9jadiaspora

9jadiaspora The portal where Nigerians in diaspora find information, share and exchange ideas, get advice and be mentored, trade and collaborate with each other.

A Cyborg Business

Can you please add your signature? ✍️*RUN, OSINBAJO RUN !!!*We, the People of Nigeria hereby petition our Vice President...
18/02/2022

Can you please add your signature? ✍️

*RUN, OSINBAJO RUN !!!*

We, the People of Nigeria hereby petition our Vice President - Professor Yemi Osinbajo to contest for the Presidency of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in the 2023 Presidential election.

Nigeria needs a leader with integrity, passionate about service to the country, of impeccable credentials, tested and proven, to deliver the country of our dreams, for the good of all Nigerians.

Professor Yemi Osinbajo stands tall above all others as the most qualified for the job.

Your Excellency, your country needs you NOW !!!

https://chng.it/kLSKd28X5r

*RUN, OSINBAJO RUN !!!*

24/10/2020
29/04/2020

A clinically-tested ventilator that can work without electricity has been presented to the management of the University of Benin (UNIBEN) in Edo State,

  19Facts VS Myths
24/03/2020

19
Facts VS Myths

02/02/2020

Lessons From the Civil War

By Yemi Osinbajo

Premium Times February 1, 2020

We stand in the shadow of one of the darkest chapters of our nation’s history, surrounded by the artefacts and monuments to a terrible conflict.

This is neither the time nor the place for rehashing the polemics of justification and recrimination, and claims and counterclaims about the remote and immediate causes of the war. Many scholarly publications, histories, biographies, and brilliant works of fiction have been devoted to these issues and rightly so. Yet, a nation must always examine itself and reflect on its journey.

In a democratic society, this means a robust conversation over vigorously contested aspects of history. Such debate remains necessary if only to enhance our self-knowledge. But perhaps more importantly, to bring closure.

What we all agree on is that the Civil War from 1967-1970 was a defining national tragedy. A catastrophic conflict that scarred us as a people. Its’ cost in lives was massive, so was the cost in lost opportunities for national advancement. The spectacle of promising lives cut short in their prime, families ruptured, communities sacked and the environment poisoned by ordinance is one that redounds to our eternal regret.

Yet, we do not remember this seminal event in our history merely to indulge in the futility of regret, we engage in the discipline of remembrance so that we can learn from history and resolve that such horrors will never repeat themselves again on our watch. And we must do so not just this month, our nation’s month of remembrance of our fallen heroes, but every moment of our lives.

Indeed, the greatest tribute we can pay to the memories of those who made the supreme sacrifice for the survival of this union that we call Nigeria today is to ensure that the circumstances that led to the conflict are never re-enacted.

We cannot change the past, but it is within our power to ensure that history does not repeat itself and that we never again confront the awful consequences of abandoning dialogue and letting our darkest impulses drive us.

Sixteen years after the end of the war, Dim Chukwuemeka Ojukwu was asked if he thought the war resolved the issues for which it was fought. His reply is instructive, he said and I quote, “Wars hardly ever resolve issues. Wars are an aberration. Eventually, the issues still have to be dealt with.” In any event, it is evident that the cost of resolving our differences peacefully through dialogue is far less than trying to do so through war.

Chinua Achebe once described Nigeria as, I quote, “a nation favoured by providence.” I certainly see the hand of providence in our nation’s survival of that conflict. Unlike many other African countries which have known protracted multi-generational strife and perpetual division, our conflict ended after three years and we have suffered no relapse into such fratricide since then.

In the fifty years that have followed since the end of the war, we have invested in national integration, peace-building and reconciliation. That has been a less than a perfect task. Our road has not been easy and we have faced many challenges along the way. But these setbacks should not induce hopelessness or despondency but should constantly remind us that the stakes are high because of the incredible dividends of unity for us all.

Again, in the words of Achebe, I quote him again, “there are individuals as well as nations who on account of peculiar gifts and circumstances, are commandeered by history to facilitate mankind’s advancement. Nigeria is such a nation. The vast human and material wealth with which she is endowed bestows on her a role in Africa and the world, which no one else can assume or fulfill.”

Our historic mission therefore, is not just to build a nation that works for all of us, but to create a successful polity, an economic and social powerhouse capable of powering our continent to prosperity and renown. And yet, nation-building is hard work and bringing together the multiplicity of ethnicities, languages and creeds that make up this great land under one banner is an onerous but necessary task.

