Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts

Slippery Slope Arguments – Food for Thought


By Uthman Akinbola
[15/04/13]
 
Suppose allowing an Action A (which is not objectionable) leads to an Action Z, which is objectionable, then one can argue that Action A should not be allowed, since it leads down the slope to the objectionable Action Z. This is the ‘Slippery Slope Argument (SSA)’.

SSAs are characterised by the fact that – we are less than perfect in making second-order distinctions between the good (unobjectionable) act and the bad (objectionable) act.

In other words, any slippery slope argument presupposes that:
We may not be able to make distinctions or abide by the distinction made between the unobjectionable and the objectionable.

The statement above is what David Enoch called the slippery slope argument’s Essential Premise.
            Action A is good in itself, while Z is bad (objectionable);
            But A may lead to Z, thus A should not be allowed –
            The Essential Premise is implied.

David Enoch further stressed that the essential premise is not just presupposed by an SSA alone, it is also a causal agent in the slippery slope process, and this means that when the causal story of a slippery slope situation is told the essential premise will be a part of that story.

He thereafter constructed an SSA against the use of SSAs.

Observations
(i)        David Enoch’s result implies that everybody would always be able to make distinctions between the unobjectionable and the objectionable, and abide by such distinctions. This is not true, as human beings are not endowed with the same strength of mind.
(ii)           (The result of) his treatise negates SSAs, the tool (SSA) he used is also negated.

Petroleum, the Nigerian Environment and the Petroleum Industry Bill


By Uthman Akinbola
[15/04/13]
The petroleum industry is the backbone of the Nigerian economy, accounting for over 90% of Nigeria’s total foreign exchange revenue. Nigeria is about the seventh largest producer in the world and the largest in Africa. Current daily production of crude oil in Nigeria is over 2 million barrels. However, there is an environmental cost of this economic gain to the Nigerian state. There is always an environmental cost of oil and gas exploration to any oil producing nation!

The world has seen several environmental sustenance efforts driven by the United Nations (through UNEP). From the environmental protection focus of 1972 Stockholm Protocol to the ‘Sustainable Development’ drive of the 1987 Brundtland Report. It was then that sustainable development was said to be about intergenerational equity. We also had. the Rio Earth Conference i.e. ECO-92 Summit in Rio de Janeiro, where debates centred around “Environment and Development” (having Man as the focus of the issue). There was also the Kyoto Protocol of 1997, where reductions of pollutant emissions were proposed.

Just last year (2012) the Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan attended the summit marking the 20 years of the Rio Earth Conference in Brazil. The focus was still sustainable environmental development.

However, Nigeria has not gained optimally from these efforts and also from the economic benefits derivable from petroleum. (The Gulf states are examples of economies that have gained immensely from the exploration of oil.)

Despite the overwhelming dependence on petroleum for man’s energy needs (and thus the massive exploitation of the oil resourse), over the last couple of decades world’s total reserves have actually gone up rather than down, as revealed in a paper in December, 2012 by Amama Mbabazi, the Ugandan Prime Minister. Also, we have read from several other reports that more oil and gas discoveries have been made on the African continent. This accounts for the increased presence of international economic and political power brokers in our own Gulf of Guinea, and hence offshore Nigeria.      

The August 2011 UNEP Environmental assessment report on Ogoni land (in Rivers State Nigeria – one of the OPAs) states:

Oil exploration and production projects may have impacts on the natural environment long before any oil is actually produced. These are complex, multi-faceted projects, with many different phases, including: land survey, land clearance for seismic lines, establishment of seismic and drilling camps, site preparation, infrastracture construction, drilling for oil (even when the effort is unsuccessful) and development of transportation infrastructure. Once a facility begins operating, others issues have to be dealt with, such as spills caused during oil production and the disposal of water (often salty and known as ‘produced water’) and flaring of gas (‘produced gas’) generated alongside the oil. All of these activities and their effects leave an environmental footprint.

Normally, the dillema of an oil producing state is ‘the exploration and production of oil for economic gains without upsetting the environment’. However, the situation of Nigeria is that this economic benefit ordinarily derivable from oil is frittered away, and no serious effort to protect the environment has been made. So the Nigerian state has no substantial economic gain to show for the environmental devastation from oil exploration. A case of double jeopardy. This is the first issue the Nigerian people must address.

