Jabbo's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Jabbo's Profile › Jabbo's Posts
SpicyJosBabe:Panam Percy Paul is Mbula by tribe from Adamawa State. |
cktheluckyman:It is call money laundering! Lodging everything at once would require the bank to report the transaction to NFIU. |
AmericanQuarter:It is 'have' and not 'has' you slowpoke. You think you are educated? Idiot. |
prudentcy: |
EFCC Chairman would have been the best place for Col. Ali rtd. |
[img][/img]
|
Story |
apolonius:Always be sure of your information before making contribution. Dogara is neither Hausa nor Fulani. He is a Northern Minority from Bauchi. |
M |
legalwealth:Don't try it for anything. No bank would ask you to that online. You must present yourself physically to do your BVN. The mail you received was sent to you by fraudsters who want to get your ATM details. |
Very true! I paid that amount when I did mine in KD. However, you pay as high as 15K in Lagos. |
I reserve my comment. |
NewNigeriaMind:Go and learn about Nigeria, you don't know your country. You think every one from the north is Hausa or Fulani? Dogara is not Fulani, he is from the minority tribe of Zhar. You can find them in Dass and Bogoro Local Government of Bauchi State. He is a Christian by the way. |
Shouldn't this be on front page? A meaningless topic about celebrities would have been on front page before you say Jack..... |
Apart from being in his government, you have also, over the time, being his close friend; who is the Buhari that Nigerians do not know? Buhari is more detribalised, more religious tolerant than anyone I have met. In 1984, I stopped OPEC meeting from taking place. We met in Geneva on December 22, 1984 for a tow-day meeting. We thought the meeting would finish latest December 24. But the leaders said the matter for discussion would not allow the meeting to end on December 24. So, they said we should continue on December 25, which was Christmas Day. I told them: I am sorry, I cannot stay here as Christian to have OPEC meeting on Christmas Day. I have to go. Over 80 per cent members of OPEC are Muslims. We argued. My friend, Saudi Arabia Oil Minister, Zaki Yamani, had been minister for 24 years. We talked. He said the OPEC has changed. He still insisted that we should have the meeting on December 25. Yamani said sometime in the 70s, the OPEC meeting in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) went up to December 25, and King Faisal had dinner for both Christian and Muslim ministers. I said that’s very good. If a Christian leaves his home to go to Saudi Arabia for Christian dinner, then something is wrong with him. I said: Gentlemen, I am the leader of the Nigerian delegation, I am pulling out my delegation back to Nigeria tomorrow, December 23 and I pulled out Nigerian delegation, there was crisis in OPEC. I told them: Gentlemen, can you people have OPEC meeting on Eid-el-Maulud, date of birth of Prophet Mohammed? I object to it, you can go on. Do you know some Christians had told Buhari to sack me for causing international crisis? I have written a book on this, nobody can challenge me. I don’t say anything without record. When I arrived, I went to Dodan Barracks to report to Buhari, he said he saw everything on television and heard it on radio. Do you know what he did? He never sacked me. He congratulated me on what I did. He said we must respect each other’s religion. That same day, himself and Idiagbon sent me Christmas presents. Many of Buhari’s campaign sponsors, including the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi, are perceived to be corrupt. Would their relationship and influence on his government not affect the administration’s credibility? They used to say, show me your friend and I will tell you what you are. There is nobody that is corrupt that can influence Buhari. He has made it clear that there would be no discrimination in the fight against corruption. If you are corrupt, you cannot work with Buhari. If you are corrupt, shed that corruption before you come because he will disgrace you. His zero-tolerance for corruption is one of his cardinal strengths. He cannot change it. The 2014 National Conference convened by President Goodluck Jonathan came out with over 600 resolutions, most of which are perceived to be against the North. Gen Buhari is from the North and his party, APC did not believe in the conference. Do you think Buhari will implement the resolutions? They are talking about National Conference and Petroleum Industry Bill. There are a lot of things that came up at that National Conference that were nonsense. As one of the people that drafted the 1979 Constitution, Wayas and Onagoruwa, said it is the best constitution. But it is not constitution, it is Nigerians. With the state of Nigerian system, people are lying. But that system was just aided by the military. Murtala Mohammed gave them a blanket cheque. I must correct this image, there are lies against Murtala Mohammed, including some people that drafted the constitution. Murtala Mohammed, I have the speech inaugurating 49 of us, gave us free hands to operate. He asked us to suggest anything we like on how to move this nation forward. Why do you choose presidential system? Many Nigerians wrote to us and over 80 per cent of Nigerians wanted presidential system because they are displeased with the parliamentary system. So, presidential system was chosen by Nigerians, not by the military, not by 49 of us. The memos we received from Nigerian public, within and outside the country preferred presidential system. So, we chose presidential system because of them, not because somebody told us to choose presidential system. That we are not operating presidential system well is because Nigerians are corrupt. Why should a Nigerian senator earn more than the United States President, Barack Obama? The Americans have operated presidential system for over 200 years and they are still operating. America is one of the strongest economies in the world. In Nigeria, we are wealthy, but we have a very poor economy. So, why should a senator in Nigeria earn more than Obama? In fact, somebody once wrote that a senator in Nigeria can