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PoliticsRe: Omisore Has No Masked Security Escort - PDP by blacksta(m): 4:26am On Jul 07, 2014
Lies since 1999
PoliticsRe: Nigerian Police Force: Useless by blacksta(op):
Ikengawo: only because it's an 'oyibo'. If it was a nigerian they would have shot him for asking.
Oyinbo ke ?

Policeman deserves a sack. This is an endangerment of the Public, what if the dude accidentally pulls the trigger - who is held accountable
PoliticsNigerian Police Force: Useless by blacksta(op): 1:38am On Jul 07, 2014
Police is your friend

SportsRe: France Vs Germany - World Cup Q.final (0 - 1) On 4th July 2014 by blacksta(m): 6:02pm On Jul 04, 2014
How many set piece did Nigeria miss against France
PoliticsRe: President, Governors Should Have Minimum Of University Degree - CONFAB by blacksta(m): 2:17pm On Jul 03, 2014
what is the point - GEJ has a PHD , just look at where Nigeria is!
PoliticsRe: Omisore In Another Dimension!! (photo) by blacksta(m):
This is really an insult towards the people of Osun state. Omisore must really believe that people are dense and dumb hence i would hoodwink them wtth poverty stunts.

What are his policies. I am guessing if GEJ can hoodwink the entire nation with " I have no shoes" then a potential governor can claim " I have no brain" - Please vote for me.
PoliticsRe: Why Do You Support The PDP by blacksta(m): 4:49pm On Jul 02, 2014
I blame the years of Military rule for bastardizing the rational of many Nigerians hence the reason why people would affiliate with PDP - pdp HAS failed and will continue to fail Nigerians
PoliticsRe: Bola Tinubu’s Friends Created Boko Haram - Obanikoro by blacksta(m): 4:23pm On Jul 02, 2014
[quote author=Mogidi]I say it everyday to those willing to hear the truth, it was created by the Buko hari leader after another defeat. He still thinks he can shoot his way to Aso rock like he did in 1983. Anyway its fine by me as long as he keeps his boko boys in the north. [/quote


Dullard on the lose grin
PoliticsRe: Bola Tinubu’s Friends Created Boko Haram - Obanikoro by blacksta(m): 4:17pm On Jul 02, 2014
you see

I blame Gej for all this mess

how can a whole state minister for Defense utter such statement

This is what happens when a bus conductor occupies a very sensitive position
PoliticsRe: Photos Of Goodluck Jonathan’s 2015 Campaign Umbrellas And Caps by blacksta(m): 12:55pm On Jul 02, 2014
VICTORCIZA: Apc is capable of any evil, they might be the people that printed this just to score a cheap political point!!!

if at all pdp printed this then orji kalu is the culprit.
idiotic comment

what else do we expect from a low life grin
PoliticsRe: House: Another APC Member Defects to PDP by blacksta(m): 11:13am On Jul 02, 2014
Do you agree that PDP has failed Nigerians

Every area of government monumental failure - We are still living in the dark ages -

can you imagine 2014 - No electricity
PoliticsRe: House: Another APC Member Defects to PDP by blacksta(m): 10:58am On Jul 02, 2014
I fail to understand the desire of Nigerians of wanting to remain in poverty , I can understand paid hacks like Insecure Nigerian - he or she don mortgage their future for a bowl of rice. PDP hAS failed Nigerians
PoliticsRe: Key Actor In Chibok Girls Abduction Arrested (Photo) by blacksta(m): 3:24pm On Jul 01, 2014
wahalai - I thought abati was educated grin

