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President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria - Politics (5) - Nairaland

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Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Brillantman: 8:37am On May 30, 2017
You dey wait make Buhari take you to promise land abi??
ochejoseph:


My very good brother,

Let me start by letting you know that the salaries of virtually all Nigerians irrespective of class have been reduced by at least 1/2 by inflation , what your salary could buy 24 months ago I could barely buy half .

Buhari needed sound economic policies to take us to the promise land , his forex policies destroyed the naira , increased cost of living and increased hardship.

I don't hate Buhari No I just want a better Nigeria and a better Benue by extension.

God bless you
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Bizibi(m): 8:40am On May 30, 2017
obailala:
Northerners may have voted GEJ out based on silly ethnic/tribal/religious sentiments, but the southerners who refused to support him, how do you explain that?... The answer is that GEJ was a disaster and his performance was appalling. The sentimental issue of 'making sure another born-to-rule hausa man shouldnt take power' is the reason many south-easterners till date still refuse to acknowledge the failure of a regime which couldnt complete any single meaningful capital project and which was already borrowing to pay salaries in the first few months of oil price crash.

Oh yes, you may claim the current govt is also a disaster, but when comparing the speed of an athlete with 2 legs to the speed of an athlete with 1 leg, only a joker thinks it should be a direct comparison.
abeg forget all this long talk,buhari and his govt is worse than the ineffectual buffoon end of story.

Trying to give excuses fr a lazy govt......except you re part of the govt and the party.
Excuses wont make them sit up

1 Like

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Brillantman: 8:40am On May 30, 2017
Nope bro
Foxyn:
boss are you on ICQ?
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Bizibi(m): 8:41am On May 30, 2017
bakynes:

You know what? From your score card even though you claimed it's a mid term score card, but in actual fact it was the entire Jonathan's tenure you used in comparison.
mtcheeeew!! Ooh so to u APC mid term score card is better abi.....
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by ayindejimmy(m): 8:42am On May 30, 2017
balanceofterror1:



GEJ's lost was due to Boko Haram and chibok girls issue not b'cos of hunger in the land.

Speak for yourself and others Igbos
If Gej performed like the op claimed, why was he voted out despite emptying our treasury to boost his chances

1 Like

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by obailala(m): 8:42am On May 30, 2017
temodent:


You need not argue with the OP no more. He tried very very hard to conceal his biases but unfortunately it is just too obvious for any concealment.
Complete objectivity is missing in his assessment
The Op is a known Jonathan supporter and he's actually one of the few who has the capacity to come up with good arguments and robust analysis. But then, he's a die-hard Jonathanian, so the bias is expected.

3 Likes

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Nobody: 8:42am On May 30, 2017
GEJ all the way, unlike the current president who is truthfully incapable of ruling this country. How can someone be presiding over Nigeria from a hospital bed, I have never seen a more ineffective president than him, indeed he has failed and should respectfully resign.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by proffc: 8:43am On May 30, 2017
baralatie:

that is to tell you the reason why Nigeria got itself to this point we are right now!
A lot of negative forces was at work and the APC had their hands in it.
I rather bookmark you till federal elections come up in 2019.then I will remind this comment

I hear you. You must have come in from Frankfurt or America - in Fela's voice - otherwise you will know that there was overwhelming support against GEJ and it was no fault of the people but due to his gross ineptitude and rudderless navigation.

It will be a miracle indeed if an opposition usurps APC in the next election, not with Osinbajo as A.P and all these jegudu-jera politicians deflecting.

1 Like

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Omuka: 8:44am On May 30, 2017
diamondzs:

He mentioned "Religious & Ethnic", but u became blind to the second
jonathan had no vote from the north. Idiot.

1 Like

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by ochejoseph(m): 8:44am On May 30, 2017
G
bakynes:

You know what? From your score card even though you claimed it's a mid term score card, but in actual fact it was the entire Jonathan's tenure you used in comparison.


Hmmmm you are wrong here is the original article
Dated 30th may 2013

https://www.nairaland.com/1307994/president-jonathans-mid-term-scores#15979433
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by obailala(m): 8:44am On May 30, 2017
Bizibi:
abeg forget all this long talk,buhari and his govt is worse than the ineffectual buffoon end of story.

Trying to give excuses fr a lazy govt......except you re part of the govt and the party.
Excuses wont make them sit up
E go hard and its not just right to fairly compare apples and bananas. Both regimes are extremely disappointing though.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Nobody: 8:46am On May 30, 2017
Brillantman:
Nope bro
alright boss, please can you send me an email here - michaelfoxyn @ gmail.com

pls
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by vantage001: 8:48am On May 30, 2017
proffc:


I hear you. You must have come in from Frankfurt or America - in Fela's voice - otherwise you will know that there was overwhelming support against GEJ and it was no fault of the people but due to his gross ineptitude and rudderless navigation.