employ four Obamas. So, don’t blame the constitution. It is us. On the allegation that he is from the North and he will not implement the National Conference resolutions, if I as an Ijaw man is the president and they bring the report of the conference before me, I will sit on it. I know the drama they did there. A lot of things there are very divisive. In fact, one of them said his tribe had 90 per cent of what they wanted as a people. Did you go there to work for Nigeria or your tribe? There were a lot of things at that National Conference that did not go through at all. If Jonathan implements the resolutions, it is a disservice to Nigeria. I will urge him never to implement them. There must be a plebiscite. A lot of things that were said there were not in the interest of Nigeria. Many people went to fight for their ethnic groups. So, that confab document should not be taken hook, line, and sinker. We must look at it very closely as Nigerians. Jonathan should not implement it because he is PDP. No. If Buhari doesn’t implement it, it is not because he is from the North. If they say most of the things they are saying there are against the North, is that how to pull Nigeria together? Did they go there to do one for the North and one for the South? We went there to discuss something that will unite Nigeria and move together as a people. The confab document, as it is, should not be implemented because it is not in the interest of Nigeria. They must have another group to look at it and whatever comes out of that group must be sent to Nigerians for plebiscite. The same thing happened to the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), don’t implement it. I am happy he has not implemented it. I have written 40 pages of comments on the PIB, which I will publish later. The PIB, which everybody was clamouring for, if he implements it the way it is, the petroleum industry will die. There are a lot of things that will make foreign investors to run away from this county. Without the foreign investors, Nigeria cannot manage the oil industry alone. Shell, for instance, produces 50 per cent of our oil. Shell operates here and all over the world. If Shell closes its operation in Nigeria, Shell will not suffer, it is Nigeria that will suffer. Oil makes over 80 per cent of Nigerian budget. Nigerians cannot run the oil company without foreign participation because it is capital intensive. They provide the funds and the expertise. If we have well-trained Nigerians, what of the funds? When Rilwan Lukman was there as the oil minister, what did he do? We have a Petroleum Institute in Effurun in Delta State, which is about to be upgraded to a university. Lukman established another petroleum institute in Kaduna. When they asked him why, he said it was established to train middle-class manpower. So, the PIB is not as good as people think. I will advise Buhari not to implement it. He should set up another body. He should select and delegate 40 of us from different backgrounds, from different parts of the country and believe in Nigeria. Let them look at the document and produce a working document. Even at that, don’t sign it; send it as a plebiscite for Nigerians to vote for. Given the perceived high level of corruption in the hierarchy of the Nigerian military, how feasible is the President-elect’s promise to bring a swift end to insurgency in the North East? Buhari has been there before. Buhari stopped Maitatsine insurgency (of 1980). He was then a General Officer Commanding (GOC). Why has Jonathan not been able to do it? There is a budget for the military. They voted huge amount of money to buy equipment, it was there; they never did anything. Buhari doesn’t need big project to fight corruption. Immediately Buhari is sworn in, corrupt people will shake. They will correct themselves and run away. I was listening to the Minister of Works, Mike Onolememen; he said in one road contract alone, he was to find out that it was overestimated by N11billion. He said he was kind enough to cancel it, and they never complained. The same thing happened during Buhari’s time. A particular big man in Nigeria, whose name I will not mention, wrote to Buhari that in one contract he had, he was going to remove N10 million. Then, one of the ministers said, after Buhari presented the letter to us, said: This is a very good thing. The government should write to the contractor to congratulate him. I said no. What I am saying now, I have witness; Patrick Koshoni, former Chief of Naval Staff, is still alive. He is a very brilliant and articulate man. Some other ministers too are still alive. Kalu Idika Kalu is still alive. I said don’t congratulate him. If he on his own can give us N10 million, there will be other N10 million somewhere. He cannot do the contract free. He was afraid that he would be caught. So, on his own, he purged himself of corruption. Many corrupt people will run away from Nigeria without Buhari catching them. What I know is that the money they have taken from this country, he will bring it back. On Boko Haram, Buhari is a General of repute and he fought Maitatsine insurgency, which was worse thanBoko Haram. Boko Haram was started by politicians, like Niger Delta militants. They used them and dumped them. Maitatsine riot was not started by politicians. It was an upsurge of either religious or fanaticism. But Buhari was able to stop them. During Shagari’s administration, Saad invaded some parts of Nigeria. Buhari was GOC and he drove them out. Even, when Shagari told him to stop, he said in one interview, that he refused to collect the Commander-in-Chief’s letter until he gave Cameroon breathing nose. He can do it. The military will be stronger and the military likes him because he knows where the shoes pinch. What is your take on the agitations of the people that Buhari should probe the Jonathan administration and his aides as a result of alleged reports of monumental corruption under his administration? But Buhari said he would not go after the past administration? What is your take on this? Buhari said Jonathan has nothing to fear, yes I agree. But Jonathan has nothing to fear, provided he has acted