muslim “core north” and the non-Muslim “other north” the so called “abode of war,” constituting non-hausa/Fulani tribes of the north, and that between the Yorubas and the Igbos, and the Igbos and Fulani and now Yoruba and Fulani, have remained a permanent slur on our nationhood and a major contributor to our collective failure to build unity and peace.

Sir Frederick Lugard, the celebrated  founder of Nigeria, was a racist bigot who pitted one tribe against the other through his infamous Indirect Rule policy.  He categorized Nigerian tribes into superior and inferior tribes and those who were born to rule and those born to be perpetually subjects.

Coming from great Britain itself which had freed itself from arbitrary rule of the Kings through the Magna Carta, his wicked policies were often so cruel and reprehensible even to the colonial office. But he laid the basis for Nigeria’s corruption and tribalism. At independence our politicians were already pre-cast in the mould of tribal warriors and even though some of them were highly educated and were motivated to join politics through high ideals of Pan Africanism, socialism, nationalism, etc. they soon suffered from fatigue, lost traction and joined their tribal bandwagons to exploit the big center; the Federal Government, to chop.

Throughout the First Republic, there were no attempts apart from the National Anthem, to build unity in diversity. Tribes and politics were synonymous, as if political parties were no more than platforms of continuing with inter-tribal wars in another way; to parody Carl Von Clausewitz. Minor bruises and scrapes in tribal interactions often led to inter tribal violence and bloodshed.But the development plans set  the tone for rapid growth even though we did not have oil, because we had hope and hope drove our aspirations for greatness.


When the Military took over in 1966, tribalism was an underlying motive. Corruption quickly set in as they perceived power as their turn to chop, and they deftly created a roster of which graduating class at the academy , it was their turn to chop power. They quarreled over spoils and booty, while tenaciously running promotions as they clung to political offices. They scrapped the development plans which had carefully laid the trajectory of national development and growth. In 1970 Nigeria had a GDP per Capita of $219 dollars and our economy ranked globally as number 88, while China had a GDP of $112 dollars and ranked 114 in the world!! The military armed with petrodollars became retrograde.

They jettisoned the development plans that put us on the path of faster growth and sunk their teeth into the juicy national cake of corruption. We began our slow descent into anomie.

The military unjustly created Federating States for themselves and awarded Local Governments for their communities and distributed oil blocks too, as favors, to   themselves and their friends.

This became a permanent dysfunctional restructuring of the economy and political space. Their intervention was hasty and uncalled for since Nigeria was trying to grapple with nascent democracy. Democracy is messy, it is laborious, and it requires nation builders whose conduct, speeches and character is public spirited and can stand the test of time. The Military years were very challenging. Even though the military got us into a civil war, they also preserved a tenuous, national unity.

The Military era produced some of our most notable Generlas, like ; T.Y.Danjuma, Olusegun Obasanjo, Mohammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Babangida, and Aliyu Gusau. These living legendary generals have transcended the military era and have galvanized themselves into a national oligarchy and hegemony of the Military Political-Complex that rules our country up to this moment. Nothing happens without their imprimatur stamp of approval. These very rich, highly endowed and influential generals can, if they choose; cohere a national elite consensus and end our dystopia and anomie or plunge us into more chaos.

Our problem today is that these generals appear to have lost their espirit de corps and are singing a discordantly. The one who is president doesn’t speak when he should speak and give hope. He watches on as anomie and dystopia takes over. He is not to be blamed, we are all involved. We are all guilty. Now it is  up to us alone, to rescue this country. Tribalism and material pursuits have robbed us predominant influence as nation builders and hence the drift to anomie. The time to re-build the nation is now!


Politics and PoliticiansNigeria’s post military politicians from 1999 to date are a curious blend of the most educated politicians, experienced technocrats, retired military top brass and a small number of the criminal class. Politics throws up strange bedfellows. So much was expected of them. Yet it is during their time at the helms of democratic governance of Nigeria that all hell has broken loose.

These politicians and top civil servants with the business elite contrived a marriage of convenience. They feel so entitled and are oblivious to the pathetic fate of the hapless masses that have waited all these years to enter the promise that Nigeria offered at Independence.

Armed with gun totting military guards they blow loud sirens around the impoverished and harassed rural people in their dingy hovels, trumpeting their importance, as they guzzle every naira that the center collects in the treasuries through: fat salaries, allowances, contracts and outright theft. The People are left without hope in poverty, ill-health and little to no access to good education. This has created a perfect criminal ecology for festering wars, criminality and brigandage ongoing in Nigeria.

Non-ideological Political Party Platforms.Lack of differentiating ideologies among the parties makes each party more of the same other party. Party politics has created permanent enmities purely on the basis of who gets or who is denied a finger in the till of corruption. Political parties have assumed tribal identities.

They are the new tribes. People are goaded to assume these political identities and massively hate any others who are not in the same party. They belong to a different tribe. They are the other to be hated. 

Most of the politicians stand for nothing, and believe in no cause other than the filling of gargantuan appetites for positions, to be shared and other forms of material wealth to be distributed. Their call to service is not borne of making a difference in nation building but rather their call to the feeding trough of corruption and tribalism.

Many are on ego trips and are ready to maim, kill or die when their political egos are ruffled. This is a mistake. Politics is merely a time bound game. Play your part simply and allow others to play theirs for soon enough age and time will send you out to sit on the cold bench as spectator. This is mortality. Nothing is permanent.


PovertyPoverty is a major underlying cause of banditry, kidnapping and even tribal wars. The gap between our rich and poor is widening. The rich are taunting the poor with unearned riches and flaunting on our streets, toys acquired from unearned riches that are easily traceable to public coffers. Our rich and our entitled elite have driven the poor to destitution and hopelessness and into chaos, crime and wars. The envy driven rage has no respite.

The poor are envious and angry  feel justified to kidnap. According to the late Benue assassinated bandit, Gana, “ We saw how the politicians were stealing and enjoying life, as if we were not human beings and as if what they were doing stealing was what we elected them to do?”


Globalization Globalization has foisted on us since 1999, a full embrace of the neo- liberal economic model. This has escalated structural problems and anomie. The continuous devaluation of the naira and endless increases in pump prices of fuel gas and stiff electricity tariffs have widened the gap between the rich and poor and created unbearable hardship to the citizens.