The second issue is the roll-back of the already done damage to the environment. How do we institutionalise the restoration and regenration of the OPAs? How do we achieve the roll-back of the over four-decade long degradation that the OPAs air and water media, land and ecological biodiversity have witnessed? This is a challenge that we must confront.

Three main sources of hydrocarbon pollution in the oil producing areas are – oil spills; gas flares; and effluent and waste discharges. The major causes of the spill incidences include pipelines and flow lines leakage/blowouts, blowouts from well-heads and spills from flowstations. It also includes sabotage of oil facilities. Oil production involves the burning of hydrocarbon gases. The flaring of natural or associated gas is done as a by-product of the drilling of crude oil. Gas flares has negative impact on the local ecology and climate. One of the impacts, aside the raising of surrounding temperature, is light pollution, which subjects the living organism around the vicinity of the flare to 24-hour daylight. This destabilises diurnality and night-time patterns in animals.

The OPAs have experienced many major oil spills since production began in 1958 thereabouts. For instance.. The Niger Delta experienced two major oil spills, the Funiwa oil well blowout in 1980 and the Jones Creek oil spillage in 1998 that resulted in the greatest mangrove forest devastation ever recorded worldwide as stated in United Nations Development Program’s (UNDP) report on Nigeria in 2006.

The World Bank (2005) estimated that Nigeria flares about 75 per cent of the gas it produces due to the lack of a local market and infrastructure. This is an evidence of unsustainable production.

Another important issue is that about human development.

Generally, the communities from which oil is drilled often see the oil companies as vampires exploiting their resources, usually, to the point of exhaustion with little or no benefit to the people.

Addressing oil security and illegal bunkering is also important, for this erodes the revenue acruable to the FG. It also causes a lot of environmental damage. I donot believe that appealing to the international community to help us fight illegal oil bunkering will necessarily solve the problem.

There is no doubt that the oil and gas sector is very crucial in the industrial advances made by man and its importance is aptly described by Amama Mbabazi, the Prime minister of Uganda when he opined that: ‘Oil is a strategic resource that contributes to economic oportunity and energy security for the global market. Oil plays a dominant role in meeting the world’s energy needs, and this situation is expected to continue for decades to come. Even with the investments countries are making in renewable energy, energy efficiency and other measures to support a low-carbon economy, the International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook for 2009 still expects world oil demand to grow by one percent per year until 2030.’

He also asserted that ‘oil and gas are absolutely necessary to the world’s industrial economies. Together, they supply two-thirds of the world’s energy consumption. They also form the building blocks of over 30,000 different chemicals.’ This is why we have to take the oil industry with all seriousness and take maximum advantage of it for a robust national development.

Nonetheless, we must be mindful of the environmental impact of petroleum exploration, and strive to undo the mistake of the past, while embarking on measures to protect the environment against future degradation.

Way Forward
The Niger Delta Regional Master Plan is one important solution. The NDDC serving as Niger Delta Policy Council should address the Niger Delta policy issues and work to implement and ensure the success of the initiatives in 25, or so, areas covered in the Master Plan. Thus, many stakeholders must work together to achieve meaningful change. All levels of government and the NDDC, the oil companies, the organized private sector, civil society organizations and development agencies should form partnerships around the Master Plan for sustainable development and the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

The United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) Environmental Assessment report on Ogoni land (August 2011) has recommended some solutions, and some of these are applicable to the entire oil producing areas.

It is pertinent that Nigerian government study the UNEP report and work to adapt the recommendations therein to the entire OPAs.

Some of the recommendations include:

Due to the wide extent of contamination in Ogoni land and nearby areas, and the varying degrees of degradation, there will not be one single clean-up technique appropriate for the entire area. A combination of approaches will therefore need to be considered, ranging from active intervention for cleaning the top soil and replanting mangrove to passive monitoring of natural regeneration. Practical action at the regulatory, operational and monitoring levels is also proposed.

Comprehensive review of existing Nigerian legislation on contaminated site clean-up considering recent international developments in regulation and incorporating community consultation to determine remediation closure levels, so that decisions on new legislation are seen as both transparent and inclusive.

A Centre of Excellence for Environmental Restoration should be established in Ogoni land to promote learning in other areas impacted by oil contamination, in the Niger Delta and elsewhere in the world. Offering a range of activities and services, the Centre could run training courses in environmental monitoring and restoration and ultimately become a model for environmental restoration, attracting international attention.

