Saturday, July 23, 2011

South Sudan rebel Gatluak Gai killed after peace deal

 


 
 
A key South Sudanese rebel leader, Col Gatluak Gai, who this week signed a peace deal with the government, has been killed.
The exact circumstances of his death are disputed.
Col Gai was shot in the early hours of Saturday morning despite having apparently been reconciled with the South Sudanese army.
South Sudan became independent earlier this month, but is facing at least half a dozen armed rebellions.
The incident happened at or near the district of Pakur in Unity State.
Colonel Gai began his rebellion following elections last year, after the candidate he supported for state governor was controversially declared to be the loser.
This week Col Gai signed a peace agreement with the South Sudan army and was due to be reintegrated into it.

Heineken CEO: Nigeria Is A Safer Place For Our Company Than Greece

At breakfast in Davos, Heineken CEO Jean-François van Boxmeer, told executives at the conference that he thought Nigeria is safer for his company than Greece, according to DealBook.
He is reported to have said: “Nigeria is more predictable than Greece. I’m speaking of our business."
Boxmeer said he gauged a country by three primary criteria:
Jean-François van Boxmeer,
Jean-François van Boxmeer,
Chief Executive, Heineken
1. Population
2. GDP growth
3. Stability.
Though his advice may be a good rule of thumb he pointed out that perhaps this made sense because his company was in the business of making beer. In keeping with his statement though, Heineken acquired two business in Nigeria on January 12, a move that will boost its capacity to 3.7 million hectoliters. 
In their third quarter earnings report, the company released a statement attributing a 1% drop in volume in Central and Eastern Europe and a drop in consumption due to austerity measures in places like Greece. In comparison there was 12% volume growth in Africa with Nigeria accounting for the most growth in the region.


 http://www.businessinsider.com/heineken-nigeria-greece-2011-1#ixzz1SxsX2TBO

Sudan musicians fear return to the 'Stone Age'

 
Khartoum hip-hop group Rezoulution say
 they free to rap about politics - up to a point
  
When hardline Islamists took control of Sudan in 1989, they made it clear that a lot of music was not acceptable.
"Women and the arts are the two great casualties of the Islamists," says Sudanese human rights activist Albaqir Alafif Mukhtar.
Songs about that old musical staple - romantic love - were particularly frowned upon.
Some musicians were banned from staging concerts and many musicians, artists and intellectuals fled the country.
At the time the Muslim north, which implemented Sharia law, was engaged in a devastating civil war with the south, where most people follow Christianity and traditional religions.

Africa loses $1.4bn yearly to spectrum colonisation


LAGOS – Chief Executive Officer of Asia Broadcast Satellite, ABS, Limited, Mr Thomas Choi, has said Africa and the Middle-East lose at least $1.4 billion annually in local market share due to spectrum colonisation.
This loss, however, goes to Europe and American markets.
Choi said this, weekend, in a paper, entitled: Spearheading Connectivity and Diversifying Revenue Streams, at the ongoing SATCOM Africa event in Johannesburg, South Africa.
He revealed that currently, the global revenue around the world, for all satellite services including the Direct to Home, DTH TV operations, was about $65 billion with the over 200 satellites in the orbit.
The revenue stream, however, favours Europe which has about 90 per cent market share, North and South America which have 90 per cent market share and Asia which has 70 per cent market share. It leaves Africa and the Middle-East which have 17 per cent market share in the lurch.
He, however, noted that in North and South America and Europe, Asia, there are local satellite operators who have their own spectrum licences that are providing services to their own local customers in their markets.
For him, all the money generated in this activity, remain in their markets. He said even worse for Africa was that about 90 per cent of available satellite spectrum belong to countries other than Africa and Middle-East, allowing such countries to put satellite over and above Africa.
He said: “Because the available spectrum right have been taken up by Europe, America and Asia, these countries serve over 80 per cent of the total satellite demand and even those coming from the African and the Middle- East regions.”


Thursday, July 21, 2011

Islamic banking stirs up controversy in religiously-divided Nigeria

The governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria is fielding criticism for exacerbating the country's sectarian problems by allowing Islamic banking to make its debut in Nigeria.



