Want to run for president of Nigeria? Only $132,000 Political analysts say exorbitant rates in Nigeria are illegal


Nigeria’s main political parties are charging eye-watering fees from election hopefuls, in a move condemned as undemocratic and a breeding ground for high-level cronyism and corruption.

Supporters of President Goodluck Jonathan pooled their resources to stump up the 22 million naira (132,000 dollars) to buy his nomination form from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

The main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) is asking for 27.5 million naira, forcing one prospective candidate, former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari, to take out a bank loan.

For governorship posts, the PDP is asking for 11 million naira while the APC wants 10 million naira — all before anyone is even chosen to run at the elections next year.

Candidates for parliamentary elections are also having to pay huge sums of cash, far outstripping the fees charged elsewhere in West Africa.

Political and legal analysts say the exorbitant rates in Nigeria are illegal, discourage popular participation in the electoral process and consolidate power among the wealthy elite.

“The incredible amount of money charged by political parties for nomination forms only reflects the dangerous connection between politics and big business and the disconnect it fosters on the silent majority,” said Eneruvie Enakoko, formerly of the Transition Monitoring Group of non-profit organisations promoting democratic values.

High fees for nomination force aspiring candidates without huge financial means to raise money from super-rich backers, who will then expect pay-back if they are voted in, he added.

“If the candidate eventually gets the nomination and wins the election, he feels indebted and obligated to that tiny percentage of the population and his loyalty will be to those people and not to the rest of the populace or the silent majority who have no voice,” he told AFP.

“It is a dangerous and vicious cycle because the candidate after getting elected cannot afford to forget where he got the money to bankroll his election.”

‘Moneybags and godfathers’

Under the military dictator Ibrahim Babangida (1985-1993), two political parties were founded and funded by government, the National Republican Convention and Social Democratic Party.

But since Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999, the government has stopped direct funding of political parties, forcing them to look for other ways to raise money.

While the nexus of politicians, wealthy individuals and big business is not unique to Nigeria, the phenomenon makes it less likely that the country’s catalogue of problems are tackled.

Nigeria may be Africa’s biggest economy and leading oil producer but it ranks low on the global scale for social development indicators such as access to education and healthcare.

Some 61.2 percent of Nigerians were living on $1 a day or less in 2009-10, according to the last available government figures on living standards, released in 2012.

Nigeria is also blighted by endemic graft, particularly in the huge public sector, and was ranked 144th out of 177 countries in Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index 2013.

For Dapo Thomas, of Lagos State University, the exorbitant fees skew the political system, furthering a culture of patronage and keeping out poorer, but perhaps more qualified, administrators.

“It allows the moneybags and godfathers to dominate the political scene,” he said.

“If somebody of Buhari’s calibre could not afford 27.5 million naira without taking a loan from the bank, who else can afford it?”

‘Unwholesome and undemocratic’

Lagos lawyer Femi Falana said charging for nomination by both Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which oversees elections, and political parties was against the law.

Debo Adeniran, of the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders pressure group, described charging as “unwholesome” and “undemocratic” but INEC maintained that it was powerless to act.

The electoral body cannot stop parties from collecting election fees, said INEC spokesman Kayode Idowu, but expressed concern about the trend.

“On no account should eligible Nigerians be denied the rights to participate in the electoral process. Not even money,” he said.

The electoral body will continue to monitor the finances of the parties while it had also set limits on campaign spending, he added.

A presidential candidate cannot spend above one billion naira, a governorship hopeful 200 million naira, a politician running for the senate 40 million and 10 million for the lower House of Representatives.

Parties are also not allowed to seek external funding to safeguard “the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the nation”, said Idowu.

“All these measures are in place to ensure popular participation as well as preserve the integrity of the electoral system,” he added.

SOURCE: Emirates 24/7 News

 

Activists Criticise NASS For Passing Jail Sentence On Beggars


 08 Nov 2014   Posted by Administrator


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By Kevwe Ebireri, Abuja

A civil rights group. the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, has criticized the National Assembly passing a law that stipulates a jail term for physically-challenged beggars.

The two chambers prescribed a six-month term jail, among other punishments, for anyone using a person living with disability to solicit for arms in public.

This is contained in the harmonized Bill jointly passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives last week.

Reacting to the development on behalf of the coalition, CACOL’s executive chairman, Debo Adeniran, described the jail term as a step in the wrong direction.

Adeniran said it was ridiculous that while many pro-masses bills are gathering dust on the shelves of our lawmakers, they could pass a bill to jail beggars who are pushed into the trade because government at all levels have failed them.