So this boy is Osama bin Laden of Boko Haram Nigeria PLC
PoliticsRe: Omisore Eating Guguru (Popcorn) In Market Square by blacksta(m): 1:32pm On Jul 01, 2014
He is a mumu

copycat with no fundamental policies

he wants to copy his way to government - People are not fooled by this sham
PoliticsRe: 100 Million Nigerians Have No Access To Electricity: PDP Is Working!!! by blacksta(m): 9:06am On Jul 01, 2014
anonimi: How many of their state residents have access to pipe-borne water in APC controlled states after 15 years in power as is the case of Lagos under Thief'nubu & Fashola despite an annual budget of N 500 billion huh
Nonsense - open another thread to discuss.
CelebritiesRe: Davido Vs Chris Brown - Who Wore It Better? (pictures) by blacksta(m): 2:11pm On Jun 28, 2014
that fat one , seriously needs to go on a diet
SportsRe: Super Eagles Boycott Training Over Unpaid Appearance Allowance by blacksta(m): 6:36am On Jun 28, 2014
if they are owed money - they should be paid promptly
PoliticsRe: Fayose Pledges To Chase APC Out Of South West by blacksta(m): 1:18pm On Jun 27, 2014
A thief wants to be leader -- Please abeg focus on EKiti and leave the rest alone
Car TalkRe: New Policy On Importation Of Tokunbo Cars: Big News Page by blacksta(m): 5:45pm On Jan 09, 2014
in the first quarter of 2014, Nigeria will begin the implementation of the new automotive policy. From the ‘stable’ of the drum beaters of a failed transformation agenda comes a jejune framework that lacks a clear cut direction for our automobile industry. Every New Year is becoming notable for the take-off of all sorts of utopian policies wrapped around job creation to make it fly. The promise of jobs has an instant appeal to the teeming army of unemployed graduates across the country deeming their natural tendency to ask probing questions.

The new policy is aimed at discouraging importation of used cars and buses. The federal government has raised tariffs of duty and levy payable on imported cars from 10 per cent to 35 per cent and from 10 per cent to 35 per cent respectively, making a total of 50 per cent increase as duty and levy payable on cars imported into Nigeria. The duty on buses had also been raised from 10 per cent to 35 per cent without levy.

The government is making it look the way a commentator puts it: “Once there’s any government policy that will affect the average Nigerian negatively, officials will be kicking for its speedy implementation. Just because an average Nigerian can starve and save for years and be able to buy a used (tokunbo) car, it’s now time to impose a new policy painting it bright with job creation.” They make it look like every good thing should be reserved for them. Government always find reasons to heap their inadequacies on the masses.

As the new duty regime comes into force, there may be negative unintended consequences in other areas of the economy. The planned hike in import duty would bring about massive job losses, even as it promises creation of more. The country is about to witness a severe era of vehicle smuggling from neighbouring countries. The actual beneficiaries of the ban will be the police, customs and immigration officials who mount multiple checkpoints on the Seme and Idiroko border roads. The revenue that would have been channeled to government coffers will end up in the pockets of border security officials.

A similar policy in the 1970s during which new Peugeot and Volkswagen cars were produced locally and were affordable to average citizens failed for lack of infrastructure, non-implementation of government policy, inappropriate tariff regime, among others. By the 1980s, most of the companies had stopped operating because of poor domestic patronage, low capacity utilisation, a high-cost environment and a failure to implement the automotive policy of the time. Others have retooled for other lines of manufacture. How to create the industrial eco-system that will help articulate the admirable objectives enunciated in the presently presumptuous policy has been the bane of successive government.

The lethal combination between incessant power outages, dearth of investment funds and almost a total lack of skilled manpower that was responsible for the untimely death of the delusional predecessor policy will send this new policy to its early grave.

Getting an automotive policy going, as shown in the past, is not a daunting task for government. We only got to the “tokunbo” cul-de-sac because local auto plants and feeder industries that came to life on the back of the ambitious “import substitution policy” of the military governments ushered in an unexpected depreciation of our currency in the early 90s, coupled with other debilitating factors led to the total collapse of the auto industries birthed in the ‘70s and ‘80s.


Therefore, it is inappropriate for government to begin the pursuit for a self-reliant automobile sector with the imposition of high import tariff on vehicles when there are fundamental supply side issues to resolve as well as low local value addition and capacity for backward integration in the sector.

And insofar as the import substitution policy of yore failed because these feeder industries were non-existent, it’s almost certain that the present ruse of a policy too, will fail, as laudable as it seem on paper. Moreover, in most countries vehicles are manufactured, the assembly plants only constitute the zenith of an industrial pyramid of raw materials processors and parts-making industries.

