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14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust - Politics (3) - Nairaland

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Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Nobody: 10:09am On May 03, 2015
Those 14 Time Bombs were actually created by Buhari and his Army old soldiers when he was in the military, in fact, after he was overthrown by IBB, he created more foot soldiers that metamorphosed into Boko Haram.

Buhari destroyed the Nigerian Economy with SAP.

Buhari destroyed our Transportation sector by stopping construction of major roads and even cancel the Lagos Metro-Line project.

Buhari was at the PTF and orchestrated wholesale Fraud that has become an octopus in the Oil Sector.

Show me one of the Problems there that is not a direct or indirect fault of Buhari and his friends and compatriots in the Military.

#BabaOneChance, Go to Aso Rock and solve the problems you help to start. You military egg-heads destroyed Nigeria, go and fix it or we will chase you out.

4 Likes

Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by godwin120alex: 10:14am On May 03, 2015
Hoping dat he delivers on his promises.

1 Like

Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by emiye(m): 10:16am On May 03, 2015
ibedun:
May be Nigerians should stop reproducing until these problems are resolved. It seems to me that our blind child bearing culture has become rather callous and dangerous.

Op please add unneeded high birth rate to the list.
maybe the 15th should be abolishment of almajiri culture in the north and increased access+ free family planning health services across the country.
the day I knew the 32 year old Gardner at my work place had 8 children with his 17.5k wage, my worries about the country in deep shiit increased. take note, he is from the south east and a Christian
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Nobody: 10:17am On May 03, 2015
CountDracula:
By the time he wil b leaving... They will become 14miracles performed by GMB

Only the enemies of Nigeria won't say at AMEN to this prayer of yours!
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by mandax: 10:17am On May 03, 2015
Number one time bomb is Buhari ever ignoring to political restructuring of Nigeria to enable near equal political representation between the two old British Protectorates later amalgamated to form Nigeria.


Northern soldiers later proliferated 19 states+Abuja in once one region north, but left only 17 states in the once three regions south. The present political structure leaves the south of Nigeria as mere appendage of a northern master country.

Three Senators are derived from every state. Thus the north nearly decides whatever can happen in Nigeria.

In no federal country was landmass or population used to create new federating units (states) like in Nigeria.
At the end of states creation in Nigeria, what we should have been having is equal multiples of states from the existing federating units that existed when states started to be created.

Imagine soldiers rising in say the US, and dividing large state of California or Texas into many more states; resulting to more legislative representatives from California or Texas sent to the US Congress, as well as take more US revenues to the new states.

It is foul play to continue since 1999 to use a non-democratically crafted political structure to determine the outcome of a democratic presidential election.

Obssanjo started political restructuring, could not finish. Yar Adua could not take up political restructuring because of obvious reasons that the extant political structure favours the far north most.
Goodluck Jonathan started very late with restructuring in his CONFAB.

A democratically crafted political structure is the first thing Nigeria needs to concord before a new constitution or amending the 1999 constitution supervised by machine gun bearing northern soldiers.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by appini: 10:19am On May 03, 2015
Dreaming is totally allowed in this concept.

He's coming to cause more troubles and confusions.

1 Like

Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Nobody: 10:24am On May 03, 2015
That's is why he is voted in to restore order in the first place.He shouldn't see it as a burden.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by makzeze: 10:24am On May 03, 2015
appini:
Dreaming is totally allowed in this concept.

He's coming to cause more troubles and confusions.
bad belle. You are an enemy of Nigeria.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Kingspin(m): 10:24am On May 03, 2015
Op, u forgot three things; indigeneship, religion and tribalism which has completely turned Nigeria upside down and pave way for most of the things u mentioned. The change should be a genuine and rooted one else we keep complaining..
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Nobody: 10:25am On May 03, 2015
datribune:


dis sounds like d wisdom of a fool. FYI death is no respecter of age. It can come anytime, anywhere, any age. When death comes u can't say - "but I'm young".
Always remember dat Aondowase Chia, d Benue State Commissioner 4 Rural Development & Cooperatives who Described Buhari as a “Quarter To Go” made dis same mistake. He is now dead while d General is as fit as a fiddle jogging 7kms every night.
Long live d People's General, long live nigeria.
u are very stewpid ..... Where in ma comment ...did u see dat I wish buhari dead?
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by UnknownT: 10:26am On May 03, 2015
rexbuton:


he supports his herders... they are free to claim any farmland for grazing.. Remember the oyo crisis? he said they were his people
Well, now he is the president of Nigeria and not the grand patron of Fulani cattle herders. We need to know where he truly stands with this issue
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by appini: 10:35am On May 03, 2015
makzeze:
bad belle. You are an enemy of Nigeria.

