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Coolier's Posts

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PoliticsRe: Maduekwe Spends N2.7 Billion On Foreign Trips by coolier(f): 8:14am On Dec 23, 2009
whatalife:
Can Nigeria get better with all these stealing everyday?
Capital NO.
PoliticsRe: Alao-akala To Get Leadership Award by coolier(f): 8:13am On Dec 23, 2009
Birds of the same feathers!
PoliticsYar'adua Holds On To Presidency Than To Life! by coolier(op): 8:08am On Dec 23, 2009
[size=8pt]Nigeria: The return of the cabals[/size]

By Ben Nanaghan, Published: Tuesday, 22 Dec 2009


Today marks President Umaru Yar’Adua’s 29th day at the intensive care unit of the King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

These are not auspicious times for throwing brickbats at the President who, for now, needs our fervent interventionist prayers for a quick recovery. It is morally indefensible to fight a man lying prostrate, almost unconscious, in an intensive care unit of a hospital. But Yar’Adua has held more tenaciously to the Presidency than to life. He has placed more premium on the Presidency than on his life. To him, life becomes secondary, as the Presidency takes the centre stage.

Even if the President falls into vegetative state, he will still rule Nigeria through the various jackals lurking in the wings. Even while still in intensive care, his sister argued that Mr. President was still physically fit (even with his voice gone) to rule Nigeria for 16 more years. The President’s aged mother was not left out, as she categorically stated that she had not asked her son to resign. Nigerians must therefore prevail on, and educate the President’s family on the need and constitutional necessity for their son to resign and save his life first and foremost.

It is unfortunate that Nigerian leaders always flout the constitution with impunity and do only those things that emblazon their power and authority at the expense of every other Nigerian. For instance, Yar’Adua has not officially written to the National Assembly briefing them of his incapacitation for almost a month he has been away in Saudi Arabia. The National Assembly, which is about 80 percent PDP-controlled, has turned a blind eye to this impeachable offence being flagrantly perpetuated by the President who has been Away Without Official Leave. In the civil service and even in the military, this is a serious offence which is tantamount to desertion and is punishable by summary dismissal.

The President’s tenacious hold on power, even at such a critical stage of a terminal illness, is profoundly confusing, unreasonable and ill-advised. It is an unfortunate unconstitutional practice, a gross abuse of office and a slap on the face of all Nigerians.

It is revealing to note that in the heat of these disturbing and unusual circumstances, the Vice-President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, remains characteristically calm, humble and dignified. He has gone through this before, during the Ex-Governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha saga. But today, the situation is not the same. The nation demands that the VP takes full charge of the country’s affairs until the ailing President returns from Saudi Arabia. This is what the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria demands. And the nation asks for no less than this.

Nigeria deserves a strong leadership in Abuja to steer the ship of the state to berth in safe harbour. Nigeria demands defined leadership instead of this leadership-by-a-consortium-of-opportunists, cabals, jackals and cartels. A country wallowing in the throes of economic woes needs an endowed, patriotic and God-fearing leader to steer it to the Promised Land.

The cabals and jackals are waiting for such debilitating signs as this to pounce on and finish off this great and economically endowed country. The cabals and cartels had already taken over Yar’Adua’s government ab initio. The President had, on two occasions, raised alarm about the existence of these cabals in the socio-economic bloodstream of this country.

In January 2009, the President’s media chief, Mr. Olusegun Adeniyi, dropped the first bombshell. He said, “the Federal Government has uncovered a strong cabal sabotaging electricity in Nigeria.” He went further to say, “it benefits this strong cabal for the power sector to malfunction”

Surprisingly, during the May/June deregulation crises, the President ‘shocked’ the nation by announcing that there was a cabal destabilising the downstream sector of the oil industry. This was when he was hale and hearty. He was criticised by his party big wigs for this “unguarded candour” coming from the President.

As far back as January 2009 and in June of the same year, our President had identified two different cabals sabotaging the two major sectors of the Nigerian economy – the power and petroleum sectors. The shocking and mystifying aspect of the whole drama is that till date, the President and his government have not made any attempt to unmask these powerful and untouchable kingpins.

What hope is there for the average Nigerian if our President is handi-capped from performing his functions by a cabal he knows so well but is unable to discipline? What hope is there for Nigeria if the President is, even in his healthiest days, being controlled by cabals and forces more powerful than him?

This tantamount to ignorance or cowardice on the part of the President if he does not comprehend the enormous and awesome powers invested on him by the Constitution. The Constitution has empowered him and his officials to unmask and decisively deal with such cabals once and for all. So, now that the President is bed-ridden and the VP is not empowered to function in an acting capacity, Nigeria has, by omission or commission, been fully surrendered to those cabals, cartels and jackals.

I wish President Yar’Adua speedy recovery to good health, but he must empower the VP to act with full powers while he is still sick. Nigeria is already in the hands of the oil and power cabals. A vacuum will make us sink deeper into the mire of economic and political oblivion.

