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Opinion

Who are President Tinubu’sAdvisers?- CCGI By Bolaji O. Akinyemi.

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“We are still wondering who advises Mr. President and who prepares his itinerary.

 

“Was the cutting of ribbon at Minna airport more reasonably official than the almost 300 children kidnapped in neighbouring Kaduna state? I expected something better from the nation’s father.

 

The two earlier paragraphs were the take away for me at the Press Conference organised by Civic Consciousness Global Initiative, a body of Christian Elders, men and women committed to pricking the conscience of leaders and orientating and re-orientating the populace on citizens’ duties and responsibilities towards a better and greater Nigeria.

 

The central call at the Civil Consciousness Global Initiative Press Conference was to fear God and obey Him.

 

The chairman of the Civil Consciousness Global Initiative (CCGI), Rev Solomon Adegbolagun has called on those in power to obey the voice of God.

 

Adegbolagun said this during a press conference at Hoarse Memorial Methodist church; Yaba Lagos, yesterday.

He said that if leaders should have listening ears to what the Holy Spirit is saying, I believe it will help them to sort out various difficulties in Nigeria.

 

He described the current situation as the worst since the inception of Nigeria.

“In addition to the hardship across the nation, security challenges have added to what the populace are experiencing.

“At CCGI, we have a commitment to speak the truth to those in power and prayerfully support them to do the right thing.

“We also have the responsibility to regularly create the consciousness of responsible citizenship to the populace.

 

He said that the press conference was for the press to help in amplifying the truth and get the message of what the people are feeling to the people in power.

 

“Our gathering here today is to have our friends who are the watchmen of the society to help us make our voices louder and wider.

 

 

“The resolve to be consistent in reviewing the state of the nation was further strengthened by our understanding of the prophecy that preceded Jesus birth in Isaiah 9; which says that THE GOVERNMENT SHALL BE UPON HIS SHOULDER.

 

“This is not just about the spiritual government but also the physical government. If the church had been responsible enough, she would be calling the shots in governance.

 

“But we had long abdicated that responsibility because we termed the road to governance, a dirty path until it started stinking and the stench wouldn’t let us breathe.”

 

He reckoned with the fact that hunger is really biting hard on everyone, not just the poor crying but the rich also!

 

“We are aware some governments are offering 25% subsidy on food items as palliative. Though commendable, the question remains, ‘are the people now smiling?’

 

In reaction to CCGI on food palliative, I am forced to ask; of what use is 25% subsidy on Food when the subsidy removal of fuel has eroded the purchasing power of the people and inflation is at all time high at 29.90% according to the National Bureau of Statistics, NBC, February 2024 released data!

 

“Many people are adjusting their eating schedules from three square meals to two or one. We are inundated daily by calls or physical visits to our offices and houses by those who need meals to survive”.

 

“We imagine also how many are subjected to such ordeals and worst is, they may not have anyone to call upon. Hunger is really becoming a plague in the land,” he added.

 

He noted the length and breadth of this nation is exposed and porous, adding, `nowhere is really guaranteed to be safe. Even those who should guarantee our safety are not themselves trustworthy nor could they assure us of being up to the task!

 

“The truth is that insecurity has two sides: there’s the sensationalized ones and also the business ones. In my view, the kidnapping and killings reported are far cries from the Business ones that are usually not reported.

 

“Another version of insecurity which is bothersome to the nation is the activities of the Fulani Herdsmen whose militant arm has been declared the fourth most deadliest terror group in the world by Global Terrorism Index!

 

Fulani Herdsmen activities; A very disturbing thought is the access of these heartless species to the sophisticated weapons they brandish.

 

“More worrisome is the notorious idiosyncrasies that their tribe owns Nigeria and the best they could do is to hold us by the jugular. The farmlands are being recklessly trespassed and the owners, mercilessly killed or brutalized.

 

He noted that the genesis of the administration’s woe was the so-called subsidy removal which the people are still finding difficult to understand.

 

“The issue of crude oil being given to foreign refineries in exchange for finished products and a fair knowledge of international oil marketing makes the subsidy story ridiculous to a large extent.

 

“Somehow, it sometimes looks like our leaders make appointments trying to satisfy a handful of persons as against the hundreds of millions whose duty called them to serve!

Opinion

Eze Replies Chibuike Ikenga on His Utterly Abrasive Comparison of Wike with Amaechi

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“…Both are Empowerment Machines. The only difference is that those empowered by Amaechi are not as appreciative as those empowered by Wike. This notwithstanding, comparing the level of empowerment as done by Amaechi to that of Wike is like comparing River Niger with Ntawogba Creek in Port Harcourt.

