OSUN STATE MUST NOT BE TURNED INTO A BATTLE GROUND OVER RELIGIOUS SENTIMENTS – CECURR

The students of Baptist High School, Iwo, Osun State, appeared in school on Tuesday in their church apparels to protest against the court judgment which approved the use of Hijab by the Muslim students.  One of the leaders of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) was reported to have said, “if the Muslims are allowed to wear Hijab to propagate Islam in schools founded by Christian missionaries, it would also be appropriate for Christian to wear religious garment to school.”

 

The Centre for Cultural and Religious Rights, CECURR, finds this situation and the background to it very worrisome as we believe if the situation is not properly handled, the situation might degenerate into chaos and wreck untold havoc in the hitherto peaceful state.

 

CECURR is a child of necessity borne of the need to bring a succor for victims of religious and cultural persecution in any part of Nigeria. It is a non-religious organization of men and women of different religious background including atheist; it is non-sectarian, non-gender bias, gender- sensitive, non-profit making and non-governmental organisation. Its activities cover all parts of the country, its work strategy centres on study, research, education, advocacy and enlightenment.

 

The National Coordinator of CECURR, Mr. Debo Adeniran, in reacting to the development said “education is very important to the future of this nation and should not be affected by religious sentiment. Education sector is already in a serious quagmire and requires rejuvenation; the mode of dressing of students should have nothing to do with education ordinarily and should not be made a priority.”

 

Adeniran advised that the Osun state government to ensure that religious differences does not tamper with the secular status of the country and government owned institutions as enshrined in the Nigerian constitution. He said “government should avoid any situation that could allow religious sentiments to sip into governance issues or policies as this could become counter-productive and may lead to catastrophic outcomes.”

 

“We encourage the Osun state government to act fast before the present situation degenerates into anarchy by calling for dialogue and arbitration to intervene in the unfolding scenario beyond legalism and other issues that won’t matter when the latently looming chaos comes into bold relief.” the CECURR Coordinator added

 

“CECURR calls on all parties involved in the crisis to eschew violence and altercations and imbibe peaceful means of resolving the imbroglio as none of the parties stand to gain anything significant should the situation escalate beyond the present state.” Adeniran concluded

 

Debo Adeniran

National Coordinator, CECURR

www.deboadeniran.com

dadnig@yahoo.com

June 17, 2016

CHILDREN Project DENOUNCES THE PRIVATIZATION OF PUBLIC SECONDARY SCHOOLS IN OYO STATE

Child Help in Legal Defense of Rights to Education in Nigeria, CHILDREN Project, a developmental, child-right, non-profit, non-governmental organization (NGO) based in Nigeria which takes special interest in cases that concern women and children condemns the irrational attempt to privatize public schools in Oyo state by the state government.

 

Reportedly, the Oyo State government in its insensitive move commenced the process of allowing private organizations to partly or fully take over ownership of public primary and secondary schools; a move which have been meet with resistance by right thinking Nigerians including the primary victims, that is the school children.

 

No matter what reasons the Oyo state government is advancing to justify its decision, they defy logic, fly in the face of dialectics and betray the very essence why government was instituted in the first place.

 

It is bad enough that government is not abiding by the recommendation of UNESCO to plunge 26% of annual budget in to education which has led to the parlous state of the sector with poorly paid teachers and incondusive learning environment, dashing out publicly own schools to cronies of the politicians in government is certainly unacceptable.

Education is a foundational requirement for any society that is serious about its development and progress, putting such an important sector in the hands of profiteers will certainly leave millions of children out school, thereby retrogressing society in the end.

 

Coming from a state that can be called the home of free education in Nigeria when it was practiced under the leadership of the great Obafemi Awolowo is like assaulting the sensibilities of Nigerians. It is also insulting that it is those that benefitted from free education that are the harbingers of the commercialization and privatization education.

The diabolic move which has led school children to streets in protests is indicative of what the future hold in stock for Oyo state and the country in future. The government gradually; if not stopped, is breeding future ‘militants’, ‘terrorist’, ‘armed robbers’ etc., this we must not allow to happen!