Gullibility is a sin. I guess you're old enough to think
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by pasol4real(m): 10:43am On May 03, 2015
makzeze:
Corruption
Under the Presidency of Goodluck Jonathan, corruption appears to have assumed the status of a norm rather than an abnormality. Little wonder that in an attempt to defend corruption, Jonathan was quoted as saying “stealing is not corruption.” The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project and other groups had in June 2012 demanded that President Jonathan should disclose his assets from 2007 to 2012 but he refused to oblige.
Although the Nigerian law provides criminal penalties for official corruption, however, it was observed more in breach during the PDP led administration of President Jonathan. Consequently, government officials frequently engaged in corrupt practices with impunity. There was also massive, widespread and pervasive corruption that affected all levels of government and even the security forces.
The Constitution provides immunity from civil and criminal prosecution for the President, Vice President, Governors and deputy Governors while in office. Some of the indices of corruption during the Jonathan government included the conviction of former Delta State governor James Ibori in the Southwark Crown Court in London of charges of money laundering and other financial crimes totaling N12.4bn, after he was acquitted by a Nigerian court; and the N1.067trn fuel subsidy fund lost to endemic corruption. Several rights groups and agencies had also rated the anticorruption efforts of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission, as well as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission as “largely ineffectual.”
Over a dozen cases handled by the EFCC under Jonathan administration have remained inconclusive, including the cases against four former governors Gbenga Daniel, Adebayo Alao-Akala, Aliyu Akwe Doma and Muhammed Danjuma Goje, for allegedly misappropriating N58bn, N25bn, N18bn and N12.8bn, respectively. Little wonder that one of the most potent campaign strategies of General Buhari was zero tolerance against corruption. As a man with a demonstrable stance against stealing of public funds not a few analysts say Buhari would tackle the cankerworm. But the degree of its entrenchment in the Nigerian system would make it no less a herculean task for the incoming administration.

Partisan Security Agencies
One of the cardinal promises of the Buhari campaign is that of tackling insecurity. With the elections over, the incoming administration’s task is pretty well cut out in terms of restructuring the security agencies to tackle the security challenges being faced in the country.
The security agencies have clearly been partisan and perhaps nowhere was this demonstrated than in the military, which, added to its inability to successfully tackle the Boko Haram insurgency in the last six years, claimed not to be in possession of Buhari’s certificates, when the issue came up during campaigns only for the Army to make a U-turn once Buhari was declared winner of the elections.
Perhaps the most glaring evidence of the military’s partisanship was its indictment in the Ekiti election scam that brought in Ayo Fayose as governor. The roles of Brig. Gen Aliyu Momoh and Capt Sagir Koli in what became known as the Ekitigate video, and the military’s refusal to investigate the role of its officers and men in this scandal are telling.
The Department of State Security goofed when on January 7, 2015, its spokesperson, Marylyn Ogar paraded several men, allegedly belonging to the APC, as planning to hack into the database of the Independent National Electoral Commission. The evidence against these men was flimsy and the fact that INEC has denied any attempt to hack into its system threw the spanner in the SSS’s claims.
None of those men the SSS paraded has been presented in court to answer to the allegations against them, further casting doubts over these allegations. Neither has Ms Ogar named the APC members she had alleged in August 2014 of belonging to the Boko Haram group.
Similarly, the Nigerian Police Force is another agency that has been partisan in the run-up to the last elections. Note was the roles of officers like Joseph Mbu in terrorizing the APC in Rivers State while serving as the Police Commissioner in the state, harassing Governor Rotimi Ameachi, who would later emerge as Buhari’s campaign chief. Upon his removal from Rivers, Mbu was posted to Abuja, from where he was sent to Lagos, another key state the PDP was eyeing. Many experts believe his deployment to Lagos State as the Police Commissioner ahead of the elections was aimed at using the police to influence the elections in favour of the PDP.
How Buhari will deal with the hierarchy of these agencies remains to be seen, but his hands might be tied already, with Jonathan sacking IG Suleiman Abba, four years before he was due for retirement and replacing him with Solomon Arase (from Jonathan’s Niger Delta). The military might have already started its house cleaning, by recently pulling out 31 generals from the force.
Also of interest will be how Buhari restructures the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, which, under Jonathan’s administrations, plagued by a series of scandals, failed to make any meaningful arrest or successful prosecution.