 

Appointments in NIMASA and NPA alone dwarf all current appointments influenced by Wike and when you add the appointments of a Federal University Vice Chancellor or a University Teaching Hospital Chief Medical Director (CMD), you can come to the realization that Wike’s appointments are mere boy-boy appointments….”

 

According to Hon. Chief Ikenga Chibuike, erstwhile CTC Chairman, Ikwerre LGA and incumbent Spokesperson of the Nyesom Wike faction of APC, Rivers State: “Chief Eze not, minding your disposition, the fact remains that Wike is far better than Amaechi.”

 

First, Wike rewards loyalty while Amaechi punishes or destroys loyalty.

 

Besides, Amaechi will reap bountifully for blackmailing me after my sacrifices. I only pray we are alive. Money isn’t everything, Chief.

 

See what Wike is doing with his position to empower his supporters and you can understand why I feel that he is better than Amaechi.”

 

HIGHLIGHTS:

Hon. Chief Ikenga Amaechi was an appointee of Rt. Hon. Barr. Chibike Rotimi Amaechi when he was the Governor of Rivers State as the Chairman CTC of Ikwerre LGA

 

Both Rt. Hon. Barr Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi and Chief Barr Nyesom Wike are all of Ikwerre extraction of Rivers State. Wike was the Chief of Staff to Amaechi when he was the Governor of Rivers State and was later recommended by Amaechi to be appointed as a Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

 

Wike and Senator/Barr Magnus Abe were arrowheads in Amaechi’s tortuous journey to the Brick House as Governor, especially when he left for Ghana on exile.

 

Both governed Rivers State for eight years each and served at various times as Ministers of Federal Republic of Nigeria.

 

Similarly, the duo emerged first runners-up in the Presidential Primaries of their various political parties in Nigeria, the PDP and APC for the 2023 general elections.

 

EZE WHO WORKED CLOSELY WITH THE TWO OUTSTANDING LEADERS FROM RIVERS STATE REACTS:

 

Below is Chief Eze’s reaction to Ikenga’s comparison:-

 

Ikenga my brother, it is pitiable, and I find it uneasy to settle that the staggering pursuit of relevance in the political playground could reduce you into a merry mockery of the virtues you once held dear to. And more worrisome is the very fact that the authoritative code of morals has lost its force and effect in your beloved but checkered conscience.

 

The fact remains that Amaechi and Wike are opposite of each other in character and action, nay in all respects. They are like two parallel lines that do not meet; one representing light; the other stack darkness. But one striking semblance of relevance in both is that they are leaders; but one in his customary characteristics is grotesque mockery of a leader.

 

Nonetheless, from whichever perspective one may look at the two, one static fact is that they have made their contributions, each in his own way and with what he has, in nation building.

 

For clarity, before I divulge my position, let me reiterate that some people who do not understand my relationship with Wike may always think that I hold a grudge against him and that my position in matters that concern him will always be antagonistic.

 

For the records, let me use this opportunity to highlight two or three major contacts between me and Wike that should put minds of such thinkers in the right perspective.

 

First, when Amaechi appointed Wike as the Director-General of his re-election campaign in 2010, Wike submitted my name as his Director Media/Publicity but Amaechi rejected his submission and gave reasons why I should not head the Media Wing of his Campaign Organization.

 

In 2009, when the EFCC came for Wike and then SSG Magnus Abe, Wike directed that I should be contacted to issue a statement against EFCC and I complied. The effect of my compliance coupled with other collaborations led the EFCC to sheath their sword.

 

We have worked together in several other businesses of interest under the Amaechi administration.

 

These having been said, it is crystal clear that I and Wike hold no evil against each other; reason being why I am always objective in my criticisms of him and his political activities.

 

The roles that both Amaechi and Wike have played in most of their public lives are there in the public domain and the stand of any contributor to this issue may be influenced depending on which divide such a fellow may belong.

 

I will like to consider the issues you raised in this matter in three perspectives:

 

1. The type of Politics that both Wike and Amaechi play:

 

2. Their Influence as Regards Empowering their Supporters

 

3. Ikenga’s Personal Grudges against Amaechi and his Support for Wike

 

4. Conclusion:

 

1.

The type of Politics that Wike and Amaechi Play:

 

It will take a very long time to begin to highlight the inputs of both Amaechi and Wike and the roles they played in the development or otherwise of Rivers State and probably their contributions to the Nigeria political space.

