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The Making Of A Confidence Vote In President Tinubu

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By Bayo Onanuga.

The National Council of State, a diverse body comprising former presidents, heads of government, chief justices of the federation, state governors, the secretary of the federal government, the attorney-general of the federation and the minister of the Federal Capital Territory, held its first meeting under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Tuesday, 13 August. This diverse composition underscores the council’s advisory role in shaping the nation’s policies and decisions, ensuring a broad spectrum of perspectives are considered.

At its last meeting 18 months ago, the council was briefed by the INEC Chairman and the Inspector General of Police on the preparations for the general election, which took place two weeks later. Godwin Emefiele, then the Central Bank governor, also informed the council on implementing the currency redesign policy, which created a severe economic crisis.

This time, six ministers and the National Security Adviser, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, briefed the council. President Bola Tinubu reported on the appointments made to the National Population Commission and the Independent National Electoral Commission. Both INEC and NPC are federal executive bodies contained in the constitution. In his briefing, the President told the council that he fully complied with the Federal Character principle and subjected the appointments to the approval of the Nigerian Senate.

It was fitting that Ribadu, the NSA, briefed the council first, the meeting coming just a few days after the end of peaceful and violent national protests in which some Nigerians called for regime change. In some cities in Northern Nigeria, protesters even displayed the Russian flag and caused some destruction of public and private properties. The NSA profiled some of the protesters as ideologues, anarchists, unemployed youths, and members of socialist movements and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). The protesters used internet radio and social media platforms, such as TikTok, Twitter Spaces, and fake news to mobilise people on the streets. He mentioned the involvement of an Islamic Group and some Nigerians in the diaspora. Nigeriens also took part in the protest, and the participation of a foreign agent provocateur, a European, was also found during the protest. His local collaborators have been arrested. The protest was well funded, with N4 billion contributed by political actors and $ 50 million traced to crypto wallets. Four wallets containing $38 million were blocked. The funding sources are all under investigation.

The protest recorded casualties. Eight people died from a variety of causes: bombing in Borno, vigilante shooting in Kebbi, and reckless driving also in Borno.

The briefing, laced with infographics, was comprehensive. Council members praised the paper. The council suggested the country step up efforts to secure the borders and stabilise the exchange rate. President Tinubu promised to work on the suggestions.

Economic Updates

Next was the Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Senator Abubakar Kyari. He reported on the gains of dry-season farming: 118,657 hectares cultivated, 474,628 metric tonnes of grains harvested, valued at N309 billion. He spoke on the food palliatives: 43,000 metric tonnes released from the reserve, 20 trucks of rice sent to the states from March/April, and the decision to allow tariff-free import of food for six months, all designed to crash the cost of food.

Finally, he spoke of importing thousands of tractors and other mechanisation equipment from the United States, Brazil, and Belarus and establishing mechanisation hubs in the six geopolitical zones with a $945 million loan.

Olawale Edun, the coordinating minister of the economy, briefed the council on the gains recorded in the last 14 months. Among these are exchange rate stability, a positive trade balance, and an increase in foreign direct investment and Portfolio Investment. According to recent figures from the National Bureau of Statistics, he said inflation has been slowing down. Oil production has increased, and revenues collected hit N9 trillion at the end of June, the year’s first half. He said the outlook for the year’s second half will also be better.

Infrastructure Development

Works Minister Dave Umahi reported on the inherited road contracts estimated at N14 Trillion and a funding gap of N13 trillion. Because of current market realities, the funding gap will further increase. He said this has necessitated a comprehensive review of all the critical roads by the Tinubu Administration. According to him, many roads will impact the transportation and marketing of agricultural produce.