Nigeria’s Foreign Image
Nigeria’s image within the international community has never been so low as it has been now. Buhari, in a February 9, 2015 interview with Aljazeera, had said the image of Nigeria running to France to find solutions to the Boko Haram challenge was “very embarrassing”.
He is clearly inclined to put Nigeria in the lead in the fight against Boko Haram with neighbouring countries like Chad, Niger and Cameroon in supporting roles, instead of leading the offensive, as was the case until recently. Jonathan’s administration’s handling of the Boko Haram insurgency and in particular the Chibok abductions, which resulted in an international movement that put Nigeria in the news for all the wrong reasons was damaging enough. The icing on the cake was a claim in March that President Jonathan had spoken with the King of Morrocco, when no such conversation occurred, did serious damage to Nigeria’s image, especially after an angry Morocco recalled its ambassador to Nigeria. To improve Nigeria’s image, Buhari and his team must present a more positive body language, make the right assertions at the right times and most importantly show leadership in tackling not only Boko Haram, but issues that affect Nigeria and Nigerians.

Continued Fall Of The Naira

The president-elect has a task on his hand stemming the continued slide of the naira. The local currency has been on the fall since last year as the price of crude on the international market crashed. The naira plight has been compounded by the pressure the wild political campaign spending put on the dollar, especially from late last year to March this year when the presidential election held.
A year ago, the naira exchanged for the dollar on the official market at N165 and ended the year at N183. By last week, it was exchanging for N198.55 to the dollar at the official market. At the parallel market, the value had climbed back to an average of N220 to a dollar, the exchange average before the March 28 presidential election. It, however, eased to below N200 immediately after the election, but has gradually crept up again.
On February 25 this year, the CBN was compelled to jack up the naira’s official exchange rate to N198 to a dollar, from the N168 figure (from N155) it had fixed barely three months before then. The shortage of dollars has also affected the country’s foreign reserves value, which fell below $30 billion ($29.5bn) last month, according to Central Bank of Nigeria’s figures, from the $34.493 figure it started with in the year. The continued dip in the foreign reserves value has been attributed to the significant reduction in dollar inflow caused by falling crude oil prices.
With no immediate hope of crude price rising sharply on the international market to provide adequate dollars to strengthen the naira at the exchange market, no revenue from other foreign exchange earners like solid minerals and no real options like a strong local productive base, Gen Buhari will have to call on sound management of the economy and prudent spending to rein in the downswing of the naira value. There is fear that continued fall of the naira may spark off serious inflationary pressure that could taint the Buhari administration as a bad manager of the economy. Moreover, the incoming administration will need to work magic to stop the gradual erosion of the foreign reserves - which the CBN has been dipping its hand into to prop up the naira - in the face of inadequate dollar receipts from crude sales.