well. If he has not acted well, he has everything to fear. If there is any dirt in his cupboard, he has everything to fear because Buhari will clean the cupboard. What do you think Buhari should do about people, who peddled vicious lies and campaign of hate against him, during electioneering, because a lot of people apparently believed them? Two things; anything that has to do with libel, I will tell him not to forgive but go to court. He has already said he would take Femi Fani-Kayode to court. I am one of the witnesses. How can you so support somebody so much that you will be so wicked and so violent? Ayo Fayose (Ekiti State governor) said Buhari would die. But he was one of the first people to congratulate him; that is cheap now. He doesn’t impress me and he doesn’t impress Buhari. What should he do? People that have been very wicked to him, called him name, take action against them. But don’t punish anybody because he or she abused you. If somebody says you are corrupt, make him to prove the corruption. Source: http://jimidisu.com/?p=21074 |
Professor Tam David-West served as Minister of Petroleum and Energy when the new President-elect, Gen Muhammadu Buhari (retd), was the Military Head of State from 1984 to 1985. In this interview with YINKA FABOWALE and OLUSEYE OJO in Ibadan, the professor of virology talks extensively on the person of Buhari that millions of Nigerians do not know. Excerpts: Will it be right to describe Gen Buhari’s win in the just concluded presidential election as a personal victory to you? It cannot be a personal victory to me; that will be too much. It’s victory to Nigerians, victory to those people in Nigeria, who have over the years have supported this cause. It is not for me. I was only one person telling people what he is. I have worked with him and I know him. I worked very closely with him. As an oil minister, I was closer to him than most ministers because we have hotlines; few ministers had hotlines with him. Whenever I talk about Buhari, I am talking about somebody I know. I am not talking about stereotype, am talking about somebody I know firsthand. He has good qualities. He is a unique man. The former Head of State, Abdulsalami Abubakar, described him as an extraordinary Nigerian. Why do I love him? First, he is very honest. He is not corrupt at all. He’s disciplined and he’s focused. I worked with Buhari and I worked with Babangida (Gen Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, retd). If you give a 20- page memo to Buhari by 9:00 this morning, by 10 he has finished reading it and he will ask you to come. When you get there, you will see that he has read it and made notes. If you give the same memo to Babangida, he would not read it for one week. Buhari loves Nigeria, not only because he was a soldier and signed his life for Nigeria, I know from all the people around, he’s the only person that I can vouch for. They used to insult me that Jonathan (President Goodluck Jonathan) is Ijaw and I am an Ijaw man too, why am I supporting a Fulani man? I am not going to support you because you are Ijaw, I am going to support you to lead Nigeria and do well for the country I have written two books on Buhari: one is who really is Gen Buhari and the other one is 16 sins of Buhari, which are qualities of Buhari. In the book, I wrote on the lies they are telling about him. In fact, Femi Adesina (Managing Director of The Sun newspapers) was the master of ceremony when I launched the book at NIIA(Nigerian Institute of International Affairs) in Lagos. I have a third book on him, which I have not finished – General Buhari: A Rare Gem. I don’t have Buhari’s phone number. I don’t phone him. Why do I do that? It’s because I don’t want to be tempted to be phoning him to discuss. If I want to talk to Buhari, I know how. Buhari can turn this country around. I have strong faith in this. If my father is contesting an election against Gen Buhari as president, I will vote for Buhari, not my father. I will tell my father: I know you are a good man. But you have no business with politics. You cannot do it. you are a banker, go and manage money. I cannot vote for you because Buhari will do better than you. Buhari is a fantastic man. For example, they are talking of economy while the greatest problem in Nigeria is corruption. If you can take care of corruption, everything will fall in place. Gen Buhari refused to devalue the naira in spite of the fact that when he came to power, Nigeria was broke. Shagari (Alhaji Shehu Shagari, former president of Nigeria), was negotiating for N2billion IMF loan before he was overthrown. Buhari told me he would not take IMF loan. I asked him why and he said: If you take loan of N2billion now, we will not be able to finish paying it before we leave. So, the debt will be there for our children. He’s as careful as that. You must have read that Buhari cancelled Lagos metro line. It is a lie. I have published the story before. I don’t write anything without a research. I phoned him on it and he said: No, when we came to power on January 1, 1984, Nigeria did not know how much foreign debt they are owing. They don’t know the figure. Shagari did not know. He said Lagos State came with a project, which would gulp over N100billion or so, guaranteed by the Federal Government. It’s a big loan for the project in those days. He said Federal Government could not guarantee the loan of N100billion when we did not know how much we are owing. So, Lagos State government thought of it, looked at it and jettisoned it by itself. He told me: Look professor, how can I cancel a project that I am not part of? I cannot cancel it. Buhari cited another example. He said when he was in PTF (Petroleum Trust Fund), the first N1.2 billion they made was spent on Lagos waterworks. Many people just write, they don’t investigate. This is why I don’t have respect for so many people called intellectuals. When Buhari was Head of State, $1.5 was N1:00; today, it is over N190 to $1 dollar. Then, it was N2 to £1; today it is over N240 to £1. As regards the economy, they are talking that the oil price has fallen. Oil is still being sold for $57 per barrel. When Buhari came to