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PoliticsRe: Yoruba Dont Worry We Have More Than Enough Bitumen To Produce Our Own Oil . To by koruji(m): 5:45pm On Jan 16, 2012
See them start a new round of boasting. When you start paying for your stupidity, don't come here breying like a horse made to run on hot coal. All they have is mouth - GEJ is probably regretting allowing himself to believe all your crap about how easy it would be to make the Nigerian people accept the subsidy removal.

Right now he is deploying soldiers in Lagos to ensure that oil exports wil continue to flow. He is saving face, but you charlattans have no regret. You simply collected blood-money and move on to new grandiose foolishness.

No, you don't own 58% of Lagos, you own 100% of it.

Nchara:
Only a silly non-Yoruba will remain in Yorubaland when we divide because we know such person will be crushed to death with tribalism.
But, we ain't dividing soon. Igbos in Lagos will continue to do their thing. Yes, we own 58% of LAGOS.
When the bitumen (I have been hearing about it since 1914----story, story, story) matures, we all will share it. If you resent, we push you to your original country: Benin Republic
PoliticsRe: Yoruba Dont Worry We Have More Than Enough Bitumen To Produce Our Own Oil . To by koruji(m): 5:40pm On Jan 16, 2012
That is why they are always on the losing end of things. Always focused on one side of the ledger, and when the other side inevitably bites them in the behind they simply move on to proclaiming new one sided arguments.

The fact is they have just been forced to reverse themselves after all the bravado over the last few days.

I expect the ND militants to fight GEJ now - they told him to maintain the removal or face their wrath. Yeye people.

Negro_Ntns:
Who said we need oil for our economy in West to survive?   No, we do not!  The new measure after the country divides will be taxation.  We will impose a different tax scale on non-citizens.  The Biafran citizens living in West will fund our economy.  Didnt the Ibos say their citizens number in billions in Lagos and that their business is very successfull?  Well, thats good news to know!
PoliticsRe: Yoruba Dont Worry We Have More Than Enough Bitumen To Produce Our Own Oil . To by koruji(m): 5:34pm On Jan 16, 2012
Tribalistic crap!!!

Here is your answer: Aregbesola Advocates State Control Of Resources

Yorubas have always called for self-determination, and were the main backers of the ND struggle.

ACM10:
grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin

The love that Yorubas have for oil is greater than the combined thirst of America and China for the same commodity.

They are willing to stab at the back of anybody that stood between them and the oil.

I thank God that Niger-deltans have seen from the event of the past dew day  that Igbos care less for their oil.

The Yorubas and hausa-fulanis are heavily dependent on their oil.

Its no more secret
PoliticsRe: Yoruba Dont Worry We Have More Than Enough Bitumen To Produce Our Own Oil . To by koruji(m): 5:33pm On Jan 16, 2012
Here is your answer: Aregbesola Advocates State Control Of Resources

Yorubas have always called for self-determination, and were the main backers of the ND struggle.

nedu210:
Since yoruba hav all that, like u said, its more than enough, can they please push for the division of this hell emm!! emm!! Con3 so that each nation can manage their resources. Thank u.
PoliticsRe: Bbc, Cnn Demand Explanation For Sss Invasion Of Lagos Offices by koruji(m): 5:27pm On Jan 16, 2012
GEJ is just the same old crap we have called government in Nigeria for the last 5 decades.

How does stopping the presss, any press, ensure that protests are not broadcasted? Shows you that GEJ & his advisers still live in the dark ages.

GEJ should get it - there is no place to hide and you only embarass yourself more with this kind of behaviour.
PoliticsRe: Jonathan's Militants Surround Oil Platforms In Delta& Rivers States by koruji(m): 5:01pm On Jan 16, 2012
GEJ is just a bloody ingrate. It was the same SW that led the demonstrations that rescued him from the hole that Yar'adua and his aides dug for him. So, let me hear word.

His "fangs" huh I wish BH had seen it.

Yeah, the battle has been fought and won - the economic production of the entire nation for the first month of the year is broken into pieces.

The only thing that GEJ is after is to ensure that oil exports keep flowing, and we know where the pressure is coming from. Stop fooling yourself - GEJ's government is for all intents and purposes a lameduck from here on. Nobody will ever believe a word that he says. He miscalculated big time, and is counting his losses as we speak.

vinceobe:
Since South South produced GEJ as the President, some elements in the the SW and North are not comfortable. There have been threats, intimidation, insults and the usual bring-down syndrome. Now they see the well intentioned withdrawal of subsidy and the orchestrated protest that greeted it as opportunity, to once again, undermine GEJ Presidency. Failed politicians like Pastor Tunde Bakare, El-Rufai, Dino Melaye and others became champions of the masses overnight, so much so that Abdulwaheed Omar called them 'emergency comrades'. Their sinister aim is to bring GEJ to ridicule. No wonder the innocuous protests were hijacked by sponsored hoodlums and unfortunately lives were lost. They were playing the proverbial ostrich!