Fuel Crisis
Up till last week, the fuel crisis, symbolized in the main by occasional scarcity of petroleum products, especially the premium motor spirit (petrol), had remained intractable. Buhari will have a problem on his hand fixing this monster which has defied a decisive solution for over three decades. Nigerians’ expectations on Buhari to fix the crises in both the petroleum industry and the power sector are high and some are actually seeing him as the last hope on these problems after successive leaders who promised to tackle them not only failed, but left the sectors worse than they met them.
In the petroleum industry, Buhari will be confronted with a crisis that is multi-faceted. He will have to decide on what to do with the phases 1 and 2 of the Port Harcourt refinery, Warri refinery and the Kaduna refinery. The wide belief in Nigeria is that, as in other areas of the petroleum industry, deep corrupt practices have always attended the numerous contracts that the federal government has been awarding to repair the refineries.
There is also the big matter of fuel subsidy and oil marketers. This will arguably be a knotty issue for the incoming president to address. Since the refineries began functioning epileptically and importation of petroleum products became the norm, the fuel subsidy question has been a recurring riddle with every administration. While government officials argue that there, indeed, exist subsidy claims and spend billions of naira every year paying marketers such claims, many industry analysts maintain it is a scam by which government officials and their cronies embezzle huge public funds.
One strident antagonist of oil subsidy is Tam David-West, professor of virology and a former minister in charge of the petroleum sector. David-West maintains the pump price of petrol should not be more than N40 a litre and that the current price fixed by the Jonathan administration is a scam. “Anyone that is encouraging high petroleum price in Nigeria is not only the enemy of the people, he should be arrested and sent to Bama Prison and even killed,” the professor declared.
That there is a huge fraud in the fuel subsidy claims was given truth in 2012 when the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission arraigned 17 oil marketers for fuel subsidy fraud. The fear is that any attempt to halt subsidy might be resisted by those who have benefitted from it. Such disagreement could lead to a stalemate which the incoming government could find tough to tackle.

Power Sector
As with the fuel crisis, the power sector problem is one that has defied solution. Only last week, Godknows Igali, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Power disclosed that Nigeria’s total electricity generation had dropped to a low 2,800 megawatts, the lowest in nearly a year, from its recent peak of 4,5oo. Igali blamed the drop on vandalism of gas pipelines.
The story was not new to Nigerians. The PDP, in its 16 years in power, has always been promising it would relieve Nigerians of their power supply agony. But the promise has been mere gas, as, instead of electricity supply to rise even marginally, the PDP and the Jonathan administration will be bequeathing Buhari a time bomb of a power situation.
After the unbundling of government’s Power Holding Company of Nigeria and sale, in 2013, of the resultant five generating companies (Gencos) and 10 distribution companies (Discos) to private investors, many Nigerians were looking forward to an early improvement in the power supply level.
But they have been disappointed. Although electricity tariffs continue to go up and consumers are made to pay a compulsory service charge of N750 per month to the new operators, service delivery has remained poor. In February this year, the CBN gave loans to the Gencos and the Discos. The apex bank first disbursed a total sum of N18.26bn to the first batch of beneficiaries of the N 213bn Nigeria Electricity Market Stabilization Facility (NEMSF). And barely a week after, it gave another sum of N39.53bn to the second batch of beneficiaries.
As Nigerians look up to the new president to provide them succour in the steady provision of electricity, it remains to be seen how Buhari will solve this particular problem which has so far been intractable. The incoming president has attributed the power crisis to corruption. That means he has to deal with it headlong and deliver.

N20bn Missing Oil Money
Buhari has already declared his intention to revisit the N20bn oil money that is allegedly missing. Former CBN governor and now Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi had, in September 2013, written a letter to President Jonathan alleging disappearance of the sum of $49bn in the accounts of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). But the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke was quick to debunk the allegation.
After government set up a committee to reconcile the accounts of the NNPC, Sanusi later reviewed the figure to N20bn. The figure has since become a raging controversy. A report prepared by auditors PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) and recently released by the government stated that while the total gross revenues generated from crude oil liftings amounted to $69.34bn between January 2012 and July 2013 and not $67bn as earlier stated by the Senate Reconciliation Committee, what was remitted to the federation account was $50.81bn and not $47bn.
Within the $69.34bn, the audit report revealed that $28.22bn was the value of domestic crude oil allocated to NNPC, adding that the total amount spent on subsidy for Premium Motor Spirit amounted to $5.32bn.
But an apparently unconvinced Buhari had stated that his administration, in its determined fight against corruption, would further probe the entire missing billions. “You all remember what the Emir of Kano talked about when he was the governor of the CBN. He said $20bn was unaccounted for; they said it was a lie. Instead of investigating it, they sacked him. And since this was documented, our administration will take a look at it.”
Many Nigerians will be anxiously waiting to witness how their new president will tackle the fraud and possibly recoup the amount believed to have been stolen from the country’s commonwealth.