This has affected health and social security and even education. In addition, globalization has inundated our landscape with military grade assault weapons with which conflicts are more readily addressed with blood bath than with discussion.


Weak institutions. Our descent to anomie is also caused by weak institutions. The weak judiciary and legislative arms of government have made democracy untenable as the judiciary and legislative arms of government have become merely the two extra arms of executive power. They may contend this as loudly and as forcefully as their power permits, but then we are yet to see any credible spine in asserting their independence from an all too powerful presidency. Our military once the toast of the world has whittled down its reputation and has failed to rout out a rag tag Book Haram insurgency which grows stronger every day in the last 12 years. Have they also succumbed to corruption and or tribalism to get by? Can we rely on the military to defend us when they have shown many instances of colluding with criminals who are ravaging the countryside and terrorizing the citizens in remote rural settings where governance is in short supply?


We did have a Civil Service on whose shoulders the country could fight a civil war and remain united. They were sung heroes. But where have all the top civil servants gone?


Our educational institutions are weak, underfunded and underperforming. My colleagues in the academia have not yet found an innovative way to raise their welfare without holding down generations of young Nigerians stuck in the production pipeline to make a contribution to growth, to peace and unity.


In order to build a peaceful nations the idea of freedom of expression is sacrosanct! Let us freely express where it hurts. Let nobody’s pain be diminished as hate speech.

For every hate speech, there are thousands of love speeches lurking under masks to speak out and drown the haters. The Press, Churches, Mosques and Civil Organizations must provide leadership in thought words and actions that unify and roll back tribalism and corruption.


Social Media
Another major factor in our descent to anomie and dystopia is through the World’s most disruptive technology: the social media. The social media has provided major theaters of war using its various platforms and messaging applications such as Facebook, WhatsApp and Twitter. Popular Nigerian Blogs are veritable theaters of war.

This doesn’t need to be so. Responsible use of social media should aim at using the cyberspace to provide justice for all as deterrent to the war drums they are beating. We must find common ground to treat one another with respect and dignity. We must not ignore or belittle each other’s grievances but seek to address and redress them.


In this time of anomie, our world has been turned upside down. This state of war predated the Buhari government that came only in 2015. Let politicians and the entitled elite, hold the mirror to themselves and stop blaming the president for the ills and festering civil wars in Nigeria. We are all guilty. Nigeria has never lived up to its potential as they say. It has never attempted to be a country of a united people with a befitting national infrastructure.

It never tried to achieve greatness by modernizing while maintaining its cultural underpinnings like China, India and Japan. It simply gave up and went back in time to tribal wars and slave trade, while its elite buried their heads in ostentation and conspicuous consumption. Rather than consider life sacrosanct, money, positions and lands titles and even name titles are more sacrosanct, and worth killing massively for.

At the beginning of post- military democracy in 2006, I read, The Ice Man by Philip Carlo, a New York best seller: actual confessions of a Mafia contract killer Richard Kuklinsky, who was on death row. Richard Kuklinsky was contracted to import into Nigeria tons of money some people in government had amassed abroad and wanted it laundered back into the nation’s top banks. He did the job successfully and was paid handsomely in millions of dollars.

This criminal’s  chilling description of Nigeria as “ One of the poorest, most violent countries in the world, where people were still bought and sold , where human sacrifice is still practiced,” and that he didn’t like anything about Nigeria, “ its disorder, its overwhelming poverty, its dusty roads, its withered trees and harried street dogs that seemed concerned they could be somebody’s dinner at any moment”, made me very angry. Because then, it was true, and today, twenty years later, this description is even more true.
So what is my recommendation?


Nigeria is in a state of war. It is in a state of anomie and this state is not sustainable. Simply put, Nigeria as is presently constituted is not sustainable. We need to create a society of honor and justice and a home of diversity where all our ethnic coloration and our religions can co-exist for sake of peace and development. We need a people driven restructuring of our political, fiscal, and security infrastructure. The center must be decentralized and downsized . It must devolve more power and responsibility to states. This should take place in 2022 ahead of the 2023 general elections. We need to strengthen the Judiciary, the Military, the Civil Service, the Police and entire security architecture. These Institutions of State should be sanitized from corruption and tribal control, so that professionalism will direct their operations to serve the interest of the nation rather than their pockets, ethnic agenda or a president assuming autocratic power. We need new political parties that have ideological content.

These parties should exist to solve Nigeria’s problems. The present parties have expired in content and substance and no longer give confidence that there is a belief system that drives their operations. They are more of the same. Self-seeking platforms of wars to disposes and to command and control others without respite.

We need parties with nationalist ideologies that can identify with the pains of “ We” the people, rather than their families and tribes. But we need even more; we need new politicians who understand the significance of empathy and love as we hope to leave        behind tribalism and corruption. We need politicians who      are public spirited, rather than self-seeking egomaniacs    and tribal bigots.


D. Nigeria has failed to educate and attract the educated to stay. Large swaths of the country have not tasted any classroom teaching. Apart from the herdsmen and nomads, the farmers are the largest illiterate communities. In many places these farmers live on remote lands without feeder roads nor infrastructure that includes schools, clean water, electricity and housing. Nigeria can decide the type of country it wants to become and then design an educational system where the next great generation will come from. E. Democracy cannot be sustained without good policing.

The operational capabilities of the nation’s security agencies need to be enhanced through training and retraining and through the use of modern intelligence gathering technologies and intelligence sharing. Ultimately, we need to establish State and Local Government Police to bring government closer to the rural citizens who are now looking up to the bandits for their law and order. 

Text of Lecture delivered at the 4th DAILY ASSET Annual Awards and Lecture held February 25, NICON Luxury Hotel, Abuja. by Prof. Iyorwuese Hagher, President, African leadership Institute USA, |

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Perspective

Democracy Day Speech By Benue Governor, Ali

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SPEECH BY HIS EXCELLENCY REV. FR. DR. HYACINTH IORMEM ALIA, THE EXECUTIVE GOVERNOR OF BENUE STATE, DURING THE OCCASION OF DEMOCRACY DAY CELEBRATION, HELD AT THE IBB SQUARE, MAKURDI, ON WEDNESDAY JUNE 12, 2024

My great people of Benue,

2.​I am excited to join you today to mark 25 years of uninterrupted civil administration in our dear country – Nigeria.