 

Thus, we condemn unequivocally the move to privatize public schools in Oyo state and in the country generally. We advise the Oyo state government to take a cue from the Kaduna state government that just put six billion naira into the renovation of public secondary and primary schools instead of their self-aggrandizing and bankrupt position to privatize public schools.

 

Those that want to own private schools should use their own funds to build schools like we see all over the country. The reason why government is instituted at all is at the very heart of this matter; with this move, we need to ask, what exactly is government doing for the people whose resources has been put under its control besides continually increasing their pains? Government must wake to its constitutional duty as enshrined in Chapter 2, Section 14, 2b that ’ the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government’. Education falls in the category of welfare, an uneducated society is one that lacks welfare, therefore failure to provision for education is government failure, and a failed government is a worthless one and should be discarded with.

 

Education is a fundamental human right of every child as enshrined in different conventions and treaties which Nigeria is a signatory to; from the UN to the African Charter, it is emphasized! No child should be left out of school; it is a betrayal of international conventions which Nigeria as a country is a signatory to.

 

Signed

 

Debo Adeniran

Coordinator, CHILDREN Project

08037194969,

dadnig@yahoo.com,

www.deboadeniran.com

June 11, 2016

 

 

 

 

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PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI SHOULD NAME AND SHAME LOOTERS OF PUBLIC FUNDS – CACOL

The President Mohammadu Buhari-led administration on Saturday 3 June, 2016 released the figures of funds and assets recovered from the looters of the country’s resources without revealing the names of the people that are involved in the crime as requested by many Nigerians.

In an unambiguous interview as if to counter the refusal to name the looters, the Chairman of Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay said that there was no legal impediment in shaming the alleged thieves adding that not naming the looters was more of a political decision than a legal one.

 

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, reacting through its Executive Chairman, Debo Adeniran in an interview said “stealing is a crime against the state and should not be covered up, it does not augur well for the President not to name the looters of the country’s commonwealth. He further stressed that the government needed to be more transparent and accountable about recovered loots and the looters’ identities as the refusal to name the looters would amount to covering up or providing protection for corruption criminals. And this will encourage corrupt persons to remain recalcitrant in the act.”

 

Adeniran explained that those who returned their loots did not do it out of their own freewill but because the authority was closing-in on them, so they must be penalized accordingly. He said “for those that have voluntarily returned looted funds, their punishments can only be discounted but not totally forgotten, as for the corruption criminals who make the state to expend so much more resources before their conviction is achieved, they must face the full wrath of the law.”

 

Continuing, the CACOL leader said “like we have also said in our coalition, the best approach to dealing with corrupt leaders is by naming, nailing, shaming and shunning them anywhere and everywhere. This and the application of punitive is what will deter other corrupt leaders or individuals from corrupt practices.”

 

Concluding, Adeniran advised the government to use the recovered funds for the initial purposes they were meant for and where such projects have been completed with other government funds, the funds should be put in the Federation Account through Treasury Single Account, TSA or an escrow account specially dedicated for recovered funds.”

 

Wale Salami

Media Coordinator, CACOL

080141121208

wale@thehumanitycentre.org

cacolc@yahoo.com,

cacol@thehumanitycentre.org 

June 8, 2016

 

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PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI SHOULD NAME AND SHAME LOOTERS OF PUBLIC FUNDS – CACOL

The President Mohammadu Buhari-led administration on Saturday 3 June, 2016 released the figures of funds and assets recovered from the looters of the country’s resources without revealing the names of the people that are involved in the crime as requested by many Nigerians.
 
In an unambiguous interview as if to counter the refusal to name the looters, the Chairman of Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay said that there was no legal impediment in shaming the alleged thieves adding that not naming the looters was more of a political decision than a legal one.
 
The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, reacting through its Executive Chairman, Debo Adeniran in an interview said “stealing is a crime against the state and should not be covered up, it does not augur well for the President not to name the looters of the country’s commonwealth. He further stressed that the government needed to be more transparent and accountable about recovered loots and the looters’ identities as the refusal to name the looters would amount to covering up or providing protection for corruption criminals. And this will encourage corrupt persons to remain recalcitrant in the act.”
 