Now GEJ has bared his fangs. The seemingly innocent looking and quiet but highly intelligent and calculating President has come out smoking. Now he had labour and their backers by the balls, MENDS , sensing the tribal colouration in the whole saga, surrounded the oil wells with their smoking war arsenals. Stern looking solders are all over Lagos. A coalition of South South and South East Elders issued a press statement that says it all. Now all those tribal and ethnic jingoists have all scampered to their hiding places. The battle has been fought and won. Nigeria, once again, happily survived.!!!
PoliticsRe: Afenifere Deplores Presence Of Soldiers In Lagos by koruji(m): 4:54pm On Jan 16, 2012
Won't that be nice - to have president who nobody criticizes. Oh the dreams of dictators and incompetent administrators. The only thing they know how to manage is a CRISIS - as such, even if presented with the greatest opportunity to advance a nation, they will manufacture a crisis out of it in order to be seen as doing something.

samuelloko:
When are u yorubas will stop all diz criticism
PoliticsRe: Afenifere Deplores Presence Of Soldiers In Lagos by koruji(m): 4:52pm On Jan 16, 2012
You are liar.

dammytosh:
I am a yoruba and i can say that AFENIFERE should shut up on this.

Soldiers can go to Niger Delta and even build barracks to make sure allocation comes to Lagos but Soldiers can not stop break down of LAW and Order.

They should go and collect their share from FG through Tinubu and ACN instead of ranting here.

What a selfish set of people.
PoliticsRe: Now What Happens To S U R E Programme Since Deregulation Is Put On Hold? by koruji(m): 4:09pm On Jan 16, 2012
I call it [size=14pt]SURE?[/size]

toba:
I just must agree with pple saying that SURE is just another fraud.

Now federal govt, state govt and Local govt will share an un appropriated huge sum of 1.3trillion on a hurriedly prepared document called SURE.

The damn SURE was just introduced few months to the end of last year. As at first week of Jan, it was SURE now its been changed to SURE-P. Meaning the programme is faulty and needs regular amendments.
PoliticsRe: Us Embassy Advises Its Citizens To Be Ready For Evacuation If Strike Persists by koruji(m): 3:29pm On Jan 16, 2012
I thought the definition of Nigeria was already chaos. If you can't manage your own continent with good governance those who do not joke with their security will take action. If al qaeda is trying to get a foothold in Libya then they should not be surprised the US if following them swiftly.

Just a matter of time before the F-15 begin to roar over the skies of Nigeria if GEJ and his military doesn't root out BH instead of pursuing innocent citizens.

cap28:
very well said.

they are stoking up the fire - hoping and prayign that nigeria descends into chaos so that they can have an excuse to deploy their troops here.

their economy is finished and they are now playing the only card they've got left in the pack - their gigantic military, they will use their military to invade and take over resource rich countries in africa - they  are already on the continent - with troops stationed in djibouti and uganda.  only last week Obama authorised the deployment of 12,000 troops to Libya -
PoliticsRe: Soldiers Shoot To Disperse 'occupy' Protesters In Lagos by koruji(m): 3:17pm On Jan 16, 2012
GEJ has shown his true face - that of a shameless animal.
PoliticsRe: FG orders EFCC to probe subsidy payments on fuel by koruji(m): 4:06am On Jan 16, 2012
Yeah, we know who's knees are bowing. Nuff said already.

Beaf:
^
You really sound incoherent.
. . .By the way, "every knee shall bow."
PoliticsRe: FG orders EFCC to probe subsidy payments on fuel by koruji(m): 3:45am On Jan 16, 2012
It sounds incoherent to you because you cannot follow simple logic - spend a couple of days on those sentences to distill their meaning.

Here we go again with the "secret gibberish". It never stops - you proclaim all these grandioseness that GEJ was going to become. When it all blows in your face you simply move on to making up new fallacies.

Immediately after the elections it was "every knee shall bow" to your lord GEJ, and if they cause any trouble you will "cut them loose in the desert".  Now we are on to "be awe struck" - yea GEJ is coming down the mountain from the presence of God.

Keep heaping the red coal on your head.

I don't have to be party to your chest-beating group to know that GEJ has being head-faking a lot of people over the last few days. Truth is, the man is scared stiff. He said as much publicly in church last Sunday when he accused about every arm of government of having people that were in bed with BH. To me, it seems more like the cry of an Abiku - who threatens his mother any time she refuses to cater to his every need and caprices.

Bottomline: GEJ cannot use the threat of a coup to force his subsidy removal policy down the throat of Nigerians.

Beaf:
^
You sound incoherent and full of wind.
Wiser people who are not blinded by ethnic bigotry would observe that skilled operators have moved the country forward by quantum leaps since January 1st. I wouldn't let you in on what traps have been set and sprung and what beasts have been ensnared. Observe, learn and be awe struck; the only downside is that it will take you some time, cos you are as slow as the coming of Judgement Day.
PoliticsAregbesola Advocates State Control Of Resources by koruji(op): 3:11am On Jan 16, 2012
Representatives of the Yoruba have always been consistent on this issue. They have supported resource control and were instrumental in assisting the ND struggle. Yet today, some fools are making an issue of agonies about subsidies into a Yoruba/Ijaw issue after all their pontifications about how ineffective protest against its removal would be were completely laid bare as the lies that arise from contorted crania.

Add the below to IBB's call for the same devolution of powers and fiscal federalism. The ball is in your court, you are in control do what needs to be done quickly.

Quote: “The extraction, processing and marketing of petroleum resources should not have been the exclusive preserve of a behemoth Federal Government, which now gives a monthly handout to other tiers of government. Same applies to taxation. Companies should pay tax to the government of the state where they operate. This should have been an incentive for states to engage in the economic development of their area.”


http://www.thenationonlineng.net/2011/index.php/news-update/33411-aregbesola-advocates-state-control-of-resources.html
By Adebisi Onanuga 1 hour ago

Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola yesterday called for state control of resources and true federalism as a  solution to the crisis caused by fuel subsidy removal.

Aregbesola spoke at the Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja, during the Eighth Gani Fawehinmi Annual Lecture.

Speaking on “Nigeria’s Socio-Economic Maladministration: Any Possibility of a Revolution?,” he said  insecurity in the country has pushed Nigerians towards the precipice and petrol subsidy removal fuelled their anger.

The governor said the issues facing the country are beyond fuel price increase.

He said: “People were already agitated about the future of the country, considering the grim prospect of ethno-religious conflicts. The fuel subsidy palaver is small, compared to the greater issue of fiscal federalism.

“We have been fighting for political federalism, but this will be futile without fiscal federalism. The people must be given control over their own resources.

“The extraction, processing and marketing of petroleum resources should not have been the exclusive preserve of a behemoth Federal Government, which now gives a monthly handout to other tiers of government.

“Same applies to taxation. Companies should pay tax to the government of the state where they operate. This should have been an incentive for states to engage in the economic development of their area.”

The governor noted that call s from some quarters for the Arab spring  would not work because while Nigeria is a democratic nation, the Arab world is not.

He warned the military and their apologists against taking advantage of the current situation to stage a comeback.

“Democracy anywhere is an unfinished business. There is no problem emanating from democracy that democracy cannot fix. What we need therefore is more democracy. While the former is avoidable and can be fixed, the later is a common occurrence even in established democracies.”

The guest lecturer, Prof. Omotoye Olorode described the subsidy removal as “a comprehensive economic war against the masses.

Prof. Olorode accused the ruling class of forcing  neo-liberal policies on Nigerians.

He denounced the economic policy of successive administrations to encourage self-employment, saying: “That we are going to build an economy where everybody would be self employed is an illussion. In which modern society is everybody employing himself?

“So far, the government has only succeeded in spreading the illusion of market forces, entrepreneurship and privatisation among ordinary people.

“If the government does not want miscreants in the streets, it should take care of Nigerian children.

“Leaders and the rank and file of popular movements must intensify popular education, teaching the people and learning from them.

“All these must take place in the practical process of enhancing the audacity of the oppressed and our movement in the growing confrontation with the varieties of vultures.”
PoliticsOshiomhole Never Told Fg To Remove Subsidy In January – Okosun by koruji(op): 2:59am On Jan 16, 2012
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/01/oshiomhole-never-told-fg-to-remove-subsidy-in-january-okosun/
On January 16, 2012 · In News
By SIMON EBEGBULEM

BENIN—Edo State chairman of Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, Mr Thomas Okosun, weekend, said that those vilifying Governor Adams Oshiomhole over his position on Federal Government’s removal of subsidy on petroleum misconstrued his comment.

He said: “The governor gave conditions that before you do this, the basic things should be done first. And that was the position of most Nigerians. The major complaint today is that the timing is wrong because the basic facilities that you are supposed to put on ground are not there.

How do you tell a man for example, that the budget of 2011 is running to end of March of 2012 and in that budget, the provision for subsidy was provided. It is still running and then in January, you are now introducing removal of fuel subsidy.

“That is a breach of the constitution of the country. Oshiomhole never told the Federal Government to remove subsidy at this time. He did not say they should remove subsidy without putting palliatives in place. It is like a man who wants to build a house, you are now roofing the house without a foundation first.

The truth is that a lot of people misconstrued what he said and as I speak to you now, Oshiomhole is in Abuja with the leadership of labour and government trying to find solution to the problem.”
PoliticsRe: FG orders EFCC to probe subsidy payments on fuel by koruji(m): 2:46am On Jan 16, 2012
Congratulations. GEJ will win a 90 kg gold medal for identifying "possible" corruption, failing to go after it, but imposing undue hardship on 160 million people instead. I guess it was easier to slap 160 million peoople you don't know personally than to have to drag your inner circle to the courts. Only GEJ knows why, being president, he could not go after this so-called "CABAL" and cut it off at the knees.

Like I said, I will believe it when I see it - there are already numerous cases before GEJ's EFCC that are in permanent hiatus. What is going to be different about this one?

BTW, is EFCC going to investigate the N50 billion bribery that the NASS was about to accept? You told us a couple of days ago that this was his reason, ridiculous as it is, for deciding to yank the subsidies quickly? We'll be waiting for the report on that one as well.

Beaf:
Did you know about the cabal before GEJ's govt mentioned it?
It is id!otic statements like your posts above that make people rightly conclude that many of you are driven by ethnic bigotry.
Its like talking simply because there is a mouth on your face.
PoliticsRe: Subsidy Protest: Acn Decries Growing Sectionalisation by koruji(op): 2:32am On Jan 16, 2012
It is an issue between yorubas and ijaws only in your head.

This is an issue of GEJ's incompetence - not even an ijaw issue. His ijawness is always introduced whenever someone points out that he is ended in the wrong direction. Once you tell his supporters about that they immediately label you a bigot attacking GEJ because he is an ijaw.

Chyz*:
This is an issue between Yorubas and ijaws, leave igbos out of it.
PoliticsRe: OPC Supported Obj Like Asari Supports GEJ by koruji(m): 2:27am On Jan 16, 2012
Yes, that section of Nigeria where you orginate not only maintians two faces - it is more like uncountable faces.

Let me help you as I did on the other thread where you were posting your irrelevances. [size=14pt]Below is OPC/Fasehun's reaction to OBJ own misadventure at subsidy politics in 2005[/size]:

Quote: Those who spoke included NLC President, Adams Oshiomhole, Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) President, Ibrahim Kano, Leader of the Joint Action Forum (JAF), Beko Ransome-Kuti and Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) Leader, Frederick Fasehun.  All spoke of the negative effect of an economic theory “imposed on the Nigerian people” by the IMF and the World Bank.

http://www.nigerianmuse.com/nigeriawatch/?u=Lagos_Strike_September_2005.htm
Fuel Rally: Thousands march in Lagos, demand old price Independent
Thursday 15th September, 2005

Fuel Rally: Thousands march in Lagos, demand old price
• No negiotiation, says NLC • New price threatens security – Tinubu

• Nigeria project under Obasanjo a failure – Soyinka • FG hails Lagos rally

By Wisdom Patrick,
Emmanuel Ukudolo,
Lekan Sanni (Lagos)
And Chesa Chesa (Abuja)

Lagosians, at the behest of Labour, filed out in their tens of thousands on Wednesday to give the federal authorities a piece of their mind on “bad governance” which they say has boiled over with the new price of fuel that has shot up the cost of everything else: Plus water and gari.

“Revolution now”; “Enough is enough; merchants of impoverishment go home”; “Stop importation. Make our refineries work”; “The will of the masses must be respected, no to fuel price increase” were some of the inscriptions on the placards they carried as they stomped the streets from Surulere to Alausa (Ikeja).

It was all peaceful though; to the delight of Abuja, which promptly commended the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) for making its point without a show of aggression – and the police for ensuring the safety of  life and limb and property.

But Abuja stuck to its guns on the price hike, a position conveyed after a Federal Executive Council (FEC) which held as the NLC kicked off the Lagos leg of the national rally billed to hold in strategic cities on different days.   

The protesters blamed mainly the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, the government as well as Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, for the hardship faced by the masses at a time “when they should be enjoying as a result of the high prices of crude oil” on the international market.

Those who spoke included NLC President, Adams Oshiomhole, Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) President, Ibrahim Kano, Leader of the Joint Action Forum (JAF), Beko Ransome-Kuti and Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) Leader, Frederick Fasehun.  All spoke of the negative effect of an economic theory “imposed on the Nigerian people” by the IMF and the World Bank.

They marched from the National Stadium, Surulere to deliver a letter to Governor Bola Tinubu in Ikeja for onward transmission to President Olusegun Obasanjo.

The letter was signed by Oshiomhole, Ransome-Kuti, Trade Union Congress (TUC) President, Peace Obiajulu and Princewill Ojeh of the Congress of Free Trade Unions (CFTU).

Oshiomhole, who presented the letter, also raised questions which he would like Obasanjo to answer.

“When Obasanjo assumed office in 1999”, he began, “crude oil was selling at $16 per barrel on the international market, while the product was being sold to local refineries at $9.50. Even at that, the government was making a profit of $5 since local cost of production was $4.

“Today, crude oil is being sold at between $65 and $70 per barrel, while the government projection is $30”.

He regretted that, even with an additional revenue of over 150 per cent, the railways are not working, the school system is in a shambles with Nigerians sending their children to Ghanaian universities, while power supply is as epileptic as ever.

He added that when the government announced an increase in fuel price from N20, it promised to repair roads and provide seven million jobs, but six years on, the roads are still in a terrible shape, the refineries are still not working.

“Who are the ones not making the refineries work? Nigerians want to know. Who are the importers of petroleum products that we consume. Why are the refineries not working?”

Tinubu said he shares in “the grieve, anger and the rejection” of the price hike, “which is unnecessary because what is needed to be done in the last six years to reduce the suffering of the people has not been done”.

He described the increase as a threat to national security because of its social and economic implications.

“Nigeria needs a change. The PDP government lacks in focus, it is wasteful and entrenches mediocrity in the national polity and is a party of chop and chop”, he insisted.

“Our (Lagos) government believes that petroleum product is so critical to major sectors of economic activity, including transportation, agriculture and manufacturing, that incessant increases in the price of the commodity has a direct bearing on poverty levels.

“There is certainly no way the more than 10 fuel price increases between June 1, 2000 and August 26, 2005 can be justified. We doubt if there is any country in the world with this incredible record”.

Tinubu also kicked against the plan to pay $12 billion to the IMF, saying no nation would use a chunk of its wealth to pay debts at a go. Rather, he said the money should be used to revamp the economy, repair infrastructure and raise the standard of education.

Soyinka said the Nigerian project is possible, but only in an egalitarian society which recognises the equality of all.

However, he explained, the division among the masses has made it possible for the ruling class to impoverish them.

He called on the people to put aside short-term gain for long and sustainable solution.

He asked what has happened to the dream of the founding fathers of Nigeria.

The dream is still realisable, he enthused, “but certainly not under this government. This government has no answer to Nigerians’ problems. Obasanjo told me in 1999 that he wants to build an egalitarian society which all Nigerians would be part of, contribute their quotas, and benefit at the end of such sacrifices, but today I think he has lost focus. So the time is up, the people have spoken.

“The labour of our heroes past and their dream are still achievable. It is still possible, it could still be done, but certainly not under Obasanjo and his gang or his cabal. They have to give us way. This project would be possible in the hands of the people. So get ready to fight. I am ready to walk on foot from Lagos to Abuja if that would change the present situation”.

Oshiomhole added: “This is just the beginning. Our message to this government is very clear: You must revert to the old pump price of fuel. Don’t call for negotiations because we would not come. You have no other option but to go back to the old price. The people have spoken. They call themselves a listening government in Abuja and we expect them to listen. The only way we would know they are a listening government is when they revert to old pump price of petrol”.

The FEC praised Labour for keeping the rally peaceful. But it insisted on the new pump price of fuel.

Its meeting was chaired by Vice President, Atiku Abukabar, and its outcome was passed on to reporters by Labour and Productivity Minister, Hassan Lawal.

He said the FEC commended the police for “guiding and guarding” the rally peacefully, noting that the NLC’s conduct so far has been a healthy development despite the fact that the government had tried to persuade it to shelve the action.

His words: “I must say here that we need to commend them because, for the first time, the Labour movement has decided not to go on strike right away. They have decided to hold a rally to make their point and to protest to the government.

“I think it is a very healthy development in the sense that on previous occasions, you will recall that the most predictable action by Labour was a strike. Sometimes they called it the mother of all strikes, ultimatum, intimidation and all what not. At least one is happy that the gospel of dialogue one has been preaching is paying dividends and we believe that we will all come to understand and appreciate each other’s point of view.

“The government has taken some steps and is still taking some steps to ensure some palliatives. Labour tried to argue that the Mantu committee report has not been implemented and we tried to show that it has been implemented.

“However, in our own discussion with them, new ideas have emerged. Labour has made new proposals, which we have discussed and will be carried to the government. They are also going back to make consultations with their own people and we believe there will be an amicable solution to this problem”.

Asked if the government would therefore follow the example of Ghana, Britain, Germany that are considering lowering the price of fuel price  cushion its effect on their citizens, Lawal replied: “This is the fundamental error we always make. Please compare apple with apple. Don’t compare an apple with an orange. The quantum of money we saved from some of these increases is not money meant for anybody to go on a Christmas spree.

“This is money meant for the provision of basic infrastructure. You are now talking of European countries. For God’s sake, is water or borehole an issue in England or Italy or France? Is electricity an issue in Germany or England? The issue is that we are a developing society”.
Nchara:
Clearly, a certain section of Nigeria contains two-faced hypocrits. They need watching over 24/7. Who knows what trick they will pull next?
They have been busted by this thread.
PoliticsRe: FG orders EFCC to probe subsidy payments on fuel by koruji(m): 2:22am On Jan 16, 2012
Igbayi l'aro GEJ.

They thought they could slap Nigerians on the face while protecting their own corruption.

In any case, I do not expect anything to come out of this - same old tired tricks.
PoliticsRe: Subsidy Protest: Acn Decries Growing Sectionalisation by koruji(op): 2:20am On Jan 16, 2012
@Nchara

Let me help you by jugging your memory with Fasehun & OPC's stand when OBJ tried the same crap about subsidies in 2005.

Quote: Those who spoke included NLC President, Adams Oshiomhole, Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) President, Ibrahim Kano, Leader of the Joint Action Forum (JAF), Beko Ransome-Kuti and Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) Leader, Frederick Fasehun.  All spoke of the negative effect of an economic theory “imposed on the Nigerian people” by the IMF and the World Bank.


http://www.nigerianmuse.com/nigeriawatch/?u=Lagos_Strike_September_2005.htm
Independent
Thursday 15th September, 2005

Fuel Rally: Thousands march in Lagos, demand old price
• No negiotiation, says NLC • New price threatens security – Tinubu

• Nigeria project under Obasanjo a failure – Soyinka • FG hails Lagos rally

By Wisdom Patrick,
Emmanuel Ukudolo,
Lekan Sanni (Lagos)
And Chesa Chesa (Abuja)

Lagosians, at the behest of Labour, filed out in their tens of thousands on Wednesday to give the federal authorities a piece of their mind on “bad governance” which they say has boiled over with the new price of fuel that has shot up the cost of everything else: Plus water and gari.

“Revolution now”; “Enough is enough; merchants of impoverishment go home”; “Stop importation. Make our refineries work”; “The will of the masses must be respected, no to fuel price increase” were some of the inscriptions on the placards they carried as they stomped the streets from Surulere to Alausa (Ikeja).

It was all peaceful though; to the delight of Abuja, which promptly commended the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) for making its point without a show of aggression – and the police for ensuring the safety of  life and limb and property.

But Abuja stuck to its guns on the price hike, a position conveyed after a Federal Executive Council (FEC) which held as the NLC kicked off the Lagos leg of the national rally billed to hold in strategic cities on different days.   

The protesters blamed mainly the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, the government as well as Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, for the hardship faced by the masses at a time “when they should be enjoying as a result of the high prices of crude oil” on the international market.

Those who spoke included NLC President, Adams Oshiomhole, Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) President, Ibrahim Kano, Leader of the Joint Action Forum (JAF), Beko Ransome-Kuti and Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) Leader, Frederick Fasehun.  All spoke of the negative effect of an economic theory “imposed on the Nigerian people” by the IMF and the World Bank.

They marched from the National Stadium, Surulere to deliver a letter to Governor Bola Tinubu in Ikeja for onward transmission to President Olusegun Obasanjo.

The letter was signed by Oshiomhole, Ransome-Kuti, Trade Union Congress (TUC) President, Peace Obiajulu and Princewill Ojeh of the Congress of Free Trade Unions (CFTU).

Oshiomhole, who presented the letter, also raised questions which he would like Obasanjo to answer.

“When Obasanjo assumed office in 1999”, he began, “crude oil was selling at $16 per barrel on the international market, while the product was being sold to local refineries at $9.50. Even at that, the government was making a profit of $5 since local cost of production was $4.

“Today, crude oil is being sold at between $65 and $70 per barrel, while the government projection is $30”.

He regretted that, even with an additional revenue of over 150 per cent, the railways are not working, the school system is in a shambles with Nigerians sending their children to Ghanaian universities, while power supply is as epileptic as ever.

He added that when the government announced an increase in fuel price from N20, it promised to repair roads and provide seven million jobs, but six years on, the roads are still in a terrible shape, the refineries are still not working.

“Who are the ones not making the refineries work? Nigerians want to know. Who are the importers of petroleum products that we consume. Why are the refineries not working?”

Tinubu said he shares in “the grieve, anger and the rejection” of the price hike, “which is unnecessary because what is needed to be done in the last six years to reduce the suffering of the people has not been done”.

He described the increase as a threat to national security because of its social and economic implications.

“Nigeria needs a change. The PDP government lacks in focus, it is wasteful and entrenches mediocrity in the national polity and is a party of chop and chop”, he insisted.

“Our (Lagos) government believes that petroleum product is so critical to major sectors of economic activity, including transportation, agriculture and manufacturing, that incessant increases in the price of the commodity has a direct bearing on poverty levels.

“There is certainly no way the more than 10 fuel price increases between June 1, 2000 and August 26, 2005 can be justified. We doubt if there is any country in the world with this incredible record”.

Tinubu also kicked against the plan to pay $12 billion to the IMF, saying no nation would use a chunk of its wealth to pay debts at a go. Rather, he said the money should be used to revamp the economy, repair infrastructure and raise the standard of education.

Soyinka said the Nigerian project is possible, but only in an egalitarian society which recognises the equality of all.

However, he explained, the division among the masses has made it possible for the ruling class to impoverish them.

He called on the people to put aside short-term gain for long and sustainable solution.

He asked what has happened to the dream of the founding fathers of Nigeria.

The dream is still realisable, he enthused, “but certainly not under this government. This government has no answer to Nigerians’ problems. Obasanjo told me in 1999 that he wants to build an egalitarian society which all Nigerians would be part of, contribute their quotas, and benefit at the end of such sacrifices, but today I think he has lost focus. So the time is up, the people have spoken.

“The labour of our heroes past and their dream are still achievable. It is still possible, it could still be done, but certainly not under Obasanjo and his gang or his cabal. They have to give us way. This project would be possible in the hands of the people. So get ready to fight. I am ready to walk on foot from Lagos to Abuja if that would change the present situation”.

Oshiomhole added: “This is just the beginning. Our message to this government is very clear: You must revert to the old pump price of fuel. Don’t call for negotiations because we would not come. You have no other option but to go back to the old price. The people have spoken. They call themselves a listening government in Abuja and we expect them to listen. The only way we would know they are a listening government is when they revert to old pump price of petrol”.

The FEC praised Labour for keeping the rally peaceful. But it insisted on the new pump price of fuel.

Its meeting was chaired by Vice President, Atiku Abukabar, and its outcome was passed on to reporters by Labour and Productivity Minister, Hassan Lawal.

He said the FEC commended the police for “guiding and guarding” the rally peacefully, noting that the NLC’s conduct so far has been a healthy development despite the fact that the government had tried to persuade it to shelve the action.

His words: “I must say here that we need to commend them because, for the first time, the Labour movement has decided not to go on strike right away. They have decided to hold a rally to make their point and to protest to the government.

“I think it is a very healthy development in the sense that on previous occasions, you will recall that the most predictable action by Labour was a strike. Sometimes they called it the mother of all strikes, ultimatum, intimidation and all what not. At least one is happy that the gospel of dialogue one has been preaching is paying dividends and we believe that we will all come to understand and appreciate each other’s point of view.

“The government has taken some steps and is still taking some steps to ensure some palliatives. Labour tried to argue that the Mantu committee report has not been implemented and we tried to show that it has been implemented.

“However, in our own discussion with them, new ideas have emerged. Labour has made new proposals, which we have discussed and will be carried to the government. They are also going back to make consultations with their own people and we believe there will be an amicable solution to this problem”.

Asked if the government would therefore follow the example of Ghana, Britain, Germany that are considering lowering the price of fuel price  cushion its effect on their citizens, Lawal replied: “This is the fundamental error we always make. Please compare apple with apple. Don’t compare an apple with an orange. The quantum of money we saved from some of these increases is not money meant for anybody to go on a Christmas spree.

“This is money meant for the provision of basic infrastructure. You are now talking of European countries. For God’s sake, is water or borehole an issue in England or Italy or France? Is electricity an issue in Germany or England? The issue is that we are a developing society”.
PoliticsRe: Subsidy Protest: Acn Decries Growing Sectionalisation by koruji(op): 2:16am On Jan 16, 2012
It is expected of you to bring up irrelevancies. Why don't you bring us an article about what OPC did when OBJ removed subsidies like GEJ, instead of building up fallacious arguments that lead you no where but on the same spot as before.

Nchara:
Faseun Canvasses Support for Obasanjo
By Tokunbo Adedoja
Traffic was yesterday brought to a stand-still for about three hours on the old toll-gate/ 7up axis in Ikeja following a rally organised in support of President Olusegun Obasanjo by the founder leader of the Oodua Peoples Congress(OPC), Dr. Fredrick Faseun.

The rally, which kicked off at about 11am was attended by hundreds of members of the Yoruba militia group from various parts of Lagos and neigbouring states in the Southwest.

The large turn-out of the members of the group who came in about 100 buses hindered the free flow of traffic along Oworonsoki/Third Mainland bridge, Ojota, and Maryland.

The rally, which was the second Faseun would organised for Obasanjo, was however peaceful without any interference or molestation from the police.

Addressing the rally, Faseun who spoke in Yoruba scored Obasanjo's administration high on all fronts, maintaining that the regime has brought the country out of the woods.

He specifically stated that Obasanjo's leadership qualities have brought peace to the country and praised the President for "removing thieves, robbers, fraudsters and deadwoods from our public service".

The OPC leader, who spoke occassionally in proverbs to buttress some of his points maintained that, the president has successfully launched the nation back into the comity of nations through his virile foreign policies since it assumed power.

He added that an example of the dividends of the foreign policy of the government is the forthcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting(CHOGM) and the State Visit of Queen Elizabeth of England.

According to him, this is significant because the same Commonwealth suspended Nigeria in the days of Abacha and consequently made Nigeria a pariah nation.

He also cited as example the recently held All African Games(COJA) saying that all these show that Nigeria has been fully re-integrated into the world socio-political environment.

The OPC leader chided the president's critics, describing them as pessimists and adding that Rome was not built in a day.

He consequently called on them to give Obasanjo a chance to develop the country and complete what he called the good work the administration has started.

He urged Yorubas to rally round Obasanjo, their kinsman adding that should he be disgraced out of office, it will take the Southwest up to 2047 to produce another Nigerian president going by the four years, two-term formula.

He threatened those that may be planning to remove the present admnistration from power, adding that OPC is solidly behind the president.

"They think because he does not enjoy Yoruba support, they want to upset him. If they should force Obasanjo out of office, we will tell them what OPC stands for", he said.

He, however, dispelled rumour that he was sponsored by the government to stage the rally saying "all of you know me, I can't be bribed, but no one's child can be so bad that the parents will throw him out for wild animals to consume him".
PoliticsRe: Ibb To Jonathan: Begin Restructuring Of The Country Now by koruji(m): 2:03am On Jan 16, 2012
IBB remains one of the most brilliant minds to assume headship of the Nigerian nation. The problem has always been an equal amount of egotism and a ruthlessness of ambition hidden behind that cunning smile.

Like OBJ, whatever good IBB does with one hand is completely reversed by a high dose of those other attributes in pursuit of blind ambition.

Nigerians would do well to listen to what he says, but not let him in on the doing because - that is where he ruins everything. He will say it, but will only do it if it meets his personal ambitions.

OAM4J:
Whao! So an advice this beautiful can come out of an evil genius undecided

Is he being honest or just seeking relevance?
PoliticsSubsidy Protest: Acn Decries Growing Sectionalisation by koruji(op): 11:19pm On Jan 15, 2012
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/01/subsidy-protest-acn-decries-growing-sectionalisation/
On January 15, 2012 · In News

LAGOS – The Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, yesterday, said it was concerned that, with what may be the tacit support of people in the highest echelon of power, the ongoing fuel subsidy issue was increasingly being turned to a sectional matter.

It expressed concern about the agenda allegedly being pursued by President Goodluck Jonathan and his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

In a statement in Lagos, by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said: “Going by the myriad of newspaper advertisements placed in recent times by several Ijaw and South-South groups (which we hope do not represent the general opinion in the region), and the inflammatory rhetoric spewing out of the mouth of respected leaders in the region, there may be a hidden agenda in some quarters to push the country to the brink, or even bring the house crashing down on all, as we have warned earlier.

“The increasing attack on other geo-political zones and ethnic groups as well as individual politicians by these apparently-sponsored adverts, simply because Nigerians have said ‘NO’ to what they considered an insensitive, oppressive and senseless fuel subsidy removal, shows what can happen when a leader, fails to consider the socio-political impact of what he perceives merely as an economic policy.”

ACN said it was nothing short of a monumental insult for any person or group to infer that the spontaneous and unprecedented nationwide mass action that has greeted the removal of fuel subsidy was being sponsored by the so-called failed politicians, or for any person or group to make such an irresponsible statement that the bulk of the fuel subsidy was consumed in Lagos, even when it is clear that Lagos is a melting pot that is home to people of all ethnic groups.

The party said one of the groups even said it would not mind if the fuel subsidy removal – which it (the group) supports by the way – ends up making President Jonathan the last President of a united Nigeria!

“Imagine, for a moment, that this inflammatory and inciting statement had been made by a group other than the one from the South-South! Those behind such group would by now have been threatened with treason charges, that is if they have not yet been arrested. Yet, this is the kind of rhetoric that these South-South groups have been ditching out since the fuel protests started, and the Presidency has not deemed it necessary to distance itself from such dead-enders or to repudiate them.

“Suddenly, a President that was purportedly given a pan-Nigeria mandate only a few months back is now being made to look more and more like a South-South President, who must be ‘protected’ by his ‘supporters and kinsmen’ against failed politicians from the other regions, forgetting that the same President won the last election because of the support of the other regions that are now being demonized.

“Progressively, but sadly, the Jonathan Presidency is being defined as a South-South Presidency by those who have failed to see that the mess the country has been thrown into under his watch — over the fuel subsidy and the Boko Haram issues — is a fallout of a leadership that has lied to and cheated its people on the subsidy issue, and a presidency that has allowed the Boko Haram issue to fester for too long without a decisive and creative initiative to nip it in the bud.

“Simply put, Nigerians feel betrayed by this President by the way he has handled these issues, hence he has lost their trust and confidence. This is neither a South-South vs the rest of the regions issue, or the result of an incitement by imagined enemies.”