3.

​This day affords us the privilege not just to merely mark the passage of time, but to celebrate all our past and present heroes of democracy; as well as reflect on our democratic journey in the state so far, particularly in the last one year prior to which your unanimous voices at the polls culminated into my emergence as your governor.

4.​Exactly two weeks ago, being May 29, 2024, made it exactly one year since I took the oath of office. However, I deliberately postponed my speech on that day so as to coincide with this year’s Democracy Day celebration. 

5.​I considered it more appropriate to use today’s celebrations to give you a brief but articulate account of my stewardship in the last one year; as well as point to the bright path that leads to a greater Benue which we all aspire for, as a government and as a people.

6.​Over a year ago, I stood here and made lofty but achievable promises to you. These promises, enshrined in our 7-point agenda, ranged from economic growth, to infrastructural development, security of lives and property, prompt payment of salaries and pensions/gratuities, amongst others.

7.​Upon assumption of office, we met Benue in an economic ditch. We immediately hit the ground running by engendering economic growth through agriculture. Accordingly, we procured100 trucks of fertilizer which was distributed to farmers at subsidized rates. The impact so far has been tremendous.

8.​Beyond provision of fertilizers, we also approved counterpart funding for International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD’s) Value Chain Development Programme in eight local government areas, with a view to enhancing rice and cassava production. 

9.​We further established collaborations with agricultural input suppliers to ensure the availability of improved seeds and seedlings. This was coupled with our reactivation of the swine/crop integrated project in Yandev, Gboko Local Government Area, through partnership with the French Development Agency to advance agricultural skills, as well as renovation of the infrastructure to boost enhance productivity. 

10.​Furthermore, we have struck a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) deal with Star Fertilizer Company Limited, in order to revive the state-owned fertilizer blending plant. This is in addition to our kick-starting of phased development of the Ikyogen Cattle Ranch.

11.​Meanwhile, plans are in top gear towards dredging the River Benue, as a catalyst for boosting agricultural activities and easy movement of agricultural products.

12.​Furthermore, just last week, I handed over 33 new tractors and the sum of 380 Million Naira to community interest groups across the state, to undertake climate-smart agricultural activitiesunder the Community Revolving Fund (CRF) scheme of the Agro-Climatic Resilience in Semi-Arid Landscapes (ACReSAL).

13.​I assure you that my administration is more than committed to improving the livelihoods of all and sundry in the state, especially through agriculture.

14.​With regards to Economy and Wealth Creation, our administration has created 1,450 ad-hoc jobs for the Nigeria Fire Extinguishers Control, with plans for permanent integration into the Federal Fire Service.

15.​We are currently setting up a multifunctional fashion hub in collaboration with the Office of the Vice President, to benefit over 250 professionals in the industry.

16.​In a similar vein, with 34 out of Nigeria’s 46 solid mineral deposits in Benue, we are on the verge of becoming a mining powerhouse. In view, we have partnered with Sound Core to clean up and develop the mining sector, projecting 3.5 billion Naira in revenue through our annual surface rent scheme.

17.​While tackling illegal mining and educating communities on the legal benefits, our administration in collaboration with the Federal Government, has formed the Mineral Resource and Environmental Management Committee, to protect resources and manage community conflicts.

18.​Meanwhile, we have revitalized government assets, including the Benue Investment and Property Company (BIPC) Kaduna Plaza, as well as the Guest Houses in Kaduna and Makurdi towns respectively. While transitioning to digital operations for better service delivery, we have also commissioned a BIPC bakery and water factory, and launched the Emperor Fertilizer and Motorcycle Hire Scheme, all domiciled in the State.

19.​My esteemed people of Benue, as you recall, when we came on board, our industries were moribund, with many on the brink of being taken over by private hands. We however, said a firm ‘no’ to the glorified wisdom of the last administration that “Government has no business in doing business”.

20.​Today, I proudly inform you that we have initiated the re-establishment and resuscitation of these industries, including Benue Breweries, Taraku Oil Mills, amongst others. This aims at creating more job opportunities for our teeming youths, as well as improving our Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

21.​In the area of infrastructure and environment, in the bid to enhance movement of people, goods and services, we commenced the construction of 16 strategic roads in Makurdi and other parts of the State, particularly linking our rural communities. 98% of these roads have been completed, while others are still under construction.

22.​In total, our administration has awarded 51 road projects within just one year, including three underpass projects in Makurdi, Gboko, and Otukpo Local Government Areas, respectively.

23.​In addition, the ‘Light Up Makurdi’ project, extending from Agan Toll Gate to the Air Force Base and other parts of Makurdi, is now a reality and will be expanded to other parts of the State as we step into another year of our tenure. 

24.​We have also renovated and furnished the State Secretariat. We have reconstructed the Benue State House of Assembly Complex, and remodeled the Assembly Clinic.

25.​In the transport sector, the rejuvenation of the state-owned Benue Links Transport Company is another milestone. We have handed 100 new buses to the Company, and subsidized the cost of transportation. We have also upgraded the Company’s headquarters to meet global best standards.

26.​In health and social development, our administration was the first in Nigeria to implement the Revised Medical Residency Training Fund (MRTF) 2023, at the revised rate. 

27.​We also re-introduced the Bond Scheme for medical students of Benue origin studying medicine, by approving the monthly payment of N103,000 per student. This is coupled with the approval of N100,000 monthly allowances for doctor-corps members serving in the State; as well as N15,000 as monthly allowances for other corps members posted here.

28.​Meanwhile, we have overhauled the Benue State University Teaching Hospital to meet international standards. We have also employed 500 new staff on merit, to augment the workforce.

29.​Our administration has also commenced full clinical services at the Muhammadu Buhari Mother and Child Hospital, Makurdi, to reduce maternal mortality and offer free medical services to women and children under the age of five. Meanwhile, plans are underway to ensure an effective primary healthcare delivery system in the state.