Adeniran explained that those who returned their loots did not do it out of their own freewill but because the authority was closing-in on them, so they must be penalized accordingly. He said “for those that have voluntarily returned looted funds, their punishments can only be discounted but not totally forgotten, as for the corruption criminals who make the state to expend so much more resources before their conviction is achieved, they must face the full wrath of the law.” 
 
Continuing, the CACOL leader said “like we have also said in our coalition, the best approach to dealing with corrupt leaders is by naming, nailing, shaming and shunning them anywhere and everywhere. This and the application of punitive is what will deter other corrupt leaders or individuals from corrupt practices.”
 
Concluding, Adeniran advised the government to use the recovered funds for the initial purposes they were meant for and where such projects have been completed with other government funds, the funds should be put in the Federation Account through Treasury Single Account, TSA or an escrow account specially dedicated for recovered funds.”
 
Signed
 
Wale Salami
 
Media Coordinator, CACOL
080141121208
June 2, 2016 
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AMENDMENT OF THE CCB ACT BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DESIGNED TO CLOG THE PROGRESS OF ANT-CORRUPTION – CACOL

The House of Representatives recently adopted a report to amend the Code of Conduct Bureau [CCB] Act which is meant to compel the Bureau to furnish accused persons with details of the charges against them for response before they are made to appear before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT).

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL view the adoption by the legislators as one of the means corrupt persons use to maneuver and create unnecessary obstacles of the path of justice, in the war against corruption as war is getting fiercer.

The Executive Chairman of CACOL, Mr. Debo Adeniran said that the Senate had tried to do the same thing prior now but had to jettison the idea following public outcry against the apparently pro-corruption and that it is glaringly to protect and also to buy time in favor of the corruption criminals.

He explained further that CACOL is convinced that the ongoing trial of the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki for corruption is directly linked to this development. It represents an attempt to provide security net or immunity for legislators whose corrupt tendencies are yet to be exposed and to prepare the way for the Senate to exhume the amendments it had already stood down.

Adeniran added that the public and civil society organizations should reject the diabolic amendments, because the move is a way of protecting the interest of political office holders who have embezzled the public funds and might soon suffer similar fate of the Senate President. It will encourage people to continue committing crimes and embezzling of public funds.

The CACOL leader said “after all it is a traditional practice in our judicial process to read charges to accused persons when they get to court where the accused will have the right to plead guilty or otherwise. And we should not forget that ‘accused persons’ are simply ‘accused persons’ until they are convicted and they can even claim damages where they have been accused wrongly”

In conclusion, Adeniran said “the House of Representatives should abandon the adoption of the amendment and concentrate on issues that are more important to the country’s National Development and to correct the impression already on the mind of the people that the legislature is deeply corrupt.”

Wale Salami

Media Coordinator, CACOL

080141121208

wale@thehumanitycentre.org

cacolc@yahoo.com,

cacol@thehumanitycentre.org 

June 2, 2016 

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CACOL COMMENDS THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES FOR THE ADOPTION OF E-VOTING SYSTEM.

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has commended the House of Representatives for embracing the adoption of e-voting system as it discards highly manipulative “say aye” and the “say nay” method of voting.

Recently, as reported in the news, the House of Representatives reached a favorable deduction by ditching its hitherto voice-voting method of yelling “aye” and “nay” for the electronic means of voting.” This development is highly welcomed as it is an audacious step and a move in the right direction fitting into the change agenda of the present government” said the Executive Chairman of CACOL, Mr. Debo Adeniran.

While reacting to the adoption of e-voting, the anti-corruption crusader said “the process of screaming ‘aye’ or ‘nay’ for supporting or opposing an issue on the floor is obsolete and such malfeasant measures are highly manipulative, creating avenues for the Presiding officer to sway the House to suit their own interest. The e-voting will also expose absentee legislators and those who vote against the interest of their constituents.”

Continuing, he said, “if for example the ‘ayes’ shouts the loudest and the Presiding officer for self-interest indicates that the ‘nays’ have shouted the loudest, then the vote goes in favor of the ‘nays’. And ironically, this is the same unjust and obsolete system of voting that has lead to myriad of vicious brawls in the National Assembly in the past and till date.”