 

In a bid not to bore you, let me state that Amaechi is more of a progressive, a pragmatic and futuristic leader while Wike on the other hand is more of a destructive and egoistic leader; full of himself, unlearned, hollow-brained, a power monger, and morally bankrupt.

 

Amaechi while as governor confronted insecurity headlong; and it was the period when insecurity was on the peak in Rivers State. He deployed innovative strategies to contain the situation. In the other hand, Wike, on becoming governor destroyed all those machineries and security architecture put in place by Amaechi. And as a result, the menace of insecurity returned and ravaged the state unrestrained till date.

 

Secondly, to save Nigeria from the current hunger hardship facing us as a nation, Amaechi set up the Songhai Farm that was capable of feeding the entire nation. Wike came and destroyed that farm. The farm had thousands of Rivers people under its employment but they all lost their jobs under Wike.

 

Both the Banana Farm, the Buguma Fishery, the Oil palm trees set-up to make Rivers State a self-sufficient state set up by Amaechi were all destroyed by Wike when he assumed office as Governor. Again, his display of poor leadership took food off the tables of families and households.

 

In view of the educational advancement of Rivers State, Amaechi built secondary schools and primary schools that was rated better than most of the Universities in Nigeria, Wike came and turned those schools to hideouts for criminals and safe habitation for reptiles.

 

He finally handed out academic institutions to the military as training centres. Yet, Rivers State was classified as one of the educationally disadvantaged states, in which case, the state needed more academic centres than military facilities.

 

Amaechi came and employed over 13,000 teachers at a time, the first of such an exercise in Africa to teach in those schools. Wike came and stopped the payment of most of these teachers.

 

Amaechi came and offered scholarships to hundreds of our children, Wike came and stopped those scholarships and asked those outside the country to come back without completing their studies, citing lack of fund as reason; but same Wike sent his own children to the UK to get the best education with Rivers money.

 

Amaechi used Rivers money to develop Rivers State but Wike oñ his own side became Father Christmas in Nigeria, donating billions of naira to other government and installing governments in states; a man who could not pay school fees for children of his state? Who does that!

 

The syringe factory at Rumuosi is now confirmed dead. It was full of life when Amaechi handed over to him.

 

Rivers State was home to the Hausas, Fulanis, Igbos, Yorubas and many other tribes in Nigeria when Amaechi was Governor; Wike came and ensured that most of their businesses in the State collapsed.

 

While Amaechi was governor the civil servants salaries and pension of pensioners were paid when due; Wike came and made their lives a living hell.

 

Amaechi had a vision of building a new Port Harcourt City to decongest the present Port Harcourt through setting up the Greater Port Harcourt City but Wike came and distorted the whole set up.

 

While Amaechi was the Governor of Rivers State he attracted a lot of both local and foreign investments and Wike ensured that those foreign Investors ran away fron the State.

 

During the period of Amaechi, he “scored yet another first with the unveiling of Port Harcourt as the first city in Nigeria to become the UNESCO World Book Capital defeating famous cities like Oxford and Moscow to become the UNESCO World Book Capital 2014, can anybody mention one international award won by the State during the destructive regime of Wike.

 

I don’t want to go further as trying to compare these great sons of Rivers State and what they stand is attempting to compare Light with Darkness.

 

The above notwithstanding, at the national level, google both Wike and Amaechi and you’ll get the results.

 

THISDAY NEWSPAPER accorded Amaechi an award as the Best Minister of the Decade and the records are there even for sycophants to see that means that Amaechi is better than both past and present Ministers of Federal Republic of Nigeria.

 

Amaechi is a very clean, focused, visionary leader and nationalist with interest in nation building, while the destructive politics of Wike will take Nigeria 20 years aback. The facts are there for any interested scholar to peruse through. This caused the recent Organisers of the National Constitutional Amendment Confab to invite Amaechi as one of her speakers.

 

2.

Their Influence as Regards Empowering their Supporters:

 

Both are Empowerment Machines. The only difference is that those empowered by Amaechi are not as appreciative as those empowered by Wike. This notwithstanding, comparing the level of empowerment as done by Amaechi to that of Wike is like comparing River Niger with Ntawogba Creek in Port Harcourt.

 

Appointments in NIMASA and NPA alone dwarf all current appointments influenced by Wike and when you add the appointments of a Federal University Vice Chancellor or a University Teaching Hospital Chief Medical Director (CMD), you can come to the realization that Wike’s appointments are mere boy-boy appointments.