30.​In the aspect of security of lives and property, one of our most prioritized missions has been to ensure that our people, who have been displaced by marauders, can return safely to their ancestral homes. We have therefore initiated the process by lobbying the Federal Government to begin the construction of resettlement homes for our people. 

31.​More so, our administration, in collaboration with security agencies and relevant stakeholders, has been working round the clock to ensure that Benue is a safe haven for all.

32.​Although this task has been challenging, the impact so far has been very encouraging. For instance, we have nipped in the bud almost all the inter-ethnic/community skirmishes that were prevalent before and after we came into office.

33.​Also, farmer/herder crisis and militia attacks have been contained through both kinetic and non-kinetic approaches. And we are determined to lose no sleep until we totally secure our dear State. 

34.​We have also signed into law, the establishment of a state security outfit known as the Benue State Civil Protection Guards: A formidable force combining our Livestock Guards and Volunteer Guards to effectively tackle insecurity in our dear state. 

35.​ My good people of Benue, make no mistakes about the misinformation making the rounds that the Anti-open Grazing Law has been repealed. As a matter of fact, the Law has been strengthened with more stringent stipulations.

36.​Let me use this opportunity to salute all security agencies and formations domiciled in the state, for their priceless sacrifices towards the protection of lives and property. To all volunteers of information, logistics and other efforts towards securing Benue, we are truly grateful.

37.​In the education sector, our administration has made great strides towards repositioning it, right from the primary to tertiary level.

38.​For instance, as part of palliatives for the removal of fuel subsidy, our administration decided to pay for the 2023/2024 examination fees of all students in government approved public secondary schools in the state sitting for the West African Examination Council (WAEC), National Examination Council (NECO), and National Business and Technical Examinations Board (NABTEB) examinations, respectively.

39.​At the Benue State University, we have expanded academic programmes, established new faculties, restored scholarships for medical students, and paid outstanding salary arrears. We have upgraded the ICT facilities, preparing over 10,000 youths for the global market. The idea is to train over 60,000 youths. 

40.​As a proof of our zeal towards re-writing the narrative of the education sector in Benue, we allocated 15% of the 2024 budget to education, surpassing the 7% at the Federal level. We have also trained over 150 headteachers, and distributed over 100,000 instructional materials across public schools in the state to enhance teaching and learning.

41.​This is coupled with the establishment of the Benue State Education Quality Assurance Agency (BEQA), saddled with the responsibility of daily monitoring and evaluation of all schools across the State, with the aim of improving the standard and qualityof education, as well as reawakening teachers and staff to their responsibilities.

42. This has so far yielded huge results, notably being the recent clinching of an international debate trophy in Indonesia, by four Benue secondary school students who represented Nigeria.

43.​Benue under my watch, has also weeded out thousands of ghost workers, ghost schools, and ghost agencies out of our payroll. We have gone further to cut off all leakages and conduits of inefficient money consuming channels obtainable in the past.

44.​Let it be on record that our administration has borrowed no dime since we came on board. And we shall only do so only when it becomes extremely necessary. Prudence in governance must know us and call us by name.

45.​Meanwhile, it is no longer news that improved staff welfare, prompt payment of salaries and pensions/gratuities, as well as arrears, is now a mainstay under my watch. And so shall it continue to be.

46.​Fellow Benue citizens, I can go on and on for hours, giving you a factual account of our achievements, your achievements in the last one year. However, for want of time, I have only drawn up this summary of our journey so far.

47.​I reserve special thanks to all members of my team for their unsung sacrifices in the quest for a better Benue; and to all of you for your support and belief in us.

48.​As a government of popular consent, I am mindful of the honour and trust bestowed on me. For this, I have pushed sleep and comfort to the backseat to ensure that I live up to the expectations and terms of our social contract. 

49.​Throughout this period, I have earned nothing close to love from those whose selfish interests I step upon to bring you comfort, happiness, and succour. But too high I place your interest above theirs, hence I have no regrets for what I have lost in the cause of this journey. 

50.​As we mark Democracy Day celebrations, I hereby restate my commitment towards re-writing the socio-economic narrative of our dear state. 

51.​I am forever committed to building formidable systems and institutions premised on fairness, accountability, democratic ethos, equity and justice; systems that are bigger and stronger than individuals including my humble self.

52.​I am counting on your continued support to our administration, so that together, we can reposition Benue on the global map.

53.​My vow is to always stand with you, by you, and always for you.​

54.​Thank you, and God bless!

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OPINION

Triumphalism And Denialism As Fallout Of The 2023 Elections

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 By Magnus Onyibe

Justice Monica Dongben-Mensem, the esteemed president of the court of appeals, has expressed concern about the strain placed on the judiciary as a result of an excessive caseload, mostly attributed to the inundation of political issues into the court system.

Her Lordship disclosed that during and after the 2023 election period, politicians officially presented a noteworthy total of 1,209 appeals.

These appeals are presently receiving privileged attention, potentially eclipsing other matters of economic and social importance in the country, consequently relegating non-political legal concerns to a position of lesser priority.

In her analysis, Justice Dongben-Mensem verified that out of 1,209 petitions filed, five (5) were specifically addressing the Presidential Election Petition Court, while 147 pertained to the senatorial election. Additionally, 417 petitions were related to the House of Representatives, 557 were associated with the state Houses of Assembly, and 83 focused on gubernatorial elections.

Although the distinguished jurist identified the high number of election-related lawsuits during this period as being primarily attributed to a deficiency in internal democratic processes within the political parties, it is also important to acknowledge the existence of an additional contributing component, which is the necessity for more amendments to our country’s legislation, specifically the Electoral Act of 2022.

These revisions should aim to address the existing loopholes and ensure a more comprehensive framework, a responsibility that falls upon the legislators of the 10th National Assembly (NASS).

As the verdicts of the various election petition tribunals began to trickle in on September 6th, with the five (5) justices who sat over the Presidential Election Petition, PEPT, leading the charge, the political atmosphere in Nigeria has become fraught with multiple upheavals, with a good number of senators, members of the House of Representatives, governors, and members of state houses of assembly having their victories overturned.

As of the most recent count, the tribunals have invalidated the governorship elections in Kano and Kaduna states, as well as several senatorial and House of Representatives elections across the country, and the election of the current speaker of the Plateau state assembly has also been invalidated.