Nanaghan wrote via bennanaghan@yahoo.com

http://www.punchng.com/Articl.aspx?theartic=Art2009122213132662
FamilyRe: They Used My Blood For Ritual: Girl, 15, Accuses Lover, Pastor by coolier(f): 6:37pm On Dec 22, 2009
18 I should think.
RomanceRe: Women by coolier(f): 6:30pm On Dec 22, 2009
lovemoi2:
kids should stop registering in NL
RomanceRe: Please Interprete This Text Message 4 Me by coolier(f): 6:22pm On Dec 22, 2009
Obviously you don't trust your wife. Or why would you be going through her phone in the first place and reading her sent messages?
RomanceRe: A Friend Sent This And I Found It Amazingly Funny And True: Do You? by coolier(f): 6:08pm On Dec 22, 2009
To some extent.
RomanceRe: What Do You Do When Your Spirit Is Down? by coolier(f): 6:00pm On Dec 22, 2009
Count your blessings!
RomanceRe: Im Fallin In Luv Wit My Female Friend by coolier(f): 5:38pm On Dec 22, 2009
tkb417:
go and cut your hair
Oh oh!
RomanceRe: Let's Do No Way,leave Me No Way! by coolier(f): 6:52pm On Dec 21, 2009
She said you're just friends, can you not accept that?
PoliticsRe: ****[POLL]**** Do You Have Faith That Your VP Will Make A Good President? by coolier(f): 6:33pm On Dec 21, 2009
Has our faith worked with any of the past presidents so far? His performance and achievements when he becomes President will determine how good or bad he is.
RomanceRe: At A Dead End,how Do I Getout?plz Help. by coolier(f): 10:29am On Dec 21, 2009
Emzybrown:
The best thing is to deliver the baby then if cant keep,send her to orphanage home.
Now why in God's name do people come up with things like this? She hasn't said she cannot look after the baby, she has only said she doesn't want her baby to grow up without a father. Excuse me!
Nairaland GeneralRe: My Picture In Profile by coolier(f): 10:05am On Dec 21, 2009
Nice topic for first post grin
RomanceRe: Would You Go Ahead and Marry Her? by coolier(f): 10:03am On Dec 21, 2009
No, I wouldn't.
FamilyRe: The Best Place To Raise A Child :Nigeria Or Abroad? by coolier(f): 8:16pm On Dec 20, 2009
Definitely Nigeria. No 4-yr old in Nigeria would touch beer not to talk of drinking it on the street!
PoliticsRe: Will You Allow Your Belly Opened In This Modern Surgical Theatre? by coolier(f): 8:06pm On Dec 20, 2009
Not even on my dead body!!!
FamilyRe: Getting Pregnant After 35 by coolier(f): 2:31pm On Dec 20, 2009
Women get pregnant and have children at well over 40yrs!
RomanceRe: Why Do Nigerian Men Abroad Don;t Like Nigerian Guys To Date Their Daughters? by coolier(f): 2:25pm On Dec 20, 2009
H2O2:
angry you asked one person and it miraculously applies to a whole.
RomanceRe: Her Spark Is Gone by coolier(f): 2:23pm On Dec 20, 2009
She was a beaut in uni, now her spark is gone, why are you making that your business and taxing your brain unnecessarily? huh
RomanceRe: Is It Me, Or My Citizenship? by coolier(f): 2:16pm On Dec 20, 2009
If for any reason you have some doubts, give it some more time to be sure.
FoodRe: Are Nigerians Allergic To Any Food? by coolier(f): 10:12am On Dec 20, 2009
I have a friend in Lagos who never can eat peanuts (groundnuts), She does she get huge bumps all over her body for days on end. And another I know who never touch shrimps or snails.
FoodRe: How Much Do You Eat? by coolier(f): 10:06am On Dec 20, 2009
michelin89:
I also like sugary things.
You better watch it!
FoodRe: Coca-cola To Leave Nigeria by coolier(f): 10:04am On Dec 20, 2009
Nigeria without coca cola? will my people be able to survive? they take soda like water.
TravelRe: World Mosts: by coolier(f): 9:57am On Dec 20, 2009
I can only say whao!
HealthRe: Mosquito Palava by coolier(f): 9:54am On Dec 20, 2009
Noted.
HealthRe: Doctors, Pls Advise I Dont Know My Problem by coolier(f): 9:49am On Dec 20, 2009
Maybe your eyes are weak and always tired. Or you might just be plain lazy to read. Try giving yourself enough rest and put your mind in your reading.
HealthRe: Why Is Smoking So Hard To Quit? by coolier(f): 9:43am On Dec 20, 2009
Dclique:
Am not going to lie to you, its almost impossible to quit.
You lie!!! He can do it.
HealthRe: I Need Help On Weight Loss by coolier(f): 9:41am On Dec 20, 2009
Watch what you eat, stay off fatty foods and do a lot of walking.

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