By Alex ThurstonGuest blogger / June 27, 2011

Since last week, English and Hausa media in Nigeria have been closely following a controversy over Islamic banking in the country. At the center of the controversy is Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, the dynamic and outspoken governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Since his tenure began in July 2009, Governor Sanusi’s bold moves to fire bankers and restructure banks have attracted worldwide attention. This year he is one of Time‘s 100 most influential people. Sanusi is no stranger to controversy: he has already locked horns with Nigerian lawmakers and the International Monetary Fund. Neither is he a stranger to the intricacies of Islamic thought: he is the grandson of an emir of Kano, he holds a degree in shari’a from Sudan, and he has debated religious topics with some of Nigeria’s most famous Muslim leaders.

A comprehensive look at the history of attacks by Nigeria's Boko Haram

Boko Haram has been receiving more attention from the international community and media since its June 16 attack in Abuja. The scrutiny warrants a look at its history.


  Alex ThurstonGuest blogger / July 1, 2011
 
Fire fighters, put out a fire following an
 explosion, at the police headquarters,
in Abuja, Nigeria on June 16, 2011.
Boko Haram, a Muslim rebel movement based in northeastern Nigeria, is a frequent topic on this blog and has been a subject of increasing scrutiny by journalists and policymakers following the June 16 bombing at the police headquarters in Abuja. What follows is a list of Boko Haram’s attacks from July 2009 to the present. Given the vast number of incidents linked to Boko Haram, it is nearly impossible to compile a comprehensive list, but I’ve done the best I can. Please forgive the occasional inaccuracy or omission, and let me know if I’ve left out any incident.
There are a number of background pieces that give insights into Boko Haram. The BBC has a special report from Maiduguri, the stronghold of the movement. Reuters has a helpful Q&A on the movement, and al Jazeera has a backgrounder from 2010.

Why Nigeria's tactics with the militant Boko Haram may not work

 

The Nigerian government's strategy for dealing with Boko Haram is based on its experience with militants in the Niger Delta, but Boko Haram's different grievances means those tactics may not work.




 Alex ThurstonGuest blogger / July 20, 2011
“If our dear late President Umaru Yar’Adua can restore peace to a more volatile area like the Niger Delta by extending Amnesty to the militants of the region and dialogue with them by resolving most of their grievances amicably, I don’t see why we can’t do the same to the Boko Haram.”
- Governor-elect (now Governor) Kashim Shettima of Borno State, Nigeria, May 2011
Shattered remnants are seen at the site of a bomb blast at a bar near a police barracks in the Nigerian northeastern city of Maiduguri on July 3. The explosion killed at least five people and injured 10 more, the latest apparent attack by radical Islamist sect Boko Haram.
Reuters
In 2009, President Umaru Yar’Adua launched an amnesty program that aimed to disarm, reintegrate, and employ militants in the Niger Delta. Prior to this, local anger over the failure of oil revenues to substantially benefit communities gave rise to armed movements that disrupted oil production. The government had deployed soldiers (the Joint Task Force or JTF) and militants, but only the amnesty seemed to offer a chance of lasting peace. The government’s two-pronged approach to the Delta – crackdown, then amnesty – helped tamp down the conflict there, though rumblings of discontent in the Delta, along with new threats from militants, indicate that it could resume.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Cameron: Nigeria is a Dream Waiting to Happen

British Prime Minister David Cameron has described the Nigeria as a dream waiting to happen, highlighting the projection that the country would have the fastest growing GDP in the world in the next 40 years.


Cameron, who was on a brief visit to Nigeria, made the remarks as Guest Speaker at the Pan African University, Ajah, Lagos, Tuesday.


He also met with President Goodluck Jonathan at the State House, Marina, after which both leaders announced that the two countries have agreed to co-operate on a number of areas, particularly to fight terrorist threat in Africa’s most populous country.