 

So, asking me to consider how Wike is empowering his supporters proves how myopic humans can be some times because most of the appointments so far Influenced by Wike are mere messengers and security guards to most of the appointments Amaechi made.

 

3

Ikenga’s Personal Grudges against Amaechi and his Support for Wike:

 

My dear Ikenga, you may not know but the fact is that whenever you bring up this issue before me, I cry not necessarily for Amaechi who has suffered untold hardship and injustice in the hands of those he has empowered but how those he nurtured into manhood deliberately lay him open to the jeers of mockeries of selfish jerks.

 

What exactly did Amaechi do to you people? Some people brought a report to Amaechi that you are working underground for Wike. Trust Amaechi, he never believes in gossips, he confronted you with those facts and instead of you to address them, you resorted to shouting and taunting your own very brother and benefactor. You forgot how he appointed you as the Chairman of Ikwerre LGA.

 

My plea to you to do your best to reconcile with your brother was to no avail.

 

I recall in 2013 when we brought APC into Rivers State and Wike and his defunct GDI group at that time made it impossible for us to move around. We were to hold a rally at either Isiokpo or Aluu in Ikwerre Local Government Area under your jurisdiction. You took the risk by leading the Team by Walking the distance by foot while we followed in bulletproof vehicles. You were handsomely rewarded. You got federal appointment. It seems you have forgotten how Amaechi appointed you Chairman of your Local Government in Care-Taker-Committee capacity, the CTC yourself and Tony Okocha are fighting against.

 

On a serious note, my brother Ikenga, come to think of it, is it not the same Wike you denied working with then, in the presence of Amaechi, that you are now kowtowing to and praising to high heavens? So, what was the basis of your denial? Do you not think that having aligned with Wike, the allegation is substantiated?

 

When I look at the lives of Sen Godswill Akpabio, Senator Omo Agege and others who have betrayed Amaechi and what they are currently going through, I fear the God that Amaechi serves. So, telling me that Amaechi will live to regret blackmailing you or that he betrays loyalty is merely calling a dog a bad name in order to hang it.

 

A man who got these appointments and still turns round to betray the benefactor and call him names and accuse him of not rewarding loyalty must be the most ungrateful man on earth.

 

Amaechi is innocent and God will soon prove it to us all. it is just a matter of time.

 

I give Wike till 2026 when most of those he calls his structure may have left him and you will come to understand what the power of Karma is all about.

 

4.

Conclusion:

 

In conclusion, no matter whatever may be your position, it will be totally unfair to compare darkness with light. Amaechi is the Master and will always remain the Master and no amount of blackmailing will change this fact.

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Opinion

AS TINUBU BUILDS THE COUNTRY OF OUR DREAMS – NIGERIANS SHOULD NOT REPEAT THE MISTAKE OF 2012 – By Ben Afolami

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It is regrettable and pathetic that we Nigerians love to eat our cake and want to have it back.

 

Almost all facets of our public life as a nation have been subsidized; from PMS, to electricity and education, down to transport, and to everything the dollar can buy. After the government spends such a huge chunk of its revenues running into trillions to do subsidies yearly, we turn around to ask for good roads, portable water, stable electricity, good education, standard transportation facilities, good jobs, and a 21st-century security system among other dividends of good governance. No, it is not possible, we cannot eat our cake and also have it back.

 

As it stands today, It is better for renowned World Class Economists, in the class of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and the former CBN Governor Lamido Sanusi who saw all of these coming, and who knows that the worst is yet to come, not to comment on the present state of our economy and that of the nation, as they can be largely misunderstood not to have empathy or sympathy for Nigerians or be accused of been partisan. And let’s I forget, if anyone is telling you that Peter Obi or Atiku would have done better than Tinubu, the person is either uninformed, playing politics or deliberately deceiving you. Nigeria today is structurally defective. 1000 Abraham Lincoln can’t perform any magic. Worst still is the fact that, last administration borrowed Nigeria into comma.

 

I have only chosen to objectively put this up to enlighten us. Because, another protest like the 2012 version to resist the ongoing economic surgical reforms, will throw Nigeria backward by another 50 years same way the 2012 protest took us 25 years backwards and of course where we are today. The endurance we rejected and failed to undergo in 2012, we are going through tenth of its folds just 12 years later. With total subsidy removal, GEJ and Dr. Okonjo-Iweala asked us to buy PMS at ₦141/liter in 2012. Today with 50% partial removal, we are buying at ₦600/l. We might eventually buy it at ₦1300/L. Time!!!