The current situation implies that there is likely to be a prolonged backlog of cases in the judicial system, as politicians whose election outcomes have been overturned will pursue further legal action in higher courts in a bid to revalidate their electoral success.

Initially, owing to number of elections over turned,supporters of the Labor Party (LP) believed that the tribunals were specifically targeting their candidates. However, they later realized that candidates from other political parties, including the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the ruling party All Progressives Congress (APC), and even the smaller New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), were also experiencing setbacks in the electoral tribunals.

Given that the LP and PDP presidential candidates are currently pursuing legal action to challenge the victory and assumption of the APC candidate as president, it is important to note that their claims are based on allegations of a technical malfunction during the transmission of the presidential results.

This malfunction supposedly facilitated the manipulation of the outcome in favor of the declared winner by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). However, it is perplexing to observe that the results of other elections, which were not reported to have encountered any issues with the electronic transmission of results, are also being contested and invalidated.

The point being made here is that some of the results of both the Senatorial and House of Representatives elections that were passed electronically into the INEC database and displayed via IReV and which were adjudged to be unassailable by those denying President Tinubu’s victory at the February 25 polls have been decided by the various state tribunals as being tainted.

The events seen in tribunals around the country, which have led some politicians to express jubilation via triumphalism while others exhibit denialism, indicate that the principle of justice remains impartial. The emblematic representation of justice, often shown as a blindfolded woman wielding a sword in one hand and a scale in the other, serves as a powerful embodiment of the concept of justice. In the context of the 2023 elections, in my view,this symbol has been used to impartially administer justice to all candidates involved.

It is plausible to surmise that the electoral tribunals around the country are working autonomously rather than in concert, resulting in distinct rulings tailored to specific cases.

In this context, if the judiciary is really seen to be biased towards the All Progressives Congress (APC), as claimed by the opposition, it is noteworthy that the two governors who have been removed from office by the tribunals are from the APC (Kaduna state) and the NNPP (Kano state) stables.

It is noteworthy to observe that there has been no instance of a reversal of a governor’s election conducted under the platforms of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) or the Labour Party (LP).
Does that not suggest that the judiciary is working independent of the influence of the ruling party?

Following President Tinubu’s inauguration on May 29, the opposition parties have mostly been in control of the election narrative, focusing on President Bola Tinubu’s academic history at Chicago State University (CSU) in particular.
As a result of that, all eyes have been focused on the duel between the triumphant candidate of the APC, President Bola Tinubu, and the denier,who is the APC’s flag bearer and former vice president, Atiku Abubakar.

Given that this conflict has now shifted across the Atlantic Ocean and is being considered within the jurisdiction of the United States court system, where significant action from the opposing sides has already played out,as the presiding judge in the US case, Nancy Maldonaldo has determined the ultimate victor between the two parties with respect to Discovery order of court on Chicago State University,CSU, our focus will solely be directed towards the presidential elections within this discourse.

To establish context, American attorney Angela Liu, the legal representative of former vice president Atiku Abubakar, lodged a formal complaint with CSU which president Tinubu’s alma mater requesting the disclosure of his alleged counterfeit certificate.

In response, Christopher McCarthy, President Tinubu’s attorney, sought to postpone the release of his client’s personal information, citing potential harm if done hastily. This legal tactic was utilized to allow sufficient time for the preparation of a comprehensive response, a common strategy frequently employed by legal professionals.

Coincidentally, similar to President Tinubu’s legal team, Atiku Abubakar’s lawyers also requested an accelerated hearing of the case in the United States court, presided over by Judge Jeffrey Gilbert. This request was made due to the potential harm that any further delay in obtaining the academic records from CSU could cause to the petitioner’s case.

It is important to note that, according to the Electoral Act 2022, introducing new evidence in Nigeria’s Supreme Court is prohibited after a certain period of time, thus making it time-barred.

On Monday, September 25th, which is the date that Judge Macdonaldo granted permission for the response to be submitted, President Tinubu’s legal team argued that the petitioner’s request would be considered a fishing expedition.

For the sake of those unfamiliar with legalese, it is important to clarify that the term “fishing” in legal discourse refers to a situation where the motive behind seeking the authority to inquire is unclear.

On the contrary, it is anticipated that upon the conferral of authority, a favorable outcome will ensue. According to law dictionary, it is typically uncommon for courts to approve such claims due to their tendency to be speculative in nature.

The ongoing legal dispute between former Nigerian vice president Atiku Abubakar and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in the courts of the United States of America bears resemblance to a previous incident involving former US President Donald Trump.

While preparing for his contest for the presidency of the US, Trump made claims asserting that former President Barack Obama was not born in the United States. Due to the absence of substantiating evidence, the individual in question was embarking on an exploratory endeavor, akin to a fishing expedition, with the intention of unearthing potentially compromising information by asserting that Mr. Obama is not of American origin.

Initially, President Obama refrained from providing his birth certificate as a means to refute Mr. Trump’s assertion. This situation subsequently led to Trump’s associates initiating efforts to obtain President Obama’s academic records through legal channels, albeit without success.

Eventually, President Obama chose to release his birth certificate voluntarily, thereby making it available for public scrutiny. Upon the release of this document, which served as confirmation of his birth within the United States, Donald Trump was ignominiously silenced.

Coincidentally, former President Trump had also taken measures to protect his personal and corporate financial records from authorities in the state of New York and the general public, both prior to and following his assumption of the presidency as the 44th president of the United States.

However, on Tuesday, September 26th, the city of New York successfully obtained official access to his financial records. Consequently, charges of fraud were brought against former President Trump and his two sons for allegedly inflating the value of their real estate asset in New York, namely the Trump Tower etc.

After employing legal measures to impede access to his financial records for nearly a decade,the regulator eventually obtained the aforementioned information. Upon review, did the regulator discover compelling evidence against President Trump that was anticipated to be very impactful or revelatory? Indeed, they did not. This assertion stems from longstanding claims that the real estate magnate, Mr. Trump, maintained connections with both organized crime and the Russian government.

During the prelude to the 2019 presidential campaign for re-election , opponents of Trump contended that he engaged in strategic politicking towards Russia due to a perceived influence the nation held over him, potentially stemming from his involvement in illicit activities on Russian soil.