Oil Theft
Another time bomb awaiting the president-elect after he assumes office on May 29 is the massive theft of the country’s crude oil. Over the years, the crime has become big business; in a couple of cases, whole vessels loaded with stolen Nigerian crude had been arrested on the high seas. This gave credence to the assertion that the oil theft crime is perpetrated by highly influential figures that include top politicians, serving and retired military officers and wealthy businessmen. At the lower level are pirates who own small boats and barges, and pipeline vandals who siphon crude from the broken pipes.
Putting figures to the theft, Nigeria’s Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo- Iweala said Nigeria loses about N7 billion daily from stolen crude. Former Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Mr. Andrew Yakubu, also once estimated Nigeria’s huge loss arising from oil theft at $12 billion annually. The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) once put its own estimate of oil theft from 2009 to 2011 a total sum of $10.9 billion.
The Jonathan administration awarded multi-billion contracts to former militants that include Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo ostensibly to curtail the activities of oil thieves, both on the high seas and against oil pipelines. And desperate to win his re-election bid in the March presidential election, President Jonathan also curried the support of the Yoruba militia group, the Oodua People’s Congress with contracts to also police the waterways and pipelines against pirates and oil thieves. So far, nothing concrete has been achieved in the fight against oil theft. Can Buhari stop it?

Unemployment
One of the biggest challenges before the incoming administration is that of unemployment, especially among youths. World Bank Country Representative in Nigeria, Prof. Foluso Okundamewa in 2013 put the unemployment rate at 22 percent, with 38% of youths unemployed.
To put this in context, Nigeria’s Coordinating Minister of the Econonmy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in 2014 revealed that figures by the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics put the number of unemployed youths at 5.3 million, with total number of 20.3 million people unemployed in the country. This is almost the size of the population of Australia or Ghana.
And with 1.8 million fresh graduates coming out of the university every year, it is clear the incoming administration has a huge challenge in its hand.
The consequence of such an army of unemployed is that it provides ready recruits for groups like the Boko Haram and Niger Delta Miilitants, as well as robbery gangs and other crime syndicates.
The desperation of this unemployed youth was evident on March 15 2014 when 6.5 million people turned out nationwide for the 4000 vacant positions in the Nigerian Immigration Service. Sixteen job seekers died in stampedes at the venues.
Added to the 100 million destitute people in the country, according to World Bank figures, these constitute a huge security and economic challenge that the incoming administration must tackle.

Militancy and Kidnapping
Niger Delta militants under the leadership of Government Ekpemupolo, popularly known as Tompolo recently acquired decommissioned warships from Norway. Over the years, there have been reports of former militants rearming and reposition as they enjoy lucrative contracts from the Jonathan administration.
According to a source close to the militants, “The Nigerian Navy has nothing to offer. It is the militants that are effectively in control of Nigeria’s shores.”
The protection the militants have enjoyed under the outgoing administration and the numerous arms deals that have been uncovered, including the two deals running into billions of dollars busted by South African authorities in September and October 2014, which the Nigerian government has been unable to clearly explain might indicate that the militants might be better equipped than ever.
With the army of unemployed youths, the militants have a waiting legion of recruits at their disposal and may pose a greater threat under the new administration.

source: www.dailytrust.com.ng/sunday/index.php/top-stories/20584-14-time-bombs-awaiting-buhari
One thing for sure buhari will fight n defeat corruption n reduce govenments excessiveness .but any one who tinks he wud giv him job,improve the ecinomy,Power supply ,education,security ,infrastructure etc than Jonathan did is Just bin a daydreamer .
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Tbillz(m): 10:44am On May 03, 2015
Drawing conclusions even before Buhari's regime takes off is like putting a cart before a horse or burying a living man even before his dead. now that u tagging faults to his regime, what can do you do to change it? dont judge situations you have never been in. keep your hope alive Oga.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by MosquitoREBIRTH(m): 10:48am On May 03, 2015
nuelyoyo:
I have confidence that GMB will perform, the only thing I have observed about him & I feel he should stop doing is telling the whole world about his intentions to do certain things..... Like saying he would visit past probe report and make those found guilty to return money stolen. Me think he should keep that a secret to himself and take the looters unaware. Telling a thief u are coming after him will make him prepare for his escape or defence as the case may be.
I understand where u're coming from and what you mean. But I have said this several times, I think GMB will not do all these probing, I believe he says those things just to scare intending thieves and keep them away from the treasury. I believe he is playing mind games...
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by ayusco85(m): 10:53am On May 03, 2015
Sweetguy25:
I don't see Buhari solving most of the problems there, especially corruption, unemployment and security. Nigerians go hear am.