The problem of the auto manufacturing industry in Nigeria is mainly lack of patronage and encouragement. We can recall in the past when government fleet consisted of Peugeot cars assembled locally. Civil servants were given loans to purchase cars from Peugeot Automobile of Nigeria (PAN). What do we have today? Government at all levels use imported vehicles in their convoys, as official vehicles. Same people promulgating the new policy are the ones driving all sorts of custom made vehicles around Abuja. No one cares about locally made cars. The new automotive policy is sheer hypocrisy! We don’t need a new law to get the auto industry going, just government driven patronage.

Beyond the promise that the automotive industry would create significant and good quality employment, what else?

Essentially, Nigeria has no local auto industry, so which local industry is being revived by raising tariffs? If few interested automobile companies build assembly plants in Nigeria and import all parts from other places where does that leave us? Will the locally assembled vehicles meet international standards? Will Nigerians get value for their money? Will the vehicles be durable?

We must build the requisite human capital, with the relevant automotive mechatronics capacity to engage the electronics and computing technologies that define the modern automobile industry. More time should have been given before implementation, for technical skills to be acquired in auto mechanics as no Nigerian university currently offers this as a course of study.

At this juncture, it is noteworthy that most of the figures bandied around by government are inaccurate and deliberately exaggerated to create the impression that so much is spent on importation. The much publicised N550billion (sometimes inflated to N1trillion) the country spends on importing vehicles annually is a deliberate miscalculation! If according to available figures, the country imports between 100, 000 used and 50,000 new vehicles respectively, doing the Mathematics using an average of N2.5million for every used vehicle imported, you get N250billion. Add the total cost for all new vehicles imported annually into the country, you get a figure which is a far cry from the N550billion quoted by the Minister of Commerce, Trade and Investment, Dr Olusegun Aganga. We live in a country where government officials bandy incorrect figures around, aware that Nigerians are too lazy to do the numbers.

This utopic automotive framework is a major policy somersault from same government that increased the number of years of automobiles imported to Nigeria from 10 years old to 15 years some time ago.

President Jonathan wants to do with the auto industry what he couldn’t do with the power sector, what he has not done with roads, health care and others. If his performance in office is anything to go by, the new automotive policy is one that is doomed to fail.

http://dailypost.com.ng/2014/01/04/theophilus-ilevbare-making-sense-nonsense-new-automotive-policy/
PoliticsRe: All Norwegians Become Crown Millionaires In Oil Saving Landmark - Reuters by blacksta(m): 2:11pm On Jan 09, 2014
Nigeria is not a sane nation - case closed
PoliticsRe: President Jonathan Asked Sanusi To Resign But He Refused by blacksta(m): 2:09pm On Jan 09, 2014
where is our 10 billion dollar - if you attack Sanusi - I think you must be mad angry


They claim obj stole 16 billion dollar

now gej has stolen another 10 billion
PoliticsRe: B.R.E.A.K.I.N.G; Offical CV Of Stella Oduah Edited by blacksta(m): 11:24am On Jan 09, 2014
Reptyle: Now you are veering into insults. You are here clutching at straws to support a baseless argument and you call me uneducated. cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy

Recently, President Jonathan attempted to rechristen UNILAG.

Had that renaming sailed through with no opposition, what name would have been on the certificates issued to students from then on?

Pacific Christian College became Hope International University in 1997. Madam Oduah by the CV released online claimed she got an honorary PH.D in 1998 from Pacific Christian University.

Going by your argument and assuming that Pacific College is also Pacific University, the school authorities decided to issue Oduah a certificate bearing their former name, one full year after they changed their namehuh?

What kind of puerile argument is thathuh

And you have the nerve to call me uneducated.