Using tables, maps and photos, Umahi said N300 billion was provided in the supplementary budget 2023 to fix some roads and bridges. About 90 per cent of the roads have been completed, with all the regions benefitting. Fifty-four bridges were repaired at a cost of N34 billion. He told the council about the various funding models for federal roads: Sukuk loans, tax credit scheme, public-private partnership model and budget appropriations. Ten major roads, among them, Sagamu-Benin, Lagos-Abeokuta, Lagos-Seme, Enugu-Port Harcourt, and Abuja-Keffi-Makurdi, are being built under PPP arrangement, and they are expected to be tolled so that investments can be recouped.

Legacy Projects

Umahi also told the council about the four legacy projects of the Tinubu Administration under the Renewed Hope Agenda. They are the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Superhighway, which has started, the Sokoto Badagry Superhighway, the Calabar-Abuja Superhighway and the Akwanga-Jos-Bauchi-Gombe Road. While the Sokoto section of the Sokoto-Badagry Superhighway has been awarded, the Kebbi Section of it is under procurement. The designs are ongoing for the Niger, Kwara, Oyo, Ogun and Lagos sections. In the distribution of the four legacy projects, the North Central will get 715 km, the highest, followed by South `South, 670 km, SW 546km, Northwest 431 km, Northeast 268 km, Southeast 105 km.

Industrialisation and Trade:

Doris Uzoka-Anite, the trade, industry, and investment minister, came into the chambers after that to brief the council members. While she X-rayed the problems militating against Nigeria’s industrialisation, she was emphatic that the present administration’s goal of building a trillion-dollar economy is achievable. She mentioned the billions of dollars in investment pledges. She said our country can save $25 billion from import substitution. She raised the bar of non-oil exports to $35 billion. Her ministry is preoccupied with initiating policies to make these goals possible.

Among other initiatives by her ministry are programmes such as Skilled Up Artisans and NATEP.

Solid Minerals

The Solid Minerals Minister took the hot seat and regaled the Council about the various efforts to make Nigeria reap the full benefits of its mineral endowments. Implementing a seven-point agenda, the ministry has embarked on data collection and raised a mining police force that has succeeded in arresting 317 illegal miners. Over 52 of the illegal operators are being prosecuted. About 1,000 mining cooperatives made up of artisans have been registered, and a policy of value addition is being implemented. The latter has led to the springing up of lithium processing factories in Nasarawa and Kwara.

Marching into the future, the ministry plans to establish Nigerian Solid Minerals Corporation, ban the export of raw minerals, develop a gold aggregator programme and vigorously pursue the development of our country’s bitumen deposits.

A sobering moment at the council came when the Budget and Planning Minister, Atiku Bagudu, made a graphic comparison of our country with Brazil, Indonesia and Ghana. In 1960, Brazil had a per capita income of $216. This ballooned to $11,111 in 2024 as the GDP DP also rose to $2.3 Trillion from $15.53 billion in 1960. Indonesia had PCI of $53 in 1960 and a GDP of $3.25 billion. It now has a GDP of $1.475 Trillion and a PCI of $5713. Ghana’s GDP rose 72 times from $1.22 billion in 1960 to $75.2 in 2024. PCI for Ghana increased from $177 to $2,229. Nigeria’s GDP in 1960 was $4,2 billion and is now $252.7. PCI increased from $93 to $1,109, the lowest among peers.

He said the one trillion-dollar economy is possible because the government is devoting N9.9 trillion to capital expenditures for the first time in many years after several decades of missed opportunities and reforms.

The council members listened attentively as ministers took turns briefing them about the work the Tinubu Administration has been engaged in since May 29, 2023.

One of the past leaders praised the government and its ministers for the impressive work being done.

“You have not been sleeping. You have been working. Well done”, he said. A message clearly meant for the protesters who took over the streets of many states the previous week.

With the past leader’s comment, another member moved a motion to pass a vote of confidence. The vote was passed unanimously. Thus, the inaugural meeting of the National Council of State under President Tinubu ended.

-Onanuga is Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy

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Opinion

Tourism Minister Urges Nigerians To Use Cultural Heritage for Wealth Creation

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Tourism minister Lola Ade-John urges Nigerians to uphold and take pride in Nigeria’s vast cultural heritage.