 

So, this write-up is only for those of us who seek knowledge to know the truths and face reality. You don’t need to come for me o, as we are in it together. I am not a politician, neither do I hold any public office. I am only a concerned Nigerian who feels the next generation which my children will be among, should not face what we are going through now.

 

Ordinarily, this type of sensitization should come from the Government itself. There should be presently, ongoing town hall meetings across the country with opinion leaders, traders, artisans, religious and traditional leaders led by President Tinubu himself – sensitizing all of us on why the current tough policies are the only way out of the unfortunate circumstances our nation have found itself – why the future of our children and the prosperity of our nation we all seek, is directly dependent on these variables.

 

The sensitization sessions must come with all the data available. Telling the people how much is been saved. The infrastructural policies to pursue afterward and how it is going to ameliorate the sufferings of the common man in the long term. Unfortunately, President Tinubu is repeating the costly mistake GEJ made in 2012 – poor communication, sensitization, and strategy. Most Nigerians heard the word subsidy for the first time in 2012. Up till now, some PhD holders only hear the word, and use it every day but do not understand its workings. Unfortunately, too, President Tinubu led the 2012 protest – you say Karma is real?

 

Yes, it is an admissible fact that most Nigerian leaders are corrupt. From the politicians to the civil servants down to the altar. This is evident by the headlines of corrupt activities that dot our National dailies daily. However, it should be known that no country is free from corrupt individuals and leaders. Even the best and most powerful countries of the world have their share of corrupt leaders. Former US President, Donald Trump is currently facing criminal charges. At the height and heat of the Ukrainian war last year, Ukrainian President Zelensky took part of the donations to war victims in his country to buy one of the most expensive houses in Egypt and registered it with his mother-in-law’s name. So, it is not corruption alone that has completely held us backward, though it is a fact that corruption had its fair share.

There are two realities that we Nigerians have failed to come to terms with as a developing nation. Firstly, we have a very poor economic system allegedly occasioned by different kinds of subsidies; from Fuel subsidies to electricity down to dollar subsidies. Secondly, we believe Nigeria is a rich country – Yes, we are rich, but compared to our population, Nigeria is a “Poor Giant”.

 

LET’S TALK ABOUT SUBSIDIES.

 

Subsidy is a regime whereby the government pays a portion or percentage of the real cost of an item. As of today, the real and landing cost of PMS is about ₦1300 per liter, just like we find it in the price of diesel in Nigeria. In neighboring Benin Republic, PMS is equivalent to ₦1,600/l and as high as ₦2080/l in countries like Mali and Burkina Faso. In the US and Canada, it is equivalent to ₦1,000/l. These are countries without subsidies. Market forces dictate prices. In fact, what we have today in Nigeria despite the ₦600/l is partial PMS subsidy removal.

 

Now that we buy PMS for ₦600 per liter in Nigeria, who is paying for the remaining ₦700? – is it God or our ancestors? No, it is the government. The ₦700 extra and excess that you and I don’t pay, which the Government pays on our behalf is what we call subsidy. And the ₦700/l is from the revenues of the Government generated through Oil sales. It means ₦700 per liter multiplied by millions of liters consumed in Nigeria daily. How can government have enough revenue to sponsor infrastructural programs, good education, research and development with a sound security system?

 

As of the last time I checked, the World Bank estimated that Nigeria needs a whooping $30 trillion to develop our infrastructural deficiency to full scale for an over 200 million population. That is $1 trillion capital budget for 30 years. Yet our total last budget is ₦28 trillion – equivalent to a paltry $18.6B, of which less than 50% of that money goes into capital expenditure. How many $9Bs is in 1 trillion dollars, to meet up with just a year’s needed capital expenditures? So even if the government uses all revenue generated to invest in infrastructural development, we still have a very long way to go let alone they still have to pay subsidy from it.

 

We do not believe that Nigeria is a poor country? Okay, let’s travel a bit.

 

Nigeria pumps just 1.4m barrels of Crude Oil daily for its over 200 million population. Saudi Arabia pumps 12m barrels daily for its just 35 million population. Russia produces about 10m barrels daily before the war for its 143 million population. And about 4m barrels per day for each of Canada and Iraq for their 38 million and 44 million population respectively. The United States is the highest producer globally, followed by Saudi Arabia, Russia, Canada, and Iraq in second, third, fourth, and fifth positions respectively.