In his lecture, Cameron said: "Tell me this: which part of the world has seen its number of democracies increase nearly eight-fold in just two decades? Eastern Europe? No, it’s Africa. Which continent has six of the ten fastest growing economies in the world? Asia? No, it’s Africa. Which country is predicted by some to have the highest average GDP growth in the world over the next 40 years? You might think Brazil, Russia, India or China. No. Think Africa. Think Nigeria.


"The point I want to make today, is this: This can be Africa’s moment. Africa is transforming in a way no-one thought possible 20 years ago, and suddenly a whole new future seems within reach. I have known for a long time about the tremendous energy and ingenuity of the Nigerian people. From the civil activism of the churches of South London to the contribution of Nigerians to British business, law, medicine, sport and music, I have seen the passion and enterprise of Nigerians changing my country for the better. But what I have seen in London I have seen a hundred-fold here today.


"From Eko Atlantic and Balogun Street Market to the biggest port in the most populous country in Africa, you (Governor Raji Fashola of Lagos) are transforming your city. And your fellow Africans are doing the same all over the continent. Today there are unprecedented opportunities to trade and grow, raise living standards and lift billions from poverty. So I urge you: seize these opportunities, grab them, shape them."


And as the nation grapples with the Boko Haram insurgency, the UK yesterday promised to share its expertise in anti-terrorism with the Nigerian government.


The other areas of cooperation between the two countries which Nigeria is expected to benefit from are: to improve education, check stealing of crude oil from the Niger Delta, improve power supply and reduce maternal and child mortality.


President Goodluck Jonathan and Cameron acknowledged the importance of Nigeria as a stabilising factor both in the region and the African continent.


Jonathan used the opportunity to press for UK’s support for Nigeria’s quest for a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council, saying the role Nigeria had played in ensuring democratic rule across the West African region and the continent stood it out for the position.


Speaking first after their meeting at the State House, Marina, Lagos, Cameron congratulated Jonathan for his victory at the April polls and said Nigeria was important to Britain especially with its massive economic potentials recording a growth rate of 8 per cent per annum.


He identified issues confronting Nigeria such as security, terrorism, illegal migration, high child and maternal mortality and a dwindling economy.


Cameron said remedial steps would be taken to address the challenges, starting with increasing the volume of trade between the two countries to £8 billion in 2014 and doubling power supply within the same period.


He said: "I congratulate you once again on your election victory. And anyone in doubt why Africa matters to Britain should just look at Nigeria. A country with massive potentials growing by 8 percent a year and said to be the largest in Africa. The economy of Lagos alone is the size of 32 African countries added together. A country with security issues, terrorism, crime, illegal immigration. And a country with a 10thof the world children out of school, a 10th of women dying at child birth… Nigeria presents a development challenge that must be met if we are ever to meet the millennium development goals. President Jonathan and I today agreed and set agenda in each of these areas.


"First on trade, we agreed to double trade between our two countries by 2014 to £8 billion. We agreed to double Nigeria's power supply by 2015 to address one of the biggest obstacles to Nigeria's growth. I welcome the president's leadership role to liberalise trade in West Africa. On my part, I agreed we will support this ultimate goal of free trade."


In what Cameron described as "new partnership" on the security threat to the state, he said: "We have agreed to a significant new partnership on counter-terrorism. Britain will help Nigeria establish the equivalent of what we use in Britain during national emergencies. And I am very pleased that the Nigeria Parliament has reintroduced a law on the exchange of foreign national prisoners. The 650 Nigerians in British jails have cost many pounds a year and I agreed on President Jonathan's efforts to resolve this problem and I am very grateful for your help."


Jonathan admitted that Nigeria had its challenges, the most recent of which was terrorist attacks by Boko Haram and other related organisations which operate along the same lines of reasoning and persuasion which often had been hijacked and exacerbated by "some elements".


He particularly called for help in tracking and ensuring the stoppage of oil theft in the Niger Delta with which he said the perpetrators buy arms and hand over to youths to protect their illicit trade.


"We are going to work together to make sure that this terrorist attacks we are having and other related issues are dealt with. Those of us who are Nigerians know that the greatest problem we have in the Niger Delta is not just the youth agitating for better things for their communities,but those who steal crude oil make the area ungovernable," he said.