power, oil price was $30 per barrel. During that time too, it went down to about $15. But he managed the economy. When OPEC (Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries) decided to get the market share, oil price fell to about $15 per barrel, yet we survived. We survived because of good leadership and good focus. Now, they are saying the oil price is coming down, what will Buhari do? I am absolutely certain that Buhari will turn the economy round. Why? It is because some of the blueprints he had to turn the economy round, he had not implemented before he was overthrown. I know that some of the blueprints are still on his table. So, one of the blueprints we used was very ingenious. The London Financial Times of May 1984 said it was extra-ordinary. We made IMF irrelevant. It is very simple. The economy can move. I trust and love Buhari. He said something when he was launching his book in Port Harcourt and I am very humbled by it. He said: Service to our country brought Tam and I together and the ideals we share in common make us friends. He said: Tam is somebody you can trust and that he can go to the forest with him, without being afraid. I like him. Everything I have said about Gen Buhari cannot be controverted. He can change this country round. He loves the common man. In 1984, I took a memo to the council on oil price, but Buhari said even if we increase the oil price by 10 kobo or five kobo, kerosene price must never be increased. Senator Chris Anyanwu is still alive, she can bear me witness. What is happening today? They have trillions of naira as kerosene subsidy, which is a lie. During Buhari’s time, we never imported one litre of petrol; we were even exporting petrol. Why is it so? It’s because you don’t need a middleman. There is no petrol subsidy. Buhari and I had said it independently, even Gani Fawehinmi. If you are talking about subsidy, why do you need a middleman? The Nigerian middlemen go and import a refined product from abroad. Of course, they inflate the price by giving us all sorts of figures. The petrol price in Nigeria should not be more than N40 per litre. They were abusing me. I challenged Okonjo Iweala (Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of Economy) to a debate, she never came. A professor of petroleum of Nigeria in Texas wrote to one of the people and I still have a copy in my house, that petrol price in Nigeria should not be more than about N35 per litre. Why is it so? It’s because he’s a focused man. He’s not making money from it. Buhari has not got oil bloc. He has no oil contract. As I am talking to you now, it is not because I am righteous, I have never had oil listing contract, oil bloc and shares in oil companies. When oil companies were advertising for shares, which I could buy like any other Nigerian; neither Buhari, nor myself bought shares in those companies. Even, if they gave us 1,000 shares, they gave to us because he was Head of State and I was Minister of Petroleum. He is as careful as that. Buhari served this country well and he can turn it round. I am happy and I thank Almighty God, He has brought him back. What has happened is a great victory for Nigeria and we must give all glory to God. We saw different images of Gen Buhari portrayed by the opposition during the electioneering such as being a dictator, religious bigot and ethnic jingoist. But you have always been a defender of his persona. Now, Nigerians have given their verdict on what they think of the opposition campaign. But there are fears that military mentality and temperament may come to the fore. Do you know that Buhari’s executive council was more democratic than Shagari’s parliament? When he was Military Head of State, he never liked the word president. While Babangida preferred Military President, Buhari preferred Head of State. Buhari’s executive council, which is like the parliament now, was more democratic than Shagari’s government. I have evidence. There is nothing I tell you that I cannot support with paper evidence. Shagari, when he was president, even complained that to get some of his bills passed, he had to pay his party men. I know a lawmaker, who complained to me that before he got to House to vote, they used to meet in a senator’s house in Victoria Island, Lagos, where they used to give them some money before they would go and vote for the party. If a minister came to present a memo to the council, after the presentation, Buhari would ask every minister to make general comments about what they feel about the memo. Buhari and Tunde Idiagbon, of course, were there; they would not react as ministers. After the general comments, he would say we should vote. In fact, I wrote an article entitled: Democracy in a Military Government. They could not believe it. Even at OPEC meetings, I had to explain to the Europeans that it was a military but we are running a democratic system. At the policy making level, Buhari would say: Gentlemen, you have finished speaking, how many ministers support the memo. If you are in support raise your hands. He will count it and put it down. How many ministers don’t support the memo? They raised their hands to. He would say: Gentlemen, 10 ministers support the memo, eight ministers did not support the memo. The memo is lost. If we are operating a democratic system of decision making, it is not new to him now. For instance, I had a memo for some increase in petroleum tax, Buhari supported me and Idiagbon supported me. Buhari was so sure that after the memo, we would win. Buhari told the Attorney General that at the end of the memo, this part of NNPC law has to be changed. The Attorney General walked up to me in council and said: Honourable minister, look at this place, is it the place they are going to change after your memo if you win? I said yes. But I was so sure. But when I presented and voted, we lost. Buhari lost, Idiagbon lost and I lost. Buhari just said: Gentlemen, we have lost; take the next memo. So, his coming now is not new. Democracy is not just about voting. It is a culture. Democracy is what you believe is right to be done. So, democracy is not new to Buhari. There are fears that with the enormous