But the more difficult, but crucial work is that of emphasizing and ensuring, fairness, justice and equity amongst all ethnicities and religions. We must be open to addressing the concerns of all. Within this union, all of us must feel entitled to legitimately aspire to the limits and extents of our dreams and visions in public life and commerce.
For those of us that are old enough to remember the war, we must be mindful of the fact that the majority of Nigerians alive today are too young to have witnessed the Civil War and therefore have no memory of it. The last fifty years belonged to us, but the next fifty years belong to our children and their children and we have a responsibility to unshackle them from the ghosts of ancient grudges and grievances.

As elders, we must ensure that we do not poison the minds of the young with our own prejudices and affect their ability to take advantage of the opportunities available to them in their country. We must also avoid foisting the toga of victimhood and helplessness on the next generation.

The memory of the elders is crucial and supplies us with instructive lessons, but we must enable the vision and the imagination of our youth to flower untainted by the biases of the past.

Moments ago, I toured the War Museum with a group of students from the schools in the State. It was a tremendous learning experience for us. I was struck by how novel the war stories behind the artefacts were not just to me, but to the students. It was a reminder that while we must acquaint the younger generation with our history, we must also realize that this young generation does not see the world through the same lenses as we did in the 1960s.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie talks about the dangers of a single story and there is certainly a danger in casting Nigeria solely in terms of the narratives of those of us that witnessed the war. The generations born after the Civil War are navigating the adventure of being Nigerian on different terms from their forebears. Let us give them a chance to do better than ourselves.

Young Nigerians are intermarrying, migrating and co-mingling in the quest for love and livelihood; they are doing business together and forging alliances in civil society and politics across ethnic and religious divides. Social media may be a site of divisive debates, but it is also bringing young Nigerians together in spite of their diversity and helping them to forge a new collective consciousness.

Our children are showing us that it is possible to forge friendships and bonds across ethnic and religious lines that are even stronger than family ties and this in itself evokes the possibilities of unity in diversity.

One of our biggest challenges as a nation is that of providing opportunity and hope for our teeming young population. Our youth are among the most creative, energetic and dynamic on the continent and the South-East is home to Nigeria’s most entrepreneurial sons and daughters. Young Nigerians all over the country and in the Southeast in particular, require outlets that will enable them to maximise their potential.

We have listened to the voices of some of our young people in the South-East expressing their discontent, however, we do not hear a battle cry, but rather a cry for help. We are determined to continue providing them with the tools and resources that will enable them to make the most of their lives. This is the reason for our collaboration with the African Development Bank, AfDB to provide a $500million facility for startups and entrepreneurial loans. This is aside from the N10billion fund set aside by the Bank of Industry for the same purpose.

We are also working with the Central Bank of Nigeria towards the creation of the entrepreneur bank, in addition, a Shared Facility for MSMEs which will be launched at Ugbenike in Anambra State by April 2020 for MSMEs in the shoe production cluster.

Our young people are full of zest, ideas and creative energy and sometimes they get understandably frustrated with the inability of our institutions to keep pace with their vision and dynamism. But we must not let agents of discord weaponize this frustration and turn it into a severe rupture within the country. The opportunities that you need for growth and prosperity are all here in Nigeria and we are working every day both at the national and sub-national level and local government level to increase these opportunities.

What our young people need is not self-determination but self-actualisation, more opportunities, more support to attain their dreams and visions and we are committed to creating these opportunities.

Within years of the end of the conflict, the Igbos re-established themselves as the foremost entrepreneurs in our country and are now thriving everywhere across the vast expanse of our land.

The South-East is Nigeria’s natural industrial hub. Slowly and steadily, an industrial revolution is gathering momentum here in Abia and in the Southeast as a whole. From leatherworks and textiles to engineering, the “Made-in-Aba” label is emerging as an international brand. I do not say this lightly and without knowledge, I had the privilege of launching the National MSME Clinic at the Aba Polo Club in Abia on the 25th of January 2017 with over 15,000 participants.
Aside from Imo State, all other South-Eastern States have hosted the National MSME Clinic with a large attendance of MSMEs. Abia State government won the inaugural award for MSME State of the year in 2018.

Miss Nora Oransoye from Abia State, won the 2019 Outstanding Female MSME of the Year and received a brand new car and prize money.