 

Our last budget was equivalent to $18.6B the highest ever for a population of over 200m. The United States budgets an average of $5 trillion yearly for its population of 331m. The UK budgets €1.2 trillion for its just 67 million population. Saudi Arabia budgets $334B for its 35m population. Canada budgets $457B for its 38m population. Iraq budgets $153B for its 43m population. Yet, these countries still struggle economically and sometimes enter into recession. Can we now see how poor Nigeria is, in terms of revenue generation? Unfortunately, our remaining resources such as Bitumen, Gold, and Uranium among others are neglected because of oil.

 

Sadly too, out of the 1.4m barrels per day for over 200m people, the Nigerian government still uses almost 50% of the revenues for subsidies. And we in turn expect to have world-class infrastructural facilities and a booming economy like the US, UK, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Canada, and Iraq which don’t have such subsidies. No, it is not possible. Now we see, that to have the nation of our dreams, all subsidies including that of PMS must go.

 

A very unfortunate side of this subsidy issue is that, big businesses in Nigeria also benefit from PMS subsidies like we the citizens do to develop their companies. In order words, as it benefits the citizens, business sectors who should pay for everything used for the production of items that they intend to profit from also benefit from the subsidy to fund their operations. They too buy it the amount we do. This is aside from the monumental corruption that has greeted the subsidy regime in Nigeria. Imagine MTN, a South African company buys PMS for all their operational vehicles same price that we the citizens buy it, and afterwards repatriate their profits to South Africa.

 

Of course, it is pertinent to add that, ordinarily, PMS should be a luxury just like it is in most advanced countries and economies. The reason why the increase in the cost of PMS in Nigeria affects every sector of the economy is because we depend on it for every facet of our lives. In Nigeria, we need PMS to power our generators for private and business use, we use it for our daily transportation and in most cases, transportation of goods and services. So, when there is an increase in its price, it affects the cost of human transportation then goods and services.

 

But in the advanced economy, it is not so. From avalanches of coal and electricity-powered train systems to transport humans, down to the ones that transport goods and services. The train transport system covers almost every nook and cranny of those countries. In addition, we have busses that shuttle other short distances, all at a very affordable rate. In those countries, you don’t need a car. Buying a car is a luxury, and so is buying PMS.

 

Now that we don’t have such world-class transportation facilities, the Government needs money to put them in place so that we too one day will no longer need PMS before our lives can function. The cost of PMS will no longer affect our daily lives. But the Government doesn’t have such money now. All the revenue they generate is not enough, let alone that they have to pay subsidies from the little they have. We can only endure, however, make them accountable for every kobo they safe from our sufferings just like they make the government accountable in advance climes too.

 

NOW LET’S TALK ABOUT THE DOLLAR SUBSIDY!!!

 

Dollar is unarguably the most prominent word in the mouth of every Nigerian these days. This is because, for everything you want to buy, you are been told that the “Dollar has Increased”. You go to buy an item in the morning at a particular price, you get there in the afternoon the price has changed. Well, that is correct. Truly, the value and rate of dollar to naira has increased and largely galloping. But, did the rate actually increase? No.

 

The second fundamental economic policy to save the country from total collapse after the partial PMS subsidy removal on 29th of May 2023 by President Tinubu was the unification of the FX rate and allowing the rate to be determined by forces of demand and supply.

 

Before that bold and courageous step by President Tinubu, what the government did in the past due to lack of political will and to avoid an uprising as it is currently been drummed across the country, was to fix the rate of dollar to Naira. Fixing the exchange rate means the exchange rate in our country is not determined by market forces. The government pays for any excess that is accruable over the fixed price. Another subsidy you can call it.

 

In other words, before the unification of the exchange rate with that of the parallel market, the dollar sold at the official exchange rate for around ₦460/ dollar and ₦750 per dollar at the parallel market. The ₦460 is the fixed price by the government. The ₦750 at the parallel or black market is the price determined by forces of demand and supply. So, it means the Government had been subsidizing dollars with about ₦300 for each dollar we buy at the official FX. So as the government pays about ₦300, multiplied by the millions of dollars requested daily, we use the ₦300 subsidy for education abroad, BTAs, buying foreign wines and expensive shoes among other luxuries and things we naturally may not have needed if the government had not subsidized the dollar, because those items would have been much costlier as we today have them. Unfortunately, too, this dollar subsidy is still from the little revenue and meager FX the government generates from crude oil sales.

The reason why this new policy has scattered the whole country is because, Nigeria is a largely dependent country. We import almost everything we need. Yes, almost everything. We produce what we don’t consume (Crude Oil) and consume what we don’t produce such as refined products, machinery, and even the food we eat.