Another important solution is that the Federal Government should institutionalize a form of the Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE) programme operated in the United States. It is a competitive grant programme that offers an innovative way for a community to organize and take action to reduce toxic pollution in its local environment, such that the kind of relationship and arrangements that allow some supposed elders and leaders, and few privileged youths, benefit from special treatment at the expense of the majority in the Niger Delta would be obliterated. The ‘rugged’ individualism along and within ethnic lines in existence at present does not augur well for environmental sustenance. Through that programme any community within the Niger Delta creates a partnership that implements solutions to reduce releases of toxic pollutants and minimize people's exposure to them. This programme may even be adapted for the whole of Nigeria through the Federal Ministry of Environment. In any case, it helps communities tread the path to a renewed environment.

The Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) may be a good step in the right direction. Thus, it should be seriously and sincerely addressed. National interest should override personal, regional and all other considerations. I believe that the focus or rallying point should be the maintenance of environmental fairness and justice for all. This the national assembly must take cognisance of in their deliberations towards achieving national development.

The issue of concentrating power or control of oil resource and licenses in the president’s hand through the minister of petroleum resources must be looked into. This is the same approach the Ugandan Oil Exploration Bill has taken and which is not good for the interest of the entire nation. We are aware of the self-styled dictator Museveni had turned himself into in Uganda, so one was not surprised that he pushed for such in the country’s oil bill. Is that the way we want to go?

It is better for a state to have such powers vested on government agencies and institutions rather than individual office holders, since agencies perform statutory functions often outside the direct supervision of the executive arm of government. This prevents subjecting the control of an important national resource like oil to the whims and caprices of one man or woman.

Nigeria: The North Does Not Control Nigeria's Oil Blocks

ALLAFRICA.COM
PREMIUM TIMES [07/03/13]

Opinion

Senator Ita Enang's spirited claim at the National Assembly Wednesday to the effect that 83% of the country's oil block is in the hands of northerners appears to be inspired from assertions contained in an old article by a newspaper commentator, Mr. Ross Alabo-George whose famous essay was titled Poverty And Deprivation: Why The North Is Poor.

In the excerpted refutation below, Toyin Akinosho, a petroleum geologist with over two decades of work at Chevron and now publisher of the well-regarded Africa Oil and Gas Report, argues angrily that such lines of thought canvassed by the likes of Senator Ita Solomon Enang and indeed Mr. Ross Alabo-George are merely hysterical, and tendentious, designed to mislead the public. Mr. Akinosho characterizes the arguments as crappy and crummy. It is excerpted from the African Oil+Gas Report for the value it brings to the current debate about Nigerians oil resources and the National Question.

Alabo-George's article plays up so well the sentiments that a good number of Nigerians, especially middle class types excluded from the spoils of the petroleum subsidy, and allied deliverables, nurse about the kind of leadership we have suffered since independence.

Nigeria: A Bold Bill for Change Opens Up the Debate On Nigeria's Oil Industry

ALLAFRICA.COM
AFRICAN ARGUMENTS [06/03/13]

Analysis


Ever since Nigeria's first oil find at Olobiri in 1956, the question of who should benefit and pay for the costs and consequences of oil production has been a contentious issue; often with little consensus amongst the key players - namely the Nigerian government, the oil companies, and the various communities affected - on who spilled what, where and when. Dealing with such a hornets' nest of interests has often seemed insurmountable, yet a bill before Nigeria's assembly and president seeks to change the situation.


Senator Dr. Bukola Saraki, a former governor of Kwara State, and currently the Chairman of the Senate committee for the environment, has tabled a bill aimed at strengthening the regulatory and institutional power of NOSDRA (National Oil Detection and Response Agency) - one of the agencies responsible for cleaning up oil spills in the country. His proposed bill and the contentious issue of who is responsible for cleaning up oil spills in the Niger Delta was the subject of a meeting held by the Royal African Society on Tuesday, 26th February at the offices of the law firm TLT. The panel included presentations by Senator Dr. Bukola Saraki; Barnaby Briggs, Strategic Relations Manager for Shell International; Nike Olafimihan, Head of Legal at Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC), and Joseph Croft, Executive Director of the Stakeholder Democracy Network, a UK based charity with offices in Port Harcourt, Nigeria.