This zone is already a regional manufacturing hub servicing West and Central Africa. Goods from here are heading to Cameroon, Ghana, Togo, Equatorial Guinea, Central African Republic and other African countries.

The Igbo apprenticeship system has been cited as the biggest business incubator in the world and the Southeast is the birthplace of Nollywood; our film industry which has achieved global renown on the strength of the creativity and imagination of young Nigerians.

I have given these examples to demonstrate that nations are not built by politicians or their opinions however opinionated they may be, but by men and women in business; the professions and commerce, large, medium and small, who demonstrate their belief in their country by investing their resources and lives in enterprises here in their own country. The reason I have mentioned all these people is that by investing and working here, they have demonstrated more faith in this nation and this nation’s unity.

The businessmen and women, professionals and traders here in the South-East and across Nigeria are the true nation-builders.

One of our errors in times past has been our inability to appropriate the positive aspects of the Civil War legacy such as the spirit of innovation and self-reliance that inspired technological feats in extreme circumstances even here in this museum. Within that period, our people manufactured weapons and tools for refining crude.

After the war, the federal government sought to leverage the technological genius that had come to the fore during the conflict by establishing the Projects Development Institute (PRODA) in Enugu. Unfortunately, over the years, our commitment to the objectives of PRODA has not been as strong as it should be.

However, we are now making up for lost time. Because of our commitment to reviving local manufacturing, Innoson Motors, a company that epitomises the Nigerian productive genius, is now partnering with the Army to modify some of its equipment, produce armoured fighting vehicles and other military hardware. Innoson is also in partnership with the Air Force towards the manufacture of aircraft parts. I am especially proud to note that the Aba footwear industry is kitting our troops. Four years ago, the military ordered 60, 000 pairs of boots from Aba.

I think there is no greater evidence of how firmly we have closed ranks as a people than the fact that industrialists of this region are today equipping our nation’s Armed Forces.

Years ago, Dim Chukwuemeka Ojukwu said, ‘The war has at least underlined for all of us, the importance of staying together.” Brothers and sisters, no human relationship is perfect and no nation is received or conceived in ideal circumstances. All polities, no matter how good they look today, are imperfect and only through the labours of their members are they perfected. Like families, nations are made up of people who disagree and at times disagree intensely. The ties that bind us have survived the most intense disagreement we have ever known as a people and it resulted in the Civil War.

However, our national anthem enjoins us to “build a nation where peace and justice reign.” Setbacks and adversity are as integral to a nation’s journey as they are to human existence as a whole. But we have also known hope and victory, we should not on account of the disappointments we have suffered, give up on our collective possibilities and on each other.

It is true that we are not where we want to be, but we have not been standing still either, our country is very much, a work in progress. The attainment of peace and justice is not an event, but a process and a journey.

In 2017, this administration paid the accumulated arrears of pensions owed to retired war-affected ex-Biafran Police, who have been pardoned since 2000. This was more than a gesture of good faith, it demonstrates our belief in fairness and justice and our conviction that we can only move forward together.

We must build a country devoid of any form of discrimination and marginalisation. This is the ideal to which we must strive. However, we cannot prosecute this struggle with weapons of bigotry and hatred. Our tools for creating the country we want, have to be those of empathy and a willingness to invest effort in understanding each other.
All of us must also be mindful of the sacrifice that unity calls for; it means that those of us in power must understand that the bitterness of the loser when the winner takes it all, will ultimately swallow all including the winner. Three watchwords matter: fairness, equity and justice.

We must also be mindful of the fact that it is far easier to destroy than to build. It is easier to put asunder than to bring together. It is my firm conviction that we are infinitely stronger and better together. This is not a time to put asunder, it is a time to bring together. We cannot change the past, but we can learn from it and build a better future together.

Yemi Osinbajo is Vice president of Nigeria.

This is excerpted from an address at a townhall meeting held at the National War Museum, Umuahia, Abia State recently to mark the 50th anniversary of the end of the civil war.

07/12/2019

  With the election coming up and the relative rise in interest in politics from young people on social media in the lead up to the election, a recurring theme has become more apparent as we a…

04/12/2019

*Court orders FG to recover pensions paid to ex-governors who serve as ministers, senators*

The Federal High Court in Lagos in a landmark judgment has ordered the federal government to “recover pensions collected by former governors now serving as ministers and members of the National Assembly, and directed the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Mr Abubakar Malami, SAN to challenge the legality of states’ pension laws permitting former governors and other ex-public officials to collect such pensions.”

