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Sunday, October 26, 2014
2015: We need result that will inspire change —Votu Obada
By Chris Onuoha
Votu Obada hails from Ukwuegu Local Government in Ugheli
North Local Government Area of Delta State. A business man
and widely travelled with vast experience in oil and gas
business and human resources management, he obtained his
master’s degree from University of Covetry, UK.
Votu is the son of General Orho Esio Obada (rtd), ADC to the
late Dr Nnamdi Azikwe when he was Nigeria’s ceremonial and
a former Federal Commissioner for Works. Votu’s interest to
govern Delta State is borne out of the quest for a change in
the way the polity and well-being of people is handled in the
state. In this chat, he speaks on why he wants to govern the
state.
Let me begin by stating that one of the penalties our youths pay
for refusing to participate in politics is that they end up being
governed by people who pay little attention to the basics.
My desire to be governor of Delta is well thought out after due
and thorough consultations with my elders, leaders and
political stakeholders in the state and Deltans in Diaspora.
I feel it is time we brought about in Delta the long awaited
change; change is what I represent, and part of my plan is to
inspire that change in Delta State. If you watch carefully, you
see that those aspiring to be governor in the state had at one
time or the other in government.
If they truly have solution to the problems of Deltans, by now
we should have entered our promised land. It is high time we
stopped recycling leaders, otherwise we will continue to get
same result.
I want to inspire that change. We need a different result that
will address the sufferings and aspirations of our people, and
that is what I represent. We cannot fold our hands and watch
our people wallow in abject poverty in the midst of abundance.
How to address challenges
To be able to address these challenges, you must have
understanding of what these challenges are and how they affect
our people. In the first place, you cannot rule out the fact the
unemployment exists and that is the reason some youths take to
arms to reflect their agitation and grievance for better life.
This can be tackled by creating jobs through public private
partnership initiatives. Secondly, lack of quality education is a
challenge to our state.
As a result, we have poorly educated graduates looking for job
at wrong places. The situation can be addressed through
integration of entrepreneurship development programmes from
secondary to tertiary level, to equip our graduates to be
independent and creative.
Also, full scale industrialisation is necessary. My international
exposure will help in this regard. I will bring my foreign
business partners to invest in Delta and that again will create
employment.
We also need to build a new Delta through urban-rural re-
modernisation to get our state to compete with what is
obtainable in the western world.
In the area of security, there will be rule of law. You know
when the people are happy with your administration; peace and
adherence to rule of law will exist.
Leadership is a call to serve and not to be served. This change
is what I dare to inspire in Delta and it entails these: A Teacher
– a leader is to be reproductive, A Soldier – a leader is to be
loyal, An Athlete – a leader is to be disciplined, A Farmer – a
leader is to be a hard worker, A Worker – a leader is to be
diligent, A Vessel – a leader is to be pure, A Servant – a leader
is to be submissive. Together we can inspire ourselves to
achieve our desired future/change. I am here to serve.
FG to ban commercial motorcycles nationwide
The use of motorcycles as commercial means of transport in
Nigeria, popularly known as ‘Okada’ or ‘Achaba’ may soon be
banned throughout the country.
The proposal for the ban was made by the National Council on
Transport after its annual conference in Enugu State and
endorsed by the Minister of Transport, Sen. Idris Umar.
A statement from the Federal Ministry of Transport on
Saturday evening stated that the ban of commercial motorcycle
was one of the measures proposed towards adequate provision
of safety and secure transportation in Nigeria.
It said the recommendation was contained in a statement of the
week long meeting which had in attendance all the state
commissioners of transport, permanent secretaries, directors
and officials in the federal and state ministries of transport
across the country.
The council advised all states in the federation to henceforth
discourage the use of commercial motorcycles as a means of
public transportation.
“All states and the Federal Capital Territory have therefore
been advised to establish a public transport system that ensure
strict regulation of the operation of public passenger
transportation system through a well-articulated management
system for enhanced safety, security, effective and efficient
service delivery,” the statement said.
It added, “The states are to also develop master plans for the
development of intelligent transport system to facilitate the
development and management of their transport operations in
line with emerging trends and global best practices.”
The statement noted that the council also agreed that all
commercial vehicles should be properly registered in each
state while their enumeration should be carried out periodically
to enhance safety and security.
JONATHAN’S RE-ELECTION: Anenih takes on Buhari in his comfort zone
Chief Tony Akhakon Anenih, Peoples Democratic
Party, PDP, Board of Trustees, BoT, Chairman, has
launched an offensive into the stronghold of Major
General Muhammadu Buhari, All Progressive Party,
APC, presidential aspirant, reconciling leaders of the
PDP there, explaining to them the dangers of going
into next year’s election as a divided house. He has
recorded considerable progress; and he pushes on.