In concluding, he said, “with all the vagaries and innate practices paraded by those in authority, I therefore call upon all the right thinking Nigerians to insist on transparency in the activities of the legislators to conform to the norms and ethics of democracy. We should prevent the abnormal from becoming the normal in our beloved country; we must deny the toga of shame foisted on us collectively as a people by those corrupt elements lurking in the corridors of power.”

 

Wale Salami

Media Coordinator, CACOL

080141121208

wale@thehumanitycentre.org

cacolc@yahoo.com,

cacol@thehumanitycentre.org 

1/06/2016

 

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THE PRESIDENT SHOULD MAKE PUBLIC THE NAMES OF LOOTERS AND DETAILS OF THE LOOTS – CACOL

The President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Muhammad Buhari while speaking at an anti-corruption summit organized by the British Prime Minister, David Cameroon, recently, promised to disclose the figure of funds that have been recovered from looters in his address to the Nation on the occasion of the first anniversary of his ascension to office.
However, the President failed to name the looters or mention the figures of funds and assets recovered so far with the vigorous anti-corruption war his government embarked upon since its inception. “This development has not gone down well with a lot of Nigerians, as it leaves so many questions on the minds of the people. Why and when will be the appropriate time?” asked the Executive Chairman of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders [CACOL], Mr. Debo Adeniran in a reaction to the development.
The CACOL Chairman charged the President to come out and give explanation on the recovered loots and also reveal the identities of the looters. “Why would the President refuse to fulfill the promise he made to the people? That attitude in itself is not acceptable, as Nigerians have the right to know about their resources that have been looted and criminals behind such corrupt practices. Also the attitude portend that criminals are being ‘protected’ by the President which hangs a big question mark on the whole anti-corruption war. The names of the looters should be mentioned and justice must be served accordingly in order to prevent such acts from recurring.” Mr. Adeniran averred
In concluding, he further explained that some of the looted funds were meant for projects that would have been beneficial to the nation as a whole.  He said “the logical thing one would have expected is for the recovered loots to be plunged back into the projects they were originally meant for.”
 
Wale Salami
Media Coordinator, CACOL
080141121208

CACOL BACKS THE PRESIDENT ON THE CALL FOR SPEEDY PASSAGE OF THE ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING BILL

The recent directive by the President of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari, for the speedy passage of the anti-money laundering bill has received the support of the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL.
CACOL has described the bold step has an indication of unrelenting proactiveness emanating on the part of Buhari’s administration at monitoring the unprincipled transactions of money looters that had remained rampant over the years.
The coalition’s Executive Chairman, Comrade Debo Adeniran, said “if we can remember properly, on assuming office last year, President Buhari made it clear that his most important priority was to fight corruption at every level by plugging all those identified holes through which Nigeria’s resources were being drained with reckless abandon. This certainly is one of the means through which the President can accomplish the lofty goal of fighting corruption.”
Continuing he said that “the hydra-headed menace that is corruption, stands as an adverse phenomenon that cannot be entirely purged from the system if every lawful means are not deployed in the anti-corruption war. The President is by all noble means setting a cardinal dais, diminishing the sturdy hold that corruption has on some major facets; features like money laundering represent in bold relief one of the major ways corruption criminals utilizes to loot the country’s commonwealth.”
We therefore urge the Buhari-led administration to introduce other bills similar to the anti-money laundering bill for implementation into the system to help with the fight against corruption, for when one fights against corruption, corruption itself fights back. This is Nigeria, it is our own, so let’s put aside all the frivolities and innate corrupt tendency so we can make Nigeria whole again.” the CACOL Chairman concluded
 
Wale Salami
Media Coordinator, CACOL
080141121208
 
 
 
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ONE-YEAR AFTER PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHARI’S INAUGURATION: NOT YET UHURU! TIME TO CHANGE THE MEDIOCRE, INSENSITIVE AND THE INACTIVE ONES IN THE CABINET – CACOL

As the one-year anniversary of the inauguration of the present regime closes in, President Muhammadu Buhari has reportedly asked Nigerians to tell him if he should change any Minister in his cabinet, one year after the ascension of the All Progressive Congress to power at the Federal level following the party’s roaring victory at the 2015 general elections.