Nigeria: The PIB Is Anti-Nigerian - Prof. Iyayi

ALLAFRICA.COM
VANGUARD [26/02/13]

Interview
PROF. FESTUS IYAYI, Head of Department, Business Administration at the University of Benin and former President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), in this interview attributed the rot in the Nigerian Universities to the Babangida regime which he accused of systematically killing university education and his verdict: no Nigerian university will attain a world raking in the midst of squalor, lack of facilities and poor funding. He also welcomes the merger of opposition parties, but added that the emerging party must have an ideology and vision on how to develop the country, just as he derides the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB as anti-Nigerian. Excerpts

Next year, Nigeria will be celebrating 100 years of amalgamation of the North and South by Lord Lugard . Is this worth celebrating?
I believe that the bringing together of the Protectorates of Southern and Northern Nigeria and the Colony of Lagos into one Nigeria is a blessing. America is a country of hundreds of millions of people, China is over one billion, so, the diversity is like creating a rainbow and for a rainbow to occur, there has to been unity, there has to been cohesion, there has to be a feeling of oneness.

Uganda: Museveni Clarifies On 'Besigye Lies' in Second Letter

ALLAFRICA.COM
NEW VISION [16/02/13]

President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni writes a second letter in which he makes clear what he calls lies or distortions by former Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) leader Dr Kizza Besigye. This comes only a week after he "disposed of the bulk of Dr. Besigye's lies" and as he had promised then, he writes again to start off from where he had stopped. Below is his letter. . .

************************************************

Clarification of Besigye's lies
By
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
16th February, 2013

Last week, I disposed of the bulk of Dr. Besigye's lies. I promised the readers that in another piece, I would deal with the remaining lies or distortions. These were: "Special Forces was created for Muhoozi"; "Poverty"; "We went to the bush to overthrow Army rule"; and "Power belongs to the people and not Army rule".

The Nigeria Satellites

By Uthman Akinbola [07/07/12]


Developed nations utilize space technology to explore and enhance development so as to create new forms of opportunities for their countries and citizens. They make use of different kinds of satellites to achieve this.

Satellites, i.e. artificial satellites, are objects placed into orbit around the earth for a variety of purposes, which could be communication or exploratory. They are placed into orbit by multi-stage rockets and are powered by batteries that are charged by solar cells and, in many cases, by nuclear generators. The first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, was launched by the Soviet Union in October 4, 1957. The first United States satellite, Explorer 1, was launched on January 31, 1958.

Satellites may be divided into three; environment, navigation and communication. Environment satellites are used for measuring density; temperature, the strength and direction of the geomagnetic field and for forecast of weather conditions. They are also useful in obtaining images of military value e.g. nuclear explosions in the atmosphere. Earth observation satellites (EOS) fall within this class.

Uganda: Editor's Q & A - How Has Museveni Stayed in Power?

ALLAFRICA.COM
THINK AFRICA PRESS [12/02/13]

Analysis
Think Africa Press' editor explains the dynamics behind the Ugandan president's support from the West, domestic control and staying power.

How has President Yoweri Museveni managed to become one of the world's longest serving heads of state?
Yoweri Museveni's 27 years in power is the exception in post-independence Uganda. The country's first president, Frederick Mutesa II, was deposed after less than three years in power.

His successor, Milton Obote, was the victim of a coup led by Idi Amin. Idi Amin was overthrown following the Uganda-Tanzania war. This paved the way for Obote to return to power before he was deposed once again, this time leading to the rise of Tito Okello. Tito Okello was deposed by Museveni in 1986.

NEWSMAKER-Michael Dell: Repairing a legacy?

REUTERS [05/02/13]
By Ben Berkowitz

Putting up cash and equity to take Dell Inc private
* Analysts say he will get more flexibility
* Questions remain over real potential for a turnaround

Feb 5 (Reuters) - Michael Dell once gave up day-to-day control of the computer company that bears his name - and everything began to go south. Now the billionaire is cementing his grip over the firm to try to restore it to its former glory.

The billionaire roped in private equity house Silver Lake and Microsoft Corp, to take his 28-year-old company private for $24.4 billion in the second-largest buyout in technology history.

In Tuesday's announcement, Dell - who once upbraided Apple Inc co-founder's Steve Jobs for trying to rescue the Mac-maker - enthused about the "exciting new chapter" his company was embarking upon.