It will be a miracle indeed if an opposition usurps APC in the next election, not with Osinbajo as A.P and all these jegudu-jera politicians deflecting.
What is osibanjo performance currently as AP and on what basis is he a credible candidate?
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by bakynes(m): 8:49am On May 30, 2017
Bizibi:
mtcheeeew!! Ooh so to u APC mid term score card is better abi.....
Not better but Jonathan score lower in some issues like Aviation, insecurities.He scored higher in economy, ease of doing business, Agriculture and the rest and this is evident because of Highest global oil price in history of OPEC.

I would have loved a comparison btw both Administration, if the Oil price didn't fall this low.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by ashjay001(m): 8:49am On May 30, 2017
obayaya:


Present your own scorecard..

The fact that nobody in the APC has presented any midterm scorecard for this administration speaks volume.

It's a testament of the disappointment of core APC supporters like you.

If the administration was performing, you'd probably write a very long article highlighting the administration's achievements.

What Buhari has changed in 24 months
Posted By: OLUKOREDE YISHAUOn: May 30, 2017
The last two years have been filled with ups and downs. OLUKOREDE YISHAU chronicles the things that have not remained the same since President Muhammadu Buhari took the saddle.
Dynamites were thrown. Grenades caused chaos. Gunshots rented the air. The scenes were Niger Delta. The victims were not human-beings but oil facilities – strategic ones for that matter. And the effects on oil production and export were not only huge and scary, but was costly. The economy bled and needed oxygen to be on the path of recovery.
Settling down to business, President Muhammadu Buhari and his team put up their thinking cap. The grievances of those blowing up the pipelines must be addressed. His deputy, Yemi Osinbajo, a professor of Law and now acting President, went from one creek to the other, preaching peace.
He visited oil-producing communities, listened to the people and spelt out the Federal Government’s commitment as captured in the ‘New Vision for the Niger Delta’. The vision has answers to the 16-point Demand Agenda submitted to President Buhari by the Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) in November, last year.
Thanks to the New Vision, the Nigerian Maritime University in Delta State is set to commence operation, additional N35 billion was approved for the Presidential Amnesty Programme, approval has been granted for the establishment of Modular Refineries across the nine Niger Delta states and work has resumed on abandoned projects in the oil-rich region, including the East-West Road.
The engagements with the Niger Delta and the Organisation of Oil Exporting Countries (OPEC) have helped to raise oil revenues to the extent that external reserves have grown by about $7 billion in the last six months. Some $87 million have also been added to the Excess Crude Account and $250 million to the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF).
The engagement with OPEC involved rallying the organisation and Non-OPEC members to discuss stabilisation of the global oil market in Doha and in Algiers. This led to an exemption from the OPEC production freeze and rise in oil prices to $55/pb, for the first time in 16 months.
Unlocking the potentials
The Buhari administration has leveraged on its goodwill to attract multi-billion investments and loans from China and Morocco. Buhari’s April 2016 visit to China unlocked billions of dollars in infrastructure funding and construction has started on the 150km/hour rail line between Lagos and Ibadan, the first major product of the collaboration.
One other potential-unlocking strategy the administration has come up with is the National Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (NERGP). Launched in April, it charts a course for the economy over the next four years.
The NERGP, according to the Federal Government, is to restore economic growth, invest in Nigerians, and to build a globally competitive economy. It plans to achieve these objectives by giving priority to agriculture, power, macro-economy, energy efficiency, transportation infrastructure and driving industrialisation through Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs).
As part of efforts to unlock the country’s potentials, power reform is being done. This has led to the launch of the N701 billion Payment Assurance Programme to guarantee payments to generating companies and gas suppliers.
The Power Sector Recovery Programme, which was launched in March, has been endorsed by the World Bank.
Another potential of the country, which was held down for years, is the capacity of the refineries. It has received serious attention in the last two years. Now, the total amount of crude being refined by the three refineries in Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna is now 10 million barrels. It was eight million barrels in 2015.
Agriculture and solid minerals have gotten their groves back. The sector grew by 4.11 per cent last year. Solid minerals recorded a seven per cent increase. The contribution of the Ministry of Solid Minerals to the Federation Account tripled to about N2 billion in 2016 up from N700 million in 2015.
Other positives
Despite the low oil prices at the international market, the country’s external reserves have grown by $7 billion since October last year; the Excess Crude Account has seen an inflow of $87 million and $500 million has been added to the Sovereign Wealth Fund, which represents the first inflows since the original $1 billion with which the Fund started in 2012.
The Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and a soil map designed to aid fertilizer application has raised local production of grains. It has produced a model agricultural collaboration between Lagos and Kebbi states. The country’s rice imports fell from 580,000 MT in 2015 to 58,000MT last year.
A partnership between Nigeria and Morocco – Presidential Fertiliser Initiative – has resulted in the revitalisation of 11 blending plants. Through the initiative, which involves Morocco, supplying the country phosphate, the country has recorded annual savings of $200 million in foreign exchange and 60 billion annually in budgetary provisions for fertiliser subsidies. Farmers now purchase fertiliser at N5, 500, 30 per cent cheaper than before.