 

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL welcomes this ‘openness to public appraisal – criticisms or commendation’ approach demonstrated by the President and views it as exemplifying and magnifying the essence of the ‘change’ Nigerians yearned and are still yearning for. In some quarters, some say 1 year is too early to access the performance of government but we think differently because the future begins today, and with this attitude of the President, the man who is at the very epicenter of what Nigeria is doing about its issues, we think it puts to pay the agreement of those who want to be ‘Buhari more than Buhari’. Thus, we commend the President for his humility and openness.

 

One year of governance after May 29, 2015, has definitely been topsy-turvy in almost every sector, but there are remarkable and impressive strides being achieved in some, particularly the anti-corruption war and the war against insurgency, some others however are utterly disappointing and reprehensible in their performances.

 

With regard to Ministries, topping the list as far as we are concerned in terms of abysmal performance that requires radical change is the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing. It is our view that the ministry has been the main one that has most misrepresented the campaign promises of APC and the change Nigerians expected. All the actions and policies of the Ministry have compounded the sufferings of Nigerians in multi-folds; from lack of power supply to the illogical hike in electricity tariffs, from continually decaying infrastructure to death traps as roads with a Housing sector that is ‘non-existent’ or in absolute comatose.

 

The Minister of Power, Works and Housing keeps standing logic on its heads by asking the already impoverished Nigerians to bear the brunt of his failure by asking Nigerians to pay for darkness and for services not rendered even up to the effrontery of hiking the tariff of electricity against a background of a country in perpetual darkness. The Minister has made history by achieving the lowest, ZERO, mega watts for more than 18 hours in history of power generation in Nigeria; he has nothing to offer than damage, we call on Mr. President to ask him to honourably resign or he should be sacked!

 

As a coalition with special focus on anti-corruption, we have followed the role of the bench and the bar, the Judiciary in general vis-à-vis the anti-corruption war against corruption. Recognising a challenge in a process toward achieving a goal is to be honest with oneself and a sign of strength. In CACOL we define ‘corruption as any act of dishonesty’, therefore for us it will amount to ‘playing the Ostrich’ if we cannot come to terms with the reality of our Judiciary which the President himself aptly described a ‘headache’ in the anti-corruption war.

Our following of the role of the Judiciary informs why we are demanding the immediate replacement of Mr. Malami Abubakar as the Attorney General and Minister of Justice of this country to safe this government and the country from further embarrassment and criticisms.

The mantra of this government and one of the campaign cardinal points of its party is ‘fight against corruption’. For any government to succeed in its policies, programmes and agenda, the commitment, professionalism, soundness and integrity of the Chief Law Officer of that government must be impeccable and consistent. We are afraid, based on recent happenings, the current Attorney-General and Minister of Justice has fallen short of these critical requirements and incapable of delivering any fundamental departure from the corruption ridden past of governance in the country.

 

We recall the report of police investigation into the alleged forgery of 2015 Senate Standing Order by some Senators and staff of the Senate was reported to have been submitted to the Government and a DPP’s advice was issued on July 29, 2015, demanding prosecution of certain persons and officers. According to Punch Newspaper report of Monday May 9, 2016, page 2, “the legal advice with reference number DPPA/ADV/258/15 recommended that some suspects be prosecuted for criminal conspiracy, forgery, breach of official trust and unlawful assembly”. The Minister of Justice, since the assumption of office has consciously and deliberately refused to give effect to the Director of Public Prosecution’s (DPP’s) advice. According to the same newspaper report, Mr. Malami promised Nigerians a decision on this matter within a week as at 2nd of January, 2016 but failed to do anything. It has taken the indicting report of Punch Newspaper in reference for the Attorney General to issue an ultimatum to both Police and DPP’s office for necessary action.

 

Again, there is the unnecessary and unwarranted controversy that surrounded the subterranean role of the Minister in the Nigerian Communication Commission NCC fine against the MTN. The Minister was accused of meeting and reaching agreements with MTN without involvement or representatives from the NCC.  The Attorney-General was publicly accused of meeting, negotiating, agreeing terms and collecting N50 billion on behalf of the government without recourse to both the regulatory agency and supervisory ministry. Local and international criticisms greeted the unprofessional conduct of the Minister and secrecy associated with his negotiation with MTN. These reasons, amongst others necessitate the removal of the AGF and Minister of Justice.