 

Now that the Government has stopped subsidizing the dollar, and almost all businesses in Nigeria import their inputs or even goods, aside from the dollar demands for foreign education, coupled with the activities of speculators and arbitrage, the rate of dollar to naira has continued to rise at a geometric rate. Noteworthy too is that there is a global inflation occasioned by the wars in Ukraine and Gaza.

 

Why is the dollar our headache, when naira is our currency? Let’s discuss.

 

Why should we need dollars, if we produce all the cars we need? If we produce all the ammunition our military needs. All the clothes we wear. All the food we eat. And all the medications we consume. Why should the dollar be our headache when none of us go outside the country for medical check-ups or further education? So long as all of these things are not available in our country, and we have to import them, then we must remain a servant to the dollar.

 

The original meaning of Foreign Exchange is that, countries exchange goods and services. Saudi Arabia produces a massive volume of oil. They pay her in dollars. She then uses that dollar to buy ammunition and machinery from the US or Russia. So Saudi Arabia cannot produce ammunition, however, she has to use oil that she has to EXCHANGE for ammunition she cannot produce. However, Saudi Arabia does not import food, refined products, and major technical know-how and expertise such as aviation.

 

In the case of Nigeria, we produce very little oil, and we want to exchange it for a lot of things that we don’t produce. From cars, to machinery, to ammunition, the clothes we wear, refined products, medicine, technical know-how such as aviation services, food we eat, and even fish. We depend on importation for almost everything we need for a paltry 1.4m barrels of crude oil that account for 90% of our Foreign Exchange (Dollar) And if you want the dollar to be cheap? It is not possible. The resultant effect is that as there is little available dollar that flows into the country from crude oil sales, there is massive naira chasing the little dollar for the plethora of demands that confront our imports. When demand exceeds supply, the prices continue to increase.

 

We have heard in the past that the naira was once higher in rate compared to the dollar. That is very correct. It happened in the periods of 1960s. Nothing has really changed about that same dollar. What has changed is our import demand. During that period, we do not import food, in fact, we had excess to export. We produced our own cars. We produced our own cloth and exported cotton. Malaysia came to take our palm tree seedlings. There was no demand for medical check-ups and there were limited requests for foreign education. The world literally depended on our palm oil, groundnut, cashew, and cotton. It was the excess money or dollars from those transactions that Awolowo was able to build the first Television Station in Africa even ahead of France. He also built Cocoa house and most of the major roads we use in South West up till today.

 

How is Tinubunomics Going to Help Nigeria?

 

The current Tinubu policies if allowed to stay will have multiple effects on our economy and how we grow as a nation.

 

Firstly, the policy is expected to make more money available to the government. By so doing government at all levels is expected to have more money for infrastructural development and expenditures. Take, for example, money saved on the subsidies should be used to massively develop our electricity generation to such an extent that an average village in Nigeria should have a 12-hour supply of power daily for a start. If we achieve this, demands on PMS and Diesel will reduce. And for the fact that electricity will be cheaper compared to fossil fuel, it will in the long run affect the prices of goods and services.

If the government is done with the electricity supply, the money saved further will be used for massive transportation facilities. There should ambitious plan for train system to link up the whole country such that we will no longer have any heavy-duty trucks on our major roads. Trains should transport our cement, rice, cocoa, and other industrial goods. Another positive effect of that is that there will be reduced pressure on our major roads and the government will not have to spend billions of dollars yearly to rehabilitate our roads. As pressure gradually reduces on government revenue we can begin to talk of an affordable and accessible health care system and good education can follow. Otherwise, we cannot eat our cake and have it back.

 

Secondly, the policies are expected to drive massive local production. How this is expected to happen is that, by the time the dollar continues to go out of our reach either to buy input for businesses or to import goods, we will turn to alternative ways of getting those goods and sources for those materials. And the only way left is to turn to our local sources for those demands such as massive agricultural investment, so with time, our demands for dollars will not only decrease but there will massive employment across all sectors. 80% of current Nigerian workers both in private and public sectors are into rendering services. Only 20% are into real production.

 

Lastly, the policies are expected to discipline us to eschew waste of resources. For every item or service that we enjoy, there is a cost for it. If you are not paying directly, someone is bearing the cost somewhere. In the case of Nigeria, the Government. It is in Nigeria that you will leave your home appliances and security lights on and travel for months. No one dares that in advance country. People buy foreign wines that have been subsidized through the subsidies on the dollar and just “pour champagne”. It is in Nigeria, that an individual will have different types of cars for different purposes and outings only because PMS is cheap.