Internet Email in Brief

By Uthman Akinbola

E-mail which stands for electronic mail, often spelt email or e-mail, is a method of composing, sending, storing, and receiving messages via a network of computer systems.

It is a form of sending and receiving electronic messages in a way similar to the mailing of letters or memos.

E-mail systems can be administered over the entire internet, and thus we have internet e-mail, or via an intranet. It provides an immediate (almost instantaneous) exchange of information at very little cost. It is a widely used form of communication in the world of today.

There are two kinds of internet e-mail systems. These are:
(i)         E-mail Client System
(ii)        Webmail System

Nigeria: Understanding Petroleum Industry JOA in Post World Financial Meltdown (II)

ALLAFRICA.COM
VANGUARD [05/02/13]

Part one of this article reviewed the Association of International Petroleum Negotiators (AIPN's) model Joint Operating Agreement (JOA) and the need for a revision to reflect current practices and conditions in the industry. Changes to operators' liabilities and default provision were also discussed.

In a JOA the operator is the party with the largest interest in the production and is responsible to the day to day running of the joint operation. In general, article 4 of the 2012 JOA, increased the standard or quality level of performance expected from the operator. The operator's expanded duties include a more exacting duty to establish a Health and Safety Plan (HSE) to achieve safe and reliable conduct of petroleum operation. This plan must be in conformity with the relevant laws and in a manner consistent with the standard and procedures generally adopted by the petroleum industry.

NIGERIA: Lagos to commence Oil Production from the discovered Aje Field soon

By Uthman Akinbola [01/02/13] 


The Lagos State Government on May 11, 2010 confirmed that oil and gas production and exploration would soon commence following a vast discovery of the natural resources in the Badagry area, which it described as a major breakthrough in the history of Lagos. This followed the declaration of Aje field a commercial prospect in February 2009.

The Aje field is operated by Yinka Folawiyo Petroleum Company Limited (YFP).

Aje field is currently in the development planning stage, with first production expected in 2014. The field is expected to reach a plateau production of 50,000-80,000 barrels of oil equivalent (boe) a day.

Criticisms on Climate Change

UTHMAN AKINBOLA [23/07/12]


The Consensus on Climate Change

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is a scientific intergovernmental body tasked with evaluating the risk of climate change caused by human activity. The panel was established in 1988 by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), two organizations of the United Nations.

National and international responses to climate change generally regard the UN climate panel as authoritative and so the panel has become the ultimate authority on climate science.

The view of IPCC is that human activities have been causing climate changes that threaten the survival of the human race.

Libya: Failed Nato Mission Exposes U.S. Generals

ALLAFRICA
PAMBAZUKA NEWS [15/11/12]

Opinion

The extramarital affair cited for the resignation of CIA chief Gen Petraeus is insignificant by far compared to his belonging to a section of US military and intelligence elite pursuing a complex right-wing global agenda.

Carter Ham has been removed as head of the US Africa Command (AFRICOM). General Petraeus resigned from the CIA on November 9. Rear Adm. Charles M. Gaouette was reassigned on October 26 as the commander of the USS John C. Stennis strike group. These three changes at the top of the US military establishment are all related to the failed NATO intervention in North Africa and the subsequent war and killings that have been unleashed by militias in Libya, especially in Benghazi.

These changes exposed the new autonomy and war fighting capabilities that were being experimented where the CIA and the leaders of the military command structures such as AFRICOM and Central Command (CENTCOM) made policy independent of the executive branch and civilian leadership. This experiment shattered with devastating consequences for the entire military apparatus ensnaring generals, financial speculators, media specialists on the military and politicians.

Private Jet for Pastor Oritsejafor: Why?

Iyabo Oshodi [21/11/12]

What is this world turning into? Religious leaders that should be epitome of piety are the perpetrators of evil or the prayer partners of thugs, thieves and  so on. For how do we explain the fact that indicted well-known corporate executives and bank CEOs found guilty of fraud are core financiers of our churches to such an extent that some have estates in their names on popular prayer and camp grounds. Some imams/alfas are the fortress of some fraudsters (419s) who dupe Nigerians. Shouldn’t religious organisations and leaders take time to investigate the source of the wealth of their members before they accept gifts from them?


Though it was said that the Bombardier 10-seater jet given to pastor Ayo Oritshejafor was donated by member of his church, but what will the CAN president do supposing the real donors of the jet , one way or the other, are also the financiers of Boko Haram? And that the gift is the blood money to expiate for the thousands of innocent christians killed by the sect.