A certified true copy of the judgment delivered last week was obtained yesterday.

The judgment by Justice Oluremi Oguntoyinbo followed an application for an order of mandamus in suit number FHC/L/CS/1497/2017 brought by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP).

The judgment is coming on the heels of the invalidated pension law for former governors and other ex-public officers in Zamfara State, which provided for the upkeep of ex-governors to the tune of N700 million annually. The state has produced three former governors since 1999.

In the judgment, Justice Oguntoyinbo said: “The Attorney General has argued that the States’ laws duly passed cannot be challenged. With respect, I do not agree with this line of argument by the Attorney General that he cannot challenge the States’ pension laws for former governors.”

Justice Oguntoyinbo also said: *“The question that comes to mind is: who should approach the Court where a particular law is not in the best interest of Nigeria as a country or National interest? Who should approach the Court where a particular law is detrimental to the interest of the country? Who should institute actions in court for the purpose of recovering public funds collected?*

In answering the questions, Justice Oguntoyinbo said: “In my humble view, the Attorney General should be interested in the legality or validity of any law in Nigeria and how such laws affect or will affect Nigerians, being the Chief Law Officer of the Federation.”

Justice Oguntoyinbo has adjourned the suit to the 3rd of February 2020 for hearing on report of compliance with the court orders/judgment by the federal government.

Justice Oguntoyinbo’s judgment read in part: “I have considered SERAP’s arguments that it is concerned about the attendant consequences that are manifesting on the public workers and pensioners of the states who have been refused salaries and pensions running into several months on the excuse of non-availability of state resources to pay them. SERAP has also argued that there is need to recover such public funds collected by former governors.”

*“It is clear from the facts of this case that SERAP had written the Attorney General to institute appropriate legal actions to challenge the legality of States’ laws permitting former governors, who are now senators and ministers to enjoy governors’ emoluments while drawing normal salaries and allowances in their new political offices and to seek full recovery of funds from those involved.”*

“SERAP has stated that since the receipt of the said letter, the Attorney General has failed, refused and/or neglected to institute appropriate legal actions to that effect. In my view, the principle of ‘demand and refusal’ has been satisfied by SERAP. I have also considered the fact that in action to protect a public right or enforce the performance of a public duty, it is the Attorney General that ought to sue.”

“Having considered all the facts presented by SERAP on the need for the suit and the Counter-Affidavit against same, I find no reason why the order of mandamus should not be granted. I am of the view that SERAP’s suit has merit.”

“I resolve this issue against the Attorney General, in favour of SERAP. I hold that the Motion of Notice for Mandamus dated 6th February 2018 and filed on 7th February 2018 has merit. It is therefore granted in the terms sought.”

*“In other words, the Attorney General is hereby directed to urgently institute appropriate legal actions to challenge the legality of states’ laws permitting former governors, who are now senators and ministers to enjoy governors’ emoluments while drawing normal salaries and allowances in their new political offices and to identify those involved and seek full recovery of public funds from the former governors.”*

“I take judicial notice of the essence of the creation of SERAP. I believe that SERAP has the locus standi to bring this suit. More so, this is a constitutional matter. In constitutional matters, the requirement of locus standi becomes unnecessary to a great extent as it may merely impede judicial function. This issue is therefore resolved against the Attorney General, in favour of SERAP.”

“SERAP is seeking an order of mandamus to compel the Attorney General to file action to challenge States’ pension laws for former governors and recover public funds collected by them in the public interest, since the Attorney General has failed/neglected to institute such action. That is the essence of SERAP’s suit.”

“I believe the Attorney General can institute action in a Court of law to challenge States’ pension laws for former governors. I do not see any substance in the submissions of counsel to the Attorney General on this issue. I therefore resolve this issue against the Attorney General, in favour of SERAP. On the whole, I find no merit in the Attorney General’s preliminary objection. It is accordingly dismissed.”

SERAP deputy director, Kolawole Oluwadare, said: “This ground-breaking judgment is a victory for Nigerian workers and pensioners who have not been paid by state governors for several months and struggle to make ends meet whilst former governors now serving as ministers and senators continue to collect double emoluments and enjoy opulent lifestyles.”