The party reiterated its earlier call on all people of goodwill, including former leaders acting together, to call President Jonathan to order before he allows those who have other agenda, or those who are championing neo-colonial interests, to doom his presidency and push the country into perdition.

It advised President Jonathan that in a democracy, the people are supreme and their voices and opinions must matter on every issue, more than the self-serving postulations of a benevolent few who happened to have found themselves in government.
PoliticsArmy Disagrees With Hausa Community Over Missing Cows In Edo by koruji(op): 11:18pm On Jan 15, 2012
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/01/army-disagrees-with-hausa-community-over-missing-cows-in-edo/
On January 15, 2012 · In News

By SIMON EBEGBULEM
BENIN CITY—THE Joint Task Force code named “Operation Thunderstorm” in Edo State, weekend, disagreed with the comment by the chairman of the Cattle Dealers Association in the state, Alhaji Saad Ahmed, who alleged that over 400 of their cows were illegally slaughtered by hoodlums during the last week’s subsidy removal protest.

Alhaji Ahmed had lamented that hoodlums have been killing their cows and appealed to the Oba of Benin to intervene.

But Vanguard learnt that when the state Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole visited the Hausa community last week in company of the Commander of the 4th Brigade, Benin City, Brigadier General Abel Umahi, the issue was raised and Alhaji Ahmed failed to prove that such numbers of cows were killed illegally.

An Army source said: “We are shocked to read that such number of cows were missing because when the Governor and the Commander visited them the Governor challenged them to go and show the bush where the cows were kept before they were stolen and none of them could prove it.

“The only incident that happened was when they reported that some body was trying to steal a cow. We intervened and the person was even wounded. That person is still in the hospital now. So it is not true that 400 cows were missing.”

The spokesman of the Army in the state, Cap.Muhammed Jajira, told Vanguard on telephone that “if actually the cows were missing at least we would have found them in the bushes by now because every where is calm. I don’t think that allegation is true because they were given security”.
PoliticsRe: Jonathan To Make Nation Wide Broadcast Tonight by koruji(m): 11:14pm On Jan 15, 2012
No matter what huh Even if he steps on your neck with a boot and challenge you to breath  huh

Ageism - the Age-Old (no pun intended) disease at work.

mcfestgee:
I tink no matter what we should respect GEJ if not as a president as an elder. Some of you just speak like those specimen at Oshodi motor park.
PoliticsRe: Privatize All The Roads In Nigeria by koruji(m): 11:01pm On Jan 15, 2012
There is no word about privatization that you do not like, Seun grin

Not everything can or should be privatized.

Seun:
Great idea!
PoliticsRe: We Will Defend Jonathan With Our Blood - Asari-dokubo by koruji(m): 10:44pm On Jan 15, 2012
A je gbodo n'we ni kun ra.

Nchara:
Ijaws now know their enemy outside: the core North
They now also know their enemy closer home: Yoruba.
PoliticsRe: We Will Defend Jonathan With Our Blood - Asari-dokubo by koruji(m): 10:38pm On Jan 15, 2012
If you have read many of GEJ's supporters on this forum you won't be surprised at these statements. If you don't accept what GEJ says or does then you are anti-Ijaw. Unfortunately, GEJ's actions/speeches suggest such reasoning is not limited to this irritants - it seems to go all the way back to the powerbase.


sbeezy8:
I don't know where anyone said because he is Ijaw or Niger deltan - they are against fuel subsidy removal LOL

Its not an ethnic Issue at all. The people marching n Lagos come from All over naija.

Majority of people dont even disagree with subsidy removal if it was done tastefully, even Obj increase price SIX TIMES over 8 years, because he knows the Domino effect it has one Civil society and Economy,

GEJ- is either VERY DU.MB or something he's getting bad Advice from those who want to see his downfall.

He is a Big mumu
PoliticsRe: We Will Defend Jonathan With Our Blood - Asari-dokubo by koruji(m): 10:31pm On Jan 15, 2012
did you mean they support or oppose?

Kobojunkie:
Northern Women's group fuel Subsidy removal (ChannelsTV news).  cool cool cool cool
PoliticsRe: We Will Defend Jonathan With Our Blood - Asari-dokubo by koruji(m): 10:29pm On Jan 15, 2012
Quote: "If Jonathan, a Niger Delta son, is not good enough to govern Nigeria, the oil in his Niger Delta is not good enough for Nigeria. If the Niger Delta people are not good enough to be part of good governance in Nigeria, then our oil and gas of the Niger Delta peoples is not good enough for Nigeria."

This here is why Nigeria ends in 2015 i.e. if we make it till then. For this not to happen would require rather serious efforts by all and sundry to restructure this eye-sore of a continent.
PoliticsRe: Kenya Cuts Fuel Prices, Citing Stronger Shilling by koruji(m): 6:22am On Jan 15, 2012
Yes, he is right but YOU ARE NOT.

efisher:
Ekt-bear is right. Shikena!
PoliticsRe: Superiority Complex Vs Inferiority Complex -gej The Shoeless Kid by koruji(m): 6:01am On Jan 15, 2012
Good summary of the GEJ presidency tragedy, though the title doesn't do the article justice. Below is the main thesis of the article:

Quote: It is no longer news that the likes of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Diezani Allison Madueke, Mohammed Adoke, on the one hand; and aides like Oronto Douglas, Reuben Abati, and even the lowly Reno Omokri whose brief is Facebook and Twitter on the other hand, are the new presidential hijackers in town. Of course, more hijackers abound in the sinewy mould. I have only limited the list to the most garrulous ones.

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