Anenih and Jonathan
It was very successful, the
meeting in Kaduna, the capital of Kaduna State, last
week, between the team led by Chief Tony Anenih,
PDP BoT Chairman, and some leaders of the party in
the state.
Seated in the hall filled to capacity with chieftains of
the party were, among others, Ramalan Yero,
Governor of Kaduna State, and Senator Ahmed
Makarfi, who had held that post before.
They had come to listen to their BoT Chairman speak
truth to leadership in the state. Why this meeting
was very critical cannot be overstated because of the
strategic importance of Kaduna in the affairs of
northern Nigeria. That is the state of Vice President
Namadi Sambo.
Therefore, when Anenih delivered his sermon of
peace and unity anchored on party discipline,
apportioning blames where they were due and giving
commendation where they were deserving, the
meeting had a good end.
Instructive was the commitment extracted from
Makarfi, that he must deliver the state to the party.
For a politician who believes in the sanctity of the
state and its machinery, perhaps many have come to
confuse the role and personality of Anenih. But to
those in the leadership of the party, he epitomises
experience and loyalty. Since 1998 when the party
was formed, Anenih remains, perhaps, one of the
very few – very, very few –leaders who have never
contemplated decampment as a directive policy of
politicking.
Anenih, who has the traditional title of Iyasele (Prime
Minister) of Esanland, had set himself some targets
when he took over as BoT Chairman.
Concerned about the widening chasm in the party,
especially between members and leaders on the one
hand, and the damaging consequences of the
ceaseless bickering among members of the National
Working Committee, NWC, of the party, on the other,
Anenih had set for himself targets.
In private meetings at the very highest levels, Anenih,
information available to Sunday Vanguard suggests,
made it clear that he would be focusing on the
following:
Unity & fairness
Oneness
Progress
Rancour-free party
Assisting the NEC in bringing everybody together
Assisting the NEC in resolving the challenges and
crises confronting the party in the state chapters
Working with members of the BoT to live and act the
spirit of the conscience of the party
Re-positioning the party for the challenges of 2015
Ensuring adherence to strict party discipline
Keeping faith with the legacies of the founding
fathers of the party
Sunday Vanguard gathered that at the time of his
emergence, the agenda was not codified; but it has
since become Anenih’s agenda for development and
repositioning of the party.
“The reason is simply because when you look at the
happenings within the party, a wise leader like chief
would be interested in and committed to what you
have in the 10-point agenda’’, a top party chieftain
anonymously told Sunday Vanguard.
“In fact, it even becomes more pressing now with the
rampaging opposition threatening to dislodge the
PDP from power.
“The BoT Chairman believes that if every member
and leader of the party at the different levels key into
these points and make them cardinal objectives to be
achieved, the party would be better positioned to
silence critics”.
All attempts by Sunday Vanguard last week in Abuja
to get Anenih to talk ran into a stone wall.
But feelers from the camp loyal to the BoT Chairman
indicated that the old and tested political warhorse is
determined, in the face of burgeoning opposition
against Jonathan by the APC, to give the president’s
2015 re-election bid his all.
The strategic importance of making peace moves in
Kaduna, Katsina, Kebbi, Jigawa and Sokoto States
flows from the fact that these are states of the North
West where the APC hopes to capture considerable
votes.
The merger between the Action Congress of Nigeria,
ACN, and the Congress for Progressive Change, CPC,
was built on a possible coalition of votes between the
former’s South West geo-political zone, and the
latter’s North West area.
Therefore, sensing the danger in allowing relations
among PDP stalwarts to go to the dogs North West is
no more than sleeping while the roof is on fire.
To a large extent, the peace moves were considered
successful
Politics, thy name is Anenih
From his days in the National Party of Nigeria, NPN,
in the defunct Bendel State, Anenih’s politics has
been variously described as one of pacification.
However, beneath that pacifist paradigm of his
resides a very strong vice-grip mentality of loyalty to
the general cause of party position.
An example can be drawn from the very turbulent
days of the Social Democratic Party, SDP, when the
party was forced to agree to go for another
presidential election. The pillar of the then SDP, the
late General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, had agreed to
another election as a way out of the emerging crisis
of the June 12, 1993 presidential election. Indeed, the
leadership of the party at that time had seen the
hands of General Sani Abacha, eager to wrest power
and, therefore, had hoped that an early resolution
would checkmate Abacha’s adventure.
But the gale of antagonism to that decision, coupled
with the short-sightedness of a section of the political
class, first gave way to an Interim National
Government, ING, which was made to look all the
more interim by Abacha’s dismissal of Ernest
Shonekan, the then head of ING. But Yar’Adua and
Anenih’s position for another early election, which
was pooh-poohed, led to Abacha’s five-year disaster
as Head of State. True an annulment was anathema
to Nigeria’s growing democracy. But another
election would have seen MKO Abiola win by an even
bigger margin had it held.