He said the British had a programme for a specialised resource work with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to fingerprint the Nigerian crude so that wherever it is sold, "we would be able to link it to those refineries that are refining it".


On MDGs,he lamented that the country was lagging behind as statistical data showed a damning position but noted that with hard work and commitment, by 2015 when his administration is supposed to exit the stage, it would have been remedied.





Friday, July 15, 2011

Boko Haram: Angry MEND Blasts President Jonathan Over ‘Double Standards’

Return Of Boro’s Ghost As Militants Demand Republic Of Niger Delta-NDLF

Posted by siteadmin
 
Isaac Boro insurgency
The ghost of Major Isaac Adako Boro who declared the short-lived Niger Delta Republic in January 1966, with his Niger Delta Volunteer Force (NDVF) refuses to lie low in his grave as it keeps haunting the federal government. Last week, another militant group, Niger Delta Liberation Force (NDLF)  demanded the actualization of Republic of Niger Delta, through sovereign national conference, a solution to the incessant bombing and killing of innocent people by Northern Islamic sects, Boko Haram.
Over fourty five years, Major Isaac Adaka Boro, an under graduatehe student of Chemistry of the University of Nsuka, declared the short-lived Republic of Niger through Niger Delta Volunteer Force (NDVF) with about one hundred and fifty fighters who launched guerrilla warfare against the federal government of General J.T.U Aguiyi Ironsi against injustice and marginalization of the oil wealth of the people of Niger Delta.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Oil Spikes, Double Dips And Dilapidated Dollars


 

Mar. 10 2011 - 2:59 pm |
By BILL FLAX
A typical Mobil gas station. This one is locat...
Image via Wikipedia
Recent headlines blare like warning sirens: oil prices soar to pre-recession heights and proceed relentlessly higher. Will gas go to $5? Even inflation deniers like Ben Bernanke acknowledge the danger this poses to the still tenuous recovery; although the mainstream commentariat conveniently blames pandemonium in the Middle East.

National Chairman: Fresh zoning crisis hits PDP

By
 President Goodluck Jonathan
President Goodluck Jonathan
• Stakeholders Forum petitions Jonathan, recommends Nwachukwu, Ohakim, Mbadinuju, Metuh, 11 others

A fresh zoning crisis has erupted in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) following latest demand by some stakeholders in the party that the South-East ought to produce the new National Chairman. 
The stakeholders who recommended 15 candidates from the South-East have sent the list to President Goodluck Jonathan, the Senate President, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and all PDP governors. 
The development has caused a twist in the race to succeed the out-going acting National Chairman of the party, Dr. Mohammed Haliru Bello, who has been nominated as a Minister. 
About 23 likely candidates may now vie for the office of the National Chairman of the party. 
Before the renewed interest of the South-East, the party had initially conceded the slot to the North-East leading to the emergence of eight aspirants. 

El-Rufai arrested, released

By
 
 
• May be arraigned for sedition on Monday

Former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, who was arrested yesterday mornng by  the  State Security Service (SSS)  operatives at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja,  was released late last night.  
ex-Minister elrufai
ex-Minister elrufai


“They accosted me on my return to the country, took my phone,  interrogated me, and held me incommunicado for many hours. You can speak to me now because I am back in my house,” he told our correspondent early this morning in Abuja.
He declined to speak further on his release. But there are indications that he may be arraigned on Monday for alleged sedition.
The ex-Minister had travelled to the United Kingdom with the presidential candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change, General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) and running mate, Pastor Tunde Bakare, for a symposium at Chatham House in London on the last general elections.
El-Rufai was reportedly arrested in the presence of his wife, Hajiya Hadiza, and a friend who came to welcome him.

‘PDP can’t lead Nigeria out of the woods’

By


Like most concerned Nigerians, Comrade Linus Okoroji, former Director of Security and Logistics of Pro-National Conference Organisation (PRONACO) and now a leader of June 12 Coalition, is not happy with what is happening in the country. 