“Justice Oguntoyinbo’s judgment shows the urgent need for state governors in Nigeria to follow the Zamfara example by immediately abolishing the obnoxious pension laws in their states. We commend Justice Oguntoyinbo for her courage and wisdom, and urge President Muhammadu Buhari and Mr Malami to immediately obey the court orders.”

“This judgment should catalyse further action from the Chairman, Nigeria Governors’ Forum and Ekiti State governor Dr Kayode Fayemi to use this judgment to abolish pension law in his own state and make a clear public commitment that the Governors’ Forum under his watch will push all governors and ex-governors to abolish life pensions and return public funds collected by them before being compelled to do so.”

Femi Falana, SAN said on the judgment: “SERAP deserves the commendation of all well-meaning people that have agonised over the legalization of obscene pension package for former governors. This is one of the most patriotic public interest litigation ever undertaken in Nigeria. We call on state governors to use the judgment as the basis for formally repealing life pension laws and all other retrogressive laws without any further ado.”
Justice Oguntoyinbo’s judgment also reads: “I have considered the papers filed and it is obvious that SERAP is a human rights non-governmental organization, seeking to protect the public interest. It is also clear that the reason for this suit is to compel the Attorney General to challenge the legality of states’ pension laws for former governors and to identify those who have collected pensions and also seek to full recovery of public funds.”

“Parties ought to be bound by the issues they formulate. They ought not to make arguments outside the issues formulated by them. The Attorney General has failed to give any reason for submitting that SERAP’s suit is incompetent.”

“The argument made is that the reliefs sought by SERAP in this suit cannot be granted; that the Attorney General cannot be compelled to institute actions and that the laws sought to be challenged were duly passed by the House of Assembly, and are therefore legal and ought not to be challenged. However, SERAP on its part has made contrary arguments.”

“The Attorney General has argued that SERAP has not shown any injury it has suffered any injury as a result of the salaries and allowances being given to former governors who are now senators. SERAP is neither civil servants nor public servants who have any issues with the said States’ pension laws for former governors. That the suit was filed to promote transparency and accountability does not confer locus standi on SERAP to maintain this action.”

“The Attorney General has only made argument as to why the suit should be refused on the merit. I believe the Attorney General ought to have incorporated these arguments in his response to the suit rather than incorporating same in a preliminary objection. This is fatal to this issue in this suit.”

It would be recalled that SERAP had in July 2017 requested Mr Malami to urgently institute appropriate legal action to challenge the legality of states’ laws permitting former governors, who are now senators and ministers to enjoy governors’ emoluments while drawing normal salaries and allowances in their new political offices and to seek full recovery of public funds from those involved.”

Former Senate President and governor of Kwara state Bukola Saraki said he stopped collecting pension after hearing of SERAP’s suit, and subsequently inspired the passing of the bill by the Kwara State House of Assembly to suspend payment of pensions to former governors and their deputies.

Saraki had said at the time: “No, I’m not collecting pension; the moment I saw that SERAP allegation, I wrote to my state to stop my pension.”

The repealed pension law in Zamfara State allowed former governors to receive pension for life; two personal staff; two vehicles replaceable every four years; two drivers, free medical for the former governors and deputies and their immediate families in Nigeria or abroad; a 4-bedroom house in Zamfara and an office; free telephone and 30 days paid vacation outside Nigeria.

So far, Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi; Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige; and Minister of Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola have denied ever receiving double payments and retirement benefits as former governors in addition to other roles in public office.

At least 22 states starting from Lagos State have passed life pensions laws for former governors and other ex-public officials. Other states include Akwa Ibom; Edo; Delta; Kano; Gombe; Yobe; Borno; Bauchi; Abia; Imo; Bayelsa; Oyo; Osun; Kwara; Ondo; Ebonyi; Rivers; Niger; Kogi; and Katsina.

SERAP’s letter to Mr Malami read in part: “According to our information, those who reportedly receive double emoluments and large severance benefits from their states include: Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso (Kano); Kabiru Gaya (Kano); Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom); Theodore Orji (Abia); Abdullahi Adamu (Nasarawa); Sam Egwu (Ebonyi); Shaaba Lafiagi (Kwara); Joshua Dariye (Plateau), and Jonah Jang (Plateau).”

“Others include: Ahmed Sani Yarima (Zamfara); Danjuma Goje (Gombe); Bukar Abba Ibrahim (Yobe); Adamu Aliero (Kebbi); George Akume (Benue); and Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers).”