SMH!
1000 likes
PoliticsRe: St Paul's College President Denies Speaking To SaharaReporters by blacksta(m): 11:07am On Jan 09, 2014
I believe we have a difference between confirming whether a school offers the said program and contacting the school to release information on present and past students
PoliticsRe: St Paul's College President Denies Speaking To SaharaReporters by blacksta(m): 11:04am On Jan 09, 2014
Dead on arrival

another failed damage control exercise
PoliticsRe: Breaking News: Oduah In Fresh Fake Doctorate Degree Scandal. by blacksta(m): 5:02pm On Jan 08, 2014
Na wa oooo

I hope this woman is not contemplating suicide - Nigeria wahala too much abeg
PoliticsRe: Making Sense And Nonsense Of The New Automotive Policy - Theophilus-ilevbare by blacksta(op): 11:47am On Jan 08, 2014
The problem of the auto manufacturing industry in Nigeria is mainly lack of patronage and encouragement. We can recall in the past when government fleet consisted of Peugeot cars assembled locally. Civil servants were given loans to purchase cars from Peugeot Automobile of Nigeria (PAN). What do we have today? Government at all levels use imported vehicles in their convoys, as official vehicles. Same people promulgating the new policy are the ones driving all sorts of custom made vehicles around Abuja. No one cares about locally made cars. The new automotive policy is sheer hypocrisy! We don’t need a new law to get the auto industry going, just government driven patronage.

True - Tell GEJ to start driving Innoson cars - until then policy is an utter failure
PoliticsMaking Sense And Nonsense Of The New Automotive Policy - Theophilus-ilevbare by blacksta(op): 11:41am On Jan 08, 2014
In the first quarter of 2014, Nigeria will begin the implementation of the new automotive policy. From the ‘stable’ of the drum beaters of a failed transformation agenda comes a jejune framework that lacks a clear cut direction for our automobile industry. Every New Year is becoming notable for the take-off of all sorts of utopian policies wrapped around job creation to make it fly. The promise of jobs has an instant appeal to the teeming army of unemployed graduates across the country deeming their natural tendency to ask probing questions.

The new policy is aimed at discouraging importation of used cars and buses. The federal government has raised tariffs of duty and levy payable on imported cars from 10 per cent to 35 per cent and from 10 per cent to 35 per cent respectively, making a total of 50 per cent increase as duty and levy payable on cars imported into Nigeria. The duty on buses had also been raised from 10 per cent to 35 per cent without levy.

The government is making it look the way a commentator puts it: “Once there’s any government policy that will affect the average Nigerian negatively, officials will be kicking for its speedy implementation. Just because an average Nigerian can starve and save for years and be able to buy a used (tokunbo) car, it’s now time to impose a new policy painting it bright with job creation.” They make it look like every good thing should be reserved for them. Government always find reasons to heap their inadequacies on the masses.

As the new duty regime comes into force, there may be negative unintended consequences in other areas of the economy. The planned hike in import duty would bring about massive job losses, even as it promises creation of more. The country is about to witness a severe era of vehicle smuggling from neighbouring countries. The actual beneficiaries of the ban will be the police, customs and immigration officials who mount multiple checkpoints on the Seme and Idiroko border roads. The revenue that would have been channeled to government coffers will end up in the pockets of border security officials.

A similar policy in the 1970s during which new Peugeot and Volkswagen cars were produced locally and were affordable to average citizens failed for lack of infrastructure, non-implementation of government policy, inappropriate tariff regime, among others. By the 1980s, most of the companies had stopped operating because of poor domestic patronage, low capacity utilisation, a high-cost environment and a failure to implement the automotive policy of the time. Others have retooled for other lines of manufacture. How to create the industrial eco-system that will help articulate the admirable objectives enunciated in the presently presumptuous policy has been the bane of successive government.

The lethal combination between incessant power outages, dearth of investment funds and almost a total lack of skilled manpower that was responsible for the untimely death of the delusional predecessor policy will send this new policy to its early grave.

Getting an automotive policy going, as shown in the past, is not a daunting task for government. We only got to the “tokunbo” cul-de-sac because local auto plants and feeder industries that came to life on the back of the ambitious “import substitution policy” of the military governments ushered in an unexpected depreciation of our currency in the early 90s, coupled with other debilitating factors led to the total collapse of the auto industries birthed in the ‘70s and ‘80s.