‘Why I’m challenging Akpabio at tribunal’

challenging Akpabio at tribunal’
By
Akpabio and Akpanudoedehe Akpabio and Akpanudoedehe

Senator John Akpanudoedehe is the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) governorship candidate in Akwa-Ibom State. He speaks with Deputy Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU on why he is contesting the victory of Governor Godswill Akpabio at the Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Uyo, the state capital.

Lessons from April elections, by REC Igini

By
Irrepressible activist-lawyer Mike Igini is the Resident Electoral Commissioner of Cross River State. In this interview with Assistant Editor DADA ALADELOKUN, he reflects on the recent general elections and suggests ways of tackling their inherent challenges for improved performances in future polls. Excerpts:
You partook of the recent elections as a  Resident Electoral Commissioner  (REC); will you describe their outcome as satisfactory?

mike Igini
mike Igini

The preponderant view, locally and internationally, is that the election was an improvement on previous ones. Although perfection is difficult to attain, this level of effectiveness in election management should be a matrix to develop from, especially since some people are also at the tribunal, which in itself, also reflects a degree of dissatisfaction. So, until we get to a level such as the case in the United Kingdom where for 99 years, there has been no judicial intervention in the electoral process, where the outcome of election results is taken as given by the electorate and contestants because of the level of credibility of the process, we cannot truly say that we have reached a level of acceptable satisfaction.

‘I‘ve a mandate that’s greater than me’


By ADEKUNLE JIMOH 29/06/2011 00:00:00 

The governorship candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Kwara State in the April election, Mohammed Dele Belgore (SAN), is pessimistic about President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, given some names being bandied about as ministerial hopefuls. He spoke with some select reporters in Ilorin, the state capital. ADEKUNLE JIMOH was there. Excerpts:
Kwara people are used for one-way politics. But some believe that your entry into politics has really changed the face of politics in the state.  What is your opinion?

Re: Before another President emerges from Boko Haram

By
 

This is a very refreshing piece. It indicates that at least a number of Nigerians still do healthy thinking in spite of all odds. You may need to do a proposal to the Federal Government over this issue, or those with warped idea over how to combat it. It would put us all in trouble. The police took a false step in the beginning with the extra-judicial killing of the leader of the sect and some of his followers. And up till now, justice has not been seen to be done. Justice is the bedrock of any society. Let government consider this and other non-combative means of resolving this security threat first. But if that fails, and I pray it doesn’t, then...

Mimiko denies nominating aide for Jonathan

By
 

Ondo State Governor, Dr Olusegun Mimiko yesterday denied reports in some sections of the media that he nominated a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to President Goodluck Jonathan for consideration as Minister even as he pleaded that he be left out of issues pertaining to the PDP.
Mimiko was quoted as having nominated one Mrs. Omobola Olubusola Johnson for the President to be considered as Minister. He, however, denied it as totally strange.

Plateau senator pleads for defected PDP members

By

The Senator representing Plateau South in the National Assembly, Senator Victor Lar has asked the Plateau State Chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to re-absorb its members who defected to other parties, especially the Labour Party (LP) to actualize their political ambitions.
The appeal came on the heels of the party’s stance disclosed by its Chairman, Dr. Haruna Dabin that those who defected to other parties to contest the recently concluded April general elections should not return to the party but remain where they are to help build such parties as PDP has no accommodation again for them in the party.

Those who won’t be ministers

  • By

  •  
     Adeyemi

     Adeyemi
    Adeyemi
    As the Senate screens ministerial nominees presented by President Goodluck Jonathan, the Vice-Chairman, Northern Senators Forum, Senator Smart Adeyemi, in this interview with the Managing Editor Northern Operation, YUSUF ALLI, and SANNI OLOGUN, warns lobbyists even as he gives a hint about those who will scale the screening hurdle. Excerpts:

    Can you speak about the level of preparedness of the senate for the screening of the ministerial nominees going by the petitions that have flooded the Upper Chamber? 