 

On a brighter side, the Ministry of Defence, perhaps, deserves the best accolades considering the victories of Military against the Boko Haram insurgency in the North East and the improved protection of Nigeria’s territorial borders and of lives and property in the country. The patriotism of our gallant soldiers and their improved performances on the battlefields deserves the best of praises as their conquests warm the heart of Nigerians giving them hope for a greater country. We call on the government to ensure that the situation of the past where funds meant for military operations and personnel are NEVER again diverted for pecuniary needs of murderously corrupt public officials and military personnel.

 

The Ministry of Defence must remain awake, vigilant, combat ready and well motivated too. The emerging scenario in the Niger Delta must be under the priority attention of the military with a view of resolving the crisis via lawful and constitutional means. Yes, within constitutional means, this insistence is stemming from what Nigerians witnessed during the clash between the Shiite and the Military where hundreds of lives of civilians were wasted by the military for reasons that are yet to be discernible to anyone and does not conform with the statues as far as the rules of engagement between civilians and the military are concerned.

 

The Ministry of Finance and Economic Development has not been impressive given the present state of the economy which at best can be described as ‘foggy’ and this appear to be consciously made so; with the scenario riddled by contradictions, somersaults, illogicality, indecisions and uncertainties. This is what is at the background of the present economic hardships; where the people are battling with challenges for very basic needs; from food to housing, power to energy and from education to employment etc. and with government appearing hapless.

The Minister for Finance and Economic Development seem to be overwhelmed with present the economic situation in the country. These times require the very best hands, for the period is indeed a very challenging one, as such a change in the Ministry is also suggested by CACOL as the economy is too central to all other aspects of our national life to left in the hands of the mediocre. Via the Ministry, an inexplicable Stamp duty, a N50 tax on Bank transactions from 1000 naira and above has been imposed. Yet the government has refused to fund education adequately; shunned Health and infrastructural development, failed to guarantee security of lives and property.

 

Yet, on the economy, the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development, the Central Bank and President Buhari’s political will deserve commendation and appreciation with the inauguration of the Treasury Single Account, TSA initiative; an initiative of the immediate past regime. The TSA after the first in six months of its operation had reportedly helped the Federal Government to able to save about 2.2 trillion Naira, an amount that is about half the budget for 2015.  This huge sum of money would have ended up in private pockets without trace, with the TSA, several holes of corruption has been plugged giving the country the opportunity to plunge the gains of the TSA into the efforts for the revamping of the economy.

 

Almost all other Ministries are either prostrate or in comatose, some are even approaching non-existence in status. Nigerians can hardly tell what the Ministries of Education, Agriculture, Health, Aviation, Commerce and Industry, Solid Minerals Development etc. are doing in these very challenging times for the country. They all appear to have gone to slumber following the lack of clue on what to do.

 

The most tragic amongst the ‘comatose ministries’ perhaps are the Ministries of Education and that of Health, two very vital and foundational sectors of the society that cannot be toyed with as they link with existential reality. So far no clear educational policy or health policy has been declared and this has put both sectors in total disarray and catastrophic situations.

 

The most ridiculous in ideas out of the Ministries, is perhaps the Ministry of Agriculture with its warped suggestion for the importation of grass from Brazil for the cattle being reared by private individuals (herdsmen). This, like the idea for the creation of grazing zones represents favouratism for a particular group at the expense of other peoples’ rights which is unacceptable and must be resisted by all right thinking Nigerians.

 

The truth is that the present economic situation is a manifestation of the non-profundity and the lack of preparedness inherent in the ‘change’ the APC-led Federal government rode upon to win the general elections in 2015 basically. It reflects the futility of ‘cosmeticism’ and redecoration as strategic approaches for revamping an economy already in woe, as a result of the hitherto existing economic direction i.e. the neo-liberal economic order.