“Begging to earn a living is a sign of administrative failure and an indictment on every arm of government. Government, by its various anti-masses policies, wants people to beg because every Nigerian is in one form or the other, a beggar. For instance, many of our law enforcement agents fall into one category of beggar or the other because their take home pay hardly takes them home,” Adeniran said.

The activists expressed dismay that the federal lawmakers failed to probe the causes of street begging, but were quick to pass sentence on offenders who are only victims of circumstances.

Speaking further, Adeniran, who described the jail term as misplacement of priority and oppressive, queried why it is only the physically challenged beggars that would be jailed.

“The questions begging for answers are: why must it be only physically challenged beggars that would be jailed? Why not able-bodied people who are beggars? Why focus mainly on the physically-challenged, leaving out the myriads of area boys and girls and corporate beggars who have no other thing than to beg for living? Why are we not addressing those issues that brought them into destitution? If they are physically challenged, it means they require care and if the care is not coming from the official quarters, they help themselves by seeking it from the sympathetic public,” he queried.

Adeniran said it was a misplacement of priority and oppressive to jail beggars and urged the government to admit systemic failure in governance rather than look out for an oppressive way out.

The human rights activist also called on government to address the problem of unemployment, if it was really serious about ridding our streets of beggars.

“Basically, if we are trying to enact laws that will rid our society of unnecessary presence of beggars, caution and restraints must also be exercised to the right direction for the law to be effective. The overall interest should gear towards making life better for these physically challenged individuals rather than the eagerness to have them thrown in jail,” he added.

 

Create Employment, Stop Jailing Beggars – CACOL

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has censured the National Assembly as it passed jail term for physically-challenged beggars.

The two chambers prescribed a six-month term jail, among other punishments for anyone using a person living with disability to solicit for harms in public. This is contained in the harmonized bill jointly passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives last week.

Reacting to the development on behalf of the Coalition, its Executive Chairman, Debo Adeniran described the jail term as a step in wrong direction.

Adeniran said “It is preposterous that while many pro-masses bills are gathering dust on the shelves of our lawmakers, they could pass a bill to jail beggars who are pushed into the trade because government at all levels have failed them. Begging to earn a living is a sign of administrative failure and an indictment on every arm of government. Government, by its various anti-masses policies, wants people to beg because every Nigerian is in one form or the other, a beggar. For instance, many of our law enforcement agents fall into one category of beggar or the other because their take home pay hardly takes them home. It is so unfortunate that our lawmakers are not talking about why people are begging, because someone that is disabled and also jobless is a victim of double jeopardy. Who would be gainfully employed and go into begging? The jail term is like cutting the head because you have headache.”

 

Speaking further, Adeniran, who described the jail term as misplacement of priority and oppressive, queried why it is only the physically challenged beggars that would be jailed.

 

“The questions begging for answers are: why must it be only physically challenged beggars that would be jailed? Why not able-bodied people who are beggars? Why focus mainly on the physically-challenged, leaving out the myriads of area boys and girls and corporate beggars who have no other thing than to beg for living?  Why are we not addressing those issues that brought them into destitution? If they are physically challenged, it means they require care and if the care is not coming from the official quarters, they help themselves by seeking it from the sympathetic public.

 

It is a misplacement of priority and oppressive to jail beggars. Even when the government says it will rehabilitate them, what kind of rehabilitation are they talking about? Is that which will make them perpetually poor and incapable or that which will make them to be able to fulfill their social obligations that the society expects of them? The jail term aspect of the bill is unreasonable, oppressive, exploitative and lopsided. Sincerely speaking, the government should admit systemic failure in governance rather than look out for an oppressive way out.

 

The human rights activist however called on government to address the problem of unemployment, if it is really serious about ridding our streets of beggars.

 

“Basically, if we are trying to enact laws that will rid our society of unnecessary presence of beggars, caution and restraints must also be exercised to the right direction for the law to be effective. The overall interest should gear towards making life better for these physically challenged individuals rather than the eagerness to have them thrown in jail. Thus, adequate provision and planning should be a pre-requisite. The government should address the root of begging, which is unemployment before implementing the law.”

SOURCE:Daily Times Nigeria.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shutdown of Senate by PDP Senators

By Chukwudi Nweje / Acting Features Editor

 

For a consecutive second day after returning from recess, the Nigerian Senate on Wednesday adjourned the-man-in-the-newsplenary abruptly. Senators elected under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had first abandoned legislative process on Tuesday, threatening to initiate impeachment proceedings against President Goodluck Jonathan for allegedly allowing the governors under the PDP platform take over the party structures in their various states against their interests.