Therefore, it is inappropriate for government to begin the pursuit for a self-reliant automobile sector with the imposition of high import tariff on vehicles when there are fundamental supply side issues to resolve as well as low local value addition and capacity for backward integration in the sector.

And insofar as the import substitution policy of yore failed because these feeder industries were non-existent, it’s almost certain that the present ruse of a policy too, will fail, as laudable as it seem on paper. Moreover, in most countries vehicles are manufactured, the assembly plants only constitute the zenith of an industrial pyramid of raw materials processors and parts-making industries.

The problem of the auto manufacturing industry in Nigeria is mainly lack of patronage and encouragement. We can recall in the past when government fleet consisted of Peugeot cars assembled locally. Civil servants were given loans to purchase cars from Peugeot Automobile of Nigeria (PAN). What do we have today? Government at all levels use imported vehicles in their convoys, as official vehicles. Same people promulgating the new policy are the ones driving all sorts of custom made vehicles around Abuja. No one cares about locally made cars. The new automotive policy is sheer hypocrisy! We don’t need a new law to get the auto industry going, just government driven patronage.

Beyond the promise that the automotive industry would create significant and good quality employment, what else?

Essentially, Nigeria has no local auto industry, so which local industry is being revived by raising tariffs? If few interested automobile companies build assembly plants in Nigeria and import all parts from other places where does that leave us? Will the locally assembled vehicles meet international standards? Will Nigerians get value for their money? Will the vehicles be durable?

We must build the requisite human capital, with the relevant automotive mechatronics capacity to engage the electronics and computing technologies that define the modern automobile industry. More time should have been given before implementation, for technical skills to be acquired in auto mechanics as no Nigerian university currently offers this as a course of study.

At this juncture, it is noteworthy that most of the figures bandied around by government are inaccurate and deliberately exaggerated to create the impression that so much is spent on importation. The much publicised N550billion (sometimes inflated to N1trillion) the country spends on importing vehicles annually is a deliberate miscalculation! If according to available figures, the country imports between 100, 000 used and 50,000 new vehicles respectively, doing the Mathematics using an average of N2.5million for every used vehicle imported, you get N250billion. Add the total cost for all new vehicles imported annually into the country, you get a figure which is a far cry from the N550billion quoted by the Minister of Commerce, Trade and Investment, Dr Olusegun Aganga. We live in a country where government officials bandy incorrect figures around, aware that Nigerians are too lazy to do the numbers.

This utopic automotive framework is a major policy somersault from same government that increased the number of years of automobiles imported to Nigeria from 10 years old to 15 years some time ago.

President Jonathan wants to do with the auto industry what he couldn’t do with the power sector, what he has not done with roads, health care and others. If his performance in office is anything to go by, the new automotive policy is one that is doomed to fail.

http://dailypost.com.ng/2014/01/04/theophilus-ilevbare-making-sense-nonsense-new-automotive-policy/
PoliticsRe: My Advice To Stella Oduah And Her Aides by blacksta(m): 10:06am On Jan 08, 2014
I refuse to read this thrash thread -

Sincere Nigerian - your type of reasoning clearly confirms why Nigeria is messed up

GOodbye
PoliticsRe: Maputo, Mozambique - A City Recovers From 40 Yr Civil War - Pictures by blacksta(m): 9:14am On Dec 20, 2013
the truth : Naija is fcked up - even without a war.
PoliticsRe: Uthman Dan Fodio Crossing The River Niger by blacksta(m): 11:58am On Dec 19, 2013
fiizznation: They simply used ferries if actually they crossed d river niger•

Ur question is jst very myopic. Is jst like saying how did the brits/french/portugese got into africa with all the oceans and seas that seperate us ?
I agree
PoliticsRe: Abati To APC: Be Ready To Pay The Price Of Treason by blacksta(m): 8:20pm On Dec 15, 2013
Apati - i am not surprised

you have invested a lot in this bankrupt administration - i totally understand you must eat ( Anyway i doubt if GEJ knows if this letter exist)

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