power of the executive president under the presidential system of government, he may abuse his powers and bastardise our democracy like former President Olusegun Obasanjo purportedly did in the removal of Senate President, party leaders, EFCC selective persecution of opponents with impunity and so on. What is your take? Professor Ben Nwabueze wrote a book after Obasanjo: How Obasanjo Destroyed Democracy in Nigeria. Why didn’t he write when Obasanjo was the president? I have a copy of the book in my house. Professor Nwabueze, a great man, but he published it after Obasanjo had left office. Also, Odimegwu-Ojukwu said Obasanjo is a democratically elected president but he has military instinct; but not Buhari. Democarcy is not something you just jump into, you must believe in it. It must be part of our culture. Democratic ethos is part of Buhari’s life. He demonstrated it when he was Military Head of State that every member must be voted for democratically to the extent that he himself lost a memo when we voted. In democracy, we have separation of powers – the executive, legislature and judiciary. We also have checks and balances. Buhari, for instance, is somebody that will not say like my friend, Obasanjo did sometime, he cannot cow down the legislature. Buhari will not influence the judiciary. In Buhari, Nigeria will have real democracy and separation of powers. The Buhari that I know will never interfere with the National Assembly. I know he will never interfere with the judiciary. It is his culture. So, there is nothing to fear. To say that Buhari is a religious bigot is absolutely rubbish. If you read my book: 16 Sins of Buhari, you will discover that he is more religiously accommodating than anybody. People also called him an fundamentalist, sometime some people write without even thinking. It was also speculated that he would Islamise Nigeria No President can Islamise Nigeria. No Muslim Head of State can Islamise Nigeria. No Christian Head of State can Christianise Nigeria. The constitution is very clear. Even during military government when constitution was suspended, no Head of State can do that. Do you know when he was Military Head of State, when there was no constitution, he could have done that. But he doesn’t believe in it. Why do I say that? To change any part of the constitution, you need two-third majority of the states of the federation. To change a letter of the constitution, two-third of the federation must agree and the Houses of Assembly must agree. When he was Military Head of State, he could get that as a military man, he did not even attempt it. How can he attempt it now that it has to go to parliament? He cannot Islamise Nigeria. To say that Buhari is a religious fundamentalist is a credit. My family has been Christian for 106 years. I am an Anglican fundamentalist. When you say somebody is a fundamentalist, it means that he believes in his religion. I am a Christian fundamentalist. I believe in the Bible. If you are a Muslim fundamentalist, you believe in Quran. So, what is wrong about that? I don’t go to church on Sunday and go to Babalawo at night. Three of Buhari’s domestic staff are Christians. His confidential secretary is a Christian, his second security officer is a Christian, his second head driver is a Christian. They have been with him for years |
Criminals everywhere |
ineriteitee:Have you gotten the Delvan's songs you asked for? |
tit:May be you can not see well. He is listed as a graduate. Look again. Start from the faculty to fellows and then to graduates. The names are listed above each cartegory. |
By Laolu Akande, OFFICIALS of the United States government have for the first time in months presented an explanation on the sudden termination of oil imports from Nigeria since July, an action which spurred concerns whether there were any possible political connotation especially because of the current strain in Nigeria-US diplomatic relations. Answering a question on the issue from The Guardian, during the week, White House Director of the US National Economic Council, Mr. Jeff Zients, said the cessation of oil imports from Nigeria had to do with the significant rise in US oil production. Zients, US Labor Secretary, Thomas Perez, and White House Policy Council Director, Cecelia Munoz, were addressing a few US journalists on Thursday afternoon on the state of the American economy when The Guardian raised the question wondering why the US brought oil imports from Nigeria to a complete zero, while still importing oil from Saudi Arabia and other major oil producing countries. According to the White House Economic Council Director, “across the last several years, US oil production has ramped up significantly by more than 50 percent to now over eight and a half million barrels per day.” He explained that such a high turn up in local US oil production “has now dramatically reduced our dependency on imports,” Zients noted, adding that “in fact, we now produce more here than we import.” The White House official stated that the development is consistent with President Barack Obama’s energy strategy, which has changed “quite a bit over the last few years as we are much less dependent on oil imports.” That strategy has not only left Nigeria in the lurch, but has generally also driven down the international market price of oil to a ridiculous $60 range by the close of trading on Friday. Oil price, which soared around $100 in September, is now $56.52 for the WTI Crude and $61.38 for the Brent Crude oil. But Zients and the other US officials at the press briefing did not address the issue of the ongoing importation from other oil producing nations, including OPEC members like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and non-OPEC suppliers like Canada. In fact, as at last month, it was reported that, while US completely halted oil imports from Nigeria, it increased its importation from those three countries. The reduction of US oil importation from Nigeria to zero is the very first time since 1973 that the US did not import oil from Nigeria. US Shale oil production is responsible for the infusion of “light, sweet crude,” said to be similar to Nigeria’s