Source: SERAP

*_Kudos to SERAP for championing this cause, this should motivate other NGOs to campaign and fight for the social, economic and political rights of Nigerians._*

13/11/2019

*OSINBAJO: FEMI ADUWO STILL GOT IT WRONG.*

Mr Olufemi Aduwo, I acknowledge your reply to my post submitted earlier to correct false claims made by you against the personality of the Vice-President Professor Yemi Osinbajo. The fact that you replied and deliberately made further false claims confirmed beyond doubts my earlier statement that you were out to serve some interest whose motive was clearly ignoble. To be precise, your motive is to bring down this VP. And I'm ashamed.

You will observe that when I first made my submission I didn't address you directly. I was trying to place you on a pedestal of civility. But in your reply you addressed me personally. And as a lawyer my instinct is to exercise a right of reply. This has prompted me to now address you personally.

Of course I could have withdrawn into my shell after making my point in my first response, but I have decided to hold out for two reasons;

1. I'm standing up to your bullying (which I presume you do to people by reeling out shallow UN credentials).

2. I feel the need to seize this opportunity to make a generational statement on behalf of many in my generation who are increasingly getting scared of coming out to make genuine contributions to governance believing that they will automatically become targets of undue attacks.

It is necessary to stand in solidarity with them and possibly stir your conscience (Mr Aduwo) and the consciences of your ilk who believe the way to rise or get attention in public eye is by pulling down good people. And there is a background to my option.

Our own Wole Soyinka once referred to his generation as "wasted". I have a strong feeling that the Nobel laureate must be familiar with Frantz Fannon's works and his famous view that every generation out of relative obscurity must identify its mission and fulfill it or jettison it. To me, Professor Soyinka was in a way expressing some form of frustration at the way he believed his own generation jettisoned its mission.

The Bard's words live with me. You will in fact be right to say I nurse an abiding fear for my own generation. The fear of helplessly watching us fall into failure and becoming another "wasted generation". For me, in the area of governance, my generation has not got much to show in leading this nation to celebrate flourishing realities of virtue, even now as many of us go into retirement with little prospect of national relevance in the future. What stares us in the face instead, is a legacy of rot that permeates every compartment of our national life. Still, in spite of all these, many in our generation, all over the place, are trying very hard, making efforts at redemption. They are visionaries, touching and changing lives positively. They are distinguished by the essential element of gravitas. They are honest. They are genuinely altruistic in purpose, not given to corruption, but always exuding true leadership characteristics.

We know them, as their achievements speak for them. The little development we currently experience in our national life is attributable largely to their influence. It is this tribe of leaders that now faces extinction. Sadly this "specie" became endangered through overwhelming tyrannical assaults from men of their own generation. We have on one hand politicians whose rank is being swelled daily by a huge number of questionable characters who out of what I would refer to as "group tyranny" seek to redefine political practice for us. Politics to them is a lotto (you take a chance with your money hoping to win more money for yourself or lose ) rather than seeking a means of fulfilling the social contract in which those who govern are expected to use governmental power to serve the people rather than self. We have on the other hand those who employ the tyranny of the press. These are rogue intellectuals who either act on their own or act as tools in the hands of dubious entities to either discourage, disparage or outrightly destroy rising stars.

For me therefore, protecting the tribe of genuine achievers has become a duty for the rest of us who strongly believe that the tribe holds out hopes that our generation can still redeem itself.

Mr Aduwo, it was within this context that I rose to put the records straight when I first responded to your write-up against the VP. The Professor Osinbajo I know is not a perfect human being. Had you offered genuine criticisms of his work as Vice President, trust me I would have yielded no response in deference to your right to freedom of expression. Criticisms against the VP normally come into the public arena everyday. And many are taken in good faith. But you broke basic intellectual rules of engagement as a public intellectual (which you struggle to make yourself out to be) by making serious claims that you could not support with evidence. I caught you lying against the Vice-president regarding a matter that I was directly involved in. What sort of person would I be if I stood by and allowed your lies go unchallenged? I know the Vice-president is a gentleman and presently impeded by his position from engaging every single attacker. But I'm different. I'm out of government and I'm fully ready for us to "wipe the floor" together whatever level you dictate.