During the February 1999 National Convention of the
PDP in Jos, from where former President Olusegun
Obasanjo emerged, the victory recorded by
Obasanjo over Alex Ekwueme, his closest rival, was
made possible by a combination of factors from
which you cannot divorce Anenih.
In fact, as early as 6:45am on voting day, apart from
this writer, the only person who sat in the VIP section
of the Jos Township Stadium that Sunday morning
was Anenih. Clad in his now familiar blue jeans jacket
and trousers, he kept making sorties between the VIP
section of the stadium and the delegates’ stands,
each time to nip suspected emerging crisis in the bud
when voting was about to commence.
In 2002, at the height of the burst-up between the
National Assembly and the rambunctious Obasanjo,
it was to Anenih the latter turned.
Working tirelessly with a handful of other committed
leaders of the PDP, Anenih became the arrow-head
of that rescue mission, negotiating, conciliating and
making compromises with a view to saving a
situation which had pitched the North against the
South. That Obasanjo could survive the onslaught,
and later serve out his first term and even secure a
second term, was due, in part, to Anenih’s role.
Worse for Obasanjo, on the eve of the PDP National
Convention in January 2003, when a majority of the
state governors in the party almost threw him to the
dogs, preferring, instead, the then Vice President
Atiku Abubakar, it was the same Anenih who again
threw himself into the battle to save Obasanjo.
However, between the selfsame Obasanjo and
Anenih, the centre could not hold when the issue of
Third Term began to gain fervency. The latter
objected to the move and this angered Obasanjo.
And whereas the former president recruited some
political upstarts to drive his Third Term project, the
effort ended as a fool’s errand. Had Obasanjo
adhered to good sense and wisdom, he might have
spared himself and his presidency the odium of the
embarrassment that trailed his failure to secure the
Third Term, which still haunts him till today.
Presidential watchers insist that when the issue of
zoning became very contentious in the run up to the
2011 presidential contest, it was Anenih who brought
out data, showing how zoning had almost always
been breached since 1999 whenever the party
wanted a presidential convention, citing the instances
of the late Abubakar Rimi in 1999 and 2003 (when the
slot was supposedly reserved for the South); and
2007 (when some southerners contested against
Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, a time when the slot was
supposedly reserved for the North).
For the BoT Chairman, he accepts the praises where
due and takes the bashings which are sometimes
caustic with quintessential equanimity when they
come – as they often do, especially in his home state
of Edo, where a political party other than his own is
in control. Some may never agree with his politics,
but for a man steeped in his ways, some phrases
commonly used by Anenih in the face of party
indiscipline are, ‘Things are not supposed to be done
this way’, ‘You cannot behave like this’. Anenih has his
multitude; and he still leads. It was in 1992 that the
late Shehu Yar’Adua christened Anenih, “The Leader”.
The title has since stuck.
That he is moving round to cool otherwise heated
climes in the North West is not by accident, especially
at a time when the PDP needs leadership with
character to confront the challenges of 2015. Anenih
was 81 in August.
Friday, October 24, 2014
Electric fault causes fire at airport
A fire engulfed the departures hall of the
Murtala Muhammed International Airport,
An electric fault has been established as the cause of the fire, which led travellers and aviation staff to run for safety. However, the incident has been termed as minor because the smoke was quickly traced to the second
floor of the terminal. No immediate danger was caused to anyone as a result of the incident nor were flights affected. Therefore immediate investigation has been commenced by the maintenance authority.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Reps seek increment in NYSC allowances
The House of Representatives on Thursday in Abuja
passed for second reading a bill seeking an improved
welfare package for members of the National Youth
Service Corps.
The bill seeks to amend the NYSC Act No 51 of 1993
by making provisions to enhance the welfare of corps
members, encourage acquisition of special business
and commercial skills at the end of the annual
service year.
Moshood Mustapha (All Progressives Congress –
Kwara), who sponsored the bill, expressed regrets
over unemployment and poverty rate bedeviling the
country.
He said the proposed amendment would encourage
self-employment.
Section 7(3) of the proposed amendment seeks to
increase state governments annual subvention from
N500,000 to N50m, to enable NYSC to cater
adequately for the welfare and skill acquisition needs
of corps members.
It said such minimum subvention shall be provided
before the commencement of the service year, for
which it was intended.
Section 18 (2) also seeks to increase minimum
accommodation allowance from N250 per month to
N5,000 while transport allowance might be increased
from N150 per month to N5,000.
The sponsor added, “The bill seeks to amend the
NYSC Decree 51 of 1993 to provide for the training of
corps members to acquire skills and business.
“It would enable them to seek other means of
sustainable livelihood and fend for themselves other
than the white collar jobs that are in acute shortage
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