Bonny Light oil, and US refineries are said to have preferred buying the locally produced oil, which is cheaper than Nigeria’s light crude. Before Zients explanation on Thursday, there have been muted concerns whether the decision to completely end oil importation from Nigeria has any political connotation. For instance, a German top bank, Deutsche Bank had commented last month that “as if the recent drop in oil prices was not enough bad news for Nigeria’s economy, recent data show the US completely stopped importing crude oil from Nigeria. This marks a dramatic reversal for Africa’s largest economy, which in 2010 was still among America’s top 5 oil suppliers and exported at its peak 1.3m barrels per day to the United States.” The German bank analysis further questioned why Nigeria was singled out, an aspect of the question posed by The Guardian to which the US government officials did not address. According to Deutsche Bank, the decline in US imports from Nigeria, “proceeded much faster than for the US’ other major suppliers.’ It is the rather drastic and complete zero oil imports from Nigeria that suggested a possible political connotation, which was however left unexplained by Zients. Observers say it is not unlikely that oil imports termination with Nigeria and the refusal of the US government to sell weapons to Nigeria to fight Boko Haram might both be political signals from President Barack Obama to the Nigerian presidency as it can be seen as demonstration of a lack of commitment by the US government to a supposed strategic partner –Nigeria — in Africa. The Obama administration’s outright refusal to approve the sale of specific military equipment to Nigeria, in a clear-cut public renunciation of the Nigerian military and security apparatus which requested the okay from the US Defense department is also a potential dampener to US claims of a thriving diplomatic relationship with Nigeria. First, it was the US Ambassador in Nigeria who confirmed that the country would not okay the weapons sales to Nigeria, and then the State Department in response to Nigeria’s Ambassador’s complaints on the issue. This particular refusal is sending clear indications that there are strong oppositional voices against President Jonathan in the White House, the State Department and Pentagon, causing further strain between Nigeria and the American governments, according to knowledgeable US sources. Last month, Nigeria’s US Ambassador had to openly criticise the US government for not approving the sales of Cobra fighter jets to Nigeria to help fight the Boko Haram insurgency at a meeting he had with the influential US Council for Foreign Relations in his office. Adefuye, US sources say was expending his far-reaching influence with top US government officials in an apparent last-ditch effort to change the tone of the Obama administration towards the Jonathan presidency. In fact, authoritative US sources said the denouncement of the military sale and the abandonment of the highly valued Nigerian crude oil by US oil future traders recently are happening at a time when the offices of National Security Adviser and Finance Minister of Nigeria are spending millions of dollars to retain US lobbyists in Washington DC to help plead the case of the Jonathan presidency without much success. Explaining the desperation from the Nigerian government over the need for such lobbyists, a source from the Foreign Affairs Ministry in Abuja also said while the federal government through the office of the NSA and Finance Ministry were paying millions for lobbyists, the salaries of Nigerian diplomats were still backlogged, including in the US. Source: http://tribexmarketing.com/events/why-we-stopped-buying-nigerias-oil-mr-jeff-zientswhite-house-economic-director/ |
Tope Fasua: How Nigeria’s “middle class” work for private schools (Y! FrontPage) by Tope Fasua I was with some very bright young men and a woman a few days back and we discussed several hot topics under the auspices (sponsorship) of the great Dike Chukwumerije. I came off with a ‘takeaway’ (apologies to Fashola), about a much-misconstrued issue, more and more like a cliché, called middle class. We argued in part about how the Nigerian ‘middle-class’ was not enough critical mass to swing an election and discussed extensively on how we, the middle-class, can make the necessary impact by sharing our knowledge and educating those considered as ‘working class’ (the majority). In fact in Nigeria, that term ‘working class’ is seldom used. Even I had made the mistake in the past of using another term to qualify that ‘class’. I think I used ‘lower class’, which is actually very derogatory and well…. classist. Classism is just the junior brother of racism. It is actually a dumber junior brother. Why? Whereas it is impossible to change one’s race, and therefore a racist, in all his hallucinations, somehow has a point about clear lines of demarcation and differences, a classist doesn’t have even half a point, because what separates class is usually access to money. Therefore a ‘lower’ or ‘working’ class today, could actually win the lottery, buy up a big house in Rancho Cucamonga, and begin rubbing shoulders with Royalty. After all, in this world, people are attracted to money as flies and maggots take to decaying carcasses! But back to my rumination on the matter of class. Because of my exposure to the Freakonomics series, and to writers such as Malcolm Gladwell, I since stopped taking anything for granted. Even before I read these out-of-the-box guys, I had been schooled to look at things differently, never follow the bandwagon and always seek out exceptions. I think that is what they call risk management. Work towards achieving the best, but always remember that sometimes, good things happen to bad people, and vice versa. Before I go on, I remember that given my experience as a parent, I always find it laughable when I listen to some young Nigerian musicians talk about how they’ve ‘hammered’. Well, I’m not privy to the kinds of monies those guys can make these days, but ‘hammering’ doesn’t make a man. A Nigerian parent will find out lately that it requires a phenomenal