The administration is supporting MSMEs with $1.3 billion from the Development Bank of Nigeria (DBN). The cash was provided by the World Bank, German Development Bank, the African Development Bank (AfDB) and Agence Française de Development.
Ease of Doing Business Reform Programme
The Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council implemented its 60 National Action Plan between February and April. The plan has given willing investors the platform to search for company names on the website of the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC). Such investors can upload their registration documents directly to the CAC website without hiring lawyers to prepare registration documents. A single form has been created for company incorporation to save time and reduce cost. The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) e-payment solution has been integrated with the CAC portal to facilitate e-stamping. The country now has a simplified Visa on Arrival (VoA) Process.
To also ease business, a joint physical examination of cargo has been directed to ensure one point of contact between importers and officials. The CBN, Customs and commercial banks have been compelled to process Net Export Proceeds forms within 72 hours and Pre-Shipment Inspection Agencies (PIAs) must issue Certificate of Clean Inspection (CCI) within three days.
The number of documents required for imports has been reduced from 14 to eight. The ones for exports have come down from 10 to seven. Now, terminal operators are mandated to finish container’s examination in 12 hours.
Acting President Osinbajo sealed the National Action Plan by signing three Executive Orders to improve efficiency in the business environment and promote local procurement by government agencies.
Infrastructural development
The Buhari administration is revitalising the country’s 3,500 kilometre network of narrow-gauge railway. A consortium led by General Electric and comprising Transnet of South Africa, APM Terminals of the Netherlands and Sinohydro Consortium of China, is working on the Lagos-Kano Railway narrow-gauge Line. The Abuja Light Rail system will also go into operation later this year. The first line to be launched will connect the city centre with the airport, with a link to the Abuja-Kaduna Railway Line. The test-run is scheduled for November. Full operation is planned for the first quarter of 2018.
The reconstruction of the Abuja Airport runway was done within the scheduled six-week period (March to April 2017).
Giving fillip to the economy
The economy has been the major challenge of this administration. To get the country out of the economic quagmire, the CBN is reforming the forex regime and this has increased stability in the market. The appetite for Nigerian stocks by foreign portfolio investors has also increased. Also, the Eurobond raked in more than $7.8 billion compared to a pre-issuance target of $1 billion. Analysts have described the trend as demonstration of the restoration foreign investor’s confidence in the economic reform agenda.
The CBN has created a new forex window for investors and exporters. CBN’s date has shown that the window has attracted $1.4 billion in its first four weeks of operation.
The apex bank has also reviewed the list of 41 items excluded from the CBN forex window, in line with a request from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN). This is just as a Tariff-driven Tomato Policy has been introduced to promote local production.
More funds in the hands of local contractors mean more strength for the economy. N1.2 trillion was released for capital expenditure in last year’s budget — the largest capital ever spent in a single budget in the country’s history. As a result of this, work has started on several projects, hitherto stalled. These cut across road, rail and power.
Social Investment Programme
Regarded as the most ambitious social safety net programme, the Social Investment Programme (SIP) has over one million beneficiaries. The 160,000 N-Power beneficiaries, who have had their details validated, receive N30, 000 monthly stipends. The validation of 40,000 others is ongoing.
Significantly, 3,162,451 people in 26, 924 cooperative societies have been registered for the Government Enterprise and Empowerment (GEEP) Scheme. 57,234 interest-free loans have been issued in 28 states and Abuja, with women taking a chunk of 56 per cent.
The administration is catering for 1,051,000 in 8, 587 primary school pupils through its Homegrown School Feeding Programme (HGSFP) in seven states. Over 11,000 cooks have been hired under the scheme.
Through its Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) scheme, 26,942 beneficiaries now get N5, 000 monthly stipend in nine states and 84 local government areas of Niger, Kwara, Ekiti, Kogi, Oyo, Osun, Borno, Cross River and Bauchi states.
Cleansing budgeting process/ BVN/ Efficiency Unit
The anti-corruption war of the current administration is one thing that is clear to all as one of the things that have changed in the last 24 months.
Aside the activities of the anti-graft agencies, the Presidential Initiative on Continuous Audit (PICA) is one anti-corruption effort not known to many. It is to strengthen controls over government finances through a continuous internal audit of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs). Thanks to this initiative more than 50,000 ghost workers have been identified. N198 billion was saved as a result of this in 2016.
The anti-corruption war has generated Budget Reforms, which made the President to direct all government agencies to prepare their budgets in line with International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS). A budget template was developed for this purpose.
For the first time, this year’s budget was collated, using a web-based application developed by the Budget Office of the Federation (BOF). MDAs were compelled to upload their proposals on a portal.
The Bank Verification Number (BVN) has also saved the government a lot of money. All payments are done only into accounts with verifiable BVN. This helped to detect the 50,000 ghost workers using the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System (IPPIS) platform.
Through the creation of Efficiency Unit (EU), efficient use of government resources has been promoted. This has resulted in saving N15 billion that would have gone into travel, sitting allowances and souvenirs.
TSA/ Open Government Partnership and whistleblowing