The recent judgment by the New York Court reveals that Mr. Trump has been accused solely of engaging in the act of inflating the worth of his real estate holdings and nothing else. So, after all the hoopla regarding former President Trump’s finances, it turned out to be a little more than hot air as he was not found to be linked to any sinister activities as had been suspected.

This may be the case in the Atiku Abubakar/Bola Tinubu/CSU legal battle in the United States now that a superior court under judge Nancy Maldonado has ruled that president Tinubu’s CSU academic record (non-personal) must be released to the petitioner, as earlier ruled by judge Jeffery Gilbert.

In Nigeria, many have also referenced the instance involving former president Goodluck Jonathan, wherein he denied the request for the disclosure of his Doctor of Philosophy,PhD records from the educational institution from which he graduated . The university’s response to the Freedom of Information (FOI) request, in which they declined to give the information to a human rights and good governance advocacy group, has gained significant attention on various social media platforms.

While the veracity of the social media report remains unverified, the act of withholding or obstructing the disclosure of educational records to political adversaries is not an unprecedented occurrence in Nigeria.

At this juncture, it is apropos that we take a hard look at all the possible scenarios in the unfolding elections 2023 saga in order to have a good sense of the possible final outcome of the epic political battle between the ruling party and the main opposition party’s candidates for the presidency of our beloved country.

For the purposes of this discussion and conjecture, it should be noted that it is a well-established fact in Nigeria, as well as the rest of the world, that a male and a female can have the same name, particularly when the name is unisex, as in the cases of Chika, Uche in Igbo land, and Bola, Biodun in Yoruba land.

The prevalence of individuals sharing identical names is particularly widespread within the Hausa/Fulani region, where there is a significant number of perhaps up to one million Mohammed Abubakars who do not necessarily share the same lineage nor originate from the same locality or state.

The prevalence of shared names among individuals with origins from the northern region of our nation can be attributed to the historical practice of naming Hausa and Fulani individuals after their respective towns or villages of origin. Consider the late Mallam Isah Funtua, who was named after Funtua town, or Dr. Musa Kwakwanso, hailing from Kwakwanso village.

From a technical and political standpoint, it is plausible to consider the scenario where a female individual, other than President Tinubu who is male , is claimed to have gained admission into CSU. In this context, it is conceivable that both a female named Bola Tinubu and a guy named Bola Ahmed Tinubu, distinguishable by their middle names, may have been admitted into CSU around the same period.

And what if the clerk who documented Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s records at CSU made a typographical error and put female instead of male while carrying out the assignment? What if all the hullabaloo was caused by two (2) letters FE being unintentionally added to MALE to give the impression that there was a female Bola Tinubu?

The reason for raising the above posers is that these are political times wherein saying and doing things just to make political opponents furious or ticked off and fall into error are legitimate political weapons.

If the court has granted the petitioners’ full request, would this not amount to inadvertently giving aid to an opposition candidate, whom the intervenor has accused of conducting opposition research?

Is it not the reason why judges preside in the Temple of Justice with meticulous scrutiny, considering all aspects of a case, in order to ensure that justice is not only served but also perceived to be served?

William Blackstone, an English legal scholar, coined the proverb “It is better to err on the side of caution” in his influential 1760 book Commentaries on the Laws of England.

This statement provides a rationale for the legal principle in criminal law, commonly referred to as Blackstone’s ratio (or Blackstone’s formulation), which posits that “it is better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer”.

In trying to play the role of a devil’s advocate, one is of the opinion that proving a stolen identity case, which Turaki Atiku Abubakar’s lawyers are alleging and hoping would be the golden bullet to literally shoot down President Tinubu’s ambition and dispose him of his presidency following his election victory on February 25th, would not be a simple task, if not an impossible mission, and here are the reasons why.

So far, there may not be a female Bola Tinubu who has complained about being impersonated. If she is alive,she would have to be a witness or be joined in the case. If she has passed on, she must have family members that would stand in for her.

Otherwise, on what basis could it be asserted that Bola Ahmed Tinubu posed as a female Bola Tinubu in order to gain admission to CSU, given that no evidence of her existence is available?

My intuition is that the narrative may not resonate with the judges of the Supreme Court in Nigeria (assuming new evidence is admitted) if the petitioner is unable to produce the female Bola Tinubu, a purported US citizen, whom they claim has been impersonated by the incumbent president of Nigeria, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

Under normal circumstances (especially on moral grounds), I would agree wholeheartedly that the educational records of President Tinubu or anyone else occupying public office should be released to the public so that he can receive acclaim for academic excellence, especially since President Tinubu’s CSU transcript reveals that his performance is in the top 10 percentile.

However, I would want to protect my academic records if they were to be utilized for the purpose of doing opposition research on me. This is a commonly observed phenomenon in the realm of politics. President Tinubu and his legal team seem to consider the discovery litigation filed by the petitioner in this manner.

The reality is that it is in the character of politicians to behave in ways that confound the general public. This is because there are almost always underlying issues in political affairs, and only tackless actors in the political game fall into the pitfalls set by their opponents, who draw them into the public arena by means of blackmail and conspiracy theories.

The primary objective of shrewd politicians, however, is to convert the problems foisted upon them by their detractors (who are numerous) into promotion by doing things on their own terms.

Imagine if President Tinubu’s academic records are eventually disclosed as directed by Judge Maldonado later this week, and they turn out to contain nothing objectionable.

How would the legal and media teams of PDP candidate and former vice president Atiku Abubakar, who have been raising expectations and feeling triumphant, appear if it were determined that President Tinubu was admitted to CSU legally and did not engage in identity theft as has been alleged?

Although it would seem as if l an holding brief for President Tinubu, the purpose of this piece is to enlighten Nigerians on the subject by highlighting the fact that politicians have numerous reasons to be extremely complex and convoluted in their behavior.

The reality is that it is inherent in the essence of politics for players to engage in sophistry. Which is why I do not fault Nigerians who are perplexed by the ongoing political conflict between 2023 election winners and denialist politicians.

In reality, there are always grey areas in politics, as opposed to black and white divides. And what is taking place today between former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is a classic illustration of things being in the grey zones of politics that can be perplexing to the uninitiated.