Ms Ade-John made the call during the 2024 edition of the King Kosoko Memorial Lecture held on Sunday.

The event in Lagos also featured a book launch entitled ‘King Kosoko, His Life, His People and His Settlements’, written by the Oloja Elect of Lagos, Abiola Kosoko.

The minister said upholding the nation’s cultural heritage, such as that of the late King Kosoko of Lagos, was important to create wealth. She said this could be done by spurring local and international tourists to learn and experience late Kosoko’s legacies and other past great leaders in Nigeria.

“Today, we honour the enduring legacy of King Kosoko. I am filled with pride and gratitude. Today, we are custodians of history. It is our duty to ensure that the stories of our ancestors, their triumphs and struggles are never lost.

“Let this event be a call to Nigerians everywhere, to embrace our heritage with pride and to invite the world to witness the wonder that is Lagos and the magic that is Nigeria,” she said.

The minister said that Nigeria’s vast culture and tourism potential remained largely untapped.

She said research revealed that 2019 tourism contributed nearly five per cent to the nation’s gross domestic product with just over 1.2 million international visitors.

“Imagine what these figures would look like if our 200 million plus population buy into the idea of domestic travel. Lagos, rich in culture and history, leads this growth. Initiatives like this serve as beacons that can attract even more to our shores.

“The possibilities are endless if we fully tap into the potential of our over 1,000 assets and over 800 festivals. As we leave today, let King Kosoko’s spirit, his courage, vision and love for his people inspire us. I hope this will drive our passion to make Nigeria a global cultural destination,” she said.

The late King Kosoko was the Oba of Lagos between 1845 and 1851.

His insistence on the slave trade was the pretext for the 1851 British bombardment of Lagos, for which he went into exile in Epe.

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Ajuri Ngelale: An Affliction Tinubu Finally Got Rid Of 

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By – Mohammed Gambo

The Christianese, “affliction shall not rise the second time”, is an authoritative declaration of an utter end to extreme suffering and perfectly sums up what Ajuri Ngelale, the recently departed Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President, represented to the President Bola Tinubu administration.

It has to be stated, though, that hiring Ajuri Ngelale, a bundle of incompetence and a man with narcissistic traits, as a spokesperson , was a self-inflicted injury. It was the first affliction.

 

It was the equivalent of sticking a loaded AK 47 in one’s trousers. Ajuri came to the job with zero or middling pedigree, having never risen beyond the rank of reporter throughout his eight-year spell at both Africa Independent Television (AIT) and Channels Television. He actually joined AIT as a youth corp member in 2013 or thereabout. At the two broadcast outfits, he was sacked for poor work ethic, misdemeanor, disrespect to seniors and inordinate ambition.

 

In HR parlance, his appointment by President Tinubu would be described as a recruitment error. It was a grave error of judgment by those who packaged him for a job he has no competence, capacity, maturity, and qualifications for. For his wobbling and fum one year on the job, Ajuri was a mere impostor who took a job he couldn’t even comprehend, let alone deliver on.

 

That Ajuri lasted a whole year during which he was also appointed Special Envoy on Climate Action, another role that requires top-tier intellectual and attitudinal qualifications, is a hint of the chaos and dysfunction that dog the Tinubu administration itself. A properly structured office with less appetite for sloppiness and incompetence would have booted him out within three months. A young man who needed grooming and training himself was appointed to advise the President, a senior government role that requires deep intellect, exposure, and experience he clearly lacked The headhunters in the Presidency have questions to answer.

 

Professional Pedigree

 

The job Ajuri had requires a vast media network and hefty deposit of goodwill. He had neither. He was, therefore, a wrong hire from the first day. An aggregate experience of eight years at AIT and Channels Television is a grossly inadequate preparation for the acquisition of vast media network and the scale of goodwill needed to function on the job of a Presidential media Adviser.