On August 7, 2015, the President compelled MDAs to close their accounts with commercial banks and transfer their balances to the CBN on or before September 15 of that year. By this action, he gave life to a policy launched in 2012 but left unimplemented. This has resulted in the consolidation of over 20,000 bank accounts. An average of N4.7 billion is saved monthly in banking charges. Over N5.244 trillion is in the TSA.
The era of some MDAs having idle cash in banks and still borrowed exorbitantly from banks is gone for good.
The government keeps shutting corruption doors as they are discovered. One of such led to its signing on to the Open Government Partnership (OGP). Last year, President Buhari was at the International Anti-Corruption Summit organised by the Ubited Kingdom (UK) Government, where he pledged that Nigeria would join the international transparency, accountability and citizen engagement initiative. He fulfilled the promise last July when the country became the 70th country to join the OGP. This has led to an OGP National Steering Committee (NSC), which has developed a National Action Plan (2017–2019) to mainstream transparency in the management of public resources. The plan was submitted at the OGP Global Summit in Paris, France, in December last year.
The anti-corruption drive has led to the Whistleblowing Policy which within its first two months of operation, yielded $160 million and N8 billion in recoveries of stolen government funds.
A more transparent NNPC
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) was indicted by independent global reports for being opaque.
One of the first steps the administration took was to reconstruct NNPC’s opaque accounting structure. This led to the closure of more than 40 accounts. Now, NNPC publishes its financial reports monthly and the operational deficits have been reduced by not less than 50 per cent. NNPC outstanding Annual Audits from 2011 to 2014 has been conducted.
The agency is also undergoing other forms of restructuring that will make it an effective entity. The restructuring, analysts said, promote competition, predictable revenue generation and compliance with global best practices.
The administration has also resolved the shadowy oil swap deals that had cost the country billions of dollars and left it at the mercy of a few rich Nigerians. The government has also introduced third party financing to eliminate direct funding of cash calls. The administration has also renegotiated existing service contracts under Joint Venture and Production sharing contracts (PSC) Operations by about 30 per cent leading to operational efficiency improvements and cost reductions.
The administration has also eliminated the Offshore Processing Agreement (OPA) through the introduction of the Direct Sales and Direct Purchase (DSDP) scheme with reputable off-shore refineries. This has yielded annual savings of $1 billion.
The Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB) put together the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources, has now been passed into law by the Senate, after 17 years of failed efforts.
In 2016, the Federal Government exited the cash call arrangement with Joint Ventures (JVs) with International Oil Companies (IOCs), which put pressure on government’s finances. The failure to fully fund them resulted in more than six billion dollars arrears as at December 2015.
A new funding mechanism is being introduced to free the government from the budgetary obligation of coming up with the cash calls and increase oil production to about 2.5 million barrels per day.
The reforms have led to the negotiation of the debt arrears owed the IOCs to $5.1 billion and a long-term repayment plan has been agreed on.
No longer a pariah state
Unlike in the past, the international community warmed up to the Buhari administration in the last twelve months. The President has enlisted the support of multilateral institutions, such as the World Bank and IMF, security agencies, Western countries and other friendly nations to source, locate and repatriate stolen assets.
At one of his international engagements, specifically the London summit on anti-corruption, Buhari announced that Nigeria would begin the full implementation of the principles of the OPEN contracting data standards. This was in furtherance of his trips to the Middle-East, where he had gone to sensitise the governments on the need to repatriate stolen assets and hand over the looters for trial in Nigeria. In January last year, Nigeria and UAE signed Judicial Agreements on Extradition, Transfer of Sentenced Persons, Mutual Legal Assistance on Criminal Matters.
The Federal Government and the Swiss Government in March last year signed a Letter of Intent on the Restitution of Illegally-Acquired Assets forfeited in Switzerland. Under the agreement, Switzerland will repatriate $321 million illicitly acquired by the Gen. Sani Abacha family.
Boko Haram: No longer the Lord of Sambisa
One of the first things Buhari changed was the military structure, which led to the relocation of the Nigerian Military Command Centre to Maiduguri in May 2015. The results are glaring: Over 12,000 persons have been rescued by the troops, including 106 of the Chibok schoolgirls; since December 2015, all territories previously under Boko Haram control have been regained; by June 2015, Nigeria provided $21 million to the Task Force; and in June 2015, the United States (U.S.) announced a $5 million support for the fight against terrorism in the sub-region.
The seriousness with which the administration has pursued the anti-terror war has also led to the U.S. government further announcing an additional $40 million for humanitarian assistance in the sub-region.
Boko Haram’s operational and spiritual headquarters, “Camp Zero”, in Sambisa Forest, has been captured. The army has arrested Usman Mohammed, (a.k.a. Khalid Al Barnawi), leader of the Ansaru Terrorist group and one of the most wanted Terrorists in the world, on whose head the U.S. placed a $6 m bounty. Also arrested and being prosecuted is Amodu Omale Salifu, leader of an ISIS affiliate group active in Northcentral.
Presidential aides are confident that the next one year would bring better goodies for Nigerians in the area of security and others. They said the government has laid a proper foundation capable of putting the country on the right footing. Nigerians are waiting.
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Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Nobody: 8:51am On May 30, 2017
bakynes:

You know what? From your score card even though you claimed it's a mid term score card, but in actual fact it was the entire Jonathan's tenure you used in comparison.

What are you defending, where has PMB been in the last three months and how much has his personal sickness cost us financially? Quit defending mediocrity
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Bizibi(m): 8:51am On May 30, 2017
obailala:
E go hard and its not just right to fairly compare apples and bananas. Both regimes are extremely disappointing though.
this one is the worst infact Jonathan is far better than this govt.
Thinking they will sit up this year but still the same lame excuses.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by jomoh: 8:52am On May 30, 2017
ochejoseph:

when we talk objectively there is no need for insults if truly you mean well for Nigeria the reason why the crude price excuse will not fly is simple

1.Jonathan had a crude oil price of 110 but he had to contend with a huge subsidy regime which the APC stopped him from removing

2. Now Buhari has no high crude prices but he does not have the huge burden of subsidy which is now been paid by ordinary Nigerians.




1. Crude oil price excuse that is beyond his(PMB) control cannot not fly but APC excuse that is under the presidents control can fly abi. wehdon sir.

Was APC holding his hand front totally removing the subsidy.

2. So the subsidy magically disappeared immediately PMBs APC came in. Not even a credit to the man that thought it right to remove the subsidy.

Mr joseph, barcanista might not be in most people's good books due to his write ups but I am very sure I've ever seen anything as biased and blantantly lopesided as this from him.

Everything is not black and white and appraisal of government is much more complex(i know you know better) than the rubbish you wrote up there but you intentionally expunged the complexities and circumstances that contribute to the rating to satisfy your selfish objective.

Complexities and circumstances like:

1. What kind of economy did the two of them inherit from their predecessor

2. What was their contribution to improve or worsen.

3. What was the external reserve inherited by the two of them.

4. What was the excess crude oil reserve

5. What are the basic economic indices inherited before jumping into these conclusions.

Venuzuela had a better economy than Nigeria as at the time GEJ was handing over to PMB. Now that country is on the brink of total collapse while we are gradually coming out of the mess GEJ left us with but you choose to ignore that part.

You choose to ignore the fact that Nigeria was borrowing to pay federal workers before GEJ left but under PMB, we were not only paying convenetly but also borrowing states to pay.

You choose to ignore that GEJ met external reserve close to $60bn and left less than $25bn Squandering $35bn during an oil boom.

You choose to ignore that GEJ met a docile Bokoharam but left vibrant a Bokoharam controlling Nigerian territory.

You choose to ignore the fact that GEJ govt never did anything during Ebola rather they allowed Patrick Sawyer enter this country despite they knowing that there had been outbreak of Ebola in his country and other. Infact it was Lagos state that single handedly curbed the menace.

In fact after reading your trash up there, my gut could do nothing but regurgitate this quote from Billy Madison:

".....What you've just wrote is one of the most insanely idiotic things I've ever read. At no point in your, rambling, Incohenrent post were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone reading this thread is now dumber for having read it. I award you no point, and may God have mercy on your poor soul."

PMB might not be performing up to expectation but any sane person that knows the story of Venezuela will give PMB credit for where Nigeria is today.

obiageIi:
Idiotically skewd write up

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Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by ephi321(f): 8:53am On May 30, 2017
obailala:
E go hard and its not just right to fairly compare apples and bananas. Both regimes are extremely disappointing though.

You are just beginning to talk small small wink
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Flashmove: 8:53am On May 30, 2017
obiageIi:



Oil price

Buhari - $50/barel


Jonathan - $110/barel

Oil is not the yardstick. Many countries dont have oil and they never suffer like Nigerians. Our leaders are too wicked.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by kolaish(m): 8:54am On May 30, 2017
@ochejoseph:

You gave a good and sound write-up. The problem I see with Nigerians are: Sychopancy, over loyalty to individual leaders instead of the country, and ethnic/religious affiliation. If all these can be taken out of the context, nigeria will be a better place to live in and we will have good leaders and followers
.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Nobody: 8:56am On May 30, 2017
ISpiksDaTroof:
Someone please tell the OP that the Ineffectual Buffoon is NEVER coming back to lead any position in Nigeria--- not even as Chief Coop Master in Charge of the Chickens in the Aso Rock Zoo .

He's just that useless when put in charge of anything. Never compare him to the lanky General.

If actual votes counted not doctored one by your northern brother Jega, GEJ would have won.

The greatest mistake GEJ made was not going to court to contest that election.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by sylvez(m): 8:58am On May 30, 2017
balanceofterror1:




Pain painer Painment.