#Baba One Chance aka BOC. grin

Wish u exactly what u wish nigeria under buhari's regime..... Sore looser
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by sewentybaba: 10:53am On May 03, 2015
Buhari knew these stuffs before campaigning. No cause for alarm. It's a season film.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by dammytosh: 10:55am On May 03, 2015
CountDracula:
By the time he wil b leaving... They will become 14miracles performed by GMB

Thank You.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Nobody: 10:57am On May 03, 2015
ibedun:
May be Nigerians should stop reproducing until these problems are resolved. It seems to me that our blind child bearing culture has become rather callous and dangerous.

Op please add unneeded high birth rate to the list.

Hahahahahahahahaha! U aint far from d truth bro. Nigerians can born like chicken. U'll see families of 5-15 living in a tiny batcher and d parents will still be phucking n producing more without any plans whatsoever 4 d kids. Use condom, No! Do family planning, No!
Its sad! Our mentality's so low
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by globalresource: 11:05am On May 03, 2015
I don't know why people are speculating dooms for Buhari and his incoming administration. Don't forget if Buhari fails, we as Nigerians has failed. and we will be taking back again. People voice out against Jonathan because he failed us. I remember him before election saying the light situation has greatly improved, but where I am in a city in the south west, I have not seen light for the past 4 days and no fuel to power generator cos the little I lay hands upon is just for my car. Now we have push Jonathan out of Aso rock. Let us keep reminding Buhari of his promises and be patient also. We don't need to be prophesying doom for him. What Jonathan could not do in 6 years we should not expect Buhari to fix it in one month. And if you continue wishing him to fail, don't forget you, your family and posterity are part of the Nation. If we miss it again...don't let me think it self

God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria

God bless the in-coming President
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by pasol4real(m): 11:05am On May 03, 2015
[quote author=makzeze post=33365136]Corruption
Under the Presidency of Goodluck Jonathan, corruption appears to have assumed the status of a norm rather than an abnormality. Little wonder that in an attempt to defend corruption, Jonathan was quoted as saying “stealing is not corruption.” The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project and other groups had in June 2012 demanded that President Jonathan should disclose his assets from 2007 to 2012 but he refused to oblige.
Although the Nigerian law provides criminal penalties for official corruption, however, it was observed more in breach during the PDP led administration of President Jonathan. Consequently, government officials frequently engaged in corrupt practices with impunity. There was also massive, widespread and pervasive corruption that affected all levels of government and even the security forces.
The Constitution provides immunity from civil and criminal prosecution for the President, Vice President, Governors and deputy Governors while in office. Some of the indices of corruption during the Jonathan government included the conviction of former Delta State governor James Ibori in the Southwark Crown Court in London of charges of money laundering and other financial crimes totaling N12.4bn, after he was acquitted by a Nigerian court; and the N1.067trn fuel subsidy fund lost to endemic corruption. Several rights groups and agencies had also rated the anticorruption efforts of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission, as well as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission as “largely ineffectual.”
Over a dozen cases handled by the EFCC under Jonathan administration have remained inconclusive, including the cases against four former governors Gbenga Daniel, Adebayo Alao-Akala, Aliyu Akwe Doma and Muhammed Danjuma Goje, for allegedly misappropriating N58bn, N25bn, N18bn and N12.8bn, respectively. Little wonder that one of the most potent campaign strategies of General Buhari was zero tolerance against corruption. As a man with a demonstrable stance against stealing of public funds not a few analysts say Buhari would tackle the cankerworm. But the degree of its entrenchment in the Nigerian system would make it no less a herculean task for the incoming administration.