 

There is no way such low ranking reporter could muster the clout to manage editors, senior journalists and media owners, who are essential and critical success factor for anyone holding the job of a Special Adviser to the President of any country. Ajuri was a product of conspiracy by those who wanted to peddle influence around President Tinubu and were afraid of having strong personalities and people with professional pedigree and integrity.

 

It was established that Chief of Staff, Femi Gbajabiamila, Chairman House of Representatives Committee on Defence, Jimi Benson, sold the idea of Ajuri to Seyi Tinubu. Gbajabiamila was not comfortable having Dele Alake in the Villa because he saw Alake as a stronger personality who has a more respectable and influential relationship with the President. He didn’t want to operate as Chief of Staff under Alake’s shadow and with anyone like Tunde Rahman, who had a closer relationship with the President. They plotted against Alake and Rahman in favour of a yes man. It was like buying a poodle when you need a bulldog.

And ohhhhh! Some ‘Analysts’ have been peddling the misinformation on behalf of Ajuri, that he had worked as Special Adviser on Media to President Yaradua, Vice President Namadi Sambo, President Jonathan and then, President Buhari, before his latest ‘misappointment’ . Now, for a young man of 37 years, nothing can be farther than this to truth. I leave you to do the calculations from 2007 when Yar’adua became President.

 

How Ajuri’s honeymoon evaporated

 

Ajuri came to the Villa with an agenda different from that of his benefactors. Despite coming out in flying colours at being wretched on his job, Ajuri is no multidimensional fool. While those who brought him wanted to use him for decorative purposes, he also planned to use them to gain access. Ajuri was an outsider in the Buhari administration, where he worked in the office of the Vice President as SSA Public Affairs. Those who served in Buhari’s administration said Femi Adesina, Garba Shehu, and Laolu Akande could not tolerate his insolence and delusions.

 

He was described as a supplanter, who would go anywhere and do anything to undermine his seniors just to get ahead. The Buhari media and communications managers pushed him aside, and Laolu Akande didn’t give him any room to operate inside the VP office. For the five years, Ajuri served in Professor Yemi Osinbajo’s office, he was not allowed to have a desk in the VP’s office. He operated out of the office building of Niger Delta Power Holding. He was not allowed to even travel for once, on any official local and foreign trip with Professor Osinbajo.

 

Not long after he got his job as Tinubu’s SA Media, he started undermining the Chief of Staff. He would take a memo directly to the President against the established protocol, which is to route any communication through the office of Chief of Staff. Gbajabiamila and his team were upset when Ajuri announced appointment of five aides without their knowledge. He reportedly went to lie to the President that he couldn’t work with the media aides of the President he met on ground because he had no control over them.

 

He also told the President to allow him have his own team that would be loyal to him. He even forced some media houses to change their Correspondents for his preferred candidates. Such level of breach of protocol that is possible only in a fractured Presidency. Ajuri finally nailed his own coffin with his self-promotion agenda of Special Envoy on Climate Change with omnibus powers that effectively took over the entire function of the Minister of the Environment, who was justifiably livid about being made irrelevant in government. Ajuri also executed the Special Envoy scheme without the knowledge of Gbajabiamila, who brought him to the Villa. The Minister of Environment reportedly asked Gbajabiamila why he gave his job to Ajuri. A flustered Gbajabiamila told the Minister that he knew nothing about the Climate Change job and he only saw the press release like anyone.

 

It was the teeth given to him by Gbajabiamila that he sank into the flesh of the same man and others who got him the job as a presidential spox. The guys who brought him, seeing that he had gotten too big for his breaches, also decided they were going to take him out. He made it easy for them, especially because he was poor at his job.

 

When it was apparent that Ajuri had no capacity to deliver, President Tinubu tapped his long term ally, Bayo Onanuga to help shore up the floundering media and communication machinery of the Villa. It was same Chief of Staff that sat on the appointment for over two months to protect Ajuri. It was after the UAE Visa, the New York NASDAQ Exchange fiasco, and many other avoidable errors that Gbajabiamila finally allowed Bayo Onanuga to come on board.