The corrrct one is pain painer panest
E.g:
it pain him
It is painer than the others
This one is the panest

1 Like

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by PRYCE(m): 8:59am On May 30, 2017
ochejoseph:
PRESIDENT BUHARI Vs GOODLUCK JONATHAN's MID TERM ASSESSMENT
SCORES & CRITERIA


On the 30th of May 2013 on the challenge of then President Goodluck Jonathan' I presented a score card of where In my opinion I felt the then President had done well and the places he failed, four years on I am again presented with an opportunity to x ray a different administration this time the All progressive Congress whose stalwarts have challenged citizens to stone them if their mid-term score falls below par.

Just like I did with President Jonathan I will also score President Buhari based on critical benchmarks, but this time there will be a comparison between the two, here are the scores and why

Aviation 65%
Although the local airlines are almost in coma due to spare parts and forex scarcity, with a host of international airlines including Delta Airlines leaving the country due to medieval policies, the Buhari performed fairly well in the Aviation sector. The score of 65% was reached as a result of the following

1. Speed of upgrade of Kaduna Airport and repair of the Nnamdi Azikiwe international Airport Abuja and the professional manner in which passengers were handled and moved in- between cities.

2. Relative safety record in the sector and progress on rehabilitation especially the Abuja new terminal.

However, job losses, airlines folding ups, and the completion of the Daura helipad being the only other major project completed gave the president the 65% score

PMB 55%. GEJ 95%

Reason for GEJ's 95%
Rehabilitation and modernization of terminals ,New international and cargo Airports, improved services ,waivers, etc

Rail Transport 39%

Here the President should have done better because he could have built on the success of the previous administration, the president fared well with the painting and commissioning of the Abuja - Kaduna Speed rail constructed by President Jonathan.
Apart from this the administration has struggled to find finance to fund its proposed coastal rail projects while the rehabilitated rail infrastructure inherited from the Jonathan Administration seems to be decaying under Buhari. Work has however progressed on the Abuja light rail project being constructed by the Chinese.

PMB 39%. GEJ 80%


GEJ rating was due to
(Rehabilitation of rail lines, resumption of the Lagos - Kano service after 15 years , new air conditioned coaches and improved services at upgraded of stations, Kaduna -Abuja speed rail , Abuja light rail etc )

Water Transport 75%

Buhari did better than Jonathan here because some of the projects executed under GEJ especially the dredging are being redone and marine transport seem not to have improved despite the huge investment by Pres Yaradua. By expectation ships should have been moving cargo from Onitsha to Lokoja- Niger s[b][/b]tate but as at today the channels are still blocked.

The recent acquisitions of Ships and improvement in port operations by the NPA ensured PMB got better scores than GEJ here


PMB 75 %. GEJ 65%


Roads 25%

Here is one area that the current administration is doing terribly, most reads that were previously motorable have simply crumbled under this administration, road maintenance seem to have gone into oblivion.
With the exception of the Lagos - Ibadan expressway that was also under construction by GEJ our roads are in a complete sham , traveling with personal vehicles have become more expensive not because of fuel but largely due to what bad roads inflicts on vehicles.
The only "good" side to this problem is that spare parts dealers and mechanics are smiling.



PMB 25%. GEJ 65%

GEJ score was due to:
Improved road network, less potholes on highways, SURE P intervention on East West Road , Benin -Ore , Kano- Maiduguri, Abuja- Lokoja, Loko- oweto Etc ,)

Agriculture 25%

When a country has an Agriculture minister that is aspiring to import grass from Brazil to feed cows when there is no food for humans in the land what you get is hunger and starvation .

Rice became untouchable to, many families in Nigeria because we banned the product when our local production could barely meet 25% of our total demand a fatal error!!!!!

Another major issue in the agricultural sector under Buhari was the blind eye he turned to the activities of his fellow Fulani herders who invade farms eat up crops and harvest and in most instances kill the farmers.Benue the food basket of the nation was the worst hit.

Dr Akinkumi Adeshina pioneerd the rice revolution under GEJ, fertilizer -wallet, cocoa production and Hyde's and skin export Buhari should have built on that, but it never happened!


PMB 25% GEJ. 80 %


Power 35%.
As Governor of Lagos, Fashola had thundered that providing power supply was not rocket science today it seems PMBs minister of power is providing more darkness than Nigerians can endure.
Under PMB the electricity bills were tripled yet Nigerians continue to pay for darkness despite the promise by the APC to provide 20,000 megawatts of electricity.