    Governors can pay minimum wage if they reorder their priorities’

    ‘By
    May we start by asking what you will miss about the Senate of which you were a member for four years? 
    It has to do with the impact one could have made on the citizens of this country, particularly working with others to arrange oneself to find a way of curing the ills of the society. At the same time, more importantly, the crucial aspect of rallying round to eradicate the ills of the society is one of the things I’m going to miss. Apart from that, one had colleagues in the Senate, the experiences you gain are enormous because you meet with people and you belong to some kind of profession.
    
    •Sen. Bajomo
    Senator  Bajomo                            
    
    The picture you painted of senators as a group of people with a mandate to eradicate the ills of the society is different from the widely held view of senators as a group of self-seeking individuals.
      I think the National Assembly particularly the Senate is doing its job. People are entitled to their own opinion. At the same time, I think that the activities of the Senate are given to them in trust. If you should x-ray all senators as to how they lived up to expectation in serving their constituents, materially speaking, some of them may have left the Senate far worse than they came. 
    Now that you are out of the Senate, what is life outside like?
      Being in politics really is a political game. But it should not be politics forever without having something to fall back on. Whether you are able to get back or not does not diminish your stature, your posture and your determination to move on. And as you can see, I am moving on as I talk to you here in my office. 
    What are the things you would have loved to do differently if you had had another chance of going back to the Senate? 
    I would have loved to chair a Senate committee. It doesn’t really matter to me which committee. What matters is your ability to research. In some countries, people are made ministers of health without necessarily being medical practitioners or pharmacists. But they still manage the portfolio as if they have all the knowledge. In chairing a committee, I would have brought my personal diligence to bear on the committee. 

    Lagos Deputy Governor tasks pilgrims

    By

    Lagos State Deputy Governor, Mrs. Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, has charged intending Christian pilgrims on the need to be mindful of the essence of the exercise and be good ambassadors of the state.



    Orelope-Adefulire gave the charge yesterday while delivering her keynote address at the sensitization programme organised by the State Christian Pilgrims’ Welfare Board for Year 2011 pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
    The event, which held at the Blue Roof of the Lagos State Television Agidingbi, had in attendance, the Lagos State Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria(ACN), Chief Henry Ajomale, religious leaders including the Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Rev. Monsignor Bernard Okodua, Rev Wilson Badejo and Rev. Edward Alabi amongst others.
    The deputy governor said going on pilgrimage is geared towards attracting the blessings of God, urging them to go with a prayerful attitude and comport themselves in a manner that will portray the state positively.

    Whereabouts of kidnapped REC’s daughter, Akwa Ibom beer dealer still unknown

    By

    TWELVE days after gunmen suspected to be kidnappers abducted the daughter of the Rivers State Resident Electoral Commissioner, Utibeabasi Ikoiwak, her whereabouts are still unknown.



    Also, the whereabouts of the Chairman of Tobros Nigeria Limited, Anthony Awurigwe, remain unknown five days after he was abducted.
    Awurigwe is a beer dealer and a major distributor with Guinness Nigeria and Nigerian Breweries.
    The gunmen stormed Awurigwe’s store around 9am on Monday in a Volkswagen Jetta car and abducted the businessman.

    Lagos Assembly confirms 21 commissioners, 16 special advisers

    
       
    Governor Babatunde Fashola
    Governor Babatunde Fashola
    


    Lagos State House of Assembly yesterday confirmed the 37 nominees sent to it by Governor Babatunde Fashola for cabinet positions.
    The confirmed list is made up of 21 commissioners and 16 special advisers.
    The lawmakers confirmed all the nominees after screening the last batch of 12 yesterday. The screening started on Wednesday with 13 nominees, while 12 nominees were screened on Thursday.

    At the end of the screening exercise yesterday, Speaker Adeyemi Ikuforiji asked members if they had any objection to the confirmation of any of the members and the answer was no.
    He said, "Is there any one of the nominees that did not meet the criteria of the House and the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria?"