Nigeria: Ribadu Report and Government's Typical Response


Opinion

When I heard that Malam Nuhu Ribadu, former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had been appointed Chairman of the Petroleum Revenue Special Task Force, I recalled an article I read entitled "scandalous scandals", in which the writer asserted that while financial and economic scandals were not uncommon all over the world, Nigerian scandals were indeed different. To buttress his point, he provided examples like the Watergate and Iran Contra scandals in the U.S., the government cocaine scandal in Panama, the Profumo and Fleet Street scandals in Britain, the Imelda Marcos shoe scandal in the Philippines, and the Hansie Kronje cricket scandal in South Africa. Although happening at different times and on different continents, all these scandals had a common denominator. Without exception, one "big man" (i.e. president, senior military official, Senior government minister or captain of industry) paid the price.

Re: Mr President’s Statement was based on Notorious Facts

Uthman Akinbola [05/10/12]
Following the President’s Independence Day broadcast of 1st October 2012, the Premium Times online newspapers published ‘President Jonathan lied in Independence anniversary broadcast’.  In response to that news article, the Presidency published:
Our attention has been drawn to reports from some opposition leaning media houses alleging that Mr President made some false claims about Nigeria’s standing in this year’s Transparency International anti corruption rating.
As is the practice worldwide, we accept the premise that whatever is published in the media and goes unchallenged is the truth. On this issue, the media published their synopsis of the most recent Transparency International report and BusinessDay. a well respected newspaper with a bias for business reporting in a headline on the 12th of September 2012 with the titled ‘FG anti-corruption initiative impacts Nigeria's global perception' said "The survey on global perceptions for 2011 versus 2001 showed that the third best improvement in the world was in Nigeria, with its score improving by 1.5 points".
The above quoted comments were relied upon in coming to the conclusion that Mr. President honestly came to in good faith. To this day, Transparency International has not disputed the findings of BusinessDay.

52nd Anniversary: Nigeria, under President G E Jonathan, is a Joke!


Uthman Akinbola [07/11/12]

President Jonathan continually makes a mockery of the Nigerian State with his actions, statements and lack of meticulousness! He unwittingly shocks us all the time, painting pictures that are not real. His performance is a far cry from his mandate i.e. people’s overwhelming confidence in him and the vastness of state resources at his disposal. Furthermore, he oppresses us by verbally assaulting us, pouring invective on us through his ‘attack dog’ Doyin Okupe.  He, no doubt douses the confidence of the people in the Nigerian Government. At present, the bane of our belief in the Nigerian Project is President (Dr) Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GEJ! Events surrounding the 52nd Anniversary of Nigeria are a pointer to this. His recent speeches (as regards the 52nd Anniversary) make a serious joke of the Presidency!  

Nigeria: Once Again, Ribadu Plays the Fool!



Opinion 

WHICH of the following statements, in your opinion, best reflects President Goodluck Jonathan's "honest-to-God" attitude to corruption?

(A) The "I don't give a damn" outburst provoked by the simple demand that he declare his assets publicly? Or

(B) this, from his inauguration speech: "The bane of corruption shall be met by the overwhelming force of our collective determination, to rid our nation of this scourge" and in which he declared anew a war against corruption in order to ensure that "the limited resources of this nation will be used for the growth of our commonwealth?"

From Okija Shrine to Kano

Daily Trust (Nigeria) [14/11/12]
Written by Candid Joe 

What are the security agencies and the courts waiting for when a man publicly admits, not once but twice, that he had material evidence to the committing of electoral offences, to wit rigging?

Let me be clearer. Last Monday, speaking at a seminar organized by the National Institute for Legislative Studies in Abuja, former president Olusegun Obasanjo threw what he thought was a good joke at former Kano State governor Malam Ibrahim Shekarau. To provide a little context, Shekarau defeated the incumbent PDP governor in Kano in the 2003 elections when Obasanjo was the president.

At this seminar, Obasanjo looked at Shekarau and said, “I want to thank former Governor Shekarau for what happened to him in Kano. What he did not know, which he may want to know today, is that he won that election with a very narrow margin and if I had yielded to pressure, that narrow margin would have been changed. He didn’t know that somebody wanted me to talk to the electoral body but I refused to do so.”