amount of money to keep the family and raise children in this age and time, especially where such a parent considers him/herself as ‘middle class’. I will try and explain below, the kind of expenses we bear in the course of a lucky lifetime, for an average Nigerian middle-classer. And my argument is that these expenses are not sustainable and that we should find a way of reorganizing our society and extricating ourselves from them, for our own good. Let’s start with the school fees. A few days ago, someone on Facebook posted some of the fees paid by some of the elite primary/secondary schools in Nigeria. It caused a sort of outrage, especially among those who haven’t started paying for their children at such schools. But because of the way our society has evolved lately, it seems no self-respecting person who considers themselves as middle class will bother sending his child to public schools. So we are stuck with these private schools. Since everyone seems to be begging on hands and knees to get their children and wards into these schools, fees keep climbing every year, such that they double in a couple of years. An average private nursery primary school now charges at least N400,000 per annum per child. Some charge less, but many of such don’t adhere to basic standards. For a family with say three children, with each child spending like 9 years in kindergarten/nursery/primary school, at this conservative estimate, and if the fees don’t increase over the years, such a family will spend N10,800,000 in school fees alone on those three children just going through primary school. This is different from other fees, uniforms, development fees, and of course playclothes for children and feeding for the family. Let us not even consider, for now, the other family pressures on a man/woman who considers him/herself as middle class as is so considered by extended family and friends. You can begin to see the kind of outlays we are dealing with, in terms of how much money MUST run through the hands of a middle class family in today’s Nigeria. Consider for a minute, that our parents never had to go through this, for we all, in my generation attended at least 80% public school up to university. There is also a critical reason why some of our friends remain abroad with their families. These kinds of expenses just don’t come up. The secondary school. As the children progresses, so also do the school fees rise astronomically. A cheap private secondary school in Nigeria’s urban centres today, will charge at least N600,000 per child per year. Some charge like 10 times this, but most charge like twice that amount. The same family of three, assuming the lowest fees stated above, needs to pay secondary schools, for their three children, a clean sum of another N10,800,000 in school fees. This very average family is indeed just working class, not middle class. And it has spent N21,600,000 just paying school fees for three children up to secondary school – assuming no hitches – and preparing for the Big Kahuna; University. In private Universities, expenses take on a different life of their own. Triple what you spent in secondary, for starters. The fact is that most families in Nigeria today, where one or both parents either have a fairly well-paying job in say telecoms, banking, oil and gas, public service, or where they are entrepreneurs, pay at least twice this amount (N43,200,000), or thrice if they are really upper class by virtue of their cash flows, legal or illegal (N64,800,000). Now that is a whole lot of money. How did we arrive at this point? Before we look at how we arrived at this point, let us consider the fact that children raised in this manner have expectations. Because we put the ideas in their heads. Summer abroad is nothing. Winter abroad as well. They don’t want to understand the meaning of hard work. We the parents live vicariously through them, and they know. They know that you use them as excuse to live large and they often make you pay for it. These are also children that we cannot step down from the posh schools they attend, into lesser profile schools because of the shame and fear of letting them know. Yet, only 5% of us, or less, will be lucky enough to get that much unfettered cash-flow going for a consistent period of time. The remaining 95% will have hiccups somewhere along the lines. It’s just a law of how society works. It does not help that we live in the age of motivational speaking where smooth talkers try to convince us that bad things only happen to other people, not us. Good financial planning helps, but it all seems like a gamble now. A good financial planner, having saved up a tidy sum, may decide to increase the stakes and send the children to even more expensive schools, based on their reputation and the caliber of big men who send their children there, just like a gambler around a roulette table would up his wager. Remember that we would not send these children to school on empty stomachs. An average Nigerian family should expect to triple whatever amount it spends on school fees, to maintain the family – holidays, owambes, buying or building a house, cars, clothes, families and hangers-on, ‘dash’ here and there, and for the men, what Yorubas call “afowofas”( ask your Yoruba friend, don’t ask me! Lol). At the end of the day, an average working class family, needs a cash flow of at least N90,000,000 over a period of say 15 years. That is N6million per year. A middle class family (that buffer between working and upper class), would need at least twice that amount (N180,000,000) or N12million yearly, over the same 15 year period. How will we not be desperate? I had written about this frightening phenomenon a few months ago, and titled the article “THE ORIGINS OF CORRUPTION”. In my view, if we were seeking any true cause of our desperation and corruption, in today’s Nigeria, we should look no further. The emerging truth is that only public servants, with the advantage of job security, plus unlimited ‘egunje’ that I know, who can afford to pay these sums without batting an eyelid. Maybe those of us who are entrepreneurs will one day fight back because we are getting the short end of the stick, but for now ‘man get to survive!’ Most of my friends in the private sector, but for the very few at the top, cannot begin to dream of how their children will attend these elite schools, home or abroad. It just doesn’t come up. And for the top dogs in the private sector, I have seen several instances where something goes wrong – a fraud in the office, a layoff, a takeover, early retirement – and they fall into immediate crisis! We killed our educational sector in the last two decades. Totally. Even under the military we still had an educational sector. Maybe we bit too much of the privatization apple than is good for our health. Today, Federal Colleges/Unity Schools which were attended by good students with high grades, have become uninhabitable. I think their teachers are even on strike and no one noticed. Our public universities are also being avoided like the plague. Those who can ‘afford’ these luxuries should not count themselves lucky. We are all sitting on a time bomb, evolving a society of desperate souls. The other end of the spectrum is total deprivation. What to do? I dunno. I ain’t the oracle. But I will suggest at some point, that we must strive to #bringbackourpublicschools. Government MUST do all it can to pump money back into those schools. They must become good again, and they must be well subsidized, at least up to Secondary level. Missionary schools must come back the way they were back in the day (Baptist Academy, Methodist Boys, Anglican Girls, Loyola College, Ansar Ud Deen College etc). Shame on today’s ‘missionary’ schools who joined the bandwagon of filthy lucre! This process will be gradual, but will save us from this pit we have dug ourselves into. Gradually, the working class, and those of us who deceive ourselves that we are middle class, when we actually aren’t, should be able to return our children to those schools where we don’t have to slave to death. This will defuse a great tension in society, and would reduce the irresistible pull towards corruption, crime and desperation in society. Hopefully the private schools may slow down on the increase in their fees. I think it will also assist us to raise better, more patriotic children, not those totally disconnected from our societies, who cannot wait for the term to break so that they can skedaddle out of the country into neater, more plastic climes. Those ones get trained at the most expensive universities in the world, up to masters level, only to start careers as Deejays, Dancers, Photographers and so on. Yes, we really missed the bus! Our parents never had to go through this. We were all trained in cheap public schools and we are good for it. But perhaps through our lack of cooperation, we found each of us on his own. The future beckons… Failure to heed this, our children will not bother getting married again. The boys will hardly be able to cope with further increasing expenses. Those who get married will have just one child or none at all. And divorce rates will spike, as women become disillusioned and ‘disappointed’ at their young husband’s inability to foot the bill. Masculinity will reduce because that adrenaline rush of being able to cope with these things will not just be there. Same sex marriages will eventually get a foothold, even as same-sex relationships begin to blossom. It’s an “easy” way out of this mess, yeah? Maybe the hardcore feminists will get a taste of their heaven sef… Source: http://ynaija.com/tope-fasua-how-the-nigerian-middle-class-work-for-private-schools-y-frontpage/?utm_content=buffercea44&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer |
Mod, move this to front page, please. |
Chris Delvan (You are glorious) Solomon Lange (Yabo) Buchi Jeremiah Gyang (Na baka) Sinache |
Vivalavida99: Passengers board their Malaysia Airlines flight at Bangkok airport as it prepares to depart for Kuala Lumpur early on July 18Your information is not correct. Flight MH17 took off from Amsterdam not Bangkok. |
1 Hark! the voice of Jesus crying, "Who will go and work today? Fields are white and harvests waiting; Who will bear the sheave away?" Loud and long the Master calleth; Rich reward He offers free; Who will answer, gladly saying, "Here am I; send me, send me"? 2 If you cannot cross the ocean, And the heathen lands explore, You can find the heathen nearer, You can help them at your door. If you cannot give your thousands, You can give the widow's mite; And the least you give for Jesus Will be precious in His sight. 3 If you cannot speak like angels, If you cannot preach like Paul, You can tell the love of Jesus, You can say He died for all. If you cannot rouse the wicked With the judgment's dread alarms, You can lead the little children To the Saviour's waiting arms. 4 Let none hear you idly saying, "There is nothing I can do," While the souls of men are dying, And the Master calls for you: Take the task He gives you gladly; Let His work your pleasure be; Answer quickly when He calleth, "Here am I; send me, send me!" |
ifebosco: sharap truth be toldIt is the 'North', please. Do not embarass yourself. And by the way, are you educated at all? |
Export1: Sir, if you have the cars for sale, we can also help you to sell them! You can post your advertisement for FREE on the most popular site - our partner in AfricaThe prices on www.carxus.com are ridiculously cheap. I won't fall for it! |
FP things. Moderator, please do the needful. |
pro01: Really? I was on Dana 354 from Abj to Lagos this afternoon; that was a smooth flight. I hope you guys aren't trying to scare everyone away from Dana Airlines permanently.The OP posted on flight 356 and not 354. Apparently, you did not even read the post. |
SLIDE waxie: u be MUMU...May be you are the one who doesn't know the difference. Don't you know that you can launder money through shares? Any attempt to use ill gotten wealth in a legitimate business to make the ill gotten wealth legit is MONEY LAUNDERING.... |
[img]http://dailytrust.info/images/stories/feat1.jpg[/img]http://dailytrust.info/index.php/feature/2991-the-professor-s-passion http://yeyedesmell..com/2013/08/making-nigeria-proud-professors-passion.html?m=1 |
: