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DID OBI WIN THE 2023 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION? – By Kassim Afegbua

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The Presidential candidate of the Labour Part Mr. Peter Obi
The Presidential candidate of the Labour Part Mr. Peter Obi

Since 26 February till date, Peter Gregory Obi has been shuffling his shoulders in a feat that suggests that he has something up his sleeves. He has spoken, cried, agonised, lamented and gnashed his teeth, to convey his poisoned emotions about the presidential election.

Before the election, most of the polls were understandably pro-Obi; because some of them were his silent sponsors. Relying on those skewed pollsters, Obi was confident he would defeat his opponents in the election. I had faulted the pollsters, accusing some of them of being economical with the truth. They concentrated Obi’s winning demographics in the South-East, South-South, and North- Central. They reasoned that Atiku would win in the North, and Tinubu would win in the South-West. They failed to reckon the presence of the APC Governors as being powerful in their respective states; there were twenty-one of them. Obi’s supporters during campaigns were more than there were during the election.

A lot of them had no voter’s cards. They were just enjoying the fanfare of a new narrative in town, that could absorb their desires and pressures. So, Peter Obi’s razzmatazz before the election was a deliberate strategy to dominate the media, especially social media. His lieutenants used the skills of abuse and insults to confront anyone via social media, who wasn’t on Obi’s radar.

Obi may have won in twelve states in the election, but he didn’t deserve those votes. The votes from his South-East states were suspect, dubious and unconvincing. They were without a doubt, falsely generated to shore up votes, to level up with areas where they envisaged he would suffer a shortfall and deficit, because he had no control of those areas.

The percentage of attendance recorded in the South-Eastern states was contradictory to the realities that dominated public discourse before the election: IPOB was not predisposed to election conduct in the South- East, the unwholesome activities of unknown gunmen had turned the South-East into a theatre of war with cakes of crimson. It was a frightful reality that painted an ugly picture of a geopolitical zone whose economy had been badly affected by intermittent warfare and several stay-at-home orders, the rivers of blood in the South-East and the number of INEC offices that were burnt on a regular basis created apathy for the election; going into that election with such sub current was in itself a bad omen for a zone that has long yearned for the presidency. Blood after blood, it was an atmosphere of suspense, fear, killings, and arson; such were the visible tell-tales of the zone. If that was a strategy to chase other contestants away, it may then be said that it has amounted to Peter Obi swimming in the pool of blood of those who were killed, so as to birth his presidency. I don’t think that would sit well in his consciousness.

Again, the outcome of the votes in the South-East did not reflect the reality we were familiar with. It is abstruse to think that elections were conducted in a seemingly calm atmosphere in that same zone that had always been soaked in contestation, disputations and killings. Considering also that the South-East had been PDP’s stronghold before now, and Obi’s involvement in the election was expected to take the shine off PDP’s chart, such a landslide victory is curious. Some of the results sheets had one and the same signature running through all the columns, some others had the same handwriting all through, while others had all other parties with zero votes except the Labour Party; I will call those votes allocated votes. Intimidation, gun-shooting, ballot box snatching and voter suppression were all part of the deliberate acts to steer the votes in Obi’s direction.

Surprisingly, none of those has become a topic for discussion, in trying to analyse the general outlook of the election. One hardly hears anyone talk about the malpractices in the South-East. All one hears is INEC’s inability to post results using its iREV facility. If all political parties had the expected number of agents, as they should have, the complaint about the non-use of iREV would not have gained traction; because all party agents had the results at the polling units; so, get the actual outcome of the voting exercise was easy for political parties with the required number of agents. On Sunday 26 February, the day after the election, we were already jubilating in the Tinubu camp knowing he had won the election.

For me, Obi put up a good showing, but not enough to upstage the propitiousness for the APC and place power on his lap. His participation altered a lot of permutations, and the flow of politics across the country. Many upsets were recorded as a result of the Peter Obi factor; a factor that was propelled by a youthful following. The youth showed that they want a paradigm shift from the old order and saw Obi as a breath of fresh air.

His sense of organisation was tacky, and the party’s ability to spread its message of hope across the country was impaired; first by leadership crisis, and secondly by its lack of the right calibre of persons to manage its opportunities. Also, Peter Obi was detained by his ethnocentric concentration and his pro-Christian campaign focus. He was a regular visitor in churches and places where the Christian population commands attention.

Even in some parts of the North, he deployed his Igbo brothers as coordinators. The spread of his electoral votes is suggestive of the Igbo and Christian demographics spread in Nigeria- useful information for statisticians I guess. Adamawa, Taraba, Gombe, Nasarawa, Plateau, Benue, Kaduna, Niger, and part of Kogi showed much support for him from the Christian-populated areas.

He suffered rejection in the core Northern states where the Christian population is scanty: Jigawa, Katsina, Kano, Sokoto, Zamfara, Kebbi, Borno, Yobe and parts of Bauchi states. Whatever he gained in the South-East was knocked off by his poor outing in those Northern states. As I mentioned last week, Peter Obi’s presidency was anchored on ethnicity and pro-Christian sentiments and was further attenuated by Tinubu’s Muslim-Muslim ticket. Atiku’s presidency was anchored on the belief that with two formidable Southern candidates, he would have a smooth ride in the North, while Tinubu’s presidency was anchored on a pan-Nigeria orientation; the reason why his votes, were spread across all other geopolitical zones, except the South-east.

Even, if Peter Obi is gifted an extra one million votes, he wouldn’t still meet Asiwaju’s threshold. One million votes in an election is like winning three states in a ratio of 300k, 300k and 400k votes, while others are presumably scoring zero. Even with a such generous electoral gratuity, Peter Obi would still not have a claim to victory. So can someone please help me explain this to him in his dialect for better understanding? I am annoyed by Peter Obi’s claim to victory, in an election he has so badly condemned. Is he trying to profit from a process which in his opinion does not meet the statutory requirements of the law, or is he feeling that declaring him president-elect would eliminate all the “infractions” he has earlier identified?

Does it not appear that Obi is trying to be clever by half? From the outcome of the election, does it not appear so convincingly that INEC had complied with the law substantially? Where is this Obi’s victory claim deriving its impetus? If the votes from the South-East are subjected to forensic examination, does Obi not think that the chicken will come home to roost? How come Obi is not complaining about the outcome in the South-East, but looking elsewhere? Is that another name for smartness or glossing over what favours his quest? These and many more unanswered questions will form part of the narrative at the Tribunal.

Peter Obi must choose between being a patriot and a spoiler. It was convenient for him to celebrate when he defeated Asiwaju Tinubu in Lagos, but finds it faulty that he was beaten in some other places. He must quickly wake up from his dreamland to the stark reality of his defeat instead of wasting precious time keeping his supporters in suspense. He should congratulate the winner of the election, set a new tone to play constructive opposition and retool his Labour Party with a more vibrant leadership that can actively play the role of credible opposition, while preparing for another day. If he turns around to congratulate the winner, after the tribunal, it will not resonate with the aplomb of being a good sportsman. No election can truly meet the criteria for perfection the world over.

Despite envisaged imperfections, nations move ahead through reforms and constructive engagement to deepen the process and make it more responsive to the challenges in the system. Nigeria’s democracy is barely twenty-four years old and still undergoing its own challenges.

Through citizen participation, mobilisation and conscientization, the likelihood to have a more robust electoral process will someday dominate the reality of our electoral system. Peter Obi still has age on his side and can recontest in future elections if he so desires. He must help the country to grow in the right direction and not be part of a process that may likely throw up violence to hurt an already fragile system. He should behave like a good Christian.

For me, Peter Obi did not win the 2023 presidential election, he couldn’t have won; and the earlier he realised that, the better for his psyche and emotional stability.

Prince Kassim Afegbua, a former Commissioner of Information wrote from Abuja

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

BEING THE COMMUNIQUE ISSUED AT THE END OF THE MONTHLY GENERAL MEETING OF THE AFENIFERE HELD AT THE RESIDENCE OF OUR LEADER, CHIEF AYO ADEBANJO AT ISANYA OGBO OGUN STATE ON TUESDAY 28TH DAY OF MARCH 2023.

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The Leader of the Afenifere, Pa Ayo Adebanjo
The Leader of the Afenifere, Pa Ayo Adebanjo

1. 000 PREAMBLE.

1.02 The Afenifere held its regular monthly General Meeting today, the 28th day of March 2023, at the residence of our Leader, Chief Ayo Adebanjo at Isanya Ogbo, Ogun State.

1.03  After intensive deliberations on the state of the Nigerian Federation, the Meeting which was presided over by our Leader aforesaid and attended by delegates from the member states of our Organisation observed and Resolved as follows:

2.00 RESOLUTIONS.

2.01 That Afenifere reiterates our position that the Presidential election held on the 25th of February 2023 was characterised by all forms of primitive manipulations and noncompliance with the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Electoral Act 2022 and the Guidelines and Regulations made pursuant thereto with concomitant legislative force.

2.02 Reiterate that “the results of the lawful votes at the Presidential election available to the Afenifere through credible sources confirm that Peter Obi, the presidential candidate of the Labour Party, won the said election and we, thus, support his decision challenging the contrary declaration by the INEC.

2.03  Re-assert that for equity, fairness, national cohesion and peaceful corporate existence, the next President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria shall be a person of its southern part and specifically the South-East.

2.04 Condemn in the strongest terms, the campaigns of calumny and acts of ethnic violence deployed by some politicians and their hired criminal gangs in several parts of the federation during the gubernatorial election particularly Lagos State where the election was made to appear like an inter-ethnic war between the Yoruba and Igbo which greatly led to voters’ suppression and other forms of deliberate disenfranchisement through brigandage.

2.05 Received a message credited to Chief Emmanuel Iwunayanwun in a viral video alleging indictment of the Yoruba as political rascals on account of ethnic violence deployed by politicians of the ruling party in Lagos State. On the analysis of the video and information at the disposal of Afenifere by people at the Anambra State gathering, we are convinced that Chief Iwunayanwun rightly asserted that the Yoruba and Igbo were not at war and truly condemned the shenanigans of some political rascals.

2.06. Flowing from the above, Afenifere stated that it never issued any statement and dissociate the Organisation from any such statement against Chief Iwunayanwun.

2.07  Observed the uncouth activities and unauthorised statements in its name and the constant denigration of the organisation, by Jare Ajayi, the National Publicity Secretary and Abagun Kole Omololu the National Organising Secretary. After due consideration of the unending embarrassing conduct of the two officers, the Meeting resolved that they be and are hereby removed immediately from their respective offices and their membership be suspended sine die pending further decisions after their appearance before and recommendations by the Disciplinary Committee.

2.08 Restate our position that in accordance with the hallowed Yoruba culture of civilised conduct, Afenifere assures all person resident in Yorubaland, indigenes and non-indigenous, of protection in the conduct of their lawful duties and thus warn all threats mongers and merchants of violence to desist therefrom.

2.09 Express our belief in the judiciary as an integral part of the democratic process and expect that it proves itself in the election litigations now pending before it without fear or favour and in accordance with the judicial oaths of its members, in covenant with the Nigerian people.

2.1 0  Call on the President and Government of Nigeria to restore the patriotic confidence and hope of the Nigerian people in the continued corporate existence of the federation which will guarantee their safety throughout Nigeria.  

2.11  Appreciate the genuine and renewed interests of the international community in the security and democratic health of Nigeria and urge that as a prominent member of the global community, the affairs of Nigeria should continue to be of concern to the world.

Dated and issued at Isanya Ogbo, this 28th day of March 2023.

Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Leader

Chief Sola Ebiseni, Secretary GENERAL

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

How INEC Rigged The 2023 Presidential Election For Tinubu – Peter Obi

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The INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmoud Yakubu
The INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmoud Yakubu

How INEC Rigged The 2023 Presidential Election For Tinubu – Peter Obi

Mr Peter Obi, the presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the February 25 elections has told the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) to either declare him (Mr Obi) the winner of the election or cancel the entire exercise outrightly because the Independent Electoral Commission corruptly manipulated the election in favour of Mr Bola Tinubu, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

In a petition filed Tuesday at the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC), Mr Obi told the court that the election of Tinubu was invalid by reason of corrupt practices or non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act 2022 by INEC.

He stated that due to the manifest non-compliance by INEC with the Electoral Act and specific requirements of the Regulations for the conduct of the Presidential election, the INEC failed, refusing, and neglecting to instantly transmit and upload the result of that election electronically to the iRev from the BVAS, INEC violated the integrity and safety measures entrenched for the conduct of the said election.

Obi lamented that due to INEC’s refusal and neglect to upload and transmit the result of the election in the polling units to the IReV as required by law on the day of the election, INEC suppressed the actual scores obtained by the Labour Party.

“The suppression of the Labour Party’s scores which occurred in Eighteen Thousand and Eighty=Eight (18,088) Polling Units was orchestrated by INEC deliberately uploading unreadable and blurred Forms EC8As on the IReV; and thereby, suppressed the lawful scores obtained by the Petitioners in the said Polling Units.”

Mr Obi and the Labour Party contend that during the conduct of the Presidential election, INEC was mandatorily required to prescribe and deploy technological devices for the accreditation, verification, confirmation and authentication of voters and their particulars as contained in the 1st Respondent’s Regulations.

“Pursuant to the powers conferred on it by the 1999 Constitution and the Electoral Act, 2022, INEC issued the “Regulations and Guidelines for the Conduct of Elections, 2022”, and the Manual for Election Officials 2023.

“The said Regulations and Manual are binding on INEC and its staff with respect to the conduct of all elections, including the Presidential election being challenged in this Petition”, Obi stated.

INEC had assured Nigerians that for the 25th February 2023 Presidential election, the use of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) for the purpose of accreditation of voters is mandatory for the purpose of accreditation, verification, confirmation and authentication of voters.

In a Press Release issued by INEC and signed by Festus Okoye, National Commissioner and Chairman, Information and Voter Education for the 1st Respondent dated 11th November 2022, INEC stated that “The Commission has repeatedly reassured Nigerians that it will transmit results directly from the polling units as we witnessed in Ekiti and Osun State Governorship elections and 103 more constituencies where off-cycle Governorship/FCT Area Council elections and by-elections were held since August 2020.

“The results can still be viewed on the portal. The iRev is one of the innovations introduced by the Commission to ensure the integrity and credibility of election results in Nigeria. It is therefore inconceivable that the Commission would tum around and undermine its own innovations. The public is advised to ignore the reports. The Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and iRev have come to stay for voter accreditation and uploading of polling unit results in real-time in Nigeria.”

The Chairman of INEC, Prof. Yakubu Mahmood, also repeatedly assured that at the conclusion of the election at each Polling Unit, the Presiding Officer was mandatorily required to electronically transmit or transfer the result of the Polling Unit directly to the INEC collation system. In addition, the Presiding Officer was also mandatorily required to use the BVAS to upload a scanned copy of Form EC8A to the INEC’s Result Viewing Portal (iRev) in real time.

“Where the BVAS failed to function in any polling unit, a new BVAS was to be deployed to ensure that the accreditation process conformed with the prescribed electoral process. 

However, where the second BVAS also failed to function, the election in that polling unit was to be cancelled and another election shall be rescheduled within twenty-four (24) hours.”

But Mr Obi told the court that in manifest violation of INEC Regulations and the Electoral Act, 2022, the results of the Presidential Election held in the Polling Units were not fully uploaded on the iRev as at the time of the purported declaration of the 2nd Respondent as the winner of the Presidential Election, which gave room for manipulation of the said results by officials of the 1st Respondent.

Indeed, INEC “continued with the uploading of the results of the Presidential Election held on 25 February 2023 up till the time of filing this Petition and has continued to do so thereafter in manifest violation of the provisions of the Electoral Act and INEC Regulations”.

INEC “is obligated to compile and keep a Register of Election Results known as the National Electronic Register of Election Results (NERER) which shall be a distinct database or repository of Polling Unit results, including collated election results of each election. The Result Viewing Portal (iRev) is the immediate access by the public to the said electronic register of election results and is supposed to disclose the electronic version of the same result sheets distributed at the points of election and at the Collation Centres.”

Peter Obi lamented that despite several applications through his campaign organisation and Solicitors for certified true copies or the election documents and data relating to the Presidential election, INEC has denied him access.

“Similarly, INEC acting through its officials has refused to comply with Orders for inspection made by the Court, wherein Obi and the Labour Party were mandated to inspect and obtain certified copies etc of relevant election documents in the custody of INEC, in that:

a. INEC has denied having in its custody any Form EC8A or Form EC8B in Rivers State

b. In Bayelsa, INEC only provided certified copies of Form EC8A in Four of the Eight Local Government Areas of that State, while it provided Forms EC8B in only Seven Local Government Areas of the State.

c. INEC only provided certified copies of Forms EC8A, EC8B, EC8C and EC40G in Benue State while it blatantly refused to provide certified copies of those Forms in the remaining States.

Obi also stated that “INEC failed to record in the prescribed Forms the quantity, serial numbers and other particulars of result sheets, ballot papers and other sensitive electoral materials on the prescribed Forms EC25A, EC25A(i), EC8B and EC8B(i) – that is to say, Electoral Material Receipts for LGA, Electoral Material Distribution for RA, Electoral Material Receipts/Revised Logistics and Polling Unit Material Receipts/Distribution in respect of the States where Tinubu purportedly won.

Following the order of the Court for inspection, Obi said he applied, through their Campaign Organisation and Lawyers, for these Forms, but INEC “refused to give/issue those forms and refused to allow the inspection of the forms despite the order or Court.”

Peter Obi told the court that he has in his possession a Spread Sheet containing the Polling Units Codes and details of the aforesaid Eighteen Thousand and Eighty-Eight Polling Units, as well as the authentic results in the aforesaid Eighteen Thousand and Eighty­ Eight Polling Units.

He added that in Benue State, INEC “mischievously uploaded blurred Forms EC8A allegedly for Polling Units to suppress the lawful result of the election in the Polling Units. The Petitioners shall also at trial rely on a Forensic Report of the Presidential Election held in Polling Units in Benue State.”

In Rivers State during the collation exercise at the Federal level, INEC announced the scores of the Labour Party as 175,071 votes and the APC as having 231,591 votes. However, by the actual scores obtained at the polling units, Labour Party’s lawful votes in Rivers State are 205,110 votes, while APCs’ score ought to be 84,108 votes.

Obi further contend that if INEC had, as it was mandated to do, utilised the scores recorded on the Forms EC8A as against the fictitious Forms uploaded on the IReV, the Petitioners Obi would have won Rivers State.

Similarly, in Benne State, INEC whilst suppressing the lawful votes obtained by the Labour Party, announced that Labour Party scores from the polling units in Benue State are 308,372 votes. APC’s score was falsely announced as being 310,468 votes. However, the actual scores of the Labour Party from the polling units in Benne State was 329,003 votes, while APC scores were 300,421 votes.

‘By the unlawful announcement made by INEC, they denied me being the winner of the election in Benue State’, Obi told the court. He told the court has obtained a “forensic analysis of the election for Rivers State and Benue State made pursuant to the inspection of the election materials as ordered by the Court.”

Whilst purportedly acting under the cover of uploading the result of the Presidential Election held on 25th February 2023 on the iRev, INEC “embarked and are still embarking on massive misrepresentation and manipulation by uploading fictitious results in Polling Units where there were no elections as well as uploading incorrect results. The actual scores of the Petitioners have been reduced, tampered with, and falsely represented in the false election results uploaded in the iRev.”

Obi said he has a Forensic Report of the election result showing his actual scores obtained from the Polling Units and from the result of the election pursuant to the Inspection of the election materials as ordered by the Court.

The scores obtained by the Labour Party were unlawfully reduced and added by INEC to the scores of the APC. Further, INEC deliberately uploaded blurred results which were in favour of the Labour Party on the iRev in a bid to conceal them.

Obi asked the court to deduct these unlawful scores added to the APC and for those scores which were legitimately obtained by the Labour Party to be credited to the Labour Party’s scores. When the scores unlawfully added to the APC are deducted, the Labour Party will have the highest number of votes in the election, as shown in the Forensic Report.

“When the results of Polling Units, Wards, Local Governments, and States are properly tabulated and calculated as required by the Electoral Act and the Regulations and Guidelines for election, the overall results of the election and the percentages scored by the Political Parties will show that the Labour Party won the Presidential election of 25 February 2023.”

“From the correct Polling Unit result transmitted electronically and supported by the accreditation on the BVAS, the Labour Party won the election”, according to the Inspection Reports and Forensic/Expert analysis pursuant to the orders of the Court.

Obi also claimed that votes cast in the Poling Units in Ekiti State, Oyo State, Ondo State, Taraba State, Osun State, Kano State, Rivers State, Borno State, Katsina State, Kwara State, Gombe State, Yobe State and Niger State exceeded the number of voters accredited on the BVAS in those states.

“The computation and declaration of the result of the election, based on the uploaded results, the votes recorded for the APC did not comply with the legitimate process for computation of the result and disfavoured the Petitioners in RIVERS, LAGOS, TARABA, BENUE, ADAMAWA, IMO, BAUCHI, BORNO, KADUNA, PLATEAU and OTHER STATES OF THE FEDERATION.

In declaring the result of the election, INEC violated its own Regulations when it announced the result of the elections despite the fact that at the time of the said announcement or declaration, the totality of the Polling Unit results was yet to be fully scanned, uploaded and transmitted electronically as required by the Electoral Act, Obi said.

“The results and details are recorded in Forms EC8A. ECSB. EC8C. ECSD and ECSE which formed the basis of the declared result were not the product of compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act 2022 and INEC’s Regulations mandating the process of accreditation, voting, counting, recording of votes, and uploading to the INEC’s iRev Portal and the backend virtual server installed to ensure a uniform process.

Obi and the Labour Party further contend that when the purported scores recorded in the polling units where the above instances of over­ voting occurred are deducted from the alleged votes obtained by Bola Tinubu and on which INEC based the hurried declaration of Tinubu as the winner of the election, the margin of the purported lead between the APC and the Labour Party will be far less than the number of voters who ought to legitimately vote in those polling units.

Mr Obi stated that instances of over-voting in the conduct of the Presidential election held on 25th February 2023 occurred in more places than stated on Form EC40G(iii), according to the Report of the BYAS Accreditation in the polling units.

The above instances of non-compliance substantially affected the outcome of the election, in that if these instances did not occur in the conduct of the Presidential election, the labour Party would have emerged as the winner of the said election. Obi said.

Below are the Regulations for the conduct of the Presidential election which Obi claimed were violated by INEC. 

By the Regulations, voting was to be in accordance with the Continuous Accreditation and Voting System (CAVS) and no person was to be allowed to vote at any Polling Unit other than the one at which his or her name was disclosed on the Register of Voters. The intending voter was then to present the Permanent Voters Card (PVC) to INEC’s staff who was to verify. same using BVAS.

(i) Checking the Permanent Voter’s Card (PVC) of the voter;

(ii) Positive identification of the voter in the BVAS;

(iii) Authentication of the voter by matching his/her fingerprints or face (facial recognition) using the BVAS;

(iv) Positive identification of the voter in the Register of voters;

(v) Completion of Forms EC40H (1) – PWD Voter Information and Statistics; and

(vi) Applying indelible ink to the cuticle of the finger of the voter (where available).

By the said process of accreditation, the voter was to present himself to the Agent of the 1st Respondent who was to request the PVC of the voter. Where the voter had none, he was not to be allowed to vote; but if the voter had presented the said PVC, the Agent of the 1st Respondent was to proceed as follows:

(i) Call up the voter’s data on the BVAS by reading the bar code on the back of the PVC or reading the QR code against the name of the voter in the Register of Voters or entering the last six digits of the Voter Identification Number (VIN) of the voter into the BVAS or searching the BVAS with the surname of the voter;

(ii) On the appearance of the voters’ data on the BVAS, the APO l was to ascertain that the photograph on the PVC was that of the voter and that the Polling Unit details correspond with those of the Polling Unit;

(iii) Request the voter to place his/her thumb or any other finger (where possible) in the place provided on the BVAS for authentication or, if this failed, match the face of the voter to the picture in the BYAS using the device’s facial recognition facility; and

(iv) If the fingerprint or face of the voter matches, request the voter to proceed to APO II.

After complying with the procedure above, the verified voter was to be further scrutinized before proceeding to the process of actual voting. Where the BVAS for the polling unit failed to identify the intending voter, that voter was not be allowed to vote.

(a) In order to ensure that voting did not proceed except as specifically prescribed with the use of the BVAS, in the event of any malfunctioning of the BVAS for a polling unit, the INEC Agent was to:

(i) Immediately inform the LGA and RA supervisors, the Supervisory Presiding Officer (SPO), the Electoral Officer (EO), and the Election Monitoring and Support Centre (EMSC) for rcplacc111cnl:

(ii) Suspend Accreditation and Voting until a new BVAS was made:

(iii) file a report of the incident to the designated Official; and

(iv) Inform the voters and polling agents of the situation.

(b) Where a replacement BYAS was not available by 2:30pm, the Presiding Officer was to:

(i) Inform the LGA and RA Supervisors, SPO, EO, and EMSC of the situation.

(ii) File a report of the incident; and

(iii) Inform the voters and polling agents that accreditation and voting for the affected Polling Unit was to continue the following day.

(c) Where a BVAS was replaced in the middle of an election, the data of verified voters in the faulty BYAS was to be merged with data in the replacement B VAS for purposes of determining the number of verified voters.

After clue accreditation and casting of votes by the duly accredited voters, the Presiding Officer was to count the votes at the Polling Unit and enter the votes scored by each candidate in the Form prescribed by the 1st Respondent known as Form ECSA, which Form was then to be signed and stamped by the Presiding Officer and countersigned by the candidates or their Polling Agents where available at the Polling Unit.

The Presiding Officer was then to deliver copies of the result sheet to the party agents who desired to collect such copies as well as the Police Officer where available. Thereafter, the Polling Unit results for all the Polling Units within a Registration Area were to be delivered to the Registration Area Collation Officer who was to collate the results in the Form provided by the 1st Respondent. This process was to be repeated at all stages of collation, whereby the Ward Results were to be delivered to and collated by the Local Government Collation Officer, who was under a duty to accelerate the same to the final Constituency Collation Officer.

The Petitioners aver that, apart from the importance of the BVAS in the capture of accreditation at a polling unit in an election, the BV AS is also mandatorily to be used in the process of uploading the information or data imputed into it by the 1st Respondents’ Presiding Officer at each Polling Unit, who shall, upon completion of voting and due recording and announcement of the result:

(i) Electronically transmit or transfer the result of the Polling Unit directly to the collation system as prescribed by INEC;

(ii) Use the BVAS to upload a scanned copy of the Form ECSA to the INEC Result Viewing Portal (iRev), as prescribed by the I s1 Respondent; and

(iii) Take the BVAS and the original copy of each of the forms in a tamper-evident envelope to the Registration Area/Ward Collation Officer, in the company of Security Agents. The Polling Agents may accompany the Presiding Officer to the Registration Area/Ward Collation Centre.

Amazon Server

Obi told the court that as part of the technological architecture for the conduct of the 2023 General Elections, including the Presidential election, INEC utilized virtual servers on Amazon Web Services (AWS) for the hosting/storage of INEC’s data, particularly results obtained and or generated from the 2023 General Elections, including the election results of the Presidential Election held on 25th February 2023 on the Amazon Cloud Platform. The Petitioners may subpoena the relevant staff or officer of Amazon to establish this, and related facts pleaded in this Petition.

The Amazon Cloud Platform is the world’s most comprehensive and broadly adopted platform which enables users such as large enterprises and government agencies like the 1si Respondent to effectively and in real-time manage data, to lower costs, become more agile and effective. The Petitioners hereby plead relevant pages on the website of Amazon which can be accessed at https://aws.amazon.com.

The INEC data captured and or generated during the 2023 Presidential Election held on 25th February 2023, and stored on the AWS data warehouse using cloud computing technology is accessible.

In addition to the above, the result of the Presidential Election held on 25th February 2023 displayed/stored on INEC’s Result Viewing Portal (iRcv) ought to be the same in all material particulars with the result of the election stored in the Virtual Servers on the AWS or the Amazon Cloud Platform.

Transmission of Results

INEC created various levels of collation at the Registration Areas, Local Government Areas, State Constituencies and the Federal Constituency; and by that process, the results of any election, including the one hereby challenged, were only to be accepted for collation if the Collation Officer ascertained that the number of accredited voters corresponded with the number captured in the BVAS and where votes for the parties corresponded with the result electronically transmitted directly from the Polling Units.

In the case of a dispute, the results electronically transmitted or transferred directly from the lower levels and announced were to be used to determine the results at that level of the Collation process. Where no result was directly transmitted in respect of a Polling Unit or a level of collation, it would not be possible to resolve that dispute. In this case, the Labour Party’s agents and agents of other political parties walked away in protest from the National Collation Centre when the Collation Officer blatantly refused to resolve their disputations of the results being collated as mandatorily stipulated by the Electoral Act, 2022. The Petitioners hereby plead a video clip of the incident as reported by some media houses.

Copies of the Forms EC8A scanned and uploaded through the BVAS to INEC’s Result Viewing Portal (iRev) as mandated by the INEC, were to exactly reflect all other results which originated from the Polling Units. Those which were instantaneously uploaded at the earliest moment ought to be the standard for assessing other results subsequently advanced by the 1st Respondent in the process of Collation leading to the final segment which was the declaration of the result of the election.

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

Buhari vs Jonathan – Beyond the 2015 Presidential Election, by Prof. Charles Soludo CFR.

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President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria in a warm handshake with his predecessor, President Goodluck Jonathan
President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria in a warm handshake with his predecessor, President Goodluck Jonathan

I need to preface this article with a few clarifications. I have taken a long sabbatical leave from partisan politics, and it is real fun watching the drama from the balcony.  Having had my own share of public service (I do not need a job from government), I now devote my time and energy in pursuit of other passions, especially abroad.

A few days ago, I read an article in Thisday entitled “Where is Charles Soludo?”, and my answer is that I am still there, only that I have been too busy with extensive international travels to participate in or comment on our national politics and economy. But I occasionally follow events at home. Since the survival and prosperity of Nigeria are at stake, the least some of us (albeit, non-partisan) must do is to engage in public debate. As the elections approach, I owe a duty to share some of my concerns.

In September 2010, I wrote a piece entitled “2011 Elections: Let the Real Debate Begin” and published by Thisday. I understand the Federal Executive Council discussed it, and the Minister of Information rained personal attacks on me during the press briefing. I noted more than six newspaper editorials in support of the issues we raised.

Beside other issues we raised, our main thesis was that the macro economy was dangerously adrift, with little self-insurance mechanisms (and a prediction that if oil prices fell below $40, many state governments would not be able to pay salaries). I gave a subtle hint at easy money and exchange rate depreciations because I did not want to panic the market with a strong statement. Sadly, on the eve of the next elections, literally everything we hinted at has happened.  Part of my motivation for this article is that five years after, the real debate is still not happening.

The presidential election next month will be won by either Buhari or Jonathan. For either, it is likely to be a pyrrhic victory. None of them will be able to deliver on the fantastic promises being made on the economy, and if oil prices remain below $60, I see very difficult months ahead, with possible heady collisions with labour, civil society, and indeed the citizenry. To be sure, the presidential election will not be decided by the quality of ‘issues’ or promises canvassed by the candidates.

The debates won’t also change much (except if there is a major gaffe by either candidate like Tofa did in the debate with Abiola). My take is that more than 95% of the likely voters have pretty much made up their minds based largely on other considerations. A few of us remain undecided.

During my brief visit to Nigeria, I watched some of the campaign rallies on television. The tragedy of the current electioneering campaigns is that both parties are missing the golden opportunity to sensitize the citizenry about the enormous challenges ahead and hence mobilize them for the inevitable sacrifices they would be called upon to make soon. Each is promising an El-Dorado.

Let me admit that the two main parties talk around the major development challenges—corruption, insecurity, economy (unemployment/poverty, power, infrastructure, etc) health, education, etc. However, it is my considered view that none of them has any credible agenda to deal with the issues, especially within the context of the evolving global economy and Nigeria’s broken public finance.

The UK Conservative Party’s manifesto for the last election proudly announced that all its programmes were fully costed and were therefore implementable. Neither APC nor PDP can make a similar claim.  A plan without the dollar or Naira signs to it is nothing but a wish-list. They are not telling us how much each of their promises will cost and where they will get the money. None talks about the broken or near bankrupt public finance and the strategy to fix it.

Goodluck-Jonathan-new


In response to the question of where the money will come from, I heard one of the politicians say that the problem of Nigeria was not money but the management of resources. This is half-truth. The problem is both. No matter how efficient a father (with a monthly salary of N50,000) is at managing the family resources, I cannot see how he could deliver on a promise to buy a brand new Peugeot 406 for each of his three children in a year.

Even with all the loopholes and waste closed, with increased efficiency per dollar spent, there is still a binding budget constraint. To deliver an efficient national transport infrastructure alone will still cost tens of billions of dollars per annum even by corruption-free, cost-effective means.  Did I hear that APC promises a welfare system that will pay between N5,000 and N10,000 per month to the poorest 25 million Nigerians?  Just this programme alone will cost between N1.5 and N3 trillion per annum.

Add to this the cost of free primary education plus free meal (to be funded by the federal budget or would it force non-APC state governments to implement the same?), plus some millions of public housing, etc. I have tried to cost some of the promises by both the APC and the PDP, given alternative scenarios for public finance and the numbers don’t add up.  Nigerians would be glad to know how both parties would fund their programmes.

Do they intend to accentuate the huge public debt, or raise taxes on the soon to-be-beleaguered private businesses, or massively devalue the naira to rake in baskets of naira from the dwindling oil revenue, or embark on huge fiscal retrenchment with the sack of labour and abandonment of projects, and which areas of waste do they intend to close and how much do they estimate to rake in from them, etc?

I remember that Chief Obafemi Awolowo was asked similar questions in 1978 and 1979 about his promises of free education and free medical services. Even as a teenager, I was impressed by how he reeled out  figures about the amounts he would save from various ‘waste’ including the tea/coffee served in government offices. The point is that at least he did his homework and had his numbers and I give credit to his team.

Some 36 years later, the quality of political debate and discourse seems to border on the pedestrian. From the quality of its team, I did not expect much from the current government, but I must confess that I expected APC as a party aspiring to take over from PDP to come up with a knock-out punch. Evidently, from what we have read from the various versions of its manifesto as well as the depth of promises being made, it does not seem that it has a better offer.

Let me digress a bit to refresh our memory on where we are, and thus provide the context in which to evaluate the promises being made to us. Recall that the key word of the 2015 budget is ‘austerity’.  Austerity? This is just within a few months of the fall in oil prices. History repeats itself in a very cruel way, as this was exactly what happened under the Shehu Shagari administration.

Under the Shagari government, oil price reached its highest in 1980/81. During the same period, Nigeria ratcheted up its consumption and all tiers of government were in competition as to which would out-borrow the other. Huge public debt was the consequence. When oil prices crashed in early 1982, the National Assembly then passed the Economic Stabilization (Austerity Measures) Act in one day— going through the first, second, and third readings the same day.

The austerity measures included the rationing of ‘essential commodities’ and most states owed salary arrears. Corruption was said to be pervasive, and as Sani Abacha said in that famous coup speech, ‘unemployment has reached unacceptable proportions and our hospitals have become mere consulting clinics’.

General Muhammadu Buhari/Tunde Idiagbon regime made the fight against corruption and restoration of discipline the cardinal point of their administration which lasted for 20 months. I am not sure they had a credible plan to get the economy out of the doldrums (although it must be admitted that poverty incidence in Nigeria as of 1985 when they left office was a just46%— according to the Federal Office of Statistics).

We have come full circle. If the experience under Shagari could be excused as an unexpected shock, what Nigeria is going through now is a consequence of our deliberate wrong choices.  We have always known that the unprecedented oil boom (in both price and quantity—despite oil theft) of the last six years is temporary but the government chose to treat it as a permanent shock. The parallels with the Shagari regime are troubling.

First, at the time of oil boom, Nigeria again went on a consumption spree such that the budgets of the last five years can best be described as ‘consumption budgets’, with new borrowing by the federal government exceeding the actual expenditure on critical infrastructure. Second, not one penny was added to the stock of foreign reserves at a period Nigeria earned hundreds of billions from oil.

For comparisons, President Obasanjo met about $5 billion in foreign reserves, and the average monthly oil price for the 72 months he was in office was $38, and yet he left $43 billion in foreign reserves after paying $12 billion to write-off Nigeria’s external debt. In the last five years, the average monthly oil price has been over $100, and the quantity also higher but our foreign reserves have been declining and exchange rate depreciating.

I note that when I assumed office as Governor of CBN, the stock of foreign reserves was $10 billion. The average monthly oil price during my 60 months in office was $59, but foreign reserve reached the all-time peak of $62 billion (and despite paying $12 billion for external debt, and losing over $15 billion during the unprecedented global financial and economic crisis) I left behind $45 billion.

Recall also that our exchange rate continuously appreciated during this period and was at N117 to the dollar before the global crisis and we deliberately allowed it to depreciate in order to preserve our reserves.  My calculation is that if the economy was better managed, our foreign reserves should have been between $102 –$118 billion and exchange rate around N112 before the fall in oil prices. As of now, the reserves should be around $90 billion and exchange rate no higher than N125 per dollar.

Third, the rate of public debt accumulation at a time of unprecedented boom had no parallel in the world.  While the Obasanjo administration bought and enlarged the policy space for Nigeria, the current government has sold and constricted it.  What debt relief did for Nigeria was to liberate Nigerian policymakers from the intrusive conditionalities of the creditors and thereby truly allowing Nigeria independence in its public policy.

How have we used the independence?  Through our own choices, we have yet again tied the hands of future policymakers. This time, the debt is not necessarily to foreign creditor institutions/governments which are organized under the Paris club but largely to private agents which is even more volatile. We call it domestic debt. But if one carefully unpacks the bond portfolio, what percentage of it is held by foreign private agents? And I understand the Government had removed the speed bumps we kept to slow the speed of capital flight, and someone is sweating to explain the gyrations in foreign reserves. I am just smiling!

In sum, the mismanagement of our economy has brought us once more to the brink. Government officials rely on the artificial construct of debt to GDP ratio to tell us we can borrow as much as we want.  That is nonsense, especially for an economy with a mono but highly volatile source of revenue and forex earnings. The chicken will soon come home to roost.

Today, the combined domestic and external debt of the Federal Government is in excess of $40 billion. Add to this the fact that abandoned capital projects littered all over the country amount to over $50 billion.  No word yet on other huge contingent liabilities.  If oil prices continue to fall, I bet that Nigeria will soon have a heavy debt burden even with low debt to GDP ratio.

Furthermore, given the current and capital account regime, it is evident that Nigeria does not have enough foreign reserves to adequately cover for imports plus short term liabilities.  In essence, we are approaching the classic of what the Shagari government faced, and no wonder the hasty introduction of ‘austerity measures’ again.

Fourth, poverty incidence and unemployment are also simultaneously at all-time high levels. According to the NBS, poverty incidence grew to 69%  in 2010 and projected to be 71% in 2011, with unemployment at 24%.  This is the worst record in Nigeria’s history, and the paradox is that this happened during the unprecedented oil boom.

One theme I picked up listening to the campaign rallies as well as to some of the propagandists is the confusion about measuring government “performance”. Most people seem to confuse ‘inputs’, or ‘processes’ with output. Earlier this month, I had a dinner with a group of friends (14 of us) and we were chit-chatting about Nigeria. One of us, an associate of President Jonathan veered off to repeat a propaganda mantra that Jonathan had outperformed his predecessors.

He also reminded us that Jonathan re-based the GDP and that Nigeria is now the biggest economy in Africa; etc.  It was fun listening to the response by others. In sum, the group agreed that the President had ‘outperformed’ his predecessors except that it is in reverse order.

First, my friend was educated that re-basing the GDP is no achievement: it is a routine statistical exercise, and depending on the base year that you choose, you get a different GDP figure.  Re-basing the GDP has nothing to do with government policy. Besides, as naira-dollar exchange rate continues to depreciate, the GDP in current dollars will also shrink considerably soon.

We were reminded of Jonathan’s agricultural ‘revolution’. But someone cut in and noted that for all the propaganda, the growth rate of the agricultural sector in the last five years still remains far below the performance under Obasanjo. One of us reminded him that no other president had presided over the slaughter of about 15,000 people by insurgents in a peacetime; no other president earned up to 50% of the amount of resources the current government earned from oil and yet with very little outcomes; no other president had the rate of borrowing; none had significant forex earnings and yet did not add one penny to foreign reserves but losing international reserves at a time of boom; no other president had a depreciating exchange rate at a time of export boom; at no time in Nigeria’s history has poverty reached 71% (even under Abacha, it was 67 -70%); and under no other president did unemployment reach 24%. Surely, these are unprecedented records and he surely ‘outperformed’ his predecessors!  What a satire!

One of those present took the satire to some level by comparing Jonathan to the ‘performance’ of the former Governor of Anambra, Peter Obi.  He noted that while Obi gloated about ‘savings’, there is no signature project to remember his regime except that his regime took the first position among all states in Nigeria in the democratization of poverty—- mass impoverishment of the people of Anambra. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, poverty rose under his watch in Anambra from 20% in 2004 (lowest in Nigeria then) to 68% in 2010 (a 238% deterioration!).

Our friend likened it to a father who had no idea of what to do with his resources and was celebrating his fat bank account while his children were dying of kwashiorkor.  He pointed out that since it is the likes of Peter Obi who are the advisers to Jonathan on how to manage the economy (thereby confusing micromanagement which you do as a trader with macro governance) it is little wonder that poverty is fast becoming another name for Nigeria. It was a very hilarious evening.

My advice to President Jonathan and his handlers is to stop wasting their time trying to campaign on his job record. Those who have decided to vote for him will not do so because he has taken Nigeria to the moon. His record on the economy is a clear ‘F’ grade. As one reviews the laundry list of micro interventions the government calls its achievements, one wonders whether such list is all that the government could deliver with an unprecedented oil boom and an unprecedented public debt accumulation.

I can clearly see why reasonable people are worried.  Everywhere else in the world, government performance on the economy is measured by some outcome variables such as: income (GDP growth rate), stability of prices (inflation and exchange rate), unemployment rate, poverty rate, etc. On all these scores, this government has performed worse than its immediate predecessor— Obasanjo regime. If we appropriately adjust for oil income and debt, then this government is the worst in our history on the economy. All statistics are from the National Bureau of Statistics.

Despite presiding over the biggest oil boom in our history, it has not added one percentage point to the growth rate of GDP compared to the Obasanjo regime especially the 2003- 07 period.  Obasanjo met GDP growth rate at 2% but averaged 7% within 2003- 07. The current government has been stuck at 6% despite an unprecedented oil boom.  Income (GDP) growth has actually performed worse, and poverty escalated.

This is the only government in our history where rapidly increasing government expenditure was associated with increasing poverty. The director general of NBS stated in his written press conference address in 2011 that about 112 million Nigerians were living in poverty. Is this the record to defend?  Obama had a tough time in his re-election in 2012 because unemployment reached 8%. Here, unemployment is at a record 24% and poverty at an all-time 71% but people are prancing around, gloating about ‘performance’.

As I write, the Naira exchange rate to the dollar is $210 at the parallel market. What a historic performance! Please save your breathe and save us the embarrassment. The President promised Nigeria nothing in the last election and we did not get value for money. He should this time around present us with his plan for the future, and focus on how he would redeem himself in the second term—if he wins!

Sadly the government’s economic team is very weak, dominated by self-interested and self-conflicted group of traders and businessmen, and so-called economic team meetings have been nothing but showbiz time. The very people government exists to regulate have seized the levers of government as policymakers and most government institutions have largely been “privatized” to them.

Mention any major government department or agency and someone will tell you whom it has been ‘allocated’ to, and the person subsequently nominates his minion to occupy the seat.  What do you then expect? The economy seems to be on auto pilot, with confusion as to who is in charge, and government largely as a constraint. There are no big ideas, and it is difficult to see where economic policy is headed to.

My thesis is that the Nigerian economy, if properly managed, should have been growing at an annual rate of about 12% given the oil boom, and poverty and unemployment should have fallen dramatically over the last five years. This is topic for another day.

So far, the Government’s response to the self-inflicted crisis is, at best, laughable. They blame external shocks as if we did not expect them and say nothing about the terrible policy choices they made. The National Assembly had described the 2015 budget as unrealistic. The fiscal adjustments proposed in the 2015 budget simply play to the gallery and just to pander to our emotions.

For a $540 billion economy, the so-called luxury tax amounts to zero per cent of GDP.  If the current trend continues, private businesses will come under a heavy crunch soon. Having put economics on its head during the boom time, the Government now proposes to increase taxes during a prospective downturn and impose austerity measures. Unbelievable!

Fortuitously, just as he succeeded Shagari when Nigeria faced similar situations, Buhari is once more seeking to lead Nigeria. But times have changed, and Nigeria is largely different. First, this is a democracy and dealing with corruption must happen within the ambit of the rule of law and due process. Getting things done in a democracy requires complicated bargaining, especially where the legislature, labour, the media, and civil society have become strong and entrenched.

Second, the size, structure and institutions of the economy have fundamentally altered. The market economy, especially the capital market and foreign exchange market, impose binding constraints and discipline on any regime.   Third, dealing with most of the other issues— insecurity, unemployment/poverty, infrastructure, health, education, etc, require increased, smarter, and more efficient spending. Increased spending when the economy is on the reverse gear?

If oil prices remain between 40- 60 dollars over the next two years, the current policy regime guarantees that foreign reserves will continue the precipitous depletion with the attendant exchange rate depreciation, as well as a probable unsustainable escalation in debt accumulation, fiscal retrenchment or taxing the private sector with vengeance. The scenario does not look pretty.

The poor choices made by the current government have mortgaged the future, and the next government would have little room to manoeuvre and would inevitably undertake drastic but painful structural adjustments. Nigerians loathe the term ‘structural adjustment’. With falling real wages and depreciating currency, I can see any belated attempt  by the government to deal with the bloated public sector pitching it against a feisty labour.  I worry about regime stability in the coming months, and I do not envy the next team.

The seeming crisis is not destiny; it is self-imposed. However, we must see it as an opportunity to be seized to fundamentally restructure Nigeria’s political economy, including its fiscal federalism and mineral rights. The current system guarantees cycles of consumption loop and I cannot see sustainable long term prosperity without major systemic overhaul. The proposals at the national conference merely tinker at the margins.

In totality, the outcome of the national conference is to do more of the same, with minor amendments on the system of sharing and consumption rather than a fundamental overhaul of the system for productivity and prosperity. President Jonathan promises to implement the report of the national conference if he wins. I commend him for at least offering ‘something’, albeit, marginal in my view. I have not heard anything from the APC or Buhari regarding the national conference report or what kind of federalism they envisage for Nigeria.

In Nigeria’s recent history, two examples under the military and civilian governments demonstrate that where the political will exists, Nigeria has the capacity to overcome severe challenges.  The first was under President Babangida. Not many Nigerians appreciate that given the near bankrupt state of Nigeria’s finances and requirements for debt resolution under the Paris Club, the country had little choice but to undertake the painful structural adjustment programme (SAP).

I want to state for the record that the foundation for the current market economy we operate in Nigeria was laid by that regime (liberalization of markets including market determined exchange rate, private sector-led economy including licensing of private banks and insurance, de-regulation, privatization of public enterprises under TCPC, etc). Just abolishing the import licensing regime was a fundamental policy revolution. Despite the criticisms, these policy thrusts have remained the pillars of our deepening market economy, and the economy recovered from almost negative growth rate to average 5.5% during the regime and poverty incidence at 42% in 1992.

Under our democratic experience, President Obasanjo inherited a bankrupt economy (with the lost decade of the 1990’s GDP growth rate of 2.2% and hence zero per capita income growth for the decade). His regime consolidated and deepened the market economy structures (consolidation of the banking system which is powering the emergence of a new but truly private sector-led economy and simultaneously led to a new awareness and boom in the capital market;

telecommunications revolution; new pension regime; debt relief which won for Nigeria policy independence from the World Bank and Paris Club; deepening of de-regulation and  privatization including the unbundling of NEPA under PHCN for privatization; agricultural revolution that saw yearly growth rate of over 6% and remains unsurpassed ever since;

sound monetary and fiscal policy and growing foreign reserves that gave confidence to investors; establishment of the Africa Finance Corporation which is leading infrastructure finance in Africa; backward integration policy that saw the establishment and growth of Dangote cement and others; established ICPC and EFCC to fight corruption, etc).

The economy roared to average yearly growth of 7% between 2003 and 2007 (although average monthly oil price under his regime was $38), and poverty dropped from estimated 70% in1999 to 54% in 2004.   Obasanjo was his own coordinating minister of the economy and chairman of the economic management team— which he chaired for 90 minutes every week. I met with him daily.  In other words, he did not outsource economic management.

We expected that the next government after Obasanjo would take the economy to the next level.  So far, we have had two great slogans: the 7-point agenda and currently, the transformation agenda. They remain empty slogans without content or direction.

Let me suggest that the fundamental challenge for the next government on the economy can be framed around the goal of creating twelve million jobs over the next four years to have a dent on unemployment and poverty. The challenge is to craft a development agenda to deliver this within the context of broken public finance, and an economy in which painful structural adjustments will be inevitable if current trends in oil prices continue. Most other programmes on corruption, security, power, infrastructure, etc, are expected to be instruments to achieve this objective.

So far, neither the APC nor the PDP has a credible programme for employment and poverty reduction. The APC promises to create 20,000 jobs per state in the first year, totalling a mere 720,000 jobs.  This sounds like a quota system and for a country where the new entrants into the labour market per annum exceed two million.

If it was intended as a joke, APC must please get serious.  On the other hand, President Jonathan targets two million jobs per annum but his strategy for doing so is a Job Board— another committee of sort.  Sorry, Mr. President, a Job Board is not a strategy. The principal job Nigerians hired you to do for them is to create jobs for them too. You cannot outsource that job, Sir.  Creating 3 million jobs per annum under the unfolding crisis would task our creativity and audacity to the limits.

I heard one politician argue that once we fix power, private sector would create jobs. Not necessarily! Well, this government claims to have added 1,700MW to the national grid and yet unemployment soars. Ask Greece, Spain, etc with power and infrastructure and yet with high unemployment. Structural dislocations play a key role. For example, currently in Nigeria, it is estimated that more than 60% of graduates of our educational system are unemployable.

You can understand why many of us are amused when the government celebrates that it has established twelve more glorified secondary schools as universities. I thought they would have told us how many Nigerian universities made it in the league of the best 200 universities in the world. That would have been an achievement.  Surely, creating millions of jobs in this economy would, among other things, require ‘new money’ and extraordinary system of coordination among the three tiers of government plus the private sector.

Unfortunately, from what I read, the CBN is largely likely to be asleep at this time the country needs the most revolutionary finance. This is a topic for another day. Only the President can lead this effort. Moreover, we are waiting for the two parties/candidates to spell out HOW they will create jobs, whether it is the 20,000 jobs per state by APC or 2 million per annum by President Jonathan.  Let us know how you arrived at the figures. Whichever of the two that is declared winner will have his job cut out for him, and I expect him to declare a national emergency on job creation.

Surprisingly, none of the parties/candidates has any grand vision about African economic integration, led by Nigeria. There is no programme on how to make the naira the de facto currency of ECOWAS or the international financial centre that can attract more than $100 billion per annum.

Where is the strategy for orchestrating the revolutionary finance to power the economy during this downturn? For President Jonathan, I find it shocking that the most important initiative of his government to secure the future of the economy by Nigeria refusing to sign the ruinous Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the European Union is not even being mentioned.  President Obasanjo saved Nigeria from the potential ruin of an ECOWAS single currency while to his credit Jonathan safeguarded our industrial sector/economy by refusing to sign the EPA. Or does the government not understand the import of that?  It will be interesting to know the APC’s strategy for exploiting strategic alliances within Africa, China, and the world for Nigeria’s prosperity.

If Buhari wins, he will ride on the populist wind for “change”.  Most people I have spoken to who have decided to vote for Buhari do not necessarily know the specifics of what he would offer or how Nigeria would be different under him. I asked my driver, Usman, whom he would vote for President.

He responded: “If they no rig the election, na Buhari everybody go vote for”. I asked him why, and his next response sums it: “The man dey honest. In short, people just want to see another face for that villa”.  But if he wins, the honeymoon will be brief and the pressure will be immense to magically deliver a ‘new Nigeria’ with no corruption, no boko haram or insecurity, jobs for everyone, no poverty, infrastructure and power in abundance, etc.

As a first point, Buhari and his team must realize that they do not yet have a coherent, credible agenda that is consistent with the fundamentals of the economy currently. The APC manifesto contains some good principles and wish-lists, but as a blue print for Nigeria’s security and prosperity, it is largely hollow. The numbers do not add up. Thus, his first job is to present a credible development agenda to Nigerians.

The second key challenge for Buhari and his team will be to transit and transform from a group of what I largely refer to as aggrieved people’s congregation to build a true political party with a soul from the patchwork of political associations. It is surely easier to oppose than to govern.  This should not worry us much. After all, even the PDP which has been in power for 16 years is still an assembly of people held together by what I refer to as dining table politics.

I am not sure how many members can tell you what their party stands for or its mission and vision for Nigeria. The third but more difficult agenda is cobbling together a truly ‘progressive team’ that will begin to pick the pieces.  The lesson of history is that the best leaders have been the ones who went beyond their narrow provincial enclaves to recruit talents and mobilize capacities for national transformation.

In Nigeria’s history, the two presidents who made the most fundamental transformation of the economy, Babangida and Obasanjo, were exceptional in the quality of the teams they put together. I therefore pray that Buhari will be magnanimous in victory – if he wins—to put together a ‘team Nigeria’ for the rescue mission.

If Jonathan wins, then God must have been magnanimous to give him a second chance to redeem himself. Most people I know who support Jonathan do so either out of self-interest or fear of the unknown.  As a friend summed it: the devil you know is better than the angel you do not know.  One person assured me that we would see a ‘different Jonathan’ if he wins as he has been rattled by the harsh judgment of history on his presidency so far.  I just pray that he is right.  In that case, I would just draw the President’s attention to two issues:

First, beside the coterie of clowns who literally make a living with the sing-song of transformation agenda, President Jonathan must know that it remains an empty slogan. His greatest challenge is how to save himself from the stranglehold of his largely provincial palace jesters who tell him he has done better than God, and seek out ‘enemies’ and friends who can help him write his name in history. Propaganda won’t do it.

Second, Jonathan must claw back his powers as President of Nigeria. He largely outsourced them, and must now roll his sleeves for a new beginning. I take liberty to tell you this brutal truth: if you are not re-elected, there is little to remember your regime after the next few years.

On 7th January 2004, I made a special presentation to an expanded economic management team to set agenda for the new year (as chief economic adviser). The focus of my presentation was for us to identify seven iroko trees that would be the flagship markers for the administration as well as how to finance them. I use the same framework to evaluate your administration.

What I say to you, Mr. President, is that your record of performance so far is like a farmland filled with grasses. Yes, they are many but there is no tree, let alone any iroko tree, that stands out.  Think about this. The beginning of wisdom for every President in his second term is to admit that he is racing against time to cement his legacy. So far, your report card is not looking great.  You need a team of big and bold thinkers, as well as with excellent execution capacity.  So far, it is not working!

Under the executive presidential system, Nigerians elected you to manage their economy. You cannot outsource that job. Our constitution envisages a federal coordination of the economy, and that function is performed by the National Economic Council (NEC) with Vice-President as chairman. Indeed, the constitution and other laws of Nigeria envisage the office of the VP as the coordinator on the economy.

All major economic institutions of the federal government are, by law, chaired by the Vice-President including the national planning (see functions of the national planning commission as coordinator of federal government economic and development programmes), debt management office, National Council on Privatization, etc. As chairman of National Planning (with Ministers of Finance, Agriculture, CBN governor, etc as members), the VP oversees the federal planning and coordination.

Then the Constitution mandates the VP as representative of the federal government to chair the NEC, with only CBN governor and state governors as members—to coordinate national economy between federal and states. No minister is a member of NEC. Many people do not understand the logic of the design of our constitution and the role of the VP.  Of course, the buck stops on the desk of Mr. President. Only the President and VP have our mandate to govern us.

Every other person is an adviser/assistant. I bet that you will only appreciate this article AFTER you leave office. Now that you are in power, truth will only hurt!  Be assured that those of us who are prepared to die for Nigeria will never spare you or anyone else this bitter truth. Nigeria must survive and prosper beyond Buhari or Jonathan!

By Chukwuma Charles Soludo, CFR, Former CBN Governor and the Current Executive Governor of Anambra State.

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

Rhapsody of Realities, Tuesday, March 28th. 2023, By Pastor Chris Oyakhilome PhD DSc DD

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STAY IN CHRIST

No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the LORD, and their righteousness is of me, saith the LORD (Isaiah 54:17).

This opening verse is one of the blessings of Israel’s millennial kingdom under the Messiah; but it’s true of us in Christ today. In Him, we live and move and have our being. We’re guaranteed divine protection from all weapons of any nature, formed or used against us.

In Christianity, we dwell in Christ. Christ is our home. In Christ, we’re in safety. We’re immune from hurt or harm. It’s like what God did for the children of Israel in the Old Testament. Exodus 12:22-23 says, “And ye shall take a bunch of hyssop, and dip it in the blood that is in the bason, and strike the lintel and the two side posts with the blood that is in the bason; and none of you shall go out at the door of his house until the morning. For the LORD will pass through to smite the Egyptians; and when he seeth the blood upon the lintel, and on the two side posts, the LORD will pass over the door, and will not suffer the destroyer to come in unto your houses to smite you.”

He told the children of Israel to stay inside their houses because the death angel was coming to town; there would be no safety outside. Then He instructed them to mark their doorposts and lintels with blood to prevent them from being destroyed along with the Egyptians.

They did as God instructed and they were preserved. As long as they stayed where God told them to stay, the death angel couldn’t touch them. It’s the same thing today; as long as you’re in Christ—as long as you stay in the truth of God’s Word—death, evil and peril will “pass over” you. You’ll live perpetually in victory.

When the reality of the Word and who you are in Christ dawns on you, you suddenly come to a place of absolute confidence and independence, where you realize that you’re superior to Satan and nothing he does can affectyou. This is our life in Christ. Glory to God!

Confession

I dwell in the secret place of the Most High, and under the shadow of the Almighty. He is my refuge and my fortress. I’m forever protected and fortified against all evil, wickedness and corrupting influences in the world because I dwell in Christ, the place of safety, glory, dominion and everlasting joy—where I reign and rule over circumstances, in Jesus’ Name. Amen.

Further Study:

2 Corinthians 2:14
“Now thanks [be] unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ, and maketh manifest the savour of his knowledge by us in every place.”

Psalm 91:5-9
“Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night; [nor] for the arrow [that] flieth by day;
6 [Nor] for the pestilence [that] walketh in darkness; [nor] for the destruction [that] wasteth at noonday.
7 A thousand shall fall at thy side, and ten thousand at thy right hand; [but] it shall not come nigh thee.
8 Only with thine eyes shalt thou behold and see the reward of the wicked.
9 Because thou hast made the LORD, [which is] my refuge, [even] the most High, thy habitation;”

1-Year Bible Reading Plan:
Luke 7:36-50;
Joshua 1-2

2-Year Bible Reading Plan:
Matthew 26:26-35;
Exodus 37

Extract From Rhapsody Of Realities Daily Devotional

Good Morning Beloved.
Have A Wonderful Day!

#KeepSayingIt, Tuesday, 28th March 2023, https://loveworldlyrics.com/son-of-god-by-simeon-rich-and-loveworld-singers-mp3-lyrics/

Everything about me exudes the life of Christ; therefore, my health does not fail, rather, my health is ever radiant and ever flourishing. I am a dispenser of eternal verities. I am of God. I live in the ageless and deathless zone. I have eternal life; therefore, no disease or infection can fasten itself to my body. I do not suffer from diseases of old age, for I am renewed daily by the Word. I am bursting forth in divine health always.

The Lord is my refuge and my fortress. My God, in Him, I trust. On Him, I lean and rely. He delivers me from the snare of the fowler and from the deadly pestilence. I am not afraid of disease and death because the Lord is my shield and buckler. The angels of the Lord bear me up in their hands. I do not fall. I do not fail. I do not falter. I trample under my foot, challenges, sickness, infirmities, disappointments, agony, mishaps deceptions, and falsities. I live and dwell in health and safety all my days. I live the supernatural life in Christ – the life of majesty, tranquility, and dominance.

The reign of the Word and the influence of the Holy Spirit is over my spirit, soul, and body. I have the eternal life of God; therefore, I am not affected by anything that hurts. I flourish in perfect health and I am above all crippling circumstances of life. I am in Christ! I reign in righteousness. I dwell in the secret place of the Most High God, and I function with the ability of the Spirit always. I am the best of God’s creation because His Word of truth gave birth to me, therefore, no weapon formed against me shall prosper in Jesus Mighty Name. Amen.

‘The Most Corrupt Election, in the History of Electioneering in Nigeria’ – By LP’s Valentine Obienyem

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A Collage Picture of Electoral Violence, Voter Intimidation, Vote Buyings, Ballot box Snatching by Thugs and Fraud that marred both the 2023 Presidential and Governorship Elections in Nigeria
A Collage Picture of Electoral Violence, Voter Intimidation, Vote Buyings, Ballot box Snatching by Thugs and Fraud that marred both the 2023 Presidential and Governorship Elections in Nigeria

The just concluded Presidential election has been adjudged to be one of the most controversial in the nation’s recent history, with reports of electoral malpractices and BVAS machines that didn’t work, despite the earlier assurance by INEC that they would function optimally. Nigerians saw a few videos of different electoral malpractices; they were not the exclusive preserve of only one party – all the leading political parties were involved. As Lawyers, we are familiar with the saying “he who comes to equity, must come with clean hands”. Are the hands of your party clean enough to come to equity?

Engaging in election malpractices is the function of people’s character. A lot has been written about the Presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi; however, none of the writings has impugned his character. On the contrary, during electioneering, we saw the dirty and unbelievable past of some of the contestants, bordering on all forms of corruption and drug dealing. Logically, those found wanting, by extension, have the character traits to engage in election malpractices with a clear conscience of nature. The man whose character does not entertain vices would hardly engage in such things. Therefore, I can tell you that Mr Peter Obi has not, and will not even be part of, where such is discussed.

On the issue of the BVAS machine that did not work, it is very clear that it was an essential part of the plan by those that rigged the election – the President, INEC Chairman and Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Have you asked yourself why, amidst the universal criticisms of the BVAS machines that did not work, only one party has not condemned it?

On the election being adjudged as one of the most controversial, may I add that it is the most corrupt election in the history of electioneering in Nigeria? The painful thing is that with BVAS, it would have been the best since it has comfortable safeguards, but like everything in Nigeria, we missed that opportunity of proving to the world that we have come of age as a nation and as a people. With what happened, most civilised countries are now looking at Nigerians as a nation of barbarians, because of the indiscretion of a few.  

Given some of the outcries that have trailed the election, the observation of international election observers now the litigation that is following, would you say the election was really free and fair? How well would you say that INEC discharged its constitutional duty?

INEC failed woefully. Beyond INEC, our President, General Muhammadu Buhari would probably be remembered as the worst President since independence. I can understand the crude urge to rig elections, many years ago. However, with where we are today and where other countries are, it is heartbreaking that a leader who professes patriotism would allow such an avoidable disaster to befall the country today. While other countries are struggling to move forward, we are content to move backwards.

In the past, even with hitches here and there, international observers had given kudos to the conduct of our past elections. However, they all condemned the last Presidential election, because the rigging was brazen and stupefying.

Would you say that the 2023 elections met the expectations of the majority of Nigerians? 

I have already described it as an election that ought to have been the best, because the designers of BVAS correctly provided safeguards against the evils of elections in Nigeria – over-voting, thumb-printing, and ballot-snatching, amongst others. However, by aborting the work of BVAS, it turned out to be the worst election. It did not meet the expectations of Nigerians and of the whole world, especially other Africans that look up to us for direction and guidance.

What level of confidence do you have in the Judiciary, the last hope of the common man, that justice will be dispensed fairly, in furtherance of Nigeria’s democracy?

There appears to be a consensus among Nigerians, pointing to the loss of faith in the Judiciary. All I want to say here is that, while not agree with them, this is an opportunity for the Judiciary to reassure Nigerians. Here, may we remember the immortal words of Aristotle, that “separated from law and justice, man is the worst of all beasts”.  If justice is not done, we are simply craving a return to the state of nature. Nobody wants that for our dear country. The Presidency has moved some steps towards that, it is left for the Judiciary, peopled more by mature and circumspect men, to halt the descent into hell.  

Some of the major foreign powers like the USA and the UK have already congratulated the people of Nigeria and the President-elect on the elections, though they also urged INEC to improve the electoral process for the Gubernatorial elections, for the people to eschew violence and inflammatory statements at this critical time, and for politicians to use the “well-established mechanisms for the adjudication of electoral disputes”. What do you make of their position?

I do not have the list of those who have congratulated him or not. In international diplomacy, offering of congratulations is normal, but not in any way meant to be a stamp of legitimacy. One would even notice that the congratulations are coming reluctantly, and what does that show you?  Have you noticed that Nigerian Governors are not congratulating him? They know that Nigerians are angry, and would vote against those that do so. They are probably waiting to do so after the election. This shows us that offering congratulations is mostly perfunctory.

The issue of whether a Presidential candidate must win 25% of the votes cast in  FCT is also one that has created a massive debate amongst Lawyers. Kindly, share your opinion on this

The framers of the Constitution, are clear about that provision. If they wanted Abuja to be considered among other States, they would have used the word “including”, but they clearly used “and” to show that Abuja stands independently of other states. Why seek an interpretation of a word that is plain and not ambiguous?

Valentine Obieyen, Labour Party

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

A US-Based Prof. Moses Ochonu from Benue State Wrote.

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Mr Peter-Obi, the People's President
Mr Peter-Obi, the People's President

“You asked “where are the Igbo candidates?” You derisively said “the Igbo are not ready.” You challenged the Igbo to produce credible candidates with capacity. You claimed that no Igbo politician has national appeal. You say the Igbo are not united, as if the other groups that have produced presidents are united.

What you didn’t say is that you’re campaigning for a non-Igbo president. Nothing wrong with that, but be honest and don’t knock the nation-building imperative of having a competent Igbo as president. What you didn’t say is that you’re probably one of the Nigerians who, for reasons known only to them and God, have a thing against the Igbo or detest the idea of seeing an Igbo man lead Nigeria.

Now that Peter Obi, a competent, credible Igbo politician with national appeal, has declared for the presidential contest, I wonder what your new talking points will be. My bet is that you won’t have new talking points but that you will go back to the old familiar talking point of

1) “Obi has no structure (meaning he doesn’t have enough dollars to throw around)”;

2) “the Igbo cannot be trusted”; and “the Igbo don’t have the number,” etc.

Deep down, you know that the Igbo deserve the presidency more than any other major politico-ethnic bloc.

Deep down, you know that Peter Obi is by far the best material of all the candidates that have declared their interest in the major parties so far, since he has no baggage of corruption, is relatively young, has demonstrated capacity by recording arguably the best gubernatorial tenure since 1999, and is self-aware and self-critical.

You say you don’t just want an Igbo president but that you’d be happy with a president of Igbo extraction who is competent. You have that in Peter Obi, but you can’t bring yourself to support him because you’re prejudiced against his ethnic community, a prejudice you hide behind the specious rhetoric of “politics is a game of numbers” and “power is taken, not given.”

You know deep down that an Igbo presidency would be the best, most significant investment in nation-building in our fractured and extremely divided nation since independence, but you can’t get past your prejudice or the suspicions you’ve been socialized to harbor towards the Igbo.

You know that having a competent and proven Igbo as President could permanently address and satiate the legitimate complaints of political exclusion and its attendant separatist agitation, and that, as an added benefit, it could repair some of the economic and political damage and stagnancy of the past decade, but you somehow can’t bring yourself to accept the fact that an Igbo person who checks all the boxes and meets your own declared criteria for the presidency is ready and available to serve in that role.

The next thing we may hear from you is “2023 is not their time,” or “let the Igbo work with other groups to produce an Igbo president in the future.” This attitude is escapism, hypocrisy, self-contradiction, and duplicity rolled into one deceptive rhetoric that hides an Igbophobic mindset.

And yes, Igbophobia is a thing many of us are still fighting the civil war mentally and unless we confront it and have an honest conversation about it as a nation, national cohesion will continue to elude us”.

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

PETITION TO PRESIDENT BUHARI BY BOLAJI AKINYEMI

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President Muhammadu-Buhari of Nigeria
President Muhammadu-Buhari of Nigeria

His Excellency, Muhammadu Buhari, The President Federal Republic of Nigeria, The Presidency, The Villa, Abuja, Nigeria.

Your Excellency Sir,

PETITION AGAINST MR. BOLA AHMED TINUBU FOR MAKING INCENDIARY COMMENTS AND HATE SPEECH BREEDING YORUBA SUPREMACISTS AND CAUSING TRIBAL ATTACK AGAINST IGBOS IN LAGOS AND ACROSS NIGERIA.

I write this petition with the full realization that with the recent general  elections like ours that allegedly became a tribal war against a particular tribe, there is need to conduct post-mortem investigation and put on trial those directly responsible and those who incited and sponsored such verbal and physical attacks, especially in Lagos State to discourage this pattern in future elections. 

The Presidential election of February 25th, 2023  generously described by “The Economist” as chaotic, has further increased the negative perception of the world about our dear country to which belong our loyalty. A newspaper columnist, Lasisi Olagunju, collated the world views about us informed by the lack of organization of the umpire INEC, disappointing compromise of law enforcement agencies and unfortunate hijack of the process by non-state actors: “The world is not pleased with our ways, and we could read it clearly in how the global press described what we did with ourselves last week.

The Economist said a “chaotically organized vote and messy count” gave Nigeria a new president. The Financial Times said in an editorial comment that our Presidential election was “deeply flawed” and the winner “a wealthy political fixer.” The Guardian of U.K. described the winner as “an immensely wealthy veteran powerbroker trailed by corruption allegations which he denies.” The New York Times described him as “a divisive figure in Nigerian politics.” Robert Rotberg; founding Director of the Harvard Kennedy School’s Programme on intrastate conflict, wrote an opinion for Canada’s influential Globe and Mail; its headline: “Bola Tinubu’s election is another triumph for Nigeria’s corrupt old guard.” The Times of London was the most disrespectful. It used this very bad phrase: “a wealthy kleptocratic ‘godfather’ of politics” to describe the person who will replace our very clean Buhari on May 29, 2023. 

As bad as those characterizations are, they are not as damaging as the Financial Times’ revelation that it personally “witnessed armed men remove a presidential ballot box in Surulere, Lagos” on Election Day.

The CNN last Friday played back a part of Bola Tinubu’s acceptance speech where he described what he got as “a serious mandate.” A CNN anchor then asked if it “was really a mandate” with less than 10 percent of the registered voters behind it. He must be wondering what kind of people these are? The CNN and that anchor were not the only ones bemused by our electoral culture, our elections and their outcomes. One of Germany’s largest newspapers, Sueddeutsche Zietung, had unflattering words for the winner; it also queried the legitimacy of a mandate that was spurned by 90 per cent of the voting population. Aljazeera ran a Special Report on how the election was disrupted in Lagos last Saturday. The headline is: ‘How violence robs Nigerians of their votes.’ The Washington Post quoted Matthew Page, Associate Fellow with Chatham House’s Africa Program, as accusing INEC of making both deliberate and unintentional mistakes: “They raised the hopes about the election and its transparency, and then they dashed them. When the opposition says the process was broken, it’s hard to argue with them.” Foreign election observers from the US International Republican Institute (IRI) and the National Democratic Institute (NDI) summed up their opinion of the election as falling “well short of Nigerian citizens’ legitimate and reasonable expectations.”

Lagunju went further, “I have spent the past five days reading informed commentaries and listening to credible voices. I have not seen, read nor heard a single positive review of the election in any credible media in any country of the world. I have been around long enough to conclude that Tinubu’s 2023 mandate is rivaled in content, texture and review probably only by Shehu Shagari’s Verdict ’83 mandate”.

This was the justification for military intervention that brought you into power as military head of state. Sir, If you do not want  the military back to power any time soon, you have to respond to the yearning of the 90% majority disenfranchised who are not captured within the less than 10% voters INEC claimed voted for Asiwaju. A rerun of the election will save your integrity as our President, and help repair our badly damaged image as a nation. If 25th of February was chaotic, the 18th of March election was living in hell across Lagos for the terror unleashed on citizens.

Please, be reminded that the New York Times described Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu as “a divisive figure in Nigeria politics”. Are they privy to intelligence that your office is not? I doubt it! Sir, I do understand that your hands are tied, but you must loose them for posterity’s sake and do what is right. Bola Ahmed Tinubu has never hidden his hatred for the Igbos. I want you to call to mind the unfortunate event of Funke Olakunrin the daughter of the leader of Afenifere who was murdered by criminal elements. During his visit to the father of the deceased, Asiwaju made an uncomplimentary remark which in summary pointed to the Igbo as the tribe behind the act, but as it turned out, the criminal elements were men from another tribe. It is grossly irresponsible of any leader to attempt to tribalize crime. This is what the Fulanis have suffered since 2015 when you a respectable Fulani became the President, if you weren’t a strong willed upright person, his comment was enough to let go of the criminals. As we all know, crime has no tribe, without your interference, the criminals are facing justice. Those with tendency to tribalize crime should have no place in leadership. It is not on record that Asiwaju was remorseful for wrongly accusing the Igbo for a crime not committed by one of them, neither is there any apology in the public from him to this effect. 

Sir, recall that after Asiwaju made this statement, a Lagos Prince known online as Adeyinka Grandson, based in the UK became known for Yoruba Supremacy Ideology and began running hate speech against the Igbos, till he was arrested by a Team, led by the Scotland Yard Counter Terrorism Command for stirring racial discrimination and encouraging terrorism, an offense for he was tried and found guilty and he is currently serving a four year sentence.

Asiwaju’s unrepentant penchant for unhealthy rhetorics about the Igbo is largely responsible for reported suppression, oppression, attacks and killings suffered by persons believed to be Igbos on Saturday 18th March 2023, evidences abound of persons who are not Igbos but suffered the same fate as Igbos for “resembling” the Igbos. The silence of the Executive Governor of Lagos on what I would call the progom against the Igbos by political appointees of his government like Musiliu Akinsanya popularly known as MC Oluomo. The roles of Baales and Obas of Communities who are answerable to the commission of Chieftaincy Affairs is proof of alleged state sponsored terror against the Igbos in Lagos. 

Your Excellency, knowing the pain of war to which the country was subjected between 1966 and 1970, for which you wear today a medal of honour as a national hero, will you overlook this obvious sign of another civil war for which a “Pesident to be” and the incumbent Governor of Lagos is already culpable? Sir, imagine the fate of the Igbos in Lagos under a President and a Governor holding dearly Yoruba Supremacy Ideology in a multi-ethnic and divers nation like ours!

You cannot afford to overlook a crime against humanity for any reason. This privilege is given to you before other options (international) to seek justice will be considered. Is Asiwaju above the law? I don’t think so! Should a man with so much of embarrassing allegations not be cleared before the privilege of Presidential Immunity will be bestowed on him?

Sir, for Asiwaju’s performance as Governor of Lagos between 1999 and 2007, I will depend on Festus Keyamo’s assessment of his government in this regard: “…to me, the real meaning of government should be about bringing succour to those you govern. Aside from that, democracy and government is meaningless. I cannot imagine a situation where the military government gave more succour in Lagos state to workers than even Tinubu’s Administration. Tinubu regime has been the worst for the workers in the last two decades.”

Mr President Sir, your campaign train in 2015 threaded on two wheels viz personal uprightness and integrity of heart to duty. This is the month of Ramadan when every Muslim must seek to do only that which is right before Allah, this of course is the last you will observe in the privileged position of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The destiny of more than 200 million people hangs on you this holy month of Ramadan.

Sir, I personally believe the reason you were created and given to us as our President at this season is to bring to reality the plan of God for Nigeria. A plan long spoken by Pa Sydney Granville Elton, a Briton who arrived Nigeria in early 1930 who died a Nigerian and was buried in Ilesha, Osun State, SouthWest Nigeria. Who in 1986 said, “Nigeria and Nigerians will be known all over the world for corruption. Your name – Nigeria will stink for corruption but after a while a new phase will come, a phase of righteousness. People from the nations of the earth will hold a Nigerian and say “we want to follow you to your nation to go and learn righteousness”.

Sir, holding unto you now are 200 million people crying in hope that you will teach us to do right, no matter who is involved, that we may learn from you what to teach other nations. Asiwaju Bola Ahmed’s hate speech against the Igbos at the visit to Pa Fasoranti is enough a ground to order his immediate arrest by the Inspector General of Police and Director General of the State Security Services with  prosecution by the Attorney General of the Federation. This letter became necessary in the face of gross irresponsibility displayed by men of the Nigeria Police who became spokespersons for one Musiliu Akinsanya,  ” MC Oluomo”, an hireling of Asiwaju who in the presence of a police made similar statements for which Adeyinka Grandson is serving Jail term in UK. But, the Nigeria Police as an institution that should arrest him turned around to  say he was joking over what we will later experience as not just a threat but a war on the gloomy Saturday.

Sir, while the WORLD is waiting to know the extent of Asiwaju’s involvement in a narcotics trafficking offence dating  back to 1992 committed in the state of Chicago in USA in which the subpoena has been filed  for the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) of the United States  to testify in an election petition filed  by Mr Peter Obi, the Presidential Candidate of the Labour Party. It is important that the state adequately protects the Petitioner herein against the drug cartel pattern of attack driven by tribal supremacy ideology that Lagos state is presently witnessing.

May I also request for security protection for me and my family. Your Excellency, you once opined that the rule of law must be subjected to the supremacy of national security and interest, for which a lot of persons including myself differ from you, not with the spirit of your position but rather the letters of it.

Sir, there is no point pretending Tinubu, MC Oluomo and his foot soldiers employed by Babajide Sanwo-Olu under the guise of Lagos State Park Management Agency have become a threat to National Security. May I inform you that the need to give the spirit of your position on national security supremacy the letters to run with within the ambit of the rule of law is the reason for writing you and making the following recommendations:

Immediate sacking of Professor Mahmood Yakubu, the INEC Chairman and appointment of another. Asiwaju must be put under house arrest same way you have with Mazi Namdi Kanu, till due diligence is done and clearance from the narcotic offence is gotten, as it must never be heard of, that any one with tainted character is given the leadership of the most populous black nation in the world. This no doubt will affect the global fight against drug peddling and narcotic trafficking for which Lagos State of recent has become home for world record breaking volumes of drugs never seen before.

In the circumstance, I submit this petition in my personal capacity as a patriotic Nigerian to invite/arrest, interrogate and after investigation, if necessary, charge the individuals connected to the racial discrimination and terrorism witnessed in Lagos state to court for their conduct which led to incitement and progom against humanity.

Yours in hope of a better and greater Nigeria,

BOLAJI O. AKINYEMI

CC: 

1. Attorney General of the Federation, Federal Ministry of Justice, Abuja, Federal Capital Territory.

2. Inspector General of Police, Nigeria Police Force, Force Headquarters, Abuja, Federal Capital Territory.

3. Director General, State Security Services, State Security Services Headquarters, Abuja, Federal Capital Territory.

4. Director General, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency(NDLEA), Abuja, Federal Capital Territory.

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

INAUGURAL ADDRESS OF THE FIRST CIVILIAN GOVERNOR OF LAGOS STATE, LATE ALHAJI LATEEF KAYODE JAKANDE TO THE PEOPLE OF LAGOS STATE — 1ST OCTOBER, 1979 IN WHICH HE DECLARED LAGOS “A NO MAN’S LAND”

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THE FIRST CIVILIAN GOVERNOR OF LAGOS STATE, LATE ALHAJI LATEEF KAYODE JAKANDE FLANKED BY HIS WIFE AND THE VICE PRESIDENT, PROF. YEMI OSIBANJO ON HIS 90TH. BIRTHDAY
THE FIRST CIVILIAN GOVERNOR OF LAGOS STATE, LATE ALHAJI LATEEF KAYODE JAKANDE FLANKED BY HIS WIFE AND THE VICE PRESIDENT, PROF. YEMI OSIBANJO ON HIS 90TH. BIRTHDAY

Fellow Citizens of Lagos State,

On Saturday, 28th, July 1979, you elected me, by 559,070 votes to 126,805, the first Executive Governor of Lagos State. Today, as a result of that election, the Chief Judge of this State, in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution of Nigeria, has invested me with the office. This is an inestimable honour of which I am very conscious. It is a call to service that I take very seriously in all humility. And I want to assure you that I shall spare no effort to justify the confidence which you, the good people of Lagos State, have demonstrably reposed in me.

God moves in a mysterious way, says William Cowper, His wonders to perform. His purposes will ripen fast, unfolding every hour.

The creation of Lagos State, like all great events, is not the achievement of one single person. The territory now known as Lagos State is the former Colony Province created by the British Administration for their own administrative convenience. Following the cession of his sovereignty to the British Crown by King Dosunmu in 1861, Eko was administered independently by a Governor of the Settlement of Lagos. Under the Commission of 19th February-1866, the Settlement of Lagos was governed by an Administrator and a Legislative Council responsible to the Governor of the West African Settlements residing in Sierra Leone. This continued until 1874. By Letters Patent dated 24th July, 1874 the territory was administered by a Lieutenant Governor subject to the Governor of the Gold Coast Colony.

Nine years later, by Letters Patent of 22nd January 1883, Lagos was administered by a Deputy Governor responsible to the Governor of the Gold coast Colony. In 1886, Lagos was again set up as a separate colony in response to a petition by the people of Lagos who resented being governed from the Gold Coast. It was administered by a Governor of the Colony of Lagos under Letters Patent dated 13th January, 1886. This was the first time that the territory now known as Lagos State came under one administration. The administration continued under various constitution until 1954, when Lagos was separated from the rest of the Colony and constituted Federal Territory, that is to say a No-Man’s Land.

Thus, it is evident that, for 89 years from 1862 to 1951, Lagos (with or without the rest of the Colony) enjoyed a separate and distinct existence as a unit of administration with its own Governor, Deputy Governor, Lieutenant-governor, Administrator or Commissioner as the case may be. For 68 years from 1886 to 1954, the Colony of Lagos (i.e. the present Lagos State) was administered together as a unit, an inseperable whole. From 1914 to 1923 the Colony of Lagos had its own Legislative Council while the rest of Nigeria had another Council

Thus the foundation for a Lagos State had been well and truly laid by history. But, in the circumstances of our dear country, it still had to be fought for. And two of the earliest fighters for a Lagos State must be remembered with gratitude on this occasion. They are Chief Theophilus Adebayo Doherty and Prince Ibikunle Akintoye. They dreamt of a Lagos and Colony State. It was left to a later generation to make their dream a reality.

In 1964, while I was serving a seven-year sentence for treasonable felony and conspiracy in the Maximum Security Prison at Kirikiri, Apapa, I came to the conclusion that the time had come to put forward a reasoned case for the creation of a Lagos State. With the assistance of my friends outside the prison walls, and deliberately breaking prison regulations, this conclusion resulted in a booklet published in 1966 with the meaningful title of “The case for a Lagos State”

In the preface to the book I said inter alia: “It seems now to be generally agreed that if Nigeria is to survive as one organic whole one of the conditions precedent to such survival is the creation of new states. I have endeavoured to argue the case for a Lagos State in the following pages as objectively as possible and without emotion. One is bound to recognise that this case rests almost entirely on historical circumstances and moral principles. But this does not detract from its validity. A series of historical circumstances have culminated in neglect and injustice such as can only be effectively removed, in a Nigerian Federation, by the creation of a Lagos State”.

In August 1966, the then Administrator of Lagos, Major Mobolaji Johnson, summoned a Conference of Young Indigenous Lagosians to deliberate on the place of Lagos in a future constitutional arrangement. This book formed the basis of a memorandum submitted to the conference. The conference, among other things, decided that a Lagos State comprising the Federal Territory and the Colony Province of Western Nigeria should be created in a Nigerian Federation.

On September 12, 1966, the then Head of the Federal Military Government and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, Yakubu Gowon, established an Adhoc conference on Nigeria’s future. The Lagos Delegation was led by Doctor Taslim Elias until he became Attorney General of the Federation when the mantle of leadership of the delegation fell on me. But it was under Doctor Elias’s leadership that the Lagos delegation submitted to the Adhoc Conference a memorandum for the creation of Lagos State. That memorandum was substantially a reproduction of “The Case for A Lagos State”. And it was that memorandum, no doubt, which enabled the Federal Military Government to reach the decision to create a Lagos State in 1967.

I would like to take this opportunity to pay tribute to Brigadier Mobolaji Johnson for his invaluable contribution to the creation of this State. Throughout the period of the 1966 Adhoc conference he was unwavering in his conviction and unsparing in his endeavours for the creation of a Lagos State. It was his lot to become the first Military Governor of the State. And he made a good job of it, all things considered. May I also thank the last of the Military Administrators, Captain Ebitu Ukiwe, for the voluminous handing-over notes he has given me and in particular for his physical presence this afternoon. It is a kind gesture which I greatly appreciate.

It is now our historic duty to take off from where the military left. In doing so; I have no illusion whatsoever. When on Saturday November 4, 1978, I was nominated by my party, the Unity Party of Nigeria, to contest the gubernatorial election for this State, I said inter alia in my acceptance speech: “I am conscious of the problems and the opportunities that abound in Lagos State. I know that the citizens of Lagos State are the most sophisticated in the country. I know that every tribe and every ethnic group, in Nigeria are represented in Lagos State. I know that for most Nigerians Lagos is the El Dorado, with matchless opportunities for prosperity.

I know that the indigenes of Lagos State have a natural right to the services provided by their state. I know that the non- indigenes of Lagos State have an indisputable right to the services provided by their State of residence. I know that Lagos State is said to be the most developed part of the Federation. But I also know that below the majestic flyovers, the mystifying ring roads, and the spiralling skyscrapers there is abject poverty in this State. And I know that there are in Lagos State some of the worst living conditions that can be found in any part of the Federation.

I am sure that it will surprise many Nigerians in other states to be told that Lagos State is as much in need of development as any other State. Perhaps our need is greater. Because of the pressure of population, which is the highest in the country, the demand for services is extremely severe. Besides, Lagos State is Nigeria’s shop window. These, problems are enormous. But the consolation is that the opportunities for solving them are there. And they are exciting and challenging”. I can only underline that statement on this occasion of assuming office as Governor of Lagos State.

We shall model our government after the Government of the Western Region of Nigeria, from 1952 to 1959, headed by Chief Obafemi Awolowo. That Government was the most efficient, the most dynamic, and the most responsive of all the governments of the Federation. That Government was the country’s pace-setter — the first to do all good things that others later copied. There has never been a government like it in Africa before or since. And we know that in giving us their massive vote, the good people of Lagos State were influenced by their memories of the good old days of the Awolowo Government. We shall live up to their high expectations, especially as Chief Awolowo is still very much around and will continue to be our source of inspiration for many years to come.

In this connection, I am glad to affirm that free education at all levels, of which he is the greatest advocate in Nigeria, will become operative in Lagos State with immediate effect from today. On September 15, 1979, I issued an appeal to all school headmasters and all principals in this State not to demand or accept fees from school children in primary and secondary schools. I am grateful to all those who heeded this appeal, although it had no force of law. Now that I have been sworn in as Governor of Lagos State, I direct that education shall be free at all levels in this State. For the avoidance of doubt, no fees should be collected from any pupil or student for anything whatsoever.

Where fees have been collected immediate steps should be taken to refund them to their payers. In all Boarding Schools Parents/Teachers Association shall take over the management of boarding facilities, and they will be given all possible assistance by the education authorities until boarding is completely phased out. Arrangement have been made to enact the necessary legislations for this purpose.

The Unity Party of Nigeria is irrevocably committed to change things and to bring about a new order. We have come to serve the common people of this State. We have clear-cut programmes for which we have received your mandate. I want to assure you that we shall do everything that is humanly possible, under God’s unfailing guidance and protection, to execute these prorammes and honour the solemn pledges we made to the electorate.

In implementing these programmes we shall be scrupulously fair and just to every citizen, be he high or low; we shall seek at all times and on all occasions the greatest good of the greatest number. We shall be guided by the timeless principle that the will of the people is the supreme law. There will be no discrimination against anyone on the ground of political affiliation, religious belief, ethnic or state origin, sex or social status. But we can do all of these things only if all sections of the community cooperate fully with the Government they have elected.

We need the absolute loyalty and cooperation of the public service. We are going to move much faster than perhaps the public service is used to. We are bringing to the Service a new sense of direction. At the same time we shall ensure that every public servant in this state is adequately rewarded for his labour. Merit will be recognised regardless of language, colour or creed. We need the support and cooperation of all ratepayers and all tax- payers in this State. We are prepared to serve. But service can be provided only to the extent that the finances of the State permit. I believe that this state is quite capable of generating the necessary funds to make life better for all citizens. I, therefore, call on all adult citizens to make their own contribution to the common good by paying their rates and taxes as they fall due.

We need the support of the law enforcement agencies. We are aware of their deplorable conditions of operation. And we shall, within the limits of our constitutional powers, help to improve those conditions. For it is only in an atmosphere of peace that progress and development can take place. We need the co-operation of the judiciary. I am a firm believer in the independence of the judiciary, and I am happy that independence has been enshrined in our constitution. We shall do everything possible, within the limits of our constitutional powers, to remove any obstacle in the way of speedy and efficient administration of justice in this State.

We need the vigilance and patience of all citizens. The problems which we have inherited from the military — extremely bad roads, poor drainage, inadequate water supply, deplorable housing, neglected agriculture and the lack of markets for example will not disappear in one day. But they certainly will disappear during our tenure of office by the grace of God. We shall start solving these problems from today and from now to the end of our term we shall do nothing else. I ask you to pray constantly for us. More things are wrought by prayers than this world dreams of. We are embarking on a war against poverty, against community neglect, against reaction, against disease in Lagos State. And, by the grace of God Who loves us, we shall win.

THANK YOU!

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

The Amalgamation Of Nigeria Was A Fraud! Nigeria was created as a British sphere of interests purely for business by Chief Richard Akinjide

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Chief Richard Akinjide SAN, Ex-Minister in the 1st. & 2nd. Republics
Chief Richard Akinjide SAN, Ex-Minister in the 1st. & 2nd. Republics

I was in the first cabinet that was overthrown by the military in this country. I entered parliament on December 12, 1959. And I remained in parliament until January 15, 1966, when the government was overthrown. I was the Federal Minister of Education in that cabinet. I woke up one morning in my official house in Ikoyi to discover that my telephone was not working. I had never experienced a coup before nor did I know that it was a coup, thinking it was just a telephone fault; until a colleague of mine in the cabinet Chief Abiodun Akerele, came in and told me there had been a military coup. So I had the fortune or the misfortune of being a victim of the first coup in this country.

Many people may not know that I spent 18 months in detention in prisons across the country. I’ve spent time in Kiri Kiri prison, Ilesha prison, Ibadan prison and Abeokuta prison. Two of us who were in Balewa’s government emerged when the military handed over to the civilians in 1979 as part of the civilian government. In Balewa’s government, Alhaji Shehu Shagari was the Minister of Works while I was the Minister of Education. When the military handed over to us after about 14 years, Shagari emerged as the President while I became the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice. Again, Shagari’s government was overthrown just a few months after I left the cabinet. Of course, we suspected it was coming. A lot of things that happened between that period and now would never see the light of the day. When you are in government, you know a lot of things, you see a lot of things. A lot of things you know or did or saw will die with you.

This is the practice of the whole world. People have asked me to write my memoirs, I just laugh because there are certain things I can never reveal. When I was in Tafawa Balewa’s Cabinet, all Cabinet Ministers had access to written intelligence reports every month. That was the practice at that time. But when Shagari came in, for reasons which I cannot explain, that practice was no longer followed. But by my duties as the Attorney-General and as a member of the National Security Council, I continued to have access to some sensitive matters.

Nigeria is a very complex country. Our problems did not start yesterday. It started about 1894. Lord Lugard came here about 1894 and many people did not know that Major Lugard was not originally employed by the British government. He was employed by companies. He was first employed by the East Indian Company, by the Royal East African Company and then by the Royal Niger Company. It was from the Royal Niger Company that he transferred to the British government. Unless you know this background, you will not know the root causes of our problems. The interest of the Europeans in Africa and indeed in Nigeria was economic and it’s still economic. They have no permanent friends and no permanent interests. Neither their interest nor their friends are permanent. Nigeria was created as a British sphere of interest for business.

In 1898, Lugard formed the West African Frontier Force initially with 2,000 soldiers and that was the beginning of our problems. Anybody who wants to know the root cause of all the coups in this book and our present problems and who does not know the evolution of Nigeria would just be looking at the matter superficially. Our problems started at that time. And Lugard was what they called at that time. Several British soldiers, businessmen, and politicians were very patriotic. But I must warn you, they were operating in the interest of their country. Lugard became a Lord. Nigerians, too, should operate in the interest of their country. When Lugard formed the West African Frontier Force with 2,000 troops, about 90 percent of them were from the North mainly from the middle belt. His dispatches to London between that time and January 1914 were extremely interesting. Lugard came here for a purpose and that purpose was British interest. Between 1898 and 1914, he sent several dispatches to London which led to the Amalgamation of 1914. 

The Order-in-Council was drawn up in November 1913, signed and came into force in January 1914. In those dispatches, Lugard said several things which are the root causes of yesterday’s and today’s problems. The British needed the Railway from the North to the Coast in the interest of British business. Amalgamation of the South (not of the people) became of crucial importance to British business interests. He said the North and South should be amalgamated. Southern Nigeria came into existence in January 1900. At the centenary of the fall of Benin, I wrote a piece in several papers but before I published the piece, I sent a copy to the Oba of Benin. So when Benin was conquered in 1896, it made the creation of the Southern Nigerian protectorate possible on January 1, 1900. If you remember, Sokoto was not conquered until 1903. So, there was no question of Nigeria at that time. After the conquest of Sokoto, they were able to create the Northern Nigeria Protectorate. Lugard went full blast and created what was to be known as the protectorate of Northern Nigeria.

What is critical and important are the reasons Lugard gave in his dispatches. They are as follows:

He said the North is poor and they have no resources to run the protectorate of the North. That they have no access to the sea; that the South has resources and that they have educated people. The first Yoruba Lawyer was called to the Bar in 1861. Therefore, because it was not the policy of the British Government to bring the taxpayer’s money to run the protectorate, it was in the interest of the British taxpayer that there should be Amalgamation. But what the British Amalgamated was the Administration of the North and South. That is one of the root causes of the problems of Nigeria and the Nigerians. When the amalgamation took effect, the British government sealed off the South from the North. And between 1914 and 1960, that’s 46 years, the British allowed minimum contact between the North and South because it was not in the British interest that the North be allowed to be polluted by the educated South. That was the basis on which we got our independence in 1960 when I was in the parliament. I entered parliament on December 12, 1959.

When the North formed a political party, the Northern leaders called it the Northern People’s Congress (NPC). They didn’t call it Nigeria’s People Congress. That was by the dictum and policies of Lugard. When Aminu Kano formed his own party, it was called the Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU), not the Nigerian Elements Progressive Union. It was only Awolowo and Zik who were mistaken that there was anything called Nigeria. In fact, the so-called Nigeria created in 1914 was a complete fraud. It was created not in the interest of Nigeria or Nigerians but in the interest of the British. And what were the structures created? The structures created were as follows: Northern Nigeria was to represent England; Western Nigeria was like Wales; Eastern Nigeria was to be like Scotland.

In the British structure, England has a permanent majority in the House of Commons. There was no way Wales could ever dominate England, neither can Scotland dominate Britain. But they are very shrewd. They would allow a Scottish man to become Prime Minister. They would allow a Welsh man to become Prime Minister in London but the fact remains that the actual power is rested in England. That was what Lugard created In Nigeria, a permanent majority for the North. The population figure is also a fraud. In fact, a British Colonial Civil Servant who was involved in the fraud was trying to expose it but he was never allowed to publish it.

The analysis is as follows: If you look at the map of West Africa, starting from Mauritania to Cameroun and take the population of each country as you move from the Coast to Savannah, the population decreases. Conversely, as you come from the Desert to the Coast, right from Mauritania to Cameroun, the population increases. The only exception throughout the zone is Nigeria. Nigeria is the only Zone where you go from the Coast to the North, the population increases and when you come from the North to the Coast, the population decreases. Well, geographers, anthropologists and population experts draw your conclusions. Someone has told me that the last population census was done by computer. What nonsense! A computer is as good as its programmer. A computer will produce what you ask it to produce. I have read this book from cover to cover. This is a fantastic book. I want us to find a way to ensure that many Nigerians read this book. It is a raw material for future authors. There is one thing which is missing in this book and that is the first broadcast of General Ibrahim Babaginda when he assumed power in 1985. The broadcast is very crucial to the economic problems we have today.

Talking about the first coup, when Balewa went missing, we knew Okotie-Eboh had been killed, we knew Akintola had been killed. We the members of the Balewa cabinet started meeting. But how can we have a cabinet meeting without the Prime Minister acting or the Prime Minister presiding? So, unanimously, we nominated the acting Prime Minister among us. Then we continued holding our meetings. Then we got a message that we should all assemble at the Cabinet office.

All the Ministers were requested by the G.O.C. of the Nigerian Army, General Ironsi to assemble. What was amazing at that time was that Ironsi was going all over Lagos unarmed. We assembled there, nominating Zana Diphcharima as our acting prime minister in the absence of the Prime Minister, whose whereabouts we didn’t know. We approached the acting President, Nwafor Orizu to swear him in because he could not legitimately act as the Prime Minister unless he was sworn in. Nwafor Orizu refused. He said he needed to contact Zik who was then in West Indies. Under the Law, that is, the interpretation Act, as acting President, Nwafor Orizu had all the powers of the President. The G.O.C said he wanted to see all the cabinet ministers. And so we assembled at the cabinet office. Well, I have read many books saying that we handed over to the military. We did not hand it over. Ironsi told us that “you either hand over as gentlemen or you hand over by force”. These were his words. Is that a voluntary handover? So we did not hand it over. We wanted the Acting Prime Minister to be in place but Ironsi forced us, and I use the word force advisedly, to hand it over to him. He was controlling the soldiers.

The acting President, Nwafor Orizu, who did not cooperate with us, cooperated with the GOC. Dr. Orizu and the GOC prepared speeches which Nwafor Orizu broadcast handing over to the government of the country to the army. I here state again categorically as a member of that cabinet that we did not hand over voluntarily. It was a coup. There is a very good book, which everybody must read. It is a raw material for future authors. Anybody, who wants to know some of the causes of our problems, military instability should read this book. I recommend this book to all universities and secondary schools so that they can know how we got to where we are now. What this book shows is that if anybody stages a coup and if people don’t accept it, it will not succeed. What puzzles me is how the author got all these materials. He must have connections in high places to be able to get a lot of these materials. These materials should not be in archives, they should be in the public domain so that we know the causes of our problems.

I pray that all Nigerians should rise up and say no if anybody seizes a radio station and says “Fellow countrymen”. I hope that this book will find a way into all university libraries throughout this country, to all secondary school libraries and abroad. I appeal to the media to give this book a comprehensive and desired review. The more I open the book, the more I see something to talk about. This book is going to represent one of the chapters in the tragedy of Nigeria. This book is just like a horror film because of the instability which was started in 1966 because of many the coups are what I’ll call commercial coups. If anything at all, we have to learn a great lesson from this book and also learn a lesson on what happened, and who failed or succeeded in their coups. When it succeeds, they call it a glorious revolution, but when it fails, it is called treason. It is my honour and privilege to present this great and historic book. One of the things I like about the book is the language of the author. He’s someone who speaks Englishman’s English. He writes Queens English. Very lucid, very flowing.

These are excerpts from the speech of Chief Richard Akinjide (SAN), first and second Republic Minister, at the public presentation of the book “Fellow Country Men The Story of Coup D’etats in Nigeria by Richard Akinnola, June 2000.

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely those of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

Rhapsody of Realities, Friday, March 24th. 2023, By Pastor Chris Oyakhilome PhD DSc DD

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USE WHAT YOU’VE GOT

And Jesus rebuked him, saying, Hold thy peace, and come out of him. And when the unclean spirit had torn him, and cried with a loud voice, he came out of him (Mark 1:25-26).

As Christians, we’ve been given dominion over Satan and the powers of darkness in the Name of Jesus. We have to use what we’ve got. Don’t negotiate with demons. When you say to them, “Out!” they have to obey because you’re using the authority of the Lord Jesus.

The Bible says the people were amazed at Jesus in His day because with authority He commanded unclean spirits and they obeyed Him (Mark 1:27). The Bible says, “…he cast out the spirits with his word…” (Matthew 8:16). That’s what you’re to do.

Exercise your dominion in Christ; use the power of the Holy Spirit. The Good News Bible translation of our theme verse says, “Jesus ordered the spirit, ‘Be quiet, and come out of the man!’ The evil spirit shook the man hard, gave a loud scream, and came out of him.” They couldn’t resist Jesus; and they can’t resist you.

As you pray and intercede for people and for nations, cast out devils! Command the evil spirits responsible for the wickedness, confusion and darkness in the world to come out of your nation, city, town and village. Command the prince of the power of the air to take his hands off the
people so the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ may shine in their hearts to receive salvation.

Satan has no right to run things in your life, in your home or in the lives of your loved ones. Exercise your authority in Christ against him. Don’t wait for someone else to do it for you. Every Christian has the ability to cast out devils. Jesus has given you the authority; walk and live in His Name. Use what you’ve got!

CONFESSION:

I have authority over demons and the cohorts of darkness in the Name of Jesus. Therefore, I break the cords of bondage over men’s lives! The righteousness of God is established in the nations, cities, towns and villages of the world, in the Name of Jesus! What a life of glory, dominion and power given to us in Christ Jesus, to live above Satan and his cohorts of darkness. Hallelujah!

FURTHER STUDY:
Luke 9:1 Then he called his twelve disciples together, and gave them power and authority over all devils, and to cure diseases.

Luke 10:19 Behold, I give unto you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy: and nothing shall by any means hurt you.

Mark 16:15-18 And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. 16 He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned. 17 And these signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; 18 They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.

DAILY SCRIPTURE READING

1-Year Bible Reading Plan= Luke 5:17-39 & Deuteronomy 28

2-Year Bible Reading Plan= Matthew 25:14-30 & Exodus 33.

#KeepSayingIt Friday, 24th March 2023, https://loveworldlyrics.com/with-just-one-word-by-sylvia-and-loveworld-singers-hslhs/

I vehemently refuse anything that’s inconsistent with God’s desire for my life. I dwell in health all the days of my life because I have the eternal life of Christ working in me. This power in me is greater than sickness. I cannot be sick because Jesus makes me well. He has paralyzed the works of the enemy and has brought them to nothing. Therefore, I reign over Satan and his cohorts of darkness by the power of the Holy Spirit and in the Name of Jesus. I know who I am! I’m from above and my life is the supernatural life of God’s Word. I think the right thoughts, speak the right words, and receive the results of God’s Word in my life today and always. In the Name of Jesus, I’m healthy and whole, not subject to the afflictions and corruptions that are in the world. I live the perfect and transcendent life in Christ Jesus. Eternal life is my present-hour possession.

The very God-life is tabernacled in my body; therefore, no sickness can fasten itself to my body. I am fashioned after the Last Adam, a life-giving Spirit. I live in God’s deathless zone, walking in the light of His Word. I walk by faith and not by sensory perception. I declare my victory over sickness, poverty, failure and death. I am not moved by the prevalent circumstances in this world because I am impregnable to sickness and disease. My life is a sure testimony that there’s a higher life in Christ. The good life is mine, health is mine, and joy is aglow in my spirit. Everyday, the Lord is my portion and my joy overflows continually in the mighty Name of Jesus. Amen.

Addressing the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria – By Professor Sola Adeyeye

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Professor Sola Adeyeye on a courtesy visit to the State House, Aso Rock, Abuja FCT
Professor Sola Adeyeye on a courtesy visit to the State House, Aso Rock, Abuja FCT

I stand before you today fully cognizant, as are many of you in this audience, that these days are not the best for Nigeria. At the risk of being called prophets of doom, we really have no choice but to admit that our country, the Federal Republic of Nigeria, lies in the paths of sundry tornadoes, hurricanes, cyclones, storms, superstorms, whirlwinds, typhoons all of which are rushing towards our Republic with deadly speeds and their concomitant devastating momentum. 

We all know that humans cannot perfectly predict what the future holds. But they can examine, assess and calibrate past and present events so as to reasonably forecast events of the future, thereby preparing against and averting preventable disasters and crises. In particular, patriots are duty-bound to seek and say the truth about their country even if doing so results in being perceived, rightly or wrongly, either as the apostles of hope or as the harbingers of doom. 

Fortunately as well as unfortunately for Nigerians, we no longer need to predict the approach of any gales for our republic. The gales of doom have not only approached our doors, they gustily and ferociously bang on them!

In any case, were we to be totally oblivious to these gales, we got good help over twelve years ago, when American Intelligence apparatchiks predicted that Nigeria would disintegrate before or not too long after 2015. Within Nigeria, the responses to that prediction were largely knee-jerk reactions as if Nigeria was about to become the first country in the world to disintegrate along ethnic and sectarian fissures. Never mind that in the two decades preceding that prediction by the CIA, numerous countries of the world had failed, crumbled and disintegrated under the crushing weight of their own internal contradictions! 

Croatia which just gave a superlative performance at the 2018 World Cup in Russia did not participate in the 1994 World Cup hosted in the USA where Nigeria dazzled the world and came extremely close to beating Argentina and the mesmerizing Diego Maradona. Croatia could not have been at the 1994 World Cup or the preceding one in 1990 in Italy simply because the Republic of Croatia was not in existence until 1991 when it emerged from Yugoslavia. Other countries that were formed from the breakup of Yugoslavia include Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro and Slovenia. Likewise, Russia, the home team at this year’s World Cup, appeared in the World Cup for the first time in 1994 because the Russia we know today emerged after Russia, Belarus and Ukraine broke away from the Soviet Union after the Belavezha Accords of December 1991. 

Decades earlier, in 1937 to be precise, Burma (now called Myanmar) was separated from British India. Eleven years later (1948), Ceylon now called Sri Lanka became independent of British India. Of course, Pakistan was separated from India in 1947, while Eastern Pakistan broke away from Pakistan in 1971 to give rise to Bangladesh.  In other words, during the lifetime of the oldest members of this audience, a sequential breakup of India had occurred yielding five sovereign countries all of which have taken their rightful seats as chartered members of the United Nations, namely: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar. 

Much earlier in Western Europe, the Sweden-Norway union broke in 1814 from the long-lasting (for 293 years from 1523 to 1814) Kalmar Union in Scandinavia that included Denmark. Ninety-one years later, the Sweden-Norway Union separated in 1905 into Sweden and Norway. 

In briefly reminding us about the breakup of what were four countries (Yugoslavia, the USSR, India and the Scandinavian Kalmar Union) into what are 26 sovereign countries of our contemporary world, my point is not to glamorize the disintegration of sovereign countries as if disintegration is a never-failing solution to the conflicts that are all too common in the political enterprises of multi-ethnic and multi-national countries. 

Rather, I have refreshed our minds with empirical case notes that robustly countermand and debunk the fallacy that the disintegration of countries, is intrinsically pernicious and innately injurious. On the contrary, for example, rather than remaining together in a commonwealth of internecine conflicts and obligate mutual destruction, India and Pakistan have been far better off by parting ways into separate republics, each choosing its own substantially different courses of national actualization and development. Let us do a cursory comparison of the paths that India and Pakistan took. 

First, Pakistan was the first country in the modern era to be formed on the basis of religion. No wonder, that at its Independence, the official name of Pakistan was constitutionally proclaimed as the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. India, despite its overwhelmingly Hindu population, remained a secular state.

Second, two years after Independence, India announced a fifteen-year transition in its official language from English to Hindi. Because Hindi is not the mother tongue in the southern states of India, the attempt to impose it as the only official language was fiercely resisted in the southern states. Consequently, amendments were made in favour of continuing English as the official language.

By contrast, English remained the official language of Pakistan but in 1973 Pakistan adopted Urdu as its national language. It is noteworthy that whereas 46% of Pakistanis speak Punjab as their first language, only 8% of Pakistanis speak Urdu as their first language. 

Third, one very substantial difference in the post-independence history of India versus Pakistan is the fact that beginning in 1958, Pakistan has had several coup d’etats resulting in decades of military rule. By contrast, India has always been ruled by democratically elected Governments. This is not to say that democratic rule in India has always been smooth and peaceful. Political assassinations were a relatively common experience in India. Examples of assassinated Indian leaders include Mahatma Gandhi, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, and Phoolan Devi. Even their women were not exempted from being assassinated. But unlike what has occurred in many parts of the world, the assassination of political leaders in India has never resulted in military rule. 

Despite the divergent paths taken by India and Pakistan, they are today very powerful countries; both are nuclear powers. India tested its first nuclear explosion in 1974 by which time Ali Bhutto, the then Prime Minister of Pakistan, announced that Pakistan would be a nuclear power in 1976. You might recall that on May 27, 1998, India tested its first intercontinental ballistic missile. But guess what? While the world was still musing and rumbling about the global significance of India as a nuclear power, Pakistan tested its own intercontinental ballistic missile the very next day after the Indian test! 

Furthermore, the stupendous leaps in progress by India and Pakistan have not been limited to military technology and hardware; both countries have made tremendous progress in other spheres such as education, agriculture, transportation and health care delivery. It is an irony of history that although this lecture is being delivered on the campus of what was once ranked as the fourth-best hospital in the British Commonwealth, Nigerians now embark on regular medical trips to India. Despite its stepwise dismemberment into many smaller countries, what remains as contemporary India has marched forward. By contrast, our so-called “united” Nigeria steadily marches in relative retrogression. Our own republic is like the proverbial chicken that precariously dangles on a rope; neither the chicken nor the rope is at rest!

History has shown that whether the disintegration of a country results in beneficial or harmful outcomes depends largely on the process and mechanisms that lead to disintegration. For example, whereas the disintegration that yielded Denmark, Sweden and Norway was largely peaceful and mutually negotiated, the world is replete with tragic examples of how the disintegration of a country led to prolonged wars with attendant calamities. Think of Sudan and South Sudan. Also, think of Ethiopia and Eritrea. 

For example, splitting Vietnam in 1954 into North Vietnam and South Vietnam, each backed by external foreign interests engendered a harrowing vortex of hostilities, war and widespread destruction that lasted 21 years. The tragic consequences of the Vietnam war extended far beyond the boundaries of that southeastern Asian country. Likewise, the split of Korea into North Korea and South Korea, degenerated into proxy wars between the two superpowers of the time (the USA and the USSR), with China also intervening at some point. 

We all are living witnesses that more than 60 years after the split of Korea and the ensuing war, the Korean peninsula has remained a flashpoint of the world where sceptres of war perennially dangle as eerie reminders of possible nuclear holocaust. We need not inundate you with the list of numerous separatist wars in parts of China, Burma, Iraq, Sudan and Ethiopia all of which yielded enormous casualties. Some of these wars continue as we speak having already lasted more than five decades. 

As for Nigeria, if the truth be told, our republic creaks and moans from the battering gales that precariously dangle us on the precipice of disintegration. The American prediction has not come true. But we would be suffering from delusion-induced astigmatism, cataracts, myopia, glaucoma and macula degeneration if we fail to see that it is not too late for the prediction to be fulfilled. 

Problems are not solved by denying that they exist. Even so, what is most important is not our recognition that Nigeria is buffeted by ferocious problems. Rather, it is our willingness to stem and avert these gales and their centrifugal forces that perennially jolt and weaken the threads holding the seams of Nigeria. 

For a start, perhaps we should first convince ourselves that keeping Nigeria from disintegration is a worthwhile goal. 

Look at our contemporary world. The continent of North America comprises twenty-three countries plus nine dependent territories none of which is landlocked. The continent of South America comprises 14 countries, of which only two (Bolivia and Paraguay) are landlocked. In fact, Bolivia became landlocked only after losing its eastern border to Chile during the Pacific war of 1879-1883. The continent of Asia comprises 44 countries of which only 12 (27%) are landlocked. The continent of Europe has 50 countries out of which 17 (34%) are landlocked. Four of the landlocked European countries (i.e., Austria, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Switzerland) participate in the European Common Market thus minimizing the disadvantages of being landlocked. In effect, only 13 European countries (26%) suffer the consequences of their lack of access to the sea. The smallest continent, Oceania, comprises 14 countries none of which is landlocked. The continent of Africa has 54 countries, of which 16 (30%) are landlocked. Because the two Island countries in the Indian Ocean (Mauritius and Seychelles) plus the (five) North African countries are not landlocked, it means that all the landlocked countries of Africa are in Sub-Sahara Africa. This means that 34% of Sub-Saharan Africa is landlocked. Why should we care? 

It turns out that the cost of transportation in any country is directly correlated with whether the country is landlocked or not. Specifically, transportation costs in landlocked countries are 50% higher than in countries that are not landlocked. As such, being landlocked retards international trade because of the time spent at the ports of their maritime neighbours plus having to transport goods through their territories. Sundry tariffs and bribes are paid during the trans-border freighting of goods to and from landlocked countries.

It is noteworthy that some of the states that constitute the USA are economically so strong that they can exist very comfortably as sovereign countries were they to separate from the union of the American Republic. If the State of California were an independent country, it would be the 6th largest economy in the world. Likewise, if Texas were an independent country, it would be the 8th richest economy in the world. Mississippi with a GDP per capita of over $32,000 is the poorest state in the USA. However, Mississippi is significantly richer than Chile and Brazil which have GDP per capita of $15,000 and $11,000 respectively. I chose to compare Mississippi with these two countries because one of them (Brazil) is the largest in South America while the other (Chile) is the richest on the basis of GDP per capita.  

If we were to consider territorial size, only Niger, Mali and Nigeria are geographically bigger than Texas among the fifteen nations that constitute ECOWAS. Matter of fact, Texas is geographically more than double the size of each of the remaining 12 members of ECOWAS. As if its technological, economic and geographical advantages were not enough, the USA went to great lengths to ensure NAFTA- the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico with the clear purpose of fostering a trade bloc with advantages similar to those that are enjoyed by the industrial giants of the European Union and its unified market. 

Alas, unlike North America, Africa is fragmented into disparate geopolitical entities that are buffeted by the vagaries of nature and the environment. Because of the abundance of its natural resources, Nigeria is one country that should have long emerged as the true giant of Africa. If only it were prudently administered! The Republic of Nigeria should have been so prosperous that every country from Cameroon to Senegal pleads to be amalgamated with it. Yes, the potential of Nigeria is so enormous that everything should be done to avert its disintegration of Nigeria. However, if Nigerians are not willing to do all that ought to be done to prevent disintegration, then we should summon the honesty, commonsense and enlightened self-interest to meet around a well-furnished mahogany table to negotiate the conditions and terms for the peaceful dissolution of Nigeria to. Rather than keep transmuting the promises of Nigeria into nightmares and horrors, let a Boris Yeltsin arise and break up our “burdensome” Republic into as many as are peacefully negotiated. 

Although I am an incorrigible believer in the unity of Nigeria, I have taken extensive time to discuss the pros and cons of Nigerian unity so as to debunk the oft-repeated fallacy that Nigerian Unity is non-negotiable. Those who tout this arrant superstition do so because of their mistaken ideology that the greatest purpose of nationhood is unity. 

The truth, of course, is that whenever being “united” become inimical to the peace and progress of a country, its citizens should summon the wisdom and courage to peacefully disunite. The Unity of any country must never be an end unto itself. Rather, it should be a tool for strength through dynamic synergism, peace through necessary accommodations and progress through voluntary cooperation. In a multi-national enterprise such as the Nigerian Republic, unity must not be canonized as an end unto itself.  Rather, it is a means to an end.

Therefore, for us to properly contemplate and solve Nigeria’s seemingly intractable problems, we must first overcome the Gale of False Assumptions about National Unity. 

In this regard, let us consider one immutable and inexorable principle that unifies life. I am referring here to the very strict relationship between structure and function such that function is dependent on and dictated by structure. At all levels of biological existence, from the sub-cellular levels of macromolecules and their atomic components through increasing complexities of cells, tissues, organs, organ systems, individual organisms, populations, communities and ultimately ecosystems, a deviation from proper structure results in the perturbations and defects of function. 

EXTEMPORE EXPLANATION OF: 

1. ATOMS, ELECTRONS AND BOND

2. HOMEOSTASIS

This brings me to three other gales that Nigeria must quickly terminate if our country must leap out of its current underdevelopment. 

1. The gale of supernaturalism and ignorance

2. The gale of structural abnormalities 

3. The gale of overpopulation

THE GALE OF IGNORANCE AND SUPERNATURALISM

Two stories: 

1. Ofe at Ilesa Grammar School

2. Bellview Crash

We, Nigerians, are a superstitious lot. It does not matter too much what religion we profess, nor the level of education that we have acquired; superstitions run through our blood. This is the reason that when things are clearly not well, when they get as bad as possible when we should get angry and be emboldened to take corrective steps, we calmly retort by saying “it is well!” This proclamation, ostensibly an exercise of faith in the ultimate triumph of omnipotent God, insidiously yields a docility of temperament and cadaverous unconcern! 

The favourite houseboy, or perhaps errand girl of a religious Nigerian, is the very God he/she claims to worship! That is why once we knowingly say “it is well” in the face of staggering evidence to the contrary, we also affirm that “God will do it!” All these emanate from the supreme confidence that we often express that “God loves Nigeria!” The way we say it, you would think that God hates either Cameroon or Ghana! 

The truth of course is that nations, just like individuals, sleep on whatever bed they had laid. The pervasive dysfunction and decay in our national institutions are the creations of Nigerians, not God. We can pray for as long as we wish in our churches and mosques. We can tarry in our endless camps and so-called vigils. None of these alters the immutable truth that whatever a nation sows, the same it shall reap.

The Lagos-Ibadan Expressway probably hosts the highest concentration of sectarian zealots in the world. It also has the distinction of being the only federal expressway in the world where trucks are parked anywhere that suits the insanity of their drivers. God sees it all. He probably smiles at it all!

Meanwhile, we keep praying even as we suffer and smile as Fela Anikulapo-Kuti once sang. We forget that the righteousness which exalts a nation (Proverbs 14: 34) has little to do with the endless religious jamborees and superstitious abracadabra on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. Most Japanese neither worship Jesus Christ as the Son of God nor accept Mohammed as His Prophet. Because of its endless Buddhist temples, Japan might be classified by Nigerians as a nation of infidels! Furthermore, the natural resources of Nigeria by far exceed those of Japan. Yet, see what the Japanese have made of their nation.

Ladies and Gentlemen, what do we see when we look at the world? Western Europe, the USA, Canada, Australia and countries predominated by Christians are doing well. Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, Kuwait, and the UAE all of which have Muslims and the majority are doing well.  Israel, the only country in the world whose majority subscribe to Judaism, is doing well. Japan is doing well with its Shinto and Buddhism. Needless to say, China and Russia, both of which are predominated by atheists are doing well. This variegated array of countries that are doing well shows that the progress and well-being of nations are not exclusively fostered by just one theology! 

THE GALE OF STRUCTURAL ABNORMALITIES

Because Nigeria has perennially malfunctioned in recent years and decades, we do not need to be geniuses to conclude that our societal malfunctions are the inescapable manifestations of constitutive defects in the structure. It behoves us to diligently and dispassionately pinpoint these defects, remove or redress them, and thereby terminate the debilitating malfunctions that result in inefficiency, corruption, malaise, disorder, and underdevelopment. 

No President, king or emperor will make Nigeria work until we evolve a truly federal system. Successive rulers have denigrated Nigeria into a tragic enclave of overbearing centralism and shifty Byzantinism. As bestowed by our current constitution, the Federal Government is a monstrous octopus; its tentacles continue to asphyxiate the progress and unity of our people. We need to devolve far greater power from the central government to the federating units of Nigeria. We need to terminate the virtual omnipotence and omnipresence of the Federal Government which cause the epilepsy of our power supply, paralysis of our railway system, incapacitation of our police, the ruination of our educational system, pollution of our environment, corruption of our polity and strangulation of our economy.

THE GALE OF OVERPOPULATION

When the British first came to Nigeria, Nigeria’s population was about half that of the U.K. When they left in 1960, Britain and Nigeria had approximately equal populations. Today, Nigeria’s population is more than twice that of the U.K. This is probably the greatest nightmare rushing towards Nigeria like a speeding bullet. The Malthusian predicament, far deadlier than Boko Haram, is speedily approaching.

Currently, Nigeria is the 7th most populous country in the world. It has been projected that within the next 3 decades, Nigeria will become the 3rd most populous country in the world. By then, only China and India will have bigger populations than Nigeria. By that time, science and technology would have drastically reduced global dependency on fossil fuels. Woe betides any country whose economy is still largely dependent on oil by 2048. But that is not even the biggest thing that we need to worry about as we ponder the future of Nigeria. Because of climate change and human overuse, many of the world’s water resources have been shrinking. Unfortunately, among the fastest shrinking lakes of the world is Lake Chad which for centuries has served adjoining populations in Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria.  Without question, a future war between neighbours stares at us from Lake Chad! 

By the way, because water is indispensable to life, Nigeria must prepare for meeting the water need of our exploded future populations. As we all learned from the History of Mungo Park, Hugh Clapperton and Richard Landers etc, River Niger did not originate in Nigeria. Those in Asaba and the Delta estuaries have no greater claim to that River than communities upstream in Jebba all the way to the Futa Jallon hills in Guinnea. What will happen if countries that are upstream of Nigeria (Guinea, Mali, Niger and Benin create dams and diversions for that river to solve their own needs? 

As our population increases exponentially, where are the schools in which future generations of our children will be educated? Will our livestock production continue to be dependent on nomadic tradition? When are we going to build the roads, the refineries, and the health care facilities for the expanded population? When shall we generate the power supply for domestic and industrial uses? When shall we lay the underground cables as are being continuously done by UAE and Saudi Arabia? 

The truth is that we are already far behind with regard to providing for our present and future needs. To avert the crisis that will ensue as these needs grow, we must curtail our population growth. Nature can be ruthless. Whenever a species increases its population beyond the carrying capacity of its environment, nature intervenes with deadly consequences. That is one gale we must avert. 

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

NIGERIA 2023 – SO, WHO OWNS LAGOS?- By Ike P. Ibekwe, PhD

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Map of Lagos State
Map of Lagos State

In the opinion of this writer, this is one of those propositions and narratives that exposes the frailness and superficiality of the human being, notwithstanding the feats of space travel and other scientific achievements. A human is so fundamentally flawed and weak in many respects, (and he knows it too), irrespective of the carefully arranged exterior of courage, confidence and self-assurance. I suspect that is why every man seeks glory, commendation and praise all day long. They told us Mungo Park ‘discovered’ Nigeria by happening on River Nigeria and her tributaries; just like Columbus ‘discovered’ America. Both are important personae of history. I suppose some other important man or woman found and that both Africa and America had natives before the arrival of their ‘discoverers’. Some other important men/women wrote to describe the anthropological and sociological underpinnings of these peoples. After a time, these important men and women, and their discoveries recede into history and quickly become discussions in antiquity. But the quest for achievements and glory even after death abides with men. This partly accounts for why we write; in a sense, to speak from the grave. The truth is that man is a glory-seeking creature. Who founded Lisbon, Paris and London; and better still, who owns them? This last has become so nonsensical and ludicrous a question that the enquirer is sure to attract strange stares, should he venture out on the streets of these ‘megacities, with this question. 

This writer cannot but express his confusion and puzzle with regard to the current fruitless and idle debate about who owns Lagos; and whether the city is a ‘one man or women’s) land’ or a ‘no man’s land’, etc. Am I simply expected to next ask; ‘but what does it matter?’ No! this is plain folly. Revealing the weakness and frailty that is in man, this time of the Nigerian hue; exposing his underlying vulnerability and helplessness, in the face of all his feats, signifying that the root of his pursuits of these achievements is self-glory and approval and praise. A basic introduction to anthropology and how societies segment and emerge will reveal that endless migration is the culprit. To be simple and blunt. Everybody is a pilgrim and a sojourner everywhere. There are early settlers, and there are the earliest settlers. The early settlers would soon become the earliest settlers; while the modern settlers would graduate into early settlers. The earliest settlers’, hitherto recorded by history as such would as soon be obliterated and vanish into antiquity. How much history can History and archaeology retain and pass on? This is why we sometimes outdo ourselves by digging up items from the soil and ascribing to them a time in existence that makes them as old or even older than the earth. In turn, and in order to validate ourselves, we claim through our sophisticated science that the earth itself has lasted zillions of years. We formulate the rules of science; we decide its rules of validation. But always staring us in the face are truths we cannot pretend are nonexistent So, we continue to search and march on against nature, with nature seeming to move the goalposts, a few inches away from our last but now conquered target. Incidentally, one such truth is the effluxion of time and its effect on belief systems, ethos and mores. A ‘nothing’ (person. Place or thing) today; becomes something tomorrow, and vice versa. Our minds (society) construct the ‘something’ and the ‘nothing’, within space and time. At one time ‘Lagos is a no man’s Land’. At another time, ‘Lagos is a one man’s Land’. The victory Speech of the recently ‘re-elected’ Governor of Lagos state, Mr B. Sanwu-Olu is a testament to this fact. It is now time to heal wounds; time to accept and proclaim that we are all one; that Lagos as usual will accommodate us all. All good until the next election is around the corner. Then there will be again a differentiation and segregation between those who own Lagos, and the passers-by of Lagos; between the Landlords and the squatters; the citizens and the non-citizens of Lagos 

I find it appalling, and particularly embarrassing that grown adults like Mr Fani-Kayode and his ilk (in pursuit of the peculiarly Nigerianprebendary politics of ‘me, myself and I’ of yesteryears), continue to revive the narratives of who owns where. Presumably, upon this narrative rests the methodology for the ‘sharing and choppings’; sorry, resource allocation of the trillions of the oft-touted outlandish Lagos state IGR; actually a diplomatic euphemism of saying how the money generated in Lagos state would be shared between and amongst the boys and the men of the party that makes it to Alausa. 

But, surely, there are better things to meditate upon. In the safe assumption that the gentleman (Fani-Kayode) is above 50; I suggest we turn our attention to eternal matters. According to the scriptures; the stuff we see is temporal, while the ones we cannot see are eternal. Well then, sir, it’s time to turn our attention away from money wine and women (earthly), to weightier and eternal matters (heavenly). I must perforce also mention that whether Mr Biden decides or not, to congratulate our Presideny-elect, is entirely an earthly issue. Unsurprisingly again, Mr Fani-Kayode is fixated on what Mr Biden thinks of our recent charade, in the name of elections. Mr Biden has maintained an honourable silence by refraining from his lips. But instead of allowing the man peace to consider his options ahead of 2024; here comes our rabble-rousing Fani-Kayode, asking that Biden come over to Nigeria to help with the approval of a charade that should be rightly regarded as a rape of democracy; a pitiable excuse for that system of governance. Truth is Mr Biden is personally embarrassed at the recent turn of events in Nigeria (touted as the world’s largest black democracy). Think about it this way: America champions, promotes, protects and encourages democracy everywhere in the world, with claims that it is the best system of governance the world has ever known; in any event, better than its prominent rival, Communist-Socialism. Please, Mr Fani-Kayode, at least, let Mr Biden be, after you have given the Chinese and Russian Presidents a good reason to turn their lips and smirch at Mr Biden, with our practice of Nigerian democracy 

Following that, I conclude thus. Lagos I can see; as well as Enugu and Port Harcourt; but God and his ways and thoughts, and what will be after me I cannot see or know. Therefore, away with that nonsense about who owns Lagos, Ibadan, or New Delhi. Ask rather, have any of their previous owners had been able to take a half inch of its lands or resources with them when the time was called on their sojourn this way. Then, you will begin to understand how ludicrous and embarrassingly low Nigerians have become of late! 

THE RHODES-VIVOUR ETHNICITY QUESTION.

Perhaps, the most ridiculous of this pre-election propaganda is the allegation that the Labour Party Lagos state governorship hopeful, Mr Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour (GRV) is not a Lagosian and has no right to even contest the election, speak less of being voted for. I should simply have dismissed such assertions as those of lazy and idle minds, except that this appears to be how elections are won and lost in Nigeria. Regrettably and shamefully so. The first question should have been, even if that were so, did that convert him (GRV) to a non- Nigerian. I mean if he were a non-Lagosian, but a Nigerian, and had the courage to thrust himself forward to the electorate, having lived in Lagos for a considerable length of time (as our Laws permit); How is that anybody’s business? But that is not even the case for this gentleman. Hereunder is the plain, marketplace truth of this matter 

Everyone who knows a bit about Nigeria knows that Lagos is one of the cities in which returnee slaves from the Americas were rehabilitated. For that reason, any Lagosian of any length of time from five years upwards would be conversant with such Lagosian surnames as Macaulay, Williams, Benson, Cardozo, Johnson, Peters, Brown, etc. The name Rohdes-Vivour is just one of several foreign-sounding names. Indeed, this brings me to the question of whether the murderers of Funsho Williams have been found and brought to justice? I ask because if GRV was merely tarred with a similar brush as was Funsho Williams before the latter (who was already cruising to Alausa as governor) was mysteriously murdered. I mean if GRV is regarded as non-Lagosian, notwithstanding his Lagosian surname, and because his mother is Igbo; who knows where Mr Funsho Williams’ mother hailed from since it is clear that those foreign names with which we associate the group also known as the ‘Saro’ in Lagos, no longer matter. I must venture to remind those who are enjoying it at the moment, and speaking of a huge ‘war chest’ and ‘vast structure’, that dictators do not just happen overnight. If you do not stop them today; tomorrow night’s dinner will be your sons and daughters. You laugh and call it political dexterity that one fellow (only one!) has hoodwinked the majority of an ethnic group widely regarded as refined and enlightened, into demonizing another ethnic group, and is literally ostracizing any individual that ventures to associate with his ‘political enemies’ – which is the fate of GRV at the moment. Again, I find that embarrassing, speaking as an averagely exposed, educated and free-thinking Nigerian. In effect, Is Nigeria no longer one because of the 2023 elections? And Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour is no longer a Lagosian because he happens to have decided to be his own man- meaning, exercising his right to freedom of association? Now his mandate has again been stolen by that disgraceful umpire chaired by the equally un-blushing, shameless Yakub Mahmood. Men like Professor Osinbajo must be shifting uneasily in their seats to have to share the prefix ‘Professor’ with characters like this man. The stolen mandate has again been delivered to the APC candidate as happened in the presidential election. 

While we await God’s own verdict in the charades that President Muhammad Buhari had gleefully touted as his parting gift (and his only redeeming legacy) to us; it is apt to recall this wise counsel. That is when you ride on the back of a killer leopard/Tiger, out on a killing spree. When it finds no other prey, it will turn its attention to you. For the time being, those of you who think men like Funsho Williams, G.R.V. and P.O., are troublemakers, and should not be members of the Nigerian space; I urge you to enjoy your victory, and your victory laps, for now. I will expect that GRV, just as Obi did, will go to court to reclaim their stolen mandates. It is no longer a secret that one of the institutions that have been weakened by our politician’s war chests is the judiciary. That is the kind of ‘war-chest’ other nations boast about; even now, Russia and Ukraine are currently being supplied arms by our politicians boast about now as they are engaged in a fierce battle, ‘abi, be-eko’? Shameless people! We’ll wait and see what the courts will say on this one. At all events, we’ll let God judge! He does not slumber, we are told. Perhaps, He is waiting for somebody’s cup of iniquity to fill up to the brim. He is very patient. 

By Ike P. Ibekwe, PhD, email: ikechukwuozo@yahoo.com, Port Harcourt, Nigeria

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain

MY ACCEPTANCE SPEECH  ON THE OCCASION OF MY DECLARATION AS GOVERNOR-ELECT OF ABIA STATE – Dr Alex Chioma Otti OFR.

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Dr. Alex Chioma Otti OFR, Governor-Elect, Abia State, Umuahia
Dr. Alex Chioma Otti OFR, Governor-Elect, Abia State, Umuahia

My fellow Abians, it gives me great pleasure this evening to address you, following the final announcement of the results of the gubernatorial elections conducted across the state last Saturday, March 18, 2023. With deep humility and a profound sense of responsibility, I wholeheartedly accept your mandate to be your chief servant for the next 4 years.

Before I go on, I must first dedicate this victory to God the Father Almighty, who makes everything beautiful in His own time. I also dedicate it to the millions of Abia citizens who have been the unfortunate victims of bad governance these past decades. As I acknowledge this victory, I am fully conscious of the huge expectations of millions of the good people of Abia, who have been denied the dividends of democracy and good governance for such a long time. I want to sincerely thank every Abian and non-indigene alike who participated in this election. As you are all aware, this was my third attempt at contesting for this office, in my quest to implement my long-held vision of rebuilding Abia state as truly God’s own state. This third attempt, it pleased God to give us victory. In the words of one Labour Party stalwart, ‘The Siege Is Over’! With our votes and the collective will of the people, we have “broken the gates of hell and cast its bars of iron asunder”. As recorded in the holy book, the kingdom of hell shall not prevail against us.

I would like to quickly compliment my colleagues in the just-concluded elections, Chief Sir Okechukwu Ahiwe, Engr Enyinnaya Nwafor, High Chief Ikechi Emenike, Prof Gregory Ibe, and a host of other equally qualified governorship candidates. It has been a hard-fought contest and each of you gave his or her best in the quest to serve our beloved State. There is no doubt that all of us have very robust ideas as to how to move our dear State forward. I want to assure you that your ideas and dreams that are consistent with building a virile Abia state shall come to fruition under my watch. I, therefore, invite all of you to join hands with our administration in order to serve Abians who have been victims of several years of maladministration and state capture. I have no doubt that you will be available to use the same energy and intellect, to help rebuild our state and develop our people. Of particular mention are the Candidates that have publicly conceded defeat and congratulated us, even when the battle of Obingwa fictitious votes was still raging. These include Prof. Greg Ibe, Bishop Sunday Onuoha, Bishop Emeka Nwankpa, Chief Bond Ohuche, and Chief Chibuike Jonas, amongst others. It is well with all of you.

I want to thank the young and energetic Deputy Governor-elect, Engr Ikechukwu Emetu who is going to be carrying the burden of governance with me. I also want to thank my Campaign team led by Hon. Acho Obioma and various support and volunteer groups who worked tirelessly to make today possible. You are simply the best hands any candidate can find! Your creative ideas and dedication to our common goal were unprecedented.

I must not fail to thank the leadership and members of the Labour Party, who worked very hard to ensure that this day would come. I thank all those who worked with me through moments of despair and hope, through tears, sweat and blood, through betrayals, denials and dangers untold. It is said that the harder the struggle, the sweeter the victory. Please savour the sweetness of your hard work and firm belief.

I must give special thanks to my best friend, my confidant, my number one fan, my heartbeat, the wife of my youth, the mother of my children, and the First Lady in waiting, of Abia state, Lady Priscilla Chidinma Otti (Onugu Abia). I must thank her for living up to the challenges of being the wife of someone committed to these ideals, with equanimity and elegance. Unfortunately, the work has only just begun but now you must support me, just like you have done in the past 30 years of our marriage, to work for the people of Abia. Special thanks to our children, Dr Ezinwa, Engnr Alex Jr and Chinweotuto for being there and supporting Daddy without reservation.

I must pause and remember some of those who have left us in the course of this journey. Although they are no longer here with us, I am sure that where ever they are now, they will be smiling with satisfaction that finally, we have triumphed over the forces that have held the State captive for so long. Some of the more notable ones among them are Prince Otisi Kalu, Abbott, and Pastor Nnanna Ngwu, who both served as Chairmen for this campaign at different times. I must also remember my friend from Anambra State, Mr Eze Alomefuna, Rico, who worked tirelessly to help end the dynasty of incompetence in Abia state. Also to be remembered are Prince Dike O. Dike and Dr Mike Nwachukwu who lost their lives during the period of this struggle. Worthy of mention is the less-than-two-year-old little Adanna who tragically lost her life in 2015, when in the frenzy and excitement of our electoral victory, her father, Mr Pius Oha accidentally ran over her in a car. In spite of the exigency of time, please join me in observing a minute’s silence in honour of these fallen heroes.

Indeed, I see this victory as a call to service. Even as I come out of a bruising and long-drawn-out campaign, I know that this is just the beginning of the journey. There is a lot of work to be done and we must get all hands on deck to ensure that we take back our state and bring the much-sought-after dividends of democracy.

You voted us to serve you and not to be served. You voted us to alleviate your sufferings and not to compound and multiply them. This is a service that comes with an unusually high sense of devotion and commitment given our checkered history as a people. During my electioneering campaign, I traversed all nooks and crannies of Abia state, and that enabled me to have a first-hand assessment of the needs and expectations of Abians. These are the basic things expected by the people for a responsible government to provide in order to unleash the potential inherent in the typically hardworking Abians. Based on my findings and those of my team members, it dawned on us that an immediate hands-on approach is required to hit the ground running and to ensure that we alleviate the sufferings of all Abians, I promised you that I will serve you as the Governor of all Abians and all citizens living in Abia, irrespective of the clan, religious persuasion or political leaning. I see my mandate as cutting across all strata of our people and I once more promise to use the resources accruing to all Abians for the benefit of all Abians and the residents. I will like to assure us that we hold no bitterness against anyone and will not go on any revenge mission against anyone. If in the process of getting here, we have wronged anyone, kindly find a space in your heart to forgive. We have equally forgiven anyone that wronged us. This will be a government that would unite everyone in this state as we are all brothers and sisters.

I want to salute the industry and resourcefulness of all Abians, the religious and traditional institutions, the civil servants, the working class, the pensioners, the Business community, the physically challenged members of our society and indeed everyone that wishes Abia well. There shall be no discrimination whatsoever in the amenities that each person is able to access in our government. I made a firm promise to all civil servants and pensioners owed salaries, pensions and emoluments that an immediate payment plan would be put in place to ensure that this gets the priority it deserves.

I am very much aware of and prepared to deal with the issues of infrastructural decay which have continued to militate against our growth and development as a state. This will be tackled head-on. There is no doubt that given the deplorable state of our infrastructure, roads, schools and health systems, Abians are deservedly impatient to have these issues addressed as quickly as possible. I assure you that these areas will receive the priority attention of our government.

Nevertheless, I caution that we all will need to put in our best and row together in one direction. There is no magic wand that can fix all the rot and decay noticed in virtually all segments of the system in the past years. For us to have sustainable development, it would require a very painstaking and elaborate layout of master plans to enable us to tackle the menace of flooding and re-engineer our cities especially Aba, Umuahia and other cities that would be developed in order to support our urban renewal projects. We, therefore, plead for patience and understanding as we first tackle the immediate challenges and work on the major ones. The approach of our government will revolve around crafting policies that will enable our government to tap the creative energies of every Abian. We remain resolute in our drive to eliminate poverty and create sustainable wealth for our people.

Once again, thank you for electing me and my Deputy to serve you for the next 4 years. We trust God for His enablement to offer our services to Abians in such a way that we would not disappoint you. We shall implement our manifesto which is a revered pact between our administration and the good people of Abia state.

My dearly beloved Abians, as I conclude this address, I want to reassure you that we are going to run an open, transparent and accountable government devoid of waste and profligacy. Our doors will remain wide open and our channels of communication will remain unfettered so that your worthy contributions and suggestions will be a guiding light as we together navigate the thorny paths of rebuilding the state and transforming same for the benefit of all. We deeply cherish you all and will do our best to ensure that the trust reposed in us is not in vain. Thank you all and God bless Abia State! God bless Nigeria!!

Dr. Alex Chioma Otti OFR, Governor-Elect, Abia State, Umuahia, 22nd March 2023

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

Rhapsody of Realities, Thursday, March 23rd. 2023, By Pastor Chris Oyakhilome PhD DSc DD

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THE KEY IS YIELDING TO THE WORD

But if ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts, glory not, and lie not against the truth (James 3:14).

The verse of scripture above was written to God’s people. It shows that it’s possible to find a Christian who could be walking in bitterness, envy and strife. According to our theme verse, when you notice bitterness, envy, and strife in your heart, take a stand against them. Don’t deny them; deal with them, because they’re devilish.

In the ensuing verse 15, still referring to anger, bitterness and strife, it says, “This wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish” (James 3:15). The word “devilish” above is the Greek, “daimonio‌de‌s” which means “demonic” or that which is inspired by a demon.

Don’t allow your life to be influenced by demons; don’t get into strife. Ordinarily, Satan can’t force his will upon anyone, except those who yield to his antics and influence. Sadly, some people yield themselves to the devil without realizing it. It’s the reason you must walk in the Spirit and in the knowledge of the Word at all times. This is vital for a victorious Christian life.

Galatians 5:16 says, “This I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh.” The same James who wrote what we read in our theme verse also wrote in James 4:7, “Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” You submit yourself to God by yielding to the Word.

Then, being yielded to the Word, resist the devil and he’ll flee from you. That’s the key: it’s being yielded to the Word; giving yourself to the Word by doing the Word! It’ll rid you of envy, strife, pride, jealousy, bitterness, anger and everything unwholesome or unclean. It’ll bring you into a place of sanctification. Praise God!

Prayer

Dear Father, thank you for the impact of your Word in my spirit, soul and body. My life is filled with the joy and glory of your righteousness as I walk in the light of your Word. Every darkness is dispelled from my path because I walk in the Spirit and light of your Word, in Jesus’ Name. Amen.

Further Study:

Ephesians 4:31
“Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice:”

James 1:22-25
“But be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves.
23 For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass:
24 For he beholdeth himself, and goeth his way, and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was
25 But whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth therein, he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall be blessed in his deed.”

1-Year Bible Reading Plan:
Luke 5:1-16;
Deuteronomy 25-27

2-Year Bible Reading Plan:
Matthew 25:1-13;
Exodus 32

Extract From Rhapsody Of Realities Daily Devotional

Good Morning Beloved.
Have A Great Day!

#KeepSayingIt, Thursday, 23rd March 2023, https://loveworldlyrics.com/medley-3-february-2023-loveworld-singers/

Weakness is not an option in my life because the Holy Ghost dwells in me. I am empowered with might from within; therefore, I’m victorious at every count and in everything. I refuse to live or function by natural abilities or within human capacities. I make full proof of God’s limitless power that has been deposited in my spirit; thus, I reign, rule, and dominate my world. The joy of the Lord is my strength. Joy overflows in my heart always, and I am strengthened with might in my inner man. I refuse to be weak and I reject anything that represents darkness or inferiority. I live over and above sickness, disease, poverty, and the world. Anything that causes sorrow and depression is far from me. Jesus is Lord over my life; therefore, satan has no claim over me.

I declare that I am full of life. I do not walk in darkness, for I have the light of life. The devil has nothing in me, for I am born of God. I live in health continually. I’m alive! The Word of God is working in me! I have authority over death, sickness, disease, and infirmity because I have passed from death to life. The Holy Spirit quickens and makes my body whole. I believe what the Word says concerning me! Glorious things are spoken of me. I refuse to be sick! My faith is active, working, and generating great results for me. I’m alive unto God and my body is vitalized by the Spirit of the Living God. I am impregnable to infections, sicknesses, or diseases. The plan of the enemy against me is completely null and void. I have peace all around me! I am never without strength because the Strengthener – the Holy Spirit – is in me. He ministers to my body and energizes me in health, strength, and vigour in the mighty Name of Jesus. Amen.

SOLUDO LAUNCHES SOLUTION INNOVATION DISTRICT, SIGNS MOU WITH MICROSOFT TO TRAIN 20,000 YOUTHS – By Christian ABURIME

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Governor CC. Soludo, His Wife Mrs. Nonye Soludo and Anambra State Youths as he Launches his Solution Innovation District (SID) which was held at Professor Dora Akunyili Women's Development Center, Awka, which also featured the signing of a memorandum of Understanding with Anambra State Government, Microsoft and Wootlab Foundation to train 20,000 youths on Digital Skills.
Governor CC. Soludo, His Wife Mrs. Nonye Soludo and Anambra State Youths as he Launches his Solution Innovation District (SID) which was held at Professor Dora Akunyili Women's Development Center, Awka, which also featured the signing of a memorandum of Understanding with Anambra State Government, Microsoft and Wootlab Foundation to train 20,000 youths on Digital Skills.

Governor of Anambra State, Prof. Chukwuma Charles Soludo, CFR has launched Solution Innovation District, (SID). The function which was held at Professor Dora Akunyili Women’s Development Center, Awka, featured the signing of a memorandum of understanding with the Anambra State Government, Microsoft and Wootlab Foundation to train 20,000 youths on Digital Skills.

Performing the function, Governor Soludo stressed that knowledge and skills are enduring forms of power. He pointed out that the power of knowledge and skills transcends space and time and is not constrained by any boundaries because it follows an individual anywhere he or she goes. “The demand for knowledge and skills is global. The certificate you possess doesn’t really matter to the world. They are more interested in your mental capacity and your manual dexterity. This is the game-changing moment” Governor Soludo further pointed out

“The desire to succeed and the desire to add value are the first requirements for success. Your knowledge and abilities will support you in achieving this.

“Being a Governor or President is temporary power, and after your tenure, the world continues. However, when you have knowledge and skills, you have power that lasts a lifetime. “Those who seek knowledge and skills have a place in the future. We are continuing today with our plan to retake control of our state and put it back on the right course”, he emphasized. “To the 0.01% of our population who are criminals cannot define who we are. This is the message we sent to them. The 99% of Ndi Anambra are renowned for their entrepreneurship, diligence, fortitude, and inventiveness. “The future starts today! Although the past few days have been quite busy, I must thank you all for coming, especially our students and youth. I see the brand-new Anambra of our dream when I look into your faces” he added.

The Governor appreciated his Special Adviser on Innovation and Business Incubation, Ms Chinwe Okoye, for organizing the programme, as well as Microsoft and Wootlab Foundation for supporting Anambra. “I think that this alliance will serve as the cornerstone of our future.

“The transition of Anambra from commerce; a largely informal to a formal economy, particularly in the area of digital skills, has started” Governor Soludo stated.

The Governor spoke about other things including the annual training of 10,000 youths on digital skills, cascaded to primary and secondary schools, universities, Churches, and communities; access to high-speed internet, expressing his belief that launching of the Solution Innovation District would bring the world to Anambra and allow them to export their skills to the rest of the world.

On his part, the Commissioner for Youth, Mr Patrick Aghamba, recalled that Governor Soludo had launched the one youth, two skills programme in October 2022 as a pilot phase of his agenda and reported that the programme was progressing well. The Commissioner emphasized that the opportunities that lie in digital skills are overwhelming, maintained that the task of youth empowerment is a huge task and called on all stakeholders to participate in the programme. He expressed satisfaction that Anambra State is not falling behind in terms of digital literacy, adding that the goal is to provide more quality jobs.

Earlier in her opening remarks, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Innovation and Business Incubation, Ms Chinwe Okoli welcomed Microsoft and Wootlab foundation as official partners of the State Government and thanked Governor Soludo for launching the Solution Innovation District. “This journey aims to liberate the Anambra people’s creativity and is consistent with the Governor’s goal of making Anambra State a livable and prosperous homeland. “The Solution Innovation District was established in Anambra State to foster and promote skill innovation, including that of digital skills. It will be a community of entrepreneurs, innovators, investors, and clever artisans who will all work together to find solutions to issues in Anambra, Nigeria, and around the world”.

According to the Special Adviser, the SID components include business innovation, digital skills, and the desire to revive businesses on Facebook, Twitter, and WhatsApp while producing thousands of millionaires each year. She also mentioned SMEs’ acceleration from Onitsha to Awka to Nnewi, will help small business owners leverage technology and reach more markets, make more money, hire more people, and create jobs.

The Representative of the Microsoft Country Manager for Nigeria and Ghana, Olatomiwa Williams the Chief Executive Officer of Wootlab Foundation, Chioma Okoro described the initiative as a move in the right direction asserting that the fourth industrial revolution has already begun.

Wife of the Governor, Mrs Nonye Soludo, members of the State Executive Council, Transition Committee Chairmen, and Traditional Rulers among others attended the event.

Below is the application link for the training programme. It is virtual and every Anambra youth is welcome to apply. Deadline is 4th April 2023

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

In true democracies, political structures don’t win elections – By Azuka Onwuka

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The people's President Mr. Peter Obi and his amiable Wife Mrs. Magarette Obi
The people's President Mr. Peter Obi and his amiable Wife Mrs. Magarette Obi

Despite the shortcomings of the 2023 presidential election, which were seemingly deliberately created by the Independent National Electoral Commission, the election has given some power to the masses and created some fear in Nigerian politicians. If INEC had kept its word of organising a completely transparent election in which all results at polling units were electronically transmitted and collated without any alteration, it would have revolutionised elections in Nigeria by returning powerfully to the people as demanded by democracy.

Notwithstanding that, it gave Nigerian politicians a taste of what true democracy is: government of the people by the people and for the people. Especially in the federal legislative elections where INEC allowed elections to be electronically transmitted, many power brokers were defeated by political Lilliputians in different parts of the country. This has made those contesting the upcoming governorship and state legislative elections to become humble. Many of them have been seen kneeling down or prostrating before the people to beg for forgiveness, or visiting unusual locations and performing amusing acts, to prove that they are people-oriented politicians. Those who taunted the masses or dismissed them as social media tigers have changed their tune.

Last week, the world celebrated International Women’s Day for 2023. But for Nigerian women, 2023 has not brought good news in politics. Even though the election was declared inconclusive in some of the senatorial zones, results of the February 25 election show that only three women may be in the Senate, which features 109 members. That is a drop from the eight female senators inaugurated in the current ninth Senate in June 2019, out of which Senator Rose Oko of Cross River died and was replaced by a man.

Two of the seven senators that will not be part of the Senate from 2023 to 2027 are from Anambra State, which has been producing the highest number of female senators since the Fourth Republic commenced in 1999. They are Senators Uche Ekwunife and Stella Oduah.

Until the February 25 election, the most powerful female grassroots politician in Nigeria was Senator Ekwunife, representing Anambra Central Senatorial Zone. This is not an exaggeration. There are facts to back up that claim.

Ekwunife had her Anambra Central Senatorial Zone under lock and key. Whether you are a man, a woman or a demi-god, she would floor you in any election, no matter your chains of degree or wealth or influence. She facilitated many projects for her zone, and the people loved her. If not for the rotation of the governorship position among the three zones of Anambra State, she would have contested the seat in 2021 and probably won it.

Ekwunife with Senator Stella Oduah from Anambra North Senatorial Zone gave Anambra the record of the state that has produced the highest number of back-to-back female senators. With both of them, Anambra was producing more female senators than some zones in Nigeria that have six or seven states. Despite the disadvantage women have in Nigerian politics, it was only in Anambra State that female senators had the upper hand over men and were sure of defeating men without the backing of any political godfather.

Then hubris came upon Ekwunife and she took unwarranted swipes at the presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi, referring to him as “a kindergarten president” and his supporters as “mobocracy.” Oduah was also accused of working against the presidential ambition of Obi during the primaries by ensuring that the Anambra delegates of the Peoples Democratic Party were under the control of Nyesom Wike, who was in the race with Obi and others. With his home base taken away from him, Obi left the PDP.

Note that these ladies were not contesting against Obi. Obi did not say anything against them. They didn’t even have to say anything against Obi during the campaign. But like most Nigerian politicians who don’t know how to read situations, they couldn’t see that the ship had left the harbour. In the estimation of most Nigerian politicians and Nigerian voters, there are power brokers who own Nigerian politics and determine who wins any election.

Then came February 25. And the people spoke. The people did not just speak: they thundered! Their noise reverberated and propelled Ekwunife and Oduah out of their senatorial seats. For a political tigress who had defeated many heavyweights before, Ekwunife could not even get the second position in the election. The people showed that power belongs to them and not to power brokers with structures.

Meanwhile, Senator Victor Umeh, former Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance, who had worked against Obi some years ago, had read the handwriting on the wall and smartly reconciled with Obi, picking the LP ticket for Anambra Central, which Ekwunife had collected from him. By going to Obi and joining the little-known LP, he finally was able to wrest the Senate seat from Ekwunife. And he took the ticket so easily this time. Umeh must have been shocked that what was so difficult for him to achieve for a while became like a piece of cake just because he aligned with Obi at a time no top South-East politician wanted to openly align with him.

Interestingly, if the governorship position of Anambra State were up for election on Saturday, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo would have been overwhelmingly voted out, despite his huge popularity barely one year ago when he contested the position. He would have been punished for the condescension, malice and ridicule he expressed in his needless November 2022 letter against Obi and his supporters. Like other politicians, the argument of Soludo was simple: Obi had no political structure and could not win the presidency; the best he could do would be to win in one state.

Before the February 25 election, many “political pundits” emphasised the importance of political structure as the determinant of election victory. They dismissed Labour Party as lacking in structure and therefore unable to pose any threat. Interestingly, even though the presidential election result was flawed and has been the subject of legal contest, Labour Party denied the All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party the 25-percent vote score in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory.

For the first time, LP has made it come up as a factor for the court to determine if a presidential candidate needs to win at least 25 per cent in the FCT to be declared the winner. There is no gainsaying that in any country where people’s votes count, popular candidates win elections. It is only in countries where people trust in rigging that they tell you that you need a “structure” to win an election.

When Barack Obama joined the presidential race for the United States in 2007, I saw the type of excitement he evoked in people and predicted from far away Nigeria that he would win the presidency. But political pundits told me that it was impossible for him to do so, given his racial identity and lack of “political structure.” His opponents in the Democratic Party mocked him as a neophyte. But he eventually won his party’s ticket and the presidential election.

Similarly, when Donald Trump emerged in 2015 and was creating excitement, I said he would win the presidency, but political pundits told me that a man with such a foul mouth and unpredictable behaviour could not win the American presidency. He eventually won it.

As long as elections are completely transparent and determined by popularity, the much-touted political structure (read “vote buying, thuggery, intimidation, and election manipulation”) credited to some strong men and women is hollow. In a true democracy, the people’s vote (and not the political structure) wins elections.

Twitter: @BrandAzuka, 

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

WHY THE CURRENT NIGERIAN ARRANGEMENT OF SEPARATE DATES FOR NATIONAL AND SUBNATIONAL ELECTIONS “STIFLE” DEMOCRACY – By Alfred Obiora Uzokwe, P.E.

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Alfred Obiora Uzokwe, P.E is a professional engineer licensed to practice in the states of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Washington DC and has over 33 years of combined architectural and engineering experience in both Nigeria and the United States. He is the Author of the books- 1. Nigeria: Contemporary Commentaries and Essays, 2. Surviving in Biafra: The Story of the Nigerian Civil War, email: obiuzokwe@comcast.net, Harrisburg, PA, USA
Alfred Obiora Uzokwe, P.E is a professional engineer licensed to practice in the states of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Washington DC and has over 33 years of combined architectural and engineering experience in both Nigeria and the United States. He is the Author of the books- 1. Nigeria: Contemporary Commentaries and Essays, 2. Surviving in Biafra: The Story of the Nigerian Civil War, email: obiuzokwe@comcast.net, Harrisburg, PA, USA

Yes, democracy is loosely defined as the government of the people for the people by the people. The “by the people” part is very crucial. It means that any government that leads THE people must be a government that the majority of the people voted for. By extension, the agenda of that government should be reflective of the wishes of THE people. The only way you can get THE people to decide the government that leads them is to ensure that the voting process gives every single one the opportunity to participate. Any process or issue that hinders voting is undemocratic and in many cases throws up “leaders” who are not the desire of the people. 

Now, having set the stage above, here is my gripe and why. A contemporary of mine who lives with his family in Lagos and has done so for a long time had to travel to the Southeast, where he is from, for the presidential elections. Because of the high stakes of the presidential elections, prior to the elections, he had declared that nothing would make him abstain from voting. But because he registered to vote in his home town in the East, and with the complications inherent in trying to change his registration location, he just decided to go down to the east and vote. He has a business in Lagos that requires his attention 24/7 but he made out time and travelled on a Wednesday. On Saturday, he went out early, stood in line, braved the periodic rain on that day and eventually voted. On Monday, he headed back to his base in Lagos. 

He had done his patriotic duty by many standards but then, his duty was not fully completed. Why? Because the subnational(gubernatorial and state rep) elections were still outstanding! They were slated for March 11 before they were moved to March 18. According to him, he cannot afford to be away from his business for a second time to vote for the subnational offices. This issue is not unique to just my friend, there are many people who cannot afford to take off two chunks of their time away from their businesses to vote. Yes, voting is important and I have trumpeted that in my writings but not everyone has the ability to travel away from their businesses for large chunks of time and not experience hardship. This includes financial hardship with respect to transportation costs. I am simply saying that there are many Nigerians, like my friend, who will not be able to participate in this upcoming election on Saturday just because of that. 

I realize that the arrangement of voting at the national level on a date different from the sub-national level is codified in the Nigerian system. But I disagree with that arrangement. I think that it creates inadvertent voter suppression because many people that would have wanted to vote at the gubernatorial level will not be able to. After all said and done, the system will throw up many who did not win by majority. This arrangement needs to be looked at again. 

Also, just before the presidential election, public schools were closed so that students would go back and vote. Two days ago, I communicated with a student in one of the tertiary institutions only to find out that they are still on break because of the elections. Frankly, that is very disruptive educationally. If all elections were held in one day, schools could afford to give students two days (Thursday and Friday off to go home and vote and return Sunday. This would create minimal school disruptions. In a nation where students enrol in four-year courses but end up spending six years because of strikes and all, every day they can stay in school matters. To send them home for two weeks, in this case almost four weeks because of the date change frankly is counterproductive. 

Furthermore, this election arrangement creates an unhealthy bandwagon effect. What happens is that once the presidential election is conducted and results released, a phenomenon takes hold. People whose candidates lost, become disappointed and decide not to go back out and vote. Or, the phenomenon could be that people would say, that a certain party’s presidential candidate has won, let’s just vote for them at the gubernatorial level. It is likely to happen in Lagos state. I was listening to an APC member on TV who was asked how Labour Party was able to win Lagos at the presidential level. His answer was that they were taken by surprise. But then he added that they have learned what happened and were now ready to plug the holes during the guber elections to avoid a repeat. This could mean many things including that they will increase voter suppression, intimidation, ballot box snatching and the rest of the anomalies they foisted on voters in Lagos during the presidential elections. This is all because of an opportunity created by the two-part voting process. 

I hope that this would be looked at and remedied but knowing Nigeria, once it favours those in power, they will never see it as something to correct. 

Here I stand! 

Alfred Obiora Uzokwe, P.E. is a professional engineer licensed to practice in the states of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Washington DC and has over 33 years of combined architectural and engineering experience in both Nigeria and the United States. He is the Author of two books – 1. Nigeria: Contemporary Commentaries and Essays, 2. Surviving in Biafra: The Story of the Nigerian Civil War, email: obiuzokwe@comcast.net, Harrisburg, PA, USA

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

Rhapsody of Realities, Wednesday, March 22nd. 2023, by Pastor Chris Oyakhilome PhD DSc DD

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WISDOM AND RIGHTEOUSNESS

The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want…He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake (Psalm 23:1,3)

Did you know that wisdom and righteousness are intertwined? The wisdom (Greek: “phronesis”) that I’m talking about is practical wisdom. It’s the outworking of the righteousness of God in your life. When we talk about the righteousness of God, we’re talking about practical wisdom at work, the expression of “phronesis.”

We’re children of righteousness, and you can’t walk in righteousness and fail in wisdom (“phronesis”). The underlined portion of our theme verse says, “…he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness….” Walking in the paths of righteousness is “phronesis.” It means you don’t go anywhere by chance. You don’t meet anybody by chance; in your path, there’re no accidents. Everything is prearranged by God.

In studying the relationship between wisdom and righteousness in Proverbs 8:12-18, Wisdom says, “I wisdom dwell with prudence, and find out knowledge of witty inventions. The fear of the LORD is to hate evil: pride, and arrogancy, and the evil way, and the froward mouth, do I hate. Counsel is mine, and sound wisdom: I am understanding; I have strength. By me kings reign, and princes decree justice. By me princes rule, and nobles, even all the judges of the earth. I love them that love me; and those that seek me early shall find me. Riches and honour are with me; yea, durable riches and righteousness.”

With wisdom leading you in the paths of righteousness, you could never be poor. So, every day, declare, “Wisdom is at work in me today! No chance occurrences in my life. Predestination is at work in me.” Your life was planned by God to be on the path of wisdom and righteousness. Praise God!

CONFESSION:

Wisdom is at work in me today, and I’m set on a preordained path of righteousness! Predestination is at work in me. I don’t go anywhere by chance. I don’t meet anybody by chance; in my path of life, there’s no death. My life has a purpose with God. Amen._

FURTHER STUDY:

Proverbs 8:12-21 I wisdom dwell with prudence, and find out knowledge of witty inventions. 13 The fear of the Lord is to hate evil: pride, and arrogancy, and the evil way, and the froward mouth, do I hate. 14 Counsel is mine, and sound wisdom: I am understanding; I have strength. 15 By me kings reign, and princes decree justice. 16 By me princes rule, and nobles, even all the judges of the earth. 17 I love them that love me; and those that seek me early shall find me. 18 Riches and honour are with me; yea, durable riches and righteousness. 19 My fruit is better than gold, yea, than fine gold; and my revenue than choice silver. 20 I lead in the way of righteousness, in the midst of the paths of judgment: 21 That I may cause those that love me to inherit substance; and I will fill their treasures.

1 Corinthians 1:30 But of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption:

1 Year Bible Reading Plan: Luke 4:14-44 & Deuteronomy 22-24

2-Year Bible Reading Plan: Matthew 24:45-51 & Exodus 31

Pray-A-Thon 2023 – Wed Mar 22 @PastorChrisLive

Did you know that wisdom and righteousness are intertwined? Find out more in this Wednesday’s Rhapsody. Visit http://rhapsodyofrealities.org

Isaiah 45:8 says, “Rain down, you heavens, from above, And let the skies pour down righteousness; Let the earth open, let them bring forth salvation, And let righteousness spring up together. I, the LORD, have created it”.

At our times of prayer today, we’ll pray fervently in tongues of the Spirit, and with the prophetic words of scripture above in prayer for the nations.

The Global Day of Prayer holds this Friday, Mar 24th, from 6pm GMT+1 to Saturday, Mar 25th. Prepare and invite others to join us in prayer, as we effect changes in our world through the Spirit.

The Healing Streams Festival of Miracles showcasing miracles received at the just concluded Healing Streams Live Healing Services airs daily on http://healingstreams.tv and on our Loveworld Networks. Showing at these times: Mondays – Thursdays 12pm – 2pm & 6pm – 9pm; Fridays – 12pm – 2pm & 4pm – 6pm; Saturdays – Sundays – 4pm – 6pm; all GMT+1.

Remember to attend the Midweek Service today in Church onsite or online. God bless you.

KeepSayingIt Wednesday, 22nd March 2023 https://loveworldlyrics.com/love-unforgettable-by-faith-loveworld-singers-lyrics-and-mp3-ippc/

My life has been beautified by the only true and wise God. I am not of this world! I belong to God’s Kingdom. I am victorious over sin, sickness, disease, and poverty. I reign supreme all the time because I am in union with God. I am more than a conqueror in this life. I walk daily in the consciousness of my divinity in Christ. I refuse to allow sickness or disease to damage my body! I live a happy, joyful, and fruitful life. I am in constant health every day. I’m one with God! I have the indestructible life of God in me; hence, I am shielded from evil.

I cannot be a victim of sickness, disease, or mishaps. I am born of God; therefore, I walk in divine health every day, all year round. I declare that my life is beautiful and it cannot be destroyed by any form of infirmity. I do not get sick! I am fully fortified with the whole armour of God. No evil can come near me. I am strong in the Lord and in the power of His might. My faith prevails over all the enemy’s fiery darts of sickness, disease, and wickedness. I am full of life and I live the transcendent life in Christ that is far above sickness, disease, infirmity, and death.

I am not ordinary, because I am born of God. Thus, I function always with supernatural strength and abilities! My mind is stayed on the Lord and my trust is in my heavenly Father, He keeps me in perfect peace with health, strength, and vitality. I am impregnable to sickness, disease, and death. I live the glorious life every day and it is evident for all to See. As a partaker of the divine nature; my body is sustained by a force that the ordinary man cannot perceive. My health, strength, and wealth are assured in the mighty Name of Jesus. Amen.

ASIWAJU SHOULD’VE READ THE VERY BOLD INSCRIPTION ON EKESON LUXURY BUSES THAT PLY FROM LAGOS TO THE SOUTHEAST. IT IS BOLDLY WRITTEN: BEWARE! MANY HAVE GONE – By Chris O. Maduka

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A Collage of former Russian Oligarch Mikhail Khordokovksy, and Nigerian INEC-Selected President, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu
A Collage of former Russian Oligarch Mikhail Khordokovksy, and Nigerian INEC-Selected President, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

Like former Russian Oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, like Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu! One of President Obasanjo’s favourite songs is Sonny Neji (face me I face you oo… Oyaa, Na mi and you today.. oyaa!! Face me I go face you… Do me I go do you… OBJ is also reputable for using the remarks; Iron jam Iron one must bend when he’s in a battle mode. It is now Tinubu vs the military Generals and not Peter Obi and the OBIdient movement as he may have erroneously believed. Peter Obi and the Labour party have been tried and proven and may have been positioned to become the prime beneficiary of the outcome of the impending face-off between the military constituency and some of their former cronies they allowed to play the Nigeria chase game with them and the citizens of Nigeria as pawns.

I don’t see Asiwaju Tinubu winning this battle and winning the election. I see them taking Atiku with them into permanent retirement as they do not trust him a penny. They should know. They are privy to so much classified information and security reports. So the odds as it is clearly tilt towards Peter Obi in the final analysis. Call him “Nwa Chinemere Oko’okpa na eyiri akwa”. It is not by our might. The die is now cast. The final chapter on Tinubu political machine and dynasty has begun to unfold. Lagos is now about to witness the D-day battle of Normandy.

Nigeria is too big, too complex and way too complicated for any one single individual to approach this country with the extreme hubris and sense of indispensability as Asiwaju and his idle worshipers have demonstrated in the past few years. Everybody tends to be a boy and he’s the only man in the house. No former Governor or anybody achieved anything in Lagos but he alone built Lagos, and hence he’s the owner of Lagos PLC. Twice he went to Abeokuta in Ogun state, twice he insulted the former Military General and former head of state with his Emi’lokan speech and the F9 condescending remarks of President Buhari. Granted, some of us are not PMB fans. But he still occupies the office of the President, and if weird characters like Gov. El. Rufai and that of Kogi state and Asiwaju loyalists are allowed to set the tone and pace of governance in this country, and then we are finished.

Let’s not go into the money coup Asiwaju unleashed on the primary of the APC that gave him the presidential ticket. Should we talk of how he has infiltrated every institution of governance and destroyed the dissenting civil liberties he once used as tools to score some kind of political uppercut against his political rivals. Everyone that watched that APC charades saw a lame duck president Buhari totally embarrassed by what unfolded in that APC convention that Asiwaju hijacked with his deep pockets. Obviously, PMB seems to have lost control of his party, the government and now the country to an idle bloody civilian (as the military people call non-military others like us regardless of how highly placed you are). Indeed, we are all bloody civilians. A simple reality that Tinubu in his naivete failed to realize or pretend not to understand even with the benefit of hindsight and experience of how Chief MKO Abiola and some others ended up.

How about the closed circle council of former heads of state and presidents dominated by military Generals? What do they think of Asiwaju at this moment as he’s poised to also acquire entire Nigeria and turn it into his private estate like Lagos PLC? One can only guess as we see the handwriting on the walls. So is it now possible that Asiwaju will survive this onslaught and succeed in becoming the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in this February 2023 presidential election? If you ask me, na who I go ask??

Well, there’s a precedent with the Russian President Vladimir Putin and one of the beneficiaries of Russian cronyism and late Boris Yeltsin’s voodoo privatization that handed over a chunk of Russian oil wealth to a few Kremlin Oligarchs and loyalists such as Mikhail Khodorkovsky and oil Magnet just like Nigeria with Atiku, Asiwaju and others in Nigeria today. And now some of the prime beneficiaries of the fleecing of Nigeria are now insisting that they must purchase Nigeria wholesale with the same Nigerian wealth they were allowed to corner. The likes of Asiwaju Tinubu have grown so rich and so complacent if not naive to the point that they failed to follow the story of power play around the world, especially the story of Mikhail Khodorkovsky and how he ended up in prison in Siberia’s cold region when he started nursing the ambition to take over the Kremlin.

Many may not recall, but one of PMB’s major speeches shortly after winning the elections pointed to the fact that some individuals have cornered so much of our commonwealth to the point they think they can purchase Nigeria. What’s more? The military boys have a mindset about Nigeria, especially the Nigerian war Veterans. It is an unwritten rule, but if you know, you know. They can forgive their fellow war veterans who saw the battle as they risked their lives, but they will never forgive anyone else, be you from North East or West to play the game they played, or to be placed on the same pedestal as the owners of Nigeria as Dele Momodu captured it. This is one reality the presidential Candidates of PDP AND APC have not faced and may realize this too late. We are all eyes and ears and must not once again become pawns in the final battle of Normandy and the D day. Why??… We must ignore the instigation to go out there to become the inquisitive monkeys that often receive more bullets. To borrow from former US secretary of state, James Baker, We simply do not have a dog in that fight.

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

MC Oluomo And Lagos CP Would Be Held Responsible Should Anything Happen To Igbos During And After Saturday Guber Polls In Lagos

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A Collage of Tinubu's Chief Thug, MC Oluomo And the Lagos State Commissioner of Police
A Collage of Tinubu's Chief Thug, MC Oluomo And the Lagos State Commissioner of Police

PRESS STATEMENT by Ohanaeze Youth Council

The attention of the Ohanaeze Youth Council (OYC), led by Comrade Igboayaka O. Igboayaka, has been drawn over a video being circulated on social media which captured the Chairman of the Lagos State Parks Management Committee, Musiliu Akinsanya, popularly known as MC Oluomo, on his threat and intimidation of Ndigbo resident in the state against voting for candidates of their choice in Saturday’s governorship and state assembly elections.

In the viral video, the Bola Tinubu’s loyalist cum All Progressives Congress (APC) political thug, MC Oluomo was seen addressing a gathering of APC loyalists and threatening Igbos not to participate or bother going to their polling units on Saturday if they intended to vote for candidates of other parties other than those of the ruling party, APC, in the state. He categorically warned Igbos in Lagos to stay at home if they will not vote for Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of the APC and other candidates of the party.

It could easily be recalled that the same MC Oluomo was caught on camera preventing Igbos in his polling unit in Fehintola Giwa Street, Aguda, Surulere, Lagos, from voting for their preferred candidates during the just concluded Presidential and National Assembly elections in the state while the police personnel stationed at that polling unit looked on and did nothing to curtail his excesses. It was also alleged that this MC Oluomo ensured that electoral materials did not get to their destinations.

The Nigerian constitution gave Nigerians the freedom to vote and be voted for. But APC political thugs and Tinubu’s loyalists in the mould of MC Oluomo are saying that they are above the law and Nigerians do not have that freedom to vote in Lagos and that it is either you vote for them or you don’t vote at all.

The position of Ndigbo is simple: that based on good governance and equitable sharing of the dividends of democracy for the best interest of Lagos and Lagosians, we the Ohanaeze Youth Council (OYC) under the dogged leadership of Comrade Igboayaka O Igboayaka have endorsed the Labour Party governorship candidate, Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour (GRV) to steer the ship of the state in the next four years and it is well within our democratic rights and freedom as citizens of Nigeria to participate in the election and vote for our preferred candidates in tomorrow’s gubernatorial and hose of assembly polls.

In view of the foregoing, we shall hold MC Oluomo, the Commissioner of Police and Inspector General of Police and other security agencies responsible should anything untoward happens to Igbos and other non-indigenes in Lagos as a result of their participation in the election or voting for their preferred candidates on Saturday. Ndigbo will not continue to tolerate or condone acts of hatred, attacks or threats unleashed against them by elements of undemocratic tenets and disruption. The footprints are all over the state.

MC Oluomo’s political thuggery in Lagos has exceeded all boundaries and now poses a serious threat to national security. He must be brought to justice before he stokes or ignites ethnic violence all over the country. If the Nigerian police have decided to ignore or look the other way at all these threats, one too many of MC Oluomo and have refused to arrest him over his numerous threats against Ndigbo, it simply validates the insinuations that the security agency is biased in its operations. We would not, at this critical time, want to re-echo the insinuations of the dubious complicity of the police involvement in electoral mal-practices and violence making rounds in Lagos state but if they continue to maintain absolute silence and refuse to investigate and arrest MC Oluomo over his overbearing excesses, abuses and threats against Ndigbo in Lagos, then the belief that the police is complicit in his nefarious and unwholesome activities in Lagos will be accepted to be true.

Ndigbo are being disrespected and provoked unnecessarily as a result of their choice of candidates and political affiliations. When thugs come out openly to issue threats against democratic processes, without being cautioned, questioned or called to order or arrested, it shows that they definitely have the police or other instruments of the state in their pockets.

The exercise of one’s fundamental rights is sacrosanct, and willful and should not be breached by anyone using whichever instrumentality or sentiments. As every tribe in Nigeria has the right and liberty to align with whichever political party or persons they choose to so as Ndigbo should not be threatened, intimidated or attacked due to their political affiliations. 

We, therefore, give the Commissioner of Police Lagos State and Inspector General of Police to arrest MC Oluomo and cohorts within 3hrs or Ndigbo will resort to Self-defense at every polling Unit. Enough is enough!

Signed: Chukwuemeka Chimerue, Media and Publicity,

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

The Yorubas are becoming an insecure, frightened and second-rate nation- By Kola Odetola

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President Olusegun Obasanjo flanked by some Yoruba Elders
President Olusegun Obasanjo flanked by some Yoruba Elders

No woman likes a clingy, insecure man. But that is what we Yorubas are becoming, a frightened, insecure and second-rate nation. So fearful that we can’t even accept one of our own because his mother is Igbo. There was a time when the word swagger was synonymous with the Yoruba. Reflecting self-assurance and confidence. We exuded belief. The Igbos secretly admired us. They adopted our clothes and music. They flocked to our churches. 

We accommodated strangers because we were so sure of ourselves, of our standing in the world, our stature, and our swag that we knew our guests were not a threat. Now, all that has drained away. We are now like the insecure man who marries a pretty woman and is secretly consumed by self-doubt,  fearing he is not good enough for her,  tracks her every movement, obsessively going through her phone, hates her male colleagues because he is petrified she will leave him for someone better. Is this how low we have fallen that we now fear those we once used to regard as culturally inferior to us, we once said the Igbos could not dance, could not dress, lacked poise and polish, and were not as read as us, now we work ourselves into a frenzy about them taking over a Yoruba city hundreds of miles from the nearest hamlet in the south-east.

One of the greatest ever Yoruba leaders Adekunle Fajuyi once gave his life rather than live with the dishonour of handing over his Igbo guest to those who wanted to murder him. We now compete with each other to denounce our Igbo guests whose only crime is trading and living in our midst, ideologically handing them bound and foot to the caliphate who hate and distrust us as much as they hate and distrust them. 

We look for wild statements of a few Igbos to justify our fear of all of them in doing so demonstrating not our courage, but our fear, our insecurity, and our deep-rooted inferiority complex towards a tribe who have outmatched us and outpaced us.

A tribe who rose from the ruins of a war in which they lost 10% of their population but refused to break, to wallow in self-pity, to feel sorry for themselves, did not fear those who besieged their land, but went forth and conquered with commerce those who had conquered their land with bombs. They bought our property while we frittered the proceeds on women and easy living, then having wasted our inheritance blame those with greater foresight and discipline for taking over the land we freely sold to them. They take care of their relatives, training them in the family trade while we turn ours into households and drivers. They pool their resources together while ours is used to tearing our families apart. They build businesses, and we chase every lowly special adviser looking for government contracts. They have learnt to thrive when marginalised meaning even excluded from government largesse they still have a lower level of poverty than we do.

It shows in sports. In the 1980’s the national football team was split down the middle between Igbos and Yorubas, with the Yorubas dominating the more glamorous and creative roles. For every Okala, there was an Odegbami, every Chukwu a  Muda Lawal, every Stanley Okonkwo a Fekix Owolabi. But since the 90s and noughties, the role of honour in our national game has been claimed by the Igbos. Who has the Yorubas produced to match the profile and performances of Jay Jay Okocha, Emmanuel Amuneke, Kanu Nwankwo, Mikel Obi, and Vincent Onyeama? When ability, fortitude, resilience, drive and determination are needed we see the Igbos. But when patronage, easy living and dissolute lifestyles are on show enter the Yorubas. 

We can’t even plan coups properly. The most incompetent coup ever planned in Nigerian history was the one plotted by Yoruba officers in beer parlours over pepper soup and big stout against Abacha leading to its most senior officer grovelling before the dictator pleading for his miserable life. The coup before that planned by Igbo and delta officers – the Orkar putsch in 1990 saw the prime movers defiant to the bitter end, facing death with honour.

How did we end up here? 25 years of flirting with power at the centre, of living off and chasing unearned income, of prostrating before the caliphate has turned us into feudal retainers. Men who have lost their manhood. We are cowed into silence when state-sponsored gangs rampage across our lands raping our women, burning our farms, and slaughtering our youth. The few who find the courage to fight back we disown, we call them ruffians. When our Youths protest against injustice as they did during the #Endsars we attribute it fittingly to an Igbo plot. And why not see the qualities needed to organise a protest so well executed it captured the international airwaves for days required courage, initiative and drive. Qualities we are now so enfeebled, so morally vacuous we happily agree belong to the Igbos.

A fish rots from the head. Our legacy was built by giants like Fajuyi, Awolowo and to a lesser extent Abiola. Men who gave their freedom and their lives rather than surrender their principles. But what have we now? Bola Tinubu keeps quiet when millions of Igbos are put at risk in his city by vicious tribal bigotry and baiting because of his lust for power. Bola Tinubu buried his head when his own people were being gunned down in churches in their own land by gunmen under the protection of his Fulani bosses. In the halcyon days of the founder of the modern Yoruba race the closest Bola Ahmed Tinubu would have got to power would have been organising security at UPN party conferences. Today he is the acknowledged leader of the Yoruba race. 

Have these last few weeks of eternal shame revealed our weakness, our insecurity, the spiritual barrenness that now lies like a void at the centre of our world? We fear a Yoruba man because he has an Igbo mother! That’s how supine, how fearful we have become. We forget the Yorubas killed in their hundreds last year by state-protected Fulani gunmen because we are desperate to be awarded office by those who defile our women and pillage our land. Principle counts for nothing. We are up for sale and not for very much. This is how far we have fallen. We have won an election but lost our souls, we are in office but not in power. We are now pound land, Okrika wakes version of the Fulani elite who in spite of their monopoly of power at the centre have feared the commercial acumen and success of the Igbo for 5 decades so much they turned on them whenever they felt threatened by their own inadequacies as we have done the last few weeks.

We are now a pale imitation of the Fulani, a frightened, insecure, tremulous and second-rate nation clinging like leeches to power seek at any cost because we have nothing else to offer… The Igbos have not held power for 60 years and thrived. We have just won it for the 3rd time in the same period and still like the Fulani fear them. This is how low once great people have fallen.

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are gotten from the public domain.

Pastor Chris: Prophecy before the presidential election in Nigeria and lies of political jobbers

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Ordinarily, it would have been better to ignore the deliberate twisting of Pastor Chris’ prophetic pronouncement during a global programme: “Your Loveworld Praise-a-Thon” some days before the February 25th Presidential and National Assembly elections but for the dubious alteration of the message to suit the baleful rhetoric of the hack writer(s) who obviously are political jobbers.

After thorough due diligence (Fact Checks), it was discovered that the story originated from one source and was shared on the social media pages of a particular political bloc. Among some others, the Facebook and other social media pages of Joe Igbokwe (the Lagos Gutter Commissioner) and Abiodun Owonikoko, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) as he claims, led in this ominous mischief.

How do you explain that Owonikoko (SAN), a Muslim lawyer and counsel to APC Lagos state government who should have known better decided to make himself available for this show of shame? If not that the account was a bunch of lies, how can you explain that a Muslim lawyer was at the forefront of marketing what was allegedly said by a prominent Christian cleric? It’s not only annoying; it is also very provocative, to say the least.

Though there was no by-line to the story for the Senior Advocate to agree to post the piece on his Facebook page as it appeared means he is owning the piece except otherwise explained.

Completely rewriting and changing the entire message as was delivered by Pastor Chris to deceive gullible Nigerians and give the impression that it was their candidate and paymaster that Pastor routed to win the election was not only callous but outright irresponsibility.

If the Senior Advocate and Joe Igbokwe had written their piece as reportage it would have been ignored completely because it would have been a lesser crime but rather they chose to present the piece which they conjured from their wild imagination from the beginning to the end as direct quotes of what Pastor Chris said in the prophecy. Barrister Owonikoko should have known better the dire implications of such a dubious or rather criminal act.

It would be good for Joe Igbokwe and Barrister Owonikoko to let the Nigerian public know where Pastor Chris said what they ascribed to him or was it a private interview granted to the two political jobbers?

 Haba, if una no fear man una no go fear God or Allah as the Barrister was supposed to be a Muslims?

Anyone who has closely followed Pastor Chris long enough would immediately observe that even the construction and use of words as written in the piece are totally out of sync with his delivery style.

How could Pastor Chris have said as quoted in the piece that Apostle Paul was the Boko Haram leader of his time? Can you just imagine this?

As for Igbokwe and the fleet of his “food-is-ready” politicians (both practising and upcoming), there’s nothing to bother oneself as their antecedents in ‘Adult Almajirism’ in Lagos are well known all over the place. Now see how low they’ve sunken!

It was on Day 4 of the recently concluded “Your Loveworld Praise-a-thon with Pastor Chris and Pastor Benny Hinn” that Pastor Chris made a Prophetic declaration against the devil’s candidate emerging next president of Nigeria.

This is the word-for-word transcription of the Pastor’s prophetic declaration during the telecast: “I saw one of the candidates and it was not himself. And by the way, all the candidate’s major candidates of them are people I have great respect for. I like the guys, make no mistakes about that. These are wonderful people who have done a lot for our country, alright. So for each of them, I have very positive thoughts about each one of them.

“But you have to look in the spirit and in the spirit I saw the first one I mentioned yesterday and it was a devil, an evil spirit, a wicked spirit that was wearing his face meaning that he doesn’t even know what he is doing while campaigning and running for president. He’s being used by a wicked spirit of darkness and the spirit was a mocker.

“Today as I was praying the Spirit called him a name and I was surprised because He said the “Jackal” is cut off. I said, Jackal! I thought I knew the meaning of Jackal. I had to go into the dictionary to find what is it; Jackal. I asked why they call him Jackal. What is a jackal? It means a trickster, a swindler and one that operates on the behalf of another for the purpose of deception. That’s one of the candidates!

“If you let the second one in the office you’ll have no country.

“Then in the spirit, I saw the third one, he was afraid he might win now. He was afraid of losing. He didn’t want to lose but he was almost scared of winning. I say Lord what! Then the Lord said: Pray! I said God of heaven gives him wings to fly.

“Listen! Listen! Listen! When it comes to elections, because of the sensitivity of our position because they are all our children spiritually, so I try not to sa…. but if I see something that I have seen I cannot say I didn’t see it. You understand? But the first one because of what it was I won’t mention his name nor will I mention the name of the second. But the third one, his name is in the Bible (shouts from the congregation). Let me finish! Let me finish! Can I finish! So in the spirit….”

He then prayed: “You devil of darkness you’ll not have your candidate become the president of Nigeria. You’ll not! You’ll not! You mocking devil I break your influence, in the name of The Lord Jesus Christ! You’ll not use your candidate to mock this country. I saw him mocking and mocking and then he was ready to persecute Christians. Persecute Christians!  He was going after them from city to city but in the name of the Lord Jesus I cut you off by the Power of the Holy Ghost.”

Pastor Chris’ declaration is in the public domain, So what’s the main purpose of turning upside down his statement that was broadcasted live across the globe if not to create the impression that Pastor Chris has endorsed the paymaster of the hack-writers and cause division among the brethren of the Christian faith?

Whatever the reason, no doubt it’s mischievous at best and at worst devilish as it may have been intended to pitch Pastor Chris not only against some other ministers of the Christian faith but some political blocs. Think of it, is this, not the “mocking and persecution” by one of the candidates Pastor saw in his vision?

Because the sentence of evil acts is not instantly executed (except in some cases), the heart of unregenerate men is only set to do evil, but God is not mocked, as a man soweth, so shall he reap. God bless Nigeria!

Mr Izeze writes from Abuja: iizeze@yahoo.com; 234-8-33043009

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.

Rhapsody Of Realities, Tuesday, March 21st, 2023, by Pastor Chris Oyakhilome PhD DSc DD

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DON’T GIVE UP ON THEM

Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness. (Galatians 6:1)

As Christians and soul winners, we should be concerned enough to know if anyone in our congregation has strayed away or fallen by the wayside. We’re never to give up on anyone. The Lord expects us to account for every soul.

The words of Jesus in John 17:12 should be our inspiration always in dealing with those that the Lord adds to the Church. He said, “While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition; that the scripture might be fulfilled” (John 17:12). The Lord Jesus accounted for every soul that God gave Him.

Soul winning must have accountability; we have to be accountable for the souls the Lord has given to us. In Luke 15, the Lord Jesus told the parable of a shepherd with one hundred sheep who left the ninety-nine to go search for the one that got missing in the wilderness. When he found it, he carried it home rejoicing, and invited his friends and neighbours to celebrate. Then, the Master said, “I say unto you, that likewise, joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance” (Luke 15:7). Here, Jesus was ministering to the Jews, but He wasn’t talking about one who had never come to the Lord, but one who had strayed away.

There’s a difference between the one who has never been in the church and the one who’s been in church but strayed away. We must go after them to win them back. So, today, call or visit that brother, sister, or family that you know hasn’t been coming to church. Share the love of Christ with them and keep interceding for them. When you win them back, the Bible says there’ll be great joy in heaven. Hallelujah!

Prayer

Lord, I pray that your grace and mercy locate everyone who’s been in the Church, but for some reason has strayed away. May their love for you be rekindled, birthing a fresh appetite for your Word and the things of the Spirit. I pray that as Christ is formed in them, they’d be deeply rooted and grounded in faith and in your love, in Jesus’ Name. Amen.

Further Study:

Ephesians 3:14-19
“For this cause, I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
15 Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named,
16 That he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man;
17 That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in love,
18 May be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height
19 And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fulness of God.”

Galatians 6:1
“Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.”

Luke 15:8-11
“Either what woman having ten pieces of silver, if she lose one piece, doth not light a candle, and sweep the house, and seek diligently till she find it?
9 And when she hath found it, she calleth her friends and her neighbours together, saying, Rejoice with me; for I have found the piece which I had lost.
10 Likewise, I say unto you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth.
11 And he said, A certain man had two sons:”

1-Year Bible Reading Plan:
Luke 4:1-13;
Deuteronomy 18-21

2-Year Bible Reading Plan:
Matthew 24:34-44;
Exodus 30

Extract From Rhapsody Of Realities Daily Devotional

Good Morning Beloved.
Have A Pleasant Day!

KeepSayingIt, Tuesday, 21st March 2023
https://loveworldlyrics.com/your-presence-is-in-this-place-by-eniola-loveworld-singers-hslhs/

I believe what the Word says concerning me! Glorious things are spoken of me. I refuse to be sick! My faith is active, working, and generating great results for me. I’m alive unto God and my body is vitalized by the Spirit of the Living God. I am impregnable to infections, sicknesses, or diseases. The plan of the enemy against me is completely null and void.

I have peace all around me! I am never without strength because the Strengthener – the Holy Spirit – is in me. He ministers to my body and energizes me in health, strength, and vigour. Weakness is not an option in my life because the Holy Ghost dwells in me. I am empowered with might from within; therefore, I’m victorious at every count and in everything. I refuse to live or function by natural abilities or within human capacities. I make full proof of God’s limitless power that has been deposited in my spirit; thus, I reign, rule, and dominate my world.

I celebrate the triumphant life that the birth, vicarious death, and resurrection of Jesus have given to me. I celebrate the divine life in me, which is far above sickness and all the corrupting influences of the world. The life of God in me makes me more than a man; I refuse to be ordinary. I am alive in Christ. Sickness, disease, and infirmity have no place in my life. Health, strength, and victory are mine, and I live victoriously at all times. I take complete charge over my life as I proclaim the Name of Jesus in my health and everything that concerns me or is connected to me. Christ is my assurance of divine health, prosperity, success, victory, and dominion. There’s no place for sickness in my body in the mighty Name of Jesus. Amen!

HOW UZODIMMA’S 25TH FEBRUARY ELECTION BRIBE MONEY SHINES THE LIGHT ON HIS 18TH MARCH BRIBERY SCHEMES – BY ONWUASOANYA FCC JONES

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Governor Hope Uzodinma of Imo State
Governor Hope Uzodinma of Imo State

“Bread of deceit is sweet to a man, but afterwards his mouth is filled with gravel”. This word of God as recorded in Proverbs 20:17 best describes what is happening in the Imo State chapter of the APC today. Governor Hope Uzodimma might have expected those in opposition to “rant” and cry after he supervised what could pass as the most brazen electoral heist in the history of Nigerian politics. But, it is rather his key men and leaders of his own Party that are exposing the fraud that the election.

What started like a mere social media “dragging” by Chief Willie Amadi has exploded into a full-blown war of attrition, cascading to the rank and file of Imo APC. While some of those involved and willing to talk may not have access to the media or enjoy the mass readership that Willie Amadi and lately, Tony Gray, enjoy, one can still get useful snippets of how billions of Imo money were wasted in attempts to rewrite results of elections across Imo State. While the APC eventually succeeded in rewriting just about three House of Representatives seats, in Orlu and Okigwe zones, emerging facts show that the governor’s original scheme was to steal all the elections.

If anyone had any doubts about Willie Amadi’s initial accusations over the “misappropriation” of monies meant to bribe INEC officials and pay “stakeholders” to look the other way, a supporting write-up by Tony Gray, another staunch Uzodimma apostle from Owerri West rested every such doubt one may have had about the mindless manipulation that Uzodimma designed for this election.

According to Gray, Uzodimma actually released 100 Million Naira to each LGA for “vote canvassing” and other election-related expenses. This is outside the mouthwatering thousands of dollars allegedly released to some critical Party leaders, security personnel and INEC officials in order to subvert the will of the people.

It is unfortunate that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and other agencies charged with investigating and prosecuting financial crimes and electoral-related breaches are looking the other way while these revelations are viral on social media. There wouldn’t be a better way to show these agencies’ seriousness with their mandate than ensuring that all those concerned in this are invited for interrogation. Both the accused and the accusers shouldn’t be allowed to move on like everything is alright.

I have read somewhere that the unfortunate and highly embarrassing Imo State CP, Mohammed Barde has threatened to arrest and prosecute vote buyers tomorrow, but I know that he is simply announcing the plans he might have cooked with his puppeteer, Hope Uzodimma, to frame up some opposition leaders tomorrow by accusing them of indulging in vote buying. CP Barde doesn’t act as a Policeman but as Uzodimma’s private bodyguard, so, anything he says or promises will have to be seen from that point of view. If the CP wants us to take him seriously, he should, first of all, invite the individuals involved in the ongoing scandal over hundreds of millions of Naira and thousands of dollars dispensed for election fraud and vote buying. In a criminal investigation, you start from the known to the unknown. We already know that Uzodimma gives money for vote buying and election rigging and the information to that effect is coming from his closest political allies. Let the Police invite those people to extract more information from them.

Already, reports have started flying around that money has been disbursed from government houses for both legitimate and illegitimate election logistics. Groups have released statements accusing different individuals of being involved in different aspects of vote buying and electoral fraud, the CP, the DSS director, the REC and every other institution and official who is supposed to take action is looking the other way. IMO MUST BE SET FREE!

Disclaimer: 

The opinions and views expressed in this write-up are entirely that of the Writer(s). They do not reflect the opinions and views of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or any of its employees. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of materials herein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the Publisher (Nze Ikay’s Blog) or its employees concerning the legal status of any country, its authority, area or territory or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers. Equally, the sketches, images, pictures and videos are obtained from the public domain.