Partisan Security Agencies
One of the cardinal promises of the Buhari campaign is that of tackling insecurity. With the elections over, the incoming administration’s task is pretty well cut out in terms of restructuring the security agencies to tackle the security challenges being faced in the country.
The security agencies have clearly been partisan and perhaps nowhere was this demonstrated than in the military, which, added to its inability to successfully tackle the Boko Haram insurgency in the last six years, claimed not to be in possession of Buhari’s certificates, when the issue came up during campaigns only for the Army to make a U-turn once Buhari was declared winner of the elections.
Perhaps the most glaring evidence of the military’s partisanship was its indictment in the Ekiti election scam that brought in Ayo Fayose as governor. The roles of Brig. Gen Aliyu Momoh and Capt Sagir Koli in what became known as the Ekitigate video, and the military’s refusal to investigate the role of its officers and men in this scandal are telling.
The Department of State Security goofed when on January 7, 2015, its spokesperson, Marylyn Ogar paraded several men, allegedly belonging to the APC, as planning to hack into the database of the Independent National Electoral Commission. The evidence against these men was flimsy and the fact that INEC has denied any attempt to hack into its system threw the spanner in the SSS’s claims.
None of those men the SSS paraded has been presented in court to answer to the allegations against them, further casting doubts over these allegations. Neither has Ms Ogar named the APC members she had alleged in August 2014 of belonging to the Boko Haram group.
Similarly, the Nigerian Police Force is another agency that has been partisan in the run-up to the last elections. Note was the roles of officers like Joseph Mbu in terrorizing the APC in Rivers State while serving as the Police Commissioner in the state, harassing Governor Rotimi Ameachi, who would later emerge as Buhari’s campaign chief. Upon his removal from Rivers, Mbu was posted to Abuja, from where he was sent to Lagos, another key state the PDP was eyeing. Many experts believe his deployment to Lagos State as the Police Commissioner ahead of the elections was aimed at using the police to influence the elections in favour of the PDP.
How Buhari will deal with the hierarchy of these agencies remains to be seen, but his hands might be tied already, with Jonathan sacking IG Suleiman Abba, four years before he was due for retirement and replacing him with Solomon Arase (from Jonathan’s Niger Delta). The military might have already started its house cleaning, by recently pulling out 31 generals from the force.
Also of interest will be how Buhari restructures the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, which, under Jonathan’s administrations, plagued by a series of scandals, failed to make any meaningful arrest or successful prosecution.

Nigeria’s Foreign Image
Nigeria’s image within the international community has never been so low as it has been now. Buhari, in a February 9, 2015 interview with Aljazeera, had said the image of Nigeria running to France to find solutions to the Boko Haram challenge was “very embarrassing”.
He is clearly inclined to put Nigeria in the lead in the fight against Boko Haram with neighbouring countries like Chad, Niger and Cameroon in supporting roles, instead of leading the offensive, as was the case until recently. Jonathan’s administration’s handling of the Boko Haram insurgency and in particular the Chibok abductions, which resulted in an international movement that put Nigeria in the news for all the wrong reasons was damaging enough. The icing on the cake was a claim in March that President Jonathan had spoken with the King of Morrocco, when no such conversation occurred, did serious damage to Nigeria’s image, especially after an angry Morocco recalled its ambassador to Nigeria. To improve Nigeria’s image, Buhari and his team must present a more positive body language, make the right assertions at the right times and most importantly show leadership in tackling not only Boko Haram, but issues that affect Nigeria and Nigerians.

Continued Fall Of The Naira

The president-elect has a task on his hand stemming the continued slide of the naira. The local currency has been on the fall since last year as the price of crude on the international market crashed. The naira plight has been compounded by the pressure the wild political campaign spending put on the dollar, especially from late last year to March this year when the presidential election held.
A year ago, the naira exchanged for the dollar on the official market at N165 and ended the year at N183. By last week, it was exchanging for N198.55 to the dollar at the official market. At the parallel market, the value had climbed back to an average of N220 to a dollar, the exchange average before the March 28 presidential election. It, however, eased to below N200 immediately after the election, but has gradually crept up again.
On February 25 this year, the CBN was compelled to jack up the naira’s official exchange rate to N198 to a dollar, from the N168 figure (from N155) it had fixed barely three months before then. The shortage of dollars has also affected the country’s foreign reserves value, which fell below $30 billion ($29.5bn) last month, according to Central Bank of Nigeria’s figures, from the $34.493 figure it started with in the year. The continued dip in the foreign reserves value has been attributed to the significant reduction in dollar inflow caused by falling crude oil prices.
With no immediate hope of crude price rising sharply on the international market to provide adequate dollars to strengthen the naira at the exchange market, no revenue from other foreign exchange earners like solid minerals and no real options like a strong local productive base, Gen Buhari will have to call on sound management of the economy and prudent spending to rein in the downswing of the naira value. There is fear that continued fall of the naira may spark off serious inflationary pressure that could taint the Buhari administration as a bad manager of the economy. Moreover, the incoming administration will need to work magic to stop the gradual erosion of the foreign reserves - which the CBN has been dipping its hand into to prop up the naira - in the face of inadequate dollar receipts from crude sales.