    President to Boko Haram: Enough is enough

    By
    
    Jonathan
    Jonathan
    
    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday read the riot act to perpetrators of the recent bombings and killings in parts of the country, saying that the government will no longer sit back and watch a few individuals take the law into their hands by killing innocent Nigerians indiscriminately.
    By: Kali Gwegwe  
     Published April  26th, 2011
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    But for the surprising departure from traditional voting patter, President Goodluck Jonathan could not have won the April 16th presidential election. This development could be largely traced to the new electoral law, leadership of INEC, and the One-Man-One-Vote campaign. For the first time since independence, most Nigerians voted without paying serious attention to tribal, religious, and even party sentiments which they argue are shallow and parochial in nature. This is one strong reason why President Jonathan could put up a very strong showing in Muslim dominated north and ACN strongholds in the south-west. There is a fertile belief among the present generation of Nigerian electorates that good governance or quality political leadership transcends shallow and parochial inclinations such as ethnicity and creed. With the nation’s deep ethnic and religious divide, it was unimaginable for President Jonathan; a minority from Bayelsa State to win 25% and above of votes in as much as 31 states and Abuja. This unprecedented development alone was enough for most uninformed people to agree that PDP rigged the presidential election. But as days go by, many among this clan of doubters are beginning to appreciate the fact that Nigeria has moved far away from the era when almost everything was done based on tribal and religion sentiments.

    ARGUING FOR NIGERIA’S EMERGING CAPITAL MARKETS

      FocusNigeria.com
      
    Saturday, July 2, 2011 

    1.1 Why Nigeria’s Emerging Capital Markets?
    Nigeria’s emerging capital markets offer very attractive opportunities for market operators and astute investors. For decades, the markets had been closed to foreign investors and functioned only as a government auction/trading post for Treasury securities and equity shares of statutory corporations and foreign subsidiary companies.

    LIFE ALLOWANCES FOR CRIMINALS AND KILLERS



    I am always wondering why most Nigerians don’t think about the credibility of our Federal legislatures and the plans of our former military leaders that are in position of authority in this country. My observation has shown to me that most of them are working towards enriching their families at expense of Nigerians.

    Ndigbo and the Making of the New Nigeria


    By: Franklin Otorofani
     Published May 10th, 2011
    This piece has long been in the making but has had to be put off time and again for obvious reasons not unconnected with the just concluded elections. I had been itching to do an essay along the line indicated in the headline of this piece but had been held back by the exigencies and imperatives of the general elections in Nigeria. With the elections successfully concluded, however, those concerns have largely been attenuated and the subsequent ones rearing their ugly heads, like the mass murders in the north, for example, could not stay my hand any longer.

    Mrs Waziri, What Her Public Outcry Could Mean for the New Jonathan Presidency in Regards to an Independent Judiciary

    Published June 30, 2011
     
    A senior law enforcement official in the present Jonathan’s administration, Mrs Waziri, the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), recently expressed her frustration in public, over a judiciary system that still lacks independence, even as the country hits the political age and years of fifty!

    Nigeria’s New Face of Opposition

    --Cutting-Edge Analytics--
     
    By: Franklin Otorofani Published June 28th, 2011

    It was Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, Nigeria’s foremost nationalist and acclaimed orator who once cautioned Dr. Ukpabi Azika who had derogatorily referred to those opposed to his leadership in then Eastern Region including the late Owelle of Onitsha himself as "ex-this, ex-that," that "no condition is permanent." That immortal statement just about sums up the changing face of opposition politics in Nigeria today. Needless to state that it wasn’t long before the words of the great Zik of Africa came to pass as Asika was kicked out of power along with other regional military administrators. However, one certainly need not travel too far deep into memory lane to identify the locus of opposition politics in Nigeria.