PMB 35.% GEJ. 39%

Reason for GEJ's 39
(Although good progress was made in the privatisation of GENCOS and DISCOS, low harvest of generated power, persistent outages ,load shedding, failure to meet prepaid meter targets, outrageous bills, nonchalant attitude of PHCN to customer needs , un maintained and overloaded transformers, continued to plague Nigerians)

Security 55%.
Overall PMB feared better that GEJ here , the Sunday - Sunday bombing of churches under GEJ seem to have been disappeared under Buhari, many of the chibok girls are back although many still believed it was stage managed , suicide bombings seem to have been confined to Borno axis.
PMB would have scored much higher here but for the following reasons

1. Escalation of Kidnapping for Ransome and rise in robbery across Nigeria.

2. Terror being unleashed on citizens by Fulani herdsmen

PMB 55 % GEJ 50%



Foreign Investment 29%
Despite spending a chunk of the foreign reserve on foreign travels PMB score card on foreign investment is abysmal , to complicate matters Nigeria was not only displaced as the top destination for FDI in Africa it is no longer on the list of nations.
The nation recorded its lowest ever qrt inflow of 501.83 USD Million under PMB.

https://tradingeconomics.com/nigeria/foreign-direct-investment


A Forex regime that allows you to bring in money but bar you from taking your profit was the medieval policy that drove investor's from Nigeria.

The good news is that investors are gradually returning due to new policy changes effected

PMB 29% GEJ 80%

Ports operations 50 %

But for the executive orders issued last week nothing has changed at our port, the roads leading to the major ports had even deteriorated, the good news here is that corruption among customs officials has reduced, and transparency has been improved upon but ethnicity and religion seem to be the new yardsticks these days.

PMB 50%. GEJ% 50%

Healthcare 32%
Under PMB rats killed many Nigerian's. Many Lassa fever deaths could have been avoided if the right things were done on time like we did in the Ebola crisis. Meningitis that was contained for years became an unsurmountable hill for PMBs team, the quality of care Government hospitals is a story for another day.
Perhaps these conditions necessitated the policy Summersault that resulted in PMB seeking foreign treatment for his ear infection & his latter medical challenges.


PMB 32% GEJ 75%

GEJ score was due to ( less labour acrimony in the sector, improved service delivery especially in Maternal and Child Health , COMESS ,CONTIS, approval and payment ,strengthening of NHIS among others )

Labour 21%
2 years in office, 2 years promotion areas , including unpaid salaries across the country. Pensioner entitlements continued to be delayed among many other labour issues that stems mainly from nepotism in employment.

The government promised 3 million jobs annually but lost more than 4.5 million jobs in a single year.

http://pulse.ng/local/buhari-4-58-million-nigerians-have-lost-their-jobs-under-president-nbs-id5440745.html


Nothing explains this score better than the actions of the workers themselves who booed , pelted and walked out on the labour minister, Governors and other APC leaders at this year’s workers day ..

PMB. 21%. GEJ 75%

GEJ score was due to (improved minimum wage workers& NYSC, pensions payments, centralised payroll systems among others)

Petroleum sector 40%

This score is as a result if the huge scarcity of petroleum products witnessed in the first of the two years of Buhari presidency despite the increase in pump price our refineries are still in coma and product importation still remain high.

The promise of 40 per liter during the campaign and the fake mathematical equation used to derive same by Tam David west has simply vanished leaving Nigerians with huge transport fares, a hole in the pocket due to power generator fuel consumption and bitter taste of change in the mouth.
Despite the Niger Delta sabotage Buhari has done fairly well to make products available and exploration in the chad & Benue basins have continued.

Buhari 40% GEJ 60%

GEJ score was due to (increasing the refining capacity to 10.2 million litres daily, stability in petrol price and supply,cleansing of the subsidy scheme and increased private sector investment participation)

Economic growth and stability 10%

The moment PMB segregated Nigerians into 5% and 95 % national stability was put on the line, and everyone knows that national stability and economic growth are conjoined twins.
The nation is currently in its worst recession with negative GDP growth, the naira is competing with Zimbabwean dollar for relevance, while factories continue to fold up due to lack of forex to buy spares and raw material.
Buhari met the naira 197 to the dollar his policies ensured that the naira was the world’s worst performing currency by 2017.
The inability of the president to see himself as the father of all increased instability and dampened growth, the complete lack of wisdom in the blind implementation of the TSA was the final nail in the coffin of the economy.


PMB 10%. GEJ 70%

GEJ s score was due to ( The growth in the economy placing Nigeria as one of the fastest growing Economy in the world with Over $50 billion in External reserves ,(Real) strong bank courtesy of CBN reforms)

Corruption 60%

The score would have been much higher due to the whistle blower successes and high profile arrests and trials but for the following
1. Turning a blind eye to corrupt APC stalwarts
2. Constituting himself into accuser, judge and "God"
3. Disobedience and complete disregard for the judiciary and court orders


This three and many more has enmeshed Buharis corruption crusade into the mud and transformed it into a drive to eliminate competition, this was not helped by the actions of Babachir the grass cutter and his above the law chief of staff.

PMB 60% GEJ 49%



Education 15%

The illegal dissolution of The governing council of universities and the replacement of performing vice chancellors and competent workers with lackeys and relatives has characterized education in the last two years.

The dip in the efficiency of JAMB, the cancellation of presidential scholarships as well as the plight of many Nigerian's on nationally funded scholarship including the closures of higher institutions already set up by GEJ did not help Buhari cause here.