 

Take for example, since there was partial removal of PMS subsidies, most of us have cautioned ourselves on unnecessary travel and 24-hour running of generators. If we don’t know, all these reduced wastages have in the long run reduced the demand for refined PMS and had a significant effect no matter how small on our FX demands direction. So, one of the fundamental purposes of subsidy removal is to ensure every consumption is valued.

 

Conclusively, I will urge the citizenry to henceforth make the government accountable for every kobo generated and appropriated. Every monetary infraction and corruption should be treated with the same ferocity as the hunger and anger we currently endure. All wastages of government and governance should be resisted in the strength of ENDSARS.

 

Labor Unions should not only ask for salary increases but mobilize the citizens for accountability advocacies, forums, and platforms. The Labor Union’s demands for salary increase will only send the dollar to around ₦3,500 per dollar. The salary increase will lead to more money in circulation and more naira chasing the few available dollars and the rate of dollar consequently increases. In the end, the new increase returns to the old value.

 

Finally, in the long run, if the above measures come to play, pressure will reduce on both PMS and Dollars. And their prices will drastically come down. Time!!!

 

We have a great country called Nigeria, but we all must sacrifice to achieve that greatness. The future is bright and beautiful.

 

Ben Afolami is a Financial Expert and Investment Analyst.

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Agriculture

Insights into the Global Cassava Opportunities: Understanding the Landscape  – By Dr Adeola Odedina 

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Over the past few weeks, the social media sphere has been abuzz with a certain video showcasing cassava processing from a specific county (Name withheld).

 

Predictably, the video quickly went viral, coinciding with a period of elevated prices for gaari/cassava. As a seasoned cassava expert and farmer, many of my admirers forwarded the video to me, accompanied by questions like…

 

“High Chief Dr. Odedina, why can’t we replicate this?”

My response is simple and direct:

First and foremost, Nigeria reigns as the top producer of cassava globally, yielding over 60 million metric tonnes annually. However, the sobering reality is that we consume over 80 percent of this production as gaari, fufu, or akpu.

 

In 2006, during the inception of the Presidential Initiative on Cassava, I had the privilege of actively participating alongside other stakeholders on Cassava, precisely a collaborator on pre emotive management of Cassava Mossic disease and we multiplied and recommended top Cassava varieties that formed the basis of high yield been experienced today.The landscape initially shifted positively, but later took a downturn when investments in cassava processing faltered due to the lack of inclusive and sustainable supply of raw material to industries persuaded to be established to use Cassava as raw materials.

 

A few years later, the Bill Gates Foundation and other global donors launched the largest cassava intervention projects in Africa, namely CAVA 1 and CAVA 2 (Cassava Adding Value for Africa). I was honored to serve as the Productivity Advisor for these projects in Nigeria and other African nations

Over the span of eight years, significant efforts were made to unlock the immense potential of cassava and its derivatives, such as Glucose Syrup, ethanol, starch, and High-Quality Cassava Flour for various applications like bread and biscuits. Nigeria took the lead due to its strength, size, zeal, and commitment. While only a few flash driers were installed in Ghana, Malawi, and Tanzania, Nigeria boasted more than 20 in one state alone. I remember spending some time in the Northern states collaborating with cassava processors to ensure sustainable raw material supply. Remarkably, there are more large cassava processing firms in a single state in Nigeria than in any other country in the world or Africa. These mega-scale facilities process over 300 tonnes of cassava daily,Yes. each of those factories

Utilising up to 300 to 500 fresh Cassava roots per day ( 500 long trailers per day!) producing products like Gaari and Starch for both local consumption and export, thus presenting ample job opportunities for farmers and youth. To provide a glimpse into these operations, I’ll share a video showcasing one of the large-scale cassava processing facilities I’ve been involved with in Nigeria. Stay informed about the facts on Cassava! Do not be misled!

The onus is on stakeholders and value chain actors to fashion out ways of reaping the benefits of the unique position of Nigeria in the world to facilitate how the crop can deliver food, jobs , foreign exchange and fuel Agricultural Industrialization.

 

 

Dr Adeola Odedina is the Immediate Past Honourable Commissioner for Agriculture in Ogun State, Nigeria

Former Rector of Moshood Abiola Polythecnic, Ogun State Nigeria

And Former Provost of Federal College of Agriculture Akure Ondo State Nigeria.

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