Senate President David Mark, who presided, merely read a prepared address on his intention to intervene in the crisis rocking the House of Representatives which had also adjourned till December 3 after Speaker, Aminu Tambuwal, defected to All Progressives Congress (APC) on October 28. Continue reading “Shutdown of Senate by PDP Senators”

Ekiti election result mysterious — CACOL

A non-governmental organisation, the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, has described the result of the June 21 Ekiti State governorship election as mysterious.

The Peoples Democratic Party’s candidate, Governor Ayodele Fayose, had defeated the then incumbent Kayode Fayemi of the All Progressives Congress by a landslide, winning all the 16 local government areas in the state.

The Chairman, CACOL, Debo Adeniran, told SUNDAY PUNCH that Fayose’s election was a mystery.

He said, “If it was not mysterious, one would agree that an incumbent, who had not witnessed ‘governor-must-go protests’ and who the citizenry of the state had tolerated for that length of time couldn’t have performed that woefully.

“Conversely, Fayose was impeached for violating the rights of the Ekiti citizens. He has not been able to extricate himself from this and other allegations before he was allowed to contest elections. That is the first aspect of mystery.

“All the anti-graft agencies should have kicked against it, knowing that should he contest and win, he would attain the status of governor and immunity would be conferred on him.”

Adeniran also described the massive deployment of security operatives during the election as a show of strength by the Federal Government.

“It was the Federal Government’s way of showing that no matter what, it would be there for Fayose because he is in the ruling party. The same backing was extended to him when mayhem was witnessed in Ado-Ekiti.

“The closure of the high court wouldn’t have happened, if the Federal Government had not allowed the mayhem to fester without any control or anyone being punished for it. The courts ought not to have been closed because they are the last hope of the common man.

“People whose lives were at risk and had cases in those courts would not have had the opportunity of seeking the intervention of the judiciary and that could have led to the termination of lives,” Adeniran added.

Last Sunday, Nobel Laureate, Prof. Woke Soyinka, had similarly described Fayemi’s loss in the election as a mystery which he said the APC needed to unravel.

Soyinka said Fayose should continue the programmes and legacy projects started by the ex-governor.

But the Peoples Democratic Party in Ekiti State criticised him, accusing him of imposing himself as the ex-governor’s image maker.

Copyright PUNCH.

Continue reading “Ekiti election result mysterious — CACOL”

Life imprisonment should replace death sentence –Adeniran

Daily Independent, Nigerian Newspaper

Executive Chairman, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), Debo Adeniran, in this interview with Senior Correspondent, EKENE OKORO, says the death sentence passed on 12 soldiers accused of mutiny is barbaric and would cause more harm than good in the quest by the Nigeria Defence system to win the war against the Boko Haram. Excerpts:

Adeniran

Twelve Nigerian soldiers were recently sentenced to death for mutiny and other offences by a military court martial. Do you see capital punishment as justice well served in this regard? Continue reading “Life imprisonment should replace death sentence –Adeniran”

Serving governors do not deserve national merit award —Debo Adeniran

http://nationaldailyng.com/index.php

Comrade Debo Adeniran, Executive Chairman, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), expresses concern that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and ICPC are the proper agencies to screen politicians on corruption for

clearance to contest elections. He says there is suspicion that the $9.3 million meant for arms but confiscated in South Africa had Presidential cover and may be for other purposes than Nigerians were being told.  SUNDAY ODIBASHI met him in Lagos. Continue reading “Serving governors do not deserve national merit award —Debo Adeniran”

X-raying Ikuforiji’s long walk to vindication

Daily Independent, Nigerian Newspaper

By Tunde Opeseitan –  Snr Correspondent, Lagos

 

It is no longer news that Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Adeyemi Ikuforiji, has been cleared of money laundering charges to the tune of about N600 million, levelled against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

It is also not news that the EFCC has appealed the verdict delivered on September 26 by Justice Ibrahim Buba of the Federal High Court in Lagos. The legal travails of the Speaker began in December 2011, when the EFCC instituted a criminal charge against him and his aide, Oyebode Atoyebi. Continue reading “X-raying Ikuforiji’s long walk to vindication”

Hand over Kashamu to U.S., Nigerians tells Jonathan

Daily Independent, Nigerian Newspaper

 By Tunde Opeseitan  /   Snr Correspondent, Lagos

Some eminent Nigerians on Friday urged President Goodluck Jonathan to swiftly hand over a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Buruji Kashamu, to the United States Government for prosecution over alleged drug case.

Kashamu is wanted in the United States for allegedly importing drug illegally into the country. Continue reading “Hand over Kashamu to U.S., Nigerians tells Jonathan”