PMB 45%. GEJ 80%


GEJ s score was due to (The establishment of Federal universities in all states without one , the introduction of the Almajiri school system, the almost seamless flow and stability in universities ,Graduate and PG scholarship
Schemes, unity schools rehabilitation among others )

Press Freedom 4%
I won't be explaining this !!!!!!! The title speaks for itself, not just PMB, a huge slice of the APC including their leaders are allergic to criticism!

Ask Abati !!


PMB 4%. GEJ 95%




Electoral reforms 3%

Elections and INEC under PMB is similar to Iwu's INEC or iwururu as I call him under OBJ, inconclusiveness and mandate robbery under police and army supervision has become the norm.
Edo is case study!

PMB 3%. GEJ 91%

International Relations. 70%

Although most of his trips outside Nigeria has not yielded dividend, Buhari score card on international relations is excellent, his action at ensuring a peaceful transition in the Gambia is commendable, however, his refusal to obey the ECOWAS court is threatening to rubbish this.

PMB 70% GEJ 70%

Final Note.
It is difficult for some many to see things beyond Religion, politics and ethnicity, but it is instructive to note that if Nigeria gets better today we will all be beneficiaries, if things also become worse we will all feel the bite because we all go to thesame market , and the traders will treat us the sameway whether we are partyless , APGA, PDP ,APC, or even KOWA that's why we must at all times tell our leaders the truth and help them take decisions that will help Nigeria achieve true greatness.

Overall the Buhari administration has recorded some highs but with many lows especially in critical sectors. nevertheless for the country to achieve any meaningful development we must rise above sectarian divisions, promote objectivity and patriotism and in the end Nigeria will be a better place for us and our children .

Finally I wish President Buhari a quick recovery and safe return home.


God bless Nigeria & Happy Democracy Day 2017



"The tenure of human positions, no matter how highly exalted will eventually come to an end. Only Gods tenure is eternal" Oche Otorkpa

https://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/7569670




Oche Joseph O.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by kizyalex10(m): 8:59am On May 30, 2017
Afam4eva:
Hunger

Buhari - 95%

Jonathan - 30%
jonathan was voted out not because of bad performance but because of what the greedy nature of Nigerians nd d unrealistic promises APC made to Nigerians,of which nt a single one was fufilled up to date,if Nigerians re given d option to vote again,am sure APC won't get a handful of votes,they might prepare a platform of deceit come 2019 dat will defeat gullible Nigerians but d truth is,buhari's govt is a failed one.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by franudi: 9:00am On May 30, 2017
seunmsg:
Jonathan was really a high performer. He achieved so much mid way into his tenure that Nigerians had to massively vote him out 2 years later due to his wonderful performance. OP, well-done Sir.
Anybody that vote apc again to rule this country will die in accident.
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Lilimax(f): 9:00am On May 30, 2017
Daboomb:
[s]

Utter tosh!

Its like comparing Sleep and death, no correlation.
If not for that failure called GEJ, the Presidency will still be in the South TODAY.
If not for Jonathan's cluelessness, Nigeria wont be saddled with a sick President TODAY.
if not for his looting and complete loss of control over the thieving associates of his, Nigeria wont be this broke TODAY


"Never Again", is his middle name.
The shameless goat still thinks he is somebody to reckon with because peoplelike you give him a fake feeling of accomplishment
Bros, stop cancelling someone's analysis.
Present Buhari/APC score card after two years undecided
They have failed woefully and with flying colours smiley
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by Lilimax(f): 9:02am On May 30, 2017
obonujoker:


The Lanky general is an epitome of failure.... a buffoon is better than a failure...
smiley
Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by bakynes(m): 9:04am On May 30, 2017
Pidgin2:


What are you defending, where has PMB been in the last three months and how much has his personal sickness cost us financially? Quit defending mediocrity
See this one, did Patience Jonathan not spend our money abroad on health. That is not an issue, with or without his presence the country will move on, the Budget is already in place and will run on the already laid down policies which the Acting president will oversea.

1 Like

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by ehissi(m): 9:05am On May 30, 2017
obiageIi:

Was there a time when there was no kidnap? Atleat i can speak of a time when there was bombings every week.
What was special about our ponzi economy 3 yrs ago that states needed bailouts and the FG was borrowing to pay salaries.

At least salaries were paid amidst borrowing. This government is still borrowing, in fact it is the highest borrowing administration in the history of administrations but is owing federal workers up and down.

What are they now doing with the cash?

Abi Buhari go put our money for MMM? angry

Even Mr President himself is a ghost worker. Allegedly working in Nigeria but collecting salary in London........ undecided

1 Like 1 Share

Re: President Buhari Vs Goodluck Jonathan's Mid Term Assessment Scores & Criteria by ehissi(m): 9:07am On May 30, 2017
bakynes:

See this one, did Patience Jonathan not spend our money abroad on health. That is not an issue, with or without his presence the country will move on, the Budget is already in place and will run on the already laid down policies which the Acting president will oversea.

Point of correction, Coordinator and not Acting President...... lipsrsealed

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