During the legal proceedings in 2019 involving Atiku Abubakar and Muhammadu Buhari, Mallam Abba Kyari, who served as the Chief of Staff to President Buhari at the time, made an allegation that Atiku was of Cameroonian nationality rather than Nigerian.

Supposedly, this can be attributed to his birthplace in Jadda, a region located within Adamawa State. Notably, Jadda was situated on the Cameroonian side, which had not yet been included in Nigeria prior to the vote that made Jadda a part of Nigeria . Despite the absurdity of the incident, it did occur.

During the presidency of Alh. Shehu Shagari from 1979 to 1983, under the National Party of Nigeria (NPN), there were allegations made against Shugaba Daman, a candidate representing the Great Nigerian People Party (GNPP), an opposition party to Shagari’s National Party of Nigeria, NPN in Borno State.

These allegations claimed that Daman was a foreigner from the Niger Republic. Consequently, it was determined that he did not meet the requirements to participate in the elections.

In the meantime, Alh. Daman was living a normal life in Nigeria until he confronted the NPN and was drawn into the arena of anomie, as he was deported to the Niger Republic after the NPN obtained a favorable judgment. Is that not ludicrous?

In 2003, I assumed a public office as a commissioner in Delta, my home state, through an appointment by Chief James Ibori, who served as governor from 1999 to 2007. Before the appointment was confirmed , I encountered vehement opposition from a local group that aimed to promote an alternative candidate for the commissioner position in my local government area.

However, their efforts were unsuccessful, as Governor Ibori selected me for the appointment instead of their preferred candidate.

In an attempt to obfuscate the situation, the local political interest group had disseminated a fabricated story, which can be characterized as a very deceptive falsehood, asserting that my origin was in Edo State rather than Agbor in Delta State.

The individuals provided a rationale for their assertion subsequent to discovering the existence of a family residing in the border town between Edo and Delta State (Igbanke) who possessed an identical surname to mine. The absence of any biological or social connection to the specified family in Igbanke, Edo State, was inconsequential to them. In reality, I hail from Ogbe-Umudein, the homestead of the kingmakers in Agbor Kingdom.

Following Governor Ibori’s dismissal of the false allegations and subsequent confirmation of my appointment, a period of calm ensued, and the individuals involved in the plot to undermine my political career revealed to me their collaborative efforts aimed at sabotaging my political trajectory. This exemplifies the nature of politics.

As a result of the foregoing, my advice to those splitting hairs over President Tinubu’s academic records or those ecstatic that the president’s political career is about to be derailed by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, whose status has shifted from denial to triumphalism as a result of his victory in the US court, is to wait and see what happens in Nigeria’s Supreme Court, which is the final arbiter on the matter.

While the Discovery case in the United States has kept optimism alive in Turaki Atiku Abubakar’s camp, Mr. Peter Obi’s ‘neck of the wood’ looks to have turned inactive. Will the US court’s finding that the discovery requested by the petitioner on President Tinubu’s academic records at CSU rouse the LP camp?

The petitioner, former vice president Atiku Abubakar’s legal and media team, has been ecstatic about the explosive evidence that the president’s comprehensive academic records at CSU, once disclosed, may contain.
And is there any sure guarantee possibility that when the new evidence (assuming it contains anything incriminating) is presented by the petitioner in his appeal to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, it will be admitted or permitted to matter in the case?

And because the Supreme Court is structured to consider not only the fundamental principles of law but also the existential realities of society by balancing the positive against the negative effects of its decisions, the highest court will likely have a lot to ruminate on.

Over all, the greatest beneficiaries of the hard-fought legal battles in the US and Nigeria would be the Nigerian electorate. That would be regardless of the triumphalism and denial of the 2023 elections by the ruling and main opposition parties and their presidential candidates, President Bola Tinubu and former vice president Atiku Abubakar.

The assertion above is underscored by the fact that at the conclusion of the arduous litigation, our electoral law would be stronger.

That is not discountenancing the fact that some attorneys in Nigeria and the United States have reaped and will continue to reap handsome financial rewards as a result of the rush to the courts by politicians who believe that the laws of our land, particularly with regard to the Electoral Act 2023, are too vague and therefore require the intervention of the judiciary, the third branch of government, and the interpreters of laws.

Put succinctly, as someone who considers himself an optimist that constantly looks for the positive side of bad circumstances (turning lemons into lemonade) and who finds oasis in deserts, even though some critics think that the 2023 elections have brought democracy to its nadir in our nation,I am of the opinion that anything that emerges from the intensely contested legal battles in Nigeria and the US courts between Mr. Peter Obi of the LP and Turaki Atiku Abubakar of the PDP over President Bola Tinubu’s victory in the election 2023 would undoubtedly deepen the practice of democracy in Nigeria by turning it from what appears to be a narrative of doom, gloom, and a fledgling state into lofty heights.

That is because our lawmakers in the 10th National Assembly will now see the obvious need to fine-tune the laws and rules governing elections, which need to be clarified and made watertight in order to avoid clogging the law courts with pre- and post-election litigation, which the Appeal Court President Justice Monica Dongben-Mensem has lamented as putting too much undue strain on the judges.

According to the jurist, the prominence of electoral issues is overshadowing and displacing other facets of life, such as commercial disputes and familial problems, which also need legal resolution. Moreover, the prioritization of political cases seems to be superseding other matters during the present election period.

Having been apprised of the above information, it is my fervent hope and l guess the expectation of all well-meaning Nigerians that the 10th National Assembly will tie up all the loose ends in the Electoral Act 2022 that have caused politicians to rush to the courts over election matters so that apolitical Nigerians can breathe.

Magnus Onyibe,an entrepreneur,public policy analyst, author,democracy advocate,development strategist,alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA, and a former commissioner in the Delta State government, sent this piece from Lagos, Nigeria.
To continue with this conversation and more, please visit www.magnum.ng.

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Perspective

FULL TEXT of President Bola Tinubu’s 63rd Independence Day Anniversary Speech

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Dear Compatriots,

1. It is my unique honour to address you on this day, the 63rd anniversary of our nation’s independence, both as the President of our dear country and, simply, as a fellow Nigerian.

