Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) - Politics - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) (2686 Views)
| Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by sleemfesh(op): 10:34pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
This is a non-partisan view on Nigeria. Nigeria has a date with destiny as March 28 and April 11 draw near. These are two significant dates that, on one hand, present Nigerians with an opportunity to strengthen democracy through the ballot. These dates, on the other hand, are also beaming scaring danger signals. No thanks to politicians who are beating drums of war, stumping across the country, making campaign statements full of fury, with little about issues of concern to most Nigerians. As is typical of Nigerian elections, the tension is thick in the air, so much so that the putrid smell of Armageddon has enveloped the country. Fears are palpable, generating serious concerns among Nigerians and within the international community. Nigeria has traveled this route before, not once. There are however reasons for genuine and heightened concern this time. The last few years have seen widening cracks along the Nigeria’s well-known fault lines of religion and ethnicity. The security situation, especially in the northeast, has been a huge sore on the reputation of the Africa’s most populous country. The abduction of more than 200 girls from the Borno State community of Chibok nearly one year ago, and the perceived lack of enough effort from the government of President Goodluck Jonathan to ensure they are rescued, are making the prospect of a peaceful poll a tall dream. President Jonathan has had to take the blame for virtually everything going wrong in Nigeria. Admittedly, there are issues that currently feed this perception. They include the security situation, corruption and poor living standards of most Nigerians. Ordinarily, the buck stops at the desk of the president. The opposition seems to have succeeded in creating the impression that Mr. Jonathan merely wakes up on daily basis and does nothing. But things don’t always seem as they look in Nigeria. That the president has been doing nothing would not pass the muster of nonpartisan scrutiny. What would be correct is that the president has actually done little to publicize the many things he has been doing. In the last six years, the government has been confronting more fundamental issues of growth and development with the type of vigor and single-mindedness uncommon in Nigeria. The Jonathan administration would trump any previous administration in the effort made to tackle the near-complete collapse of infrastructure such as roads, transportation and power supply. The same can be said of employment generation and capacity development. Nigeria’s economy has not only survived major shake-ups affecting most advanced economies, it has actually also been growing in leaps and bounds, emerging as Africa’s largest. He has perhaps taken an ingenious route to fighting corruption. He understands the difference between the symptoms of corruption and the underlying causes. While many had expected a frontal attack at the symptoms through demonstrative — even if unlawful — actions by deploying anti-corruption forces in a frenzy of mass arrests, media trials and public sentencing of suspects, Mr. Jonathan has chosen to allow the justice system the space to work. He hasn’t stopped at that. He is, with the skill of a surgeon, identifying the underlying causes of corruption and taking them out one after the other. This is what he did with a fertilizer distribution scam, which had hampered food production and diversification effort for decades. Perhaps, he did not make enough noise on this, but the result of his approach is loud enough for the thousands of Nigerian farmers who now have easy access to fertilizer, completely eliminating the meddlesome middlemen. The action is equally loud enough for the vested interests to fight back and join the now-profitable president-bashing choir. The security challenge is a bit more complicated. Mr. Jonathan’s emergence represented a paradigm shift in the Nigerian political arrangement. He was the first person with no strong political background or affiliation, and from a minority tribe to become a democratic president in Nigeria. He had not benefited from any of the important pillars of power such as the support of a major ethnic group. The template for success in the Nigerian environment requires much more than the timing of response to a security situation, such as the Chibok abduction saga. It requires the willingness of the players within the affected area to put the safety of lives and protection of properties of the people ahead of their own immediate political advantage. It is not going to be easy trimming the hair of someone who continues to run. It could take time to either catch up with him or get him to willingly agree to the need to solve a problem. The ability to keep calm rather than adopt a knee-jerk and high-handed approach in the face of treachery and impunity is a great asset the president is endowed with. This, as the opposition is wont to do, can also be mistaken for weakness or incompetence. Mr. Jonathan’s civilized approach to tackling issues is built around the need to ensure social justice, equity and the rule of law. This should, ordinarily, be worthy of global acknowledgment and commendation. But the concerted noise from the opposition camp and the penchant of some international observers to rush to judgment without taking full account of peculiarities of an environment are a bit deafening and blinding to the reality on ground. As elections are getting closer, the president is faced with the facts that Nigerians are in a hurry. They’ve waited for too long. This is a situation that is being exploited by opposition leaders, who have been calling for mob actions as against the rule of law. Mr. Jonathan has equally shown that he understands that Nigerians are expecting a leader with a magic wand, who could with a snap somewhere, turn age-long and deeply rooted social decay into an instant state of bliss. But the magic wand could actually be a possibility if current efforts are allowed another four years to take root, grow and bear fruits. • William Reed is president of the Black Press Foundation. Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/mar/5/william-reed-goodluck-jonathan-steering-nigeria-wi/#ixzz3TjofCSCi Follow us: @washtimes on Twitter |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Kennywills7(m): 10:56pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
Nice one |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Ralphlauren(m): 10:59pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
Rubbish article full of lies and falsehood. The article mentioned the fertiliser scam but conveniently forgot the subsidy scam, pension scam and numerous other scams. ![]() Jonathan is handling nigeria's issues such as corruption and insecurity in a "civilised manner"?? Is this article a joke or a lame attempt at humour? ![]() Can someone please do a background check on this William reed dude? Is he from otuoke or is this reno or ayedee writing using a pseudo name? ![]() |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by sleekman(m): 11:10pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
sleemfesh: |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by OKDnigeria: 11:11pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
A very insightful write-up. Thanks to God many pple are seeing through d APC's noisy propaganda we cannot afford at dis time, to hand over the leadership of our dear nation to charlatans. We need to consolidate on d gains of last for years. March 28 is d date GEJ is d man PDP is d party Umbrella is d logo |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by sleekman(m): 11:12pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
Seun Fp Pls. Now D International Community Is Beginning 2c D Light |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Charlotte15: 11:12pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
I think Abati has woken from his slumber and has started using the foreign press to write stories. Rubbish. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by multikolour(m): 11:13pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
God will surely protect and preserve the one he has anointed for Nigeria either APC or PDP, only prophet Samuel can tell. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by tron23(m): 11:22pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
This is a very insightful article. The main point highlighted here is that Societies up North need to take responsibility for their safety and work with the Fed Govt instead of playing partisan politics with important issues. Another issue is the fact the Pres Jonathan is from a minority tribe without the usual support from the major power blocks. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by mkpakanaodogwu(m): 11:28pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
Gej till 2019 |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by aresa: 11:35pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
Charlotte15: You can have this writer write anything for you just by paying his standard fee . $2000 - $4000 |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by aresa: 11:40pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
In fact, the writer did not write that rubbish, it was passed on to him to plant in that online website for a fee. The write up is laced with too many Abati type references... That crap was written by a Nigerian. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by theV0ice: 11:42pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
aresa:Very interesting! |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by sleemfesh(op): 11:51pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
Ralphlauren:Have you for once sat down and asked yourself whether these scams started under Jonathan? Then after that do you ever ask yourself how come under him all of them were brought to the surface. How come the past Admin didn't seem to discover it. It is in itself a plus. He tried to stop the subsidy scam but you and me matched against it and still have the temerity to blame him for its persistence. The pension scam was uncovered and tackled and today we know the thieves there and some faced and are still facing the music including the one that collapsed in the courts. Thier acts span to dates well before GEJ. So what are you telling me? Some of us are just out to condemn everything mindlessly and full hate and lack of objective analysis. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by sleemfesh(op): 11:55pm On Mar 07, 2015 |
aresa:So why hasn't he written FOR APC? Politicians have killed the little sanity Nigerians would have had. Can you pick one or more of his points and disprove them? When people have truth stare them in the face and they can't disprove it they descend to abuse. Your own cup of tea though. Forget PDP APC, route for Nigeria. That's the more important thing. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Nobody: 12:01am On Mar 08, 2015 |
Ralphlauren:I know nothing will satisfy you unless this country and its leader are painted in completely bad light. Shameless idio.t. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Charlotte15: 12:01am On Mar 08, 2015 |
Charlotte15:It's an absolute rip off at that price. Anyway it's almost difficult to write anything when there's nothing to write about. When I read the part about not advertising their achievements enough I felt bad for Jonathan and his handlers. That's precisely what jonathan has been saying all over the place. Absolutely pathetic. Sack abati for abating his duties. Runaway spin doctor. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Nobody: 12:05am On Mar 08, 2015 |
blatant lies from the pit of hell... There is nobody with the name William reed in the "black press foundation"... I just did a thorough search on the guy and I was getting negative feedbacks from the server... William reed is not the president of any foundation... The founder of the black press foundation according to their site is one Mr Marc .w. Polite... His picture below and his little biography [img]http://i0.wp.com/www.politeonsociety.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Marc-Polite-2012.jpg?zoom=1.5&resize=150%2C150[/img] Marc W. Polite is an award winning writer from New York City. He writes on issues concerning history, labor, and technology. He holds a Bachelor’s in Political Science and a Master’s in History from The City College of New York... PDP and lies are like sesame twins Btw.... Even the marc polite is kinda not the founder of the foundation.. After I did a second research, the server was directing me to one ZOOMINFO.COM.... Well only pdp knew how they came about with this William reed lie. ![]() |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by aresa: 12:18am On Mar 08, 2015 |
sleemfesh: He has perhaps taken an ingenious route to fighting corruption. He understands the difference between the symptoms of corruption and the underlying causes.^^^^^^ The media director for the president of Nigeria, the same man who is fighting corruption, the chief law enforcement officer in Nigeria is currently on trial for corruption. The same man walks around Nigeria and in and out of the court with personal protection and armed police escorts provided by the same GEJ and the government prosecuting him for corruption. Is the president of Nigeria associating, hiring and paying people under prosecution for corruption by his own institutions the so called ingenious route to fighting corruption? The PDP's current chairman is still under investigation by the same president's EFCC for stealing N16 billion pension fund and he was personally appointed by the same corruption fighting president. Is this the ingenious route to fighting corruption? Do you even mind telling us how many corrupt public official this president and his agencies have prosecuted and sent to jail even after saying stealing is not corruption, corruption is overstated for political reasons, corruption is our perception and imagination? You people really need to keep quiet sometimes.... |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by citizenY(m): 12:27am On Mar 08, 2015 |
ROSSIKE:You cannot light a lamp and put it under a bushel. Foreigners can see the light but in Nigeria we see only darkness.... Jonah never light hm lamp yet. He is navigating without a compass, waiting for a rainbow to chart his course.. What a shame. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by sleemfesh(op): 12:42am On Mar 08, 2015 |
aresa:He is not the media director for the President. He is the media director for the PDP. Distinguish between party politics and our dear country. Stop allowing politicians becloud your judgement with all these their accusations and counter accusations. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by sleemfesh(op): 1:04am On Mar 08, 2015 |
kastonkastrol:Your APC brother had this to say " You can have this writer write anything for you just by paying his standard fee . $2000 - $4000" so who will be the official Liar Mo hear? Meanwhile your small mind tells you a founder is always the President of a body. Poor little you. smh. And come to think of it, a whole Washington Times is unaware of the scam. Well, APC is adept at lies. The rabid FFK has, thank goodness, sowed the seed of investigation especially from the disaster that is the Naija hotel pix sold for a London shot in us. But how you guys bastardize it. Kudos for the very sloppy try though. If you ask nicely for explanation you could get one instead of tour dead jango pose. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by aresa: 1:39am On Mar 08, 2015 |
sleemfesh:Whose campaign is+he running? Who is the head of PDP and who gave him the corrupt man under trial for corruption armed police escorts? Who controls the Nigerian Police and+the EFCC? The same crooked,corrupt and incompetent president right. Park very very well abeg |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Bekwarra(m): 2:07am On Mar 08, 2015 |
Hmmm |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by knowledgeable: 4:04am On Mar 08, 2015 |
kastonkastrol:Research or no research, the organic truth is that Nigeria urgently needs political structural adjustment through the implementation of the confab resolutions, which APC is not willing to be part of. PDP body language to APC now is that, if the resolutions cannot be implemented, then go ahead and fight for the control of the country on the battlefield period. GEJ till 2019 !!!!!! |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Controlled(f): 4:45am On Mar 08, 2015 |
abati wrote dis...stupid write up...... ![]() |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by adediranta(m): 5:18am On Mar 08, 2015 |
nice write up I would say. but we can see where his civilized approach to tackling issues has gotten him now. he's not as loved as he would have expected. nice guys as they say always finish last |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by anonimi: 5:42am On Mar 08, 2015 |
aresa:This is what APC has been doing all the while anchored by AKPD Media, not so ![]() |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by agabusta: 5:48am On Mar 08, 2015 |
sleemfesh:I can see he indeed tried to stop the subsidy scam by making one of the actors the Leader of his TAN group. For your information, he only tried to take action in a weak and convenient way that will not anger his subsidy thieves, and will impoverish Nigerians futher. Why should Nigerians be made to pay for the sins of a weak govt? Why should Nigerians be impoverished further because a weak govt cannot tackle corruption in the oil industry. If there is no effective and consistent consequences for corrupt practices, no matter the system put in place, the corrupt elements will still find away to circumvent it as they are confident at the end of it, there will be no consequence for their action. Just noise in the media. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by anonimi: 5:49am On Mar 08, 2015 |
sleemfesh: ![]() He is Eko Ile, Fashola's and APC's internet warrior number 1 paid from the taxes of Lagosians. You can check his posting history with the several monikers he has used here. |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by anonimi: 5:52am On Mar 08, 2015 |
agabusta:Has that actor being pronounced guilty by a competent, independent court of law ![]() Is a man no longer innocent until judged guilty? The national leader of the opposition that wants to give us change is a drug lord who forfeited $460,000 to the US government to pay off his crime. www.nairaland.com/attachments/1206437_2e8d204456ddaca651c21c258cad334b_jpg2c86cdb1543edff718fbaebc74f4b873 www.nairaland.com/attachments/2186225_change_jpeg_jpeg94b34b227702fbe5c47290c95691a634 |
| Re: Steering A Dangerous Course In Nigeria With A Steady Hand - (washington Times) by Ralphlauren(m): 6:31am On Mar 08, 2015 |
Imagine someone referring to Jonathan, "mister stealing is not corruption" as someone with "steady hands"? ![]() This writer was obviously outsourced by abati, reno and co to write this rubbish. If steering Nigeria with his clueless and so called "steady hands" has gotten us into this very deep mess, then he needs to leave and head back to otuoke. ![]() We need someone else with an untainted and mature pair of hands to take over the steering of this sinking ship called nigeria before its too late. |
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