    “Who Will Deliver Nigeria And Nigerians From Cultic & Demonic Leadership?”–Dr. C. K. Ekeke

     
    2 July 2011 written by Republic Report New York 

    New York [RR] WASHINGTON, DC–“Bad leadership is worse than no leadership at all.” – Unknown. Every July 4th, American citizens around the world celebrate their independence from Great Britain with singing, parades, marching bands as well as fabulous foods.  Families will gather to celebrate with barbecues, picnics, fun, gifts, pictures, crafts, games and entertainment.   Adults, young men and women, boys and girls will reflect on the history of their great country and the freedom they enjoy in their beloved nation.  The national anthem will be sung and many foreigners that received the United States citizen will pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States.
      Boko Haram, bombed force headquarters,
     killed eight, and injured scores
     The 4th of July also reminds of Africa’s long battle for independence against British rule in the 1950’s – Ghana, Nigeria, Uganda, and host of others.  In October 1st, 1960, Nigeria became an independent nation.  However, bad leadership, ethnic bias, tribalism, religious intolerance, injustice, unrighteousness, and civil war quickly marred our nation’s independence.  Since then, the Nigerian people have been denied true freedom, political peace, national development and prosperity.  The majority of Nigerians are still marginalized and enslaved by few cultic and tyrannical leaders.

    Friday, July 1, 2011

    Ekiti PDP moves to end crisis

    On June 27, 2011 ·
    BY OLA AJAYI

    IBADAN-IN a bid to end the lingering crises rocking the Ekiti State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, notable chieftains in the party have met to restore its lost electoral value in the state.
    The meeting which was initiated by a founding member of the party, Professor Tunde Adeniran, attracted over 200 party leaders.

    Audu sues Kogi govt for defamation…seeks N1bn damages



    BY IKECHUKWU NNOCHIRI

    ABUJA – FORMER governor of Kogi State, Abubakar Audu, has approached an Abuja High Court in Maitama, urging it to invoke its original jurisdiction against the incumbent governor of the state, Ibrahim Idris, for allegedly masterminding publications he said branded him a thief.
    The plaintiff in the suit he lodged before the High Court last Friday, equally prayed the court to award him N1billion as general damages, even as he sought an order directing Governor Idris to tender an unreserved apology to him in one full page advertorial to be inserted in five major national dailies.
    Specifically, he urged the court to take judicial notice of a recent advertorial entitled “Evil Alert”, which he said had explicitly called him a chronic thief with an insatiable appetite for money laundering, stressing that he had lost his public goodwill sequel to the said publication he said was inserted in several national dailies on June 15, 2011.
    Alhaji Audu in the suit he filed through his counsel, Dr. Mike Ozekhome, SAN, said he was portrayed as a greedy and corrupt public servant with an insatiable appetite for amassing public wealth, hence his insistence to return to power by all means.
    He told the court that his personal picture, as well as photographs of hotels and high-rising buildings in Abuja, South Africa, Dubai and Ukraine, were equally attached to the said publicaing  the  electorate in the state that he looted  Kogi State treasury while he held sway as the governor of the state.

    vanguardngr.com/2011/06/audu-sues-kogi-govt-for-defamation-seeks-n1bn-damages/

    Acquire nuclear power, IAEA expert advises Africans

     
    On July 1, 2011 · 



    Abuja – Mr Ki-Sig Kan, an expert in the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has advised African countries to acquire nuclear power to enable them attain full industrial growth.
    Kan, who works in the Nuclear Power Division of IAEA, gave the advice on Friday in Abuja in an interview.
    He said that for any country to construct a nuclear power plan and undertake the programme, it should have good infrastructure and human resources.

    Boko Haram: Arewa Youth Forum asks FG to strengthen security agencies

     
    On July 1, 2011 ·


    Lagos – The National President, Arewa Youth Forum (AYF), Alhaji Yerima Shettima on Friday in Lagos urged the Federal Government to strengthen its security agencies in a bid to combat the rising wave of crime in the country.

    Army declares war on Boko Haram

    Chief of Army Staff,
    Lt.-Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika
    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika, talked tough on Wednesday on the menace of Boko Haram, vowing that the Army would stamp out the sect for its "heinous" acts against innocent Nigerians.
    He said while he was not concerned with ongoing talks on the possibility of going into dialogue with the members of the sect, the army was worried that the radical Islamic sect had continnued to kill Nigerians.
    He made this known in Abuja, while addressing a press conference on the forthcoming Army Day Celebrations scheduled for July 6.