2. On this solemn yet hopeful day, let us commend our founding fathers and mothers.

Without them, there would be no modern Nigeria.
From the fading embers of colonialism, their activism, dedication and leadership gave life to the belief in Nigeria as a sovereign and independent nation.

3. Let us, at this very moment, affirm that as Nigerians, we are all endowed with the sacred rights and individual gifts that God has bestowed on us as a nation and as human beings.

No one is greater or lesser than the other. The triumphs that Nigeria has achieved shall define us. The travails we have endured shall strengthen us. And no other nation or power on this earth shall keep us from our rightful place and destiny. This nation belongs to you, dear people. Love and cherish it as your very own.

4. Nigeria is remarkable in its formation and essential character. We are a broad and dynamic blend of ethnic groups, religions, traditions and cultures. Yet, our bonds are intangible yet strong, invisible yet universal. We are joined by a common thirst for peace and progress, by the common dream of prosperity and harmony and by the unifying ideals of tolerance and justice.

5. Forging a nation based on the fair application of these noble principles to a diverse population has been a task of significant blessing but also a serial challenge. Some people have said an independent Nigeria should never have come into existence. Some have said that our country would be torn apart. They are forever mistaken. Here, our nation stands and here we shall remain.

6. This year, we passed a significant milestone in our journey to a better Nigeria. By democratically electing a 7th consecutive civilian government, Nigeria has proven that commitment to democracy and the rule of law remains our guiding light.

7. At my inauguration, I made important promises about how I would govern this great nation. Among those promises, were pledges to reshape and modernize our economy and to secure the lives, liberty and property of the people.

8. I said that bold reforms were necessary to place our nation on the path of prosperity and growth. On that occasion, I announced the end of the fuel subsidy.

9. I am attuned to the hardships that have come. I have a heart that feels and eyes that see. I wish to explain to you why we must endure this trying moment. Those who sought to perpetuate the fuel subsidy and broken foreign exchange policies are people who would build their family mansion in the middle of a swamp. I am different. I am not a man to erect our national home on a foundation of mud. To endure, our home must be constructed on safe and pleasant ground.

10. Reform may be painful, but it is what greatness and the future require. We now carry the costs of reaching a future Nigeria where the abundance and fruits of the nation are fairly shared among all, not hoarded by a select and greedy few. A Nigeria where hunger, poverty and hardship are pushed into the shadows of an ever fading past.

11. There is no joy in seeing the people of this nation shoulder burdens that should have been shed years ago. I wish today’s difficulties did not exist. But we must endure if we are to reach the good side of our future.

12. My government is doing all that it can to ease the load. I will now outline the path we are taking to relieve the stress on our families and households.

13. We have embarked on several public sector reforms to stabilize the economy, direct fiscal and monetary policy to fight inflation, encourage production, ensure the security of lives and property and lend more support to the poor and the vulnerable.

14. Based on our talks with labour, business and other stakeholders, we are introducing a provisional wage increment to enhance the federal minimum wage without causing undue inflation. For the next six months, the average low-grade worker shall receive an additional Twenty-Five Thousand naira per month.

15. To ensure better grassroots development, we set up an Infrastructure Support Fund for states to invest in critical areas. States have already received funds to provide relief packages against the impact of rising food and other prices.

16. Making the economy more robust by lowering transport costs will be key. In this regard, we have opened a new chapter in public transportation through the deployment of cheaper, safer Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) buses across the nation. These buses will operate at a fraction of current fuel prices, positively affecting transport fares.

17. New CNG conversions kits will start coming in very soon as all hands are on deck to fast track the usually lengthy procurement process. We are also setting up training facilities and workshops across the nation to train and provide new opportunities for transport operators and entrepreneurs. This is a groundbreaking moment where, as a nation, we embrace more efficient means to power our economy. In making this change, we also make history.

18. I pledged a thorough housecleaning of the den of malfeasance the CBN had become. That housecleaning is well underway. A new leadership for the Central Bank has been constituted. Also, my special investigator will soon present his findings on past lapses and how to prevent similar reoccurrences. Henceforth, monetary policy shall be for the benefit of all and not the exclusive province of the powerful and wealthy.

19. Wise tax policy is essential to economic fairness and development. I have inaugurated a Committee on Tax Reforms to improve the efficiency of tax administration in the country and address fiscal policies that are unfair or hinder the business environment and slow our growth.

20. To boost employment and urban incomes, we are providing investment funding for enterprises with great potential. Similarly, we are increasing investment in micro, small and medium-sized enterprises.

21. Commencing this month, the social safety net is being extended through the expansion of cash transfer programs to an additional 15 million vulnerable households.

22. My administration shall always accord the highest priority to the safety of the people. Inter-Service collaboration and intelligence sharing have been enhanced. Our Service Chiefs have been tasked with the vital responsibility of rebuilding the capacities of our security services.

23. Here, I salute and commend our gallant security forces for keeping us safe and securing our territorial integrity. Many have paid the ultimate sacrifice. We remember them today and their families. We shall equip our forces with the ways and means needed to perform their urgent task on behalf of the people,

24. We shall continue to make key appointments in line with the provisions of the Constitution and with fairness toward all. Women, Youth and the physically challenged shall continue to be given due regard in these appointments.

25. May I take this opportunity to congratulate the National Assembly for its role in the quick take-off of this administration through the performance of its constitutional duties of confirmation and oversight.

26. I similarly congratulate the judiciary as a pillar of democracy and fairness.

27. I also thank members of our dynamic civil society organizations and labour unions for their dedication to Nigerian democracy. We may not always agree but I value your advice and recommendations. You are my brothers and sisters and you have my due respect.

28. Fellow compatriots, the journey ahead will not be navigated by fear or hatred. We can only achieve our better Nigeria through courage, compassion and commitment as one indivisible unit.

29. I promise that I shall remain committed and serve faithfully. I also invite all to join this enterprise to remake our beloved nation into its better self. We can do it. We must do it. We shall do it.!!!

30. I wish you all a happy 63rd Independence Anniversary.

31. Thank you for listening.32. May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria

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ShareBy Mike Odiakose, Abuja Human rights lawyer, Femi Falana, SAN, on Sunday attributed the deadly stampede that claimedmore than 105...

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