Above all, the present administration needs to holistically approach the myriad of issues bedeviling the polity. There are no rooms for excuses as the condition of existence of the average Nigerian continue to deteriorate on daily basis, the excuses will not assuage the pains and sufferings of the people.

 

Government should fulfill the very reason why it was instituted in the first place! The primary question to pose; is to ask, what is the general and specific purpose of governance or of government? General in the sense of why do we as a society need a government and what kind of governance do we need in general? And specific in the sense of what is the specific goal, objective and socio-economic program of this new regime, this new government? Government is a social contract between the governed and the government as espoused in Chapter 2 of the Nigerian Constitution explicitly. The government is supposed to (constitutionally empowered) to harness the resources of the society for the provisioning of social welfare for the (majority) people, including their security and harmony.

 

A year after the inauguration of the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led Federal government, it is pertinent to come to terms with what is real and what is fad or farce. The worst thing may not be so much about where we are coming from but much more about in which direction we are going, we dare say. And the way things stands, Nigerians are more concerned with the direction the Nation is moving. The ordinary Nigerian wants to be able to feed; to be sheltered, to be gainfully employed, to be educated, secured and to live in harmony, as simple as that!

Long Live, Nigeria!

 

 

Signed:

 

Debo Adeniran

Executive Chairman, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL

dadnig@yahoo.com www.deboadeniran.com

0803-7194-969

cacolc@yahoo.com, cacol@thehumanitycentre.org

08141121208

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ALLEGED CORRUPTION CRIMINALS UNDER PROSECUTION AND THEIR CLAIMS TO ILL HEALTH; JUSTICE MUST TAKE ITS FULL COURSE – CACOL

As the anti-corruption war rages on, the ‘guilty’ are indeed getting afraid and has been groping for any means to escape the inevitable – Justice! From Allison-Madueke Diezani, former Petroleum Minister to Sambo Dasuki, former National Security Adviser and from Patrick Akpobokemi Director General, NIMASA to Olisah Metuh, former PDP spokesperson, a broken storyline is being repeated, a cracked record is being played consequent upon the ‘swords of justice’ dangling over the heads of these alleged corruption criminals.
CACOL views this scenario with utmost objectivity and respect for humanism but insist on the law to take its full course! We view the scenario as an attempt to get the empathy of Nigerians in spite of the murderous gravity of the offences involved. These alleged corrupt elements have chosen to find very ‘ingenuous’ ways to escape the wrath of law.
Mr. Debo Adeniran, Executive Chairman of CACOL, said that “yes, we agree people can fall sick at anytime, but that must not obstruct the course of justice, and this is not to say we do not empathize with the sick. Moreover, there are ‘medical facilities’ in prisons as ‘provided’ by some of these accused corruption elements when they were in government/power. Thus they have nothing to fear as they have already provisioned for medical facilities even in the prisons.
“We in CACOL, find their ‘I am Sick’ explanation as absolutely untenable and insulting, as an excuse or explanation which must be discountenanced by the Judiciary particularly in the cases of corruption. It represents an abuse of the collective intelligence of Nigerians.” Mr. Adeniran added.
Continuing, he said “one wonders why accused corrupt persons in Nigeria seem not be in a hurry to clear their names even when they usually claim being innocent of the charges before they are prosecuted; they prefer media defense even before they are charged but are usually quick to criticize the authorities that anti-graft agencies engage in media prosecution. If you have been accused of stealing and your reaction is to say, ‘I am being persecuted’, ‘I am sick’, ‘it is because I am Igbo, Yoruba or Hausa’ without attempting to clear or clean your name first, this alone, certainly speak volumes about your character and indicative of your ‘guiltiness’. We therefore call on the Judiciary not to condone such lame excuses particularly because of the grievous damage their corrupt acts have done on the people and the Nation as an entity.
“The situation that the corrupt elements have put the country into is such that the victims of their corrupt acts are sicklier they claim to be. The poor, the ordinary people are the real victims of the corrupt practices perpetrated by these ‘I am sick’ elements. Let justice take its full course! Name, Nail, Shame and Shun Corrupt Leaders, Anywhere, Everywhere.” He concluded.
 
 
Wale Salami
Media Coordinator, CACOL
080141121208
 
 
 
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