 

A broke and greedy Ajuri

 

According to Aso Rock Insiders, Ajuri came to the job with a poverty mentality. His ambition was to make tonnes of money. Having arrived broke, he saw the opportunity as one from which he could end up with money pouring out of his ears. He was said to have told people that he was treated badly by Femi Adesina, Garba Shehu and Laolu Akande under the Buhari administration. He said he didn’t make money and could barely pay his rent in Abuja. He spent every day in office scavenging for money, moving from one head of MDA to the other asking for money.

 

The quest for money made him turn the office of SA Media to President to one that announces appointments, birthdays, and obituaries for prominent people who allegedly pay him for his services. Traditionally, appointments for Heads of Agencies were announced by the office of SGF or supervising Ministry, but Ajuri turned it to a honeypot. He would announce different appointments that can be announced in one single press release in different press releases in a day.

 

There was a day he issued 15 press releases from around 3pm to 11pm. Some prolificity. He even went on Twitter to announce that he broke the State House record of the highest number of press releases in a single day. What he broke was his own record of ridiculous and frivolous press releases. For the one year he spent on the job, Ajuri went round collecting money from Ministers and other Heads of Agencies in the name of running the Media and Communication of the Villa without the knowledge of other Media aides.

 

Ajuri’s insecurity and toxicity

 

Ajuri was very insecure on the job, knowing that he is not qualified for the role ab initio. To cover his insecurity, he fought that the nebulous title of Official Spokesman of the President should be added to how he was addressed. Not high enough on his own supply, he added Chief to his official communications materials and press releases. He demanded that colleagues, State House correspondents and civil servants must address him as Chief Ajuri.

 

He wouldn’t accept or read any document where his name is not prefixed by Chief. A man hungry for deference should not be seen offering less. However, he called Bayo Onanuga, a man who graduated from university eight years before he was born, by his first name. Ajuri will probably not pass the qualifying test to work in Onanuga’s company, Independent Communication Network Limited, Publishers of TheNews Magazine, Tempo and PMNews. Onanuga is 30 years older than Ajuri and his father’s age mate.

 

He set the civil servants in his department against each other. He polarized the State House Press Corps and told some of the journalists covering the Villa never to use any statement issued by Bayo Onanuga as he is the sole and official Spokesman of the President. He gave an instruction to the civil servants in the department never to allow any press statement or release issued by Onanuga to be sent out through State Media Media mailing channels. He was a terror to the civil servants, who were afraid of him because they feared he could engineer their posting outside of the Villa.

 

He was constantly reporting other Presidential media aides to the President, Seyi and Chief of Staff until they all got tired of him and told him to mind his own business.

 

The final Straw

 

It was clear that Ajuri came to the government to pursue his own agenda. His five years at the periphery of the Buhari’s government gave him a helicopter view of government and how government platforms can be used for personal gains. He applied himself in that direction. Where he did not apply himself was his job, which he saw only as a means to make money by the shipload and one for glamour. Aso Rock Insiders said when President Tinubu was ready to offload him because of his spectacular failure on the job, he thought that, as a father, he needed to give him a soft landing. This was the reason he allowed his proposal for Special Envoy job. Instead of promoting national interest, he was promoting himself to international interests for personal gain.

 

As a Media Adviser, he also forgot that his job is to promote the principal and his agenda. However, he was promoting himself in the media without restraint and paying millions for front page picture placements. Ajuri knew that his time was up over a month ago. He started moving around, begging for interventions that would lead to the retention of his job. He was initially given a choice to pick between SA Media and Special Envoy on Climate Action as it was no longer tenable that he would hold two senior positions.