Fuel Crisis
Up till last week, the fuel crisis, symbolized in the main by occasional scarcity of petroleum products, especially the premium motor spirit (petrol), had remained intractable. Buhari will have a problem on his hand fixing this monster which has defied a decisive solution for over three decades. Nigerians’ expectations on Buhari to fix the crises in both the petroleum industry and the power sector are high and some are actually seeing him as the last hope on these problems after successive leaders who promised to tackle them not only failed, but left the sectors worse than they met them.
In the petroleum industry, Buhari will be confronted with a crisis that is multi-faceted. He will have to decide on what to do with the phases 1 and 2 of the Port Harcourt refinery, Warri refinery and the Kaduna refinery. The wide belief in Nigeria is that, as in other areas of the petroleum industry, deep corrupt practices have always attended the numerous contracts that the federal government has been awarding to repair the rm




























One thing for sure buhari will fight n defeat corruption n reduce govenments excessiveness .but any one who tinks he wud giv him job,improve the ecinomy,Power supply ,education,security ,infrastructure etc than Jonathan did is Just bin a daydreamer .the truth of the matter is gmb is not a progressive ,he is a core islamist fundamentalist,n bin a president cannot change that .he is a disciple of the hausa/fulani hegemony,n are well known for their retrogression.as for tinubu who is actually a progressive,he n his apc faction wud be brushed aside like a piece of rubbish.





My ppl truly truly i say to u ...............na one chance we enter so!!
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by baralatie(m): 11:06am On May 03, 2015
ki02020:
The fact that GEJ could not handle such situations properly does not mean another president like buhari can not handle them
he has already said that we should not expect a miracle!
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Metrofox(m): 11:12am On May 03, 2015
My greatest source of joy is that for the first time in a long time we have people who are actually prepared to take over.. Not persons who get there by sheer luck.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Edohson(m): 11:14am On May 03, 2015
How Much apc pay you to write this article? Please try an improve on your writing creativity you mention 14 bomb or what ever u called it you i just see only five u keep repeating them an i believe if ask some question about this articule u can defend ur claim. You are a disgrace to this professional.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by philips70(m): 11:30am On May 03, 2015
googlepikin:
people keep on comparing this man from then to now. guys wake up,people change. what has dis old man been doing with his life all dis years. NOTHING!!

The most important thing we know he has been doing is he has not been helping his life with stolen Nigeria's oil money all these years unlike many leaders then and now. The sole reasons even his former worst enemies rooted for him. That alone is a plus in a predominantly morally bankrupt country like ours that needs redemption. Just sit and watch responsible leadership even as we know there are extremely corrupt individuals in his party like we have all around the country and we know he will never sit and watch them do business as usual.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by erodite638: 11:46am On May 03, 2015
chill..Baba is capable
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by Nobody: 11:49am On May 03, 2015
Simple - If he doesn't perform, we would vote him out and keep doing that till we get it right in Nigeria.
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by temifisayo(f): 11:55am On May 03, 2015
Rxpetite:
grin grin grin cheesy
I feel like the reason why most Nigerians voted buhari was because they were so pissed off by jonathan. So much that if abacha had risen from the dead and campaigned, he would have won.

I feel like whenever buhari said 'change', somewhere between his lips and Nigerians'ears, the word 'change' tranformed to 'miracles'. You know how much we love miracles, just ask your pastor...or better still check his bank account.

We all have our expectations raised so high, I hope for all our sakes he delivers. Because it seems to me like he is slowly trying to lower those expectations. Very soon we'll be back to square one and we won't even realise it.










gbam
Re: 14 Time Bombs Awaiting Buhari- Daily Trust by caprini1: 12:07pm On May 03, 2015
Let him face at least Power and get it up and running.You and I can help him achieve at least 50% success in the others.

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