 

Knowing that it is the SA Media job that can keep him inside Villa, he opted to drop the Special Envoy job. By the time he was ready to retain the media job, the boat had sailed. Nobody wanted him for the media job again because he is clueless at it and has the charisma of a plank of wood.

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Soaring High: Why Ekiti Airport Is A Vision For The Future!

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By Adeoye Aribasoye

To the critics of the cargo airport initiated by Governor Kayode Fayemi in Ekiti State, it’s time to reconsider the monumental impact this project could have on our landlocked state. Establishing an airport is not just about aviation; it’s about unlocking opportunities, enhancing connectivity, and fostering growth that we desperately need.

As a landlocked state, Ekiti faces unique challenges in accessing markets and resources. An airport will not only facilitate trade but also boost medical tourism, particularly with the exceptional services offered at the Afe Babalola University Multi-Purpose Hospital. Imagine the possibilities for students and professionals traveling easily to and from the Ekiti Knowledge Zone and innovation hub, creating an environment ripe for creativity and collaboration. As said by Eleanor Roosevelt, “The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.”

Part of the concerns raised against the project was issue of Ado – Akure road. It is important to state that an airport in Ekiti and reconstructing the Ado-Akure road are not mutually exclusive; both projects are vital for our development. If we assume that the airport cost approximately N20b, it is still significantly less than the N93 billion allocated for the Ado-Akure road reconstruction, which is still likely to see cost increases due to economic factors from the 2022 estimate when $ was N450 to now when it is N1600. Remember Governor Fayemi worked tirelessly to secure funding through the African Development Bank, it was his collaboration with the likes of Mele Kyari of NNPC, Mohammed Nami of FIRS and the then Minister of Works, Tunde Fashola that ultimately made the road’s reconstruction possible.

While the Ado-Akure road is indeed crucial, it’s important to recognize that the average lifespan of such roads is only 15-20 years. In contrast, the airport infrastructure will last much longer and provide long-term benefits, positioning Ekiti as a hub for trade, tourism, and innovation for generations to come. Without any scintilla of doubt, the airport infrastructure will provide a lasting legacy for future generations. We should remind ourselves of Akure Airport, built in 1981, which has not received any significant upgrades since its inception, yet planes have been landing there consistently. The cost of the Ekiti Airport, at roughly $12 million, makes it one of the most affordable airport projects globally. If we delay this initiative, costs could soar, potentially exceeding N60 billion due to inflation and rising material prices—an opportunity that would likely elude us.

Also, when some Nigerians say there are too many airports in Nigeria, in fact I believe we don’t have nearly enough. A quick google search will show that Nigeria has one of the lowest number of airport per population in the world when you compare with the US that has 14,000 plus airports, Brazil with over 4,000, Mexico with over 1400 and Indonesia with over 700 just to mention a few.

Moreover, the desirability of the airport extends beyond immediate benefits. An airport serves as a magnet for further developments, as evidenced by the establishment of a Nigeria Air Force base in Ekiti. Without the investment in the airport, the NAF would likely not have chosen to set up a base here. This exemplifies how PREPARATION meets OPPORTUNITY.

On the cost-benefit analysis, it’s clear that Ekiti did not suffer in the short term due to the airport’s construction. Governors Fayemi and Oyebanji prioritized social investments and human capital development, ensuring salaries and pensions were consistently paid. Both administrations implemented free education and health programs, while Fayemi introduced social security benefits for the elderly and launched initiatives like the youth in commercial agriculture scheme and the youth volunteer scheme, all while developing roads, water, and power infrastructure.

Finally, all Ekiti Governors, from Gov. Segun Oni to Gov. Oyebanji, regardless of their varying political affiliations, recognized the significance of establishing the airport as a way to connect Ekiti to the broader world. Praise is due to those who courageously realized this shared aspiration for the state.

Those who fail to grasp this comprehensive approach may remain critical, but posterity will vindicate those who courageously and selflessly propelled Ekiti beyond pedestrian politics.

It is time to champion this vision together!

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