See, I supplied you with the correct information regarding the engagement of the Vice-president at the Federal Ministry of Justice. In substance all the information were paid for in the currency of hard facts. And even beyond all that, the facts remain that I worked in the Federal Ministry of Justice in the period 1990 - 1992. Prof Osinbajo was appointed as Special Adviser in 1988 and he resigned in 1992. Although I was a Consultant/Head of Law Publications Unit at the time I worked there, I had the opportunity of working with him and a strong team of very young people whom he brought on board then including the likes of Mr. Osondu Nwokoro, who is now a director in Airtel and Mr. Tony Ojukwu now executive secretary of the National Human Rights Commission. Mr. Awa Kalu, SAN, later joined Prof Osinbajo as adviser to Ajibola.

To the best of my knowledge no decree that could be tagged as draconian was made then under Ajibola especially between 1988 and 1990. I do not know of any done within that time. And you Mr Aduwo failed to cite even one example. Till today there has been no period as revolutionary for important economic and social legislation as was the period when Osinbajo was adviser to Judge Bola Ajibola, then Prince Bola Ajibola SAN, Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice. Just check your Laws of the Federation for laws made between 1988 and 1992. There were so many policy seminars and discussions in that period, with stakeholders and the public discussing the issues that later became legislation. In fact many of those pieces of legislation promulgated in 1993 were already worked on and drafted in 1992 or earlier. I remember the Companies and Allied Matters Decree( now ACT.) NAFDAC Decree, Nigerian Export Processing Zone Act, Nigeria Deposit Insurance Act, The NDLEA decree now Act. The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, The Banks and other Financial Institutions Decree, The first iterations of the Chartered Institute of Bankers Act, Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers Decree, Chartered Institute of Bankers Decree and Chartered Institute of Administration Decree. Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Decree.

I strongly reckon that you found it difficult to respond to the facts provided and having been unmasked to reveal who you truly were, you obviously felt your "United Nations" ego challenged and in an attempt to shore up your lying image, you resorted to knit-picking on the dynamics of this particular presidency as a subterfuge to cover your dubious motives.

In providing a launch pad for your well calculated attack you tried to first establish in your write-up a non-existent affinity with Prof Osinbajo calling him "my pastor" as if he knew you personally. You had calculated that if people realised he was your pastor, lies about him could be built successfully on it. And people would easily believe your story. You could fool other people but those familiar with the RCCG set-up and the hierarchy of the Provinces and regions would only marvel at how you tried to mislead people on how you came to claim a relationship with the VP. Prof Osinbajo is the Pastor of Olive Tree Parish of which you are not a member. Thus it was highly unlikely for you and Osinbajo to have a mutual relationship. How then would the collection of offerings five times at the RCCG Camp (where hundreds of thousands gather) guarantee your close knowledge of the VP to the point you declared categorically that he was not a saint.

In the case of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the former Lagos governor's assets declaration case was in 2012 - five years after Osinbajo left office as Attorney - General of Lagos State. His lawyer in that case was Chief Wole Olanipekun SAN. Why did you find it necessary to bring Osinbajo into that?

"Ambassador", it seems to me you are obsessed with projecting your own image and I could observe you would go to great lengths in doing that. Otherwise I do not understand what point you were making with the crazy melodrama you described when you said you were arrested by the DSS some years ago and the only point of the arrest was because they wanted to give you a political appointment! How absurd! And why do we need to know in an article about Osinbajo that you were not ordained a Pastor or Deacon in RCCG because you disagreed with some things in the church. You then took in tow your representations at various elections including the number of state governors you knew and your credentials as a UN Ambassador etc.

Now, a word of advice to "Your Excellency". Please mind the way you throw your UN credentials about especially in the community of highly knowledgeable people who are aware that UN only makes use of the services of people with rare skills in various fields of endeavour. Otherwise you would become a subject of ridicule. For it was quite strange that the UN that we know decided to associate with someone who does not possess the intellectual presence of mind sufficient to remember the name of the person he is addressing. And if the standards of UN representation were to be measured by the conduct you have so far exhibited the services of that august body would have been heavily devalued.

Professor Osinbajo whom you are making so much effort to disparage served the United Nations in the thick of war in Somalia after leaving the Federal Ministry of Justice. He was assigned to prepare legislation for a post-war Somalia. Today that service is probably a footnote on his CV. Unlike you, he has not even attempted to brandish this remarkable achievement one bit, talk less of oppress people with it.

As regards your claim to the Christian faith, let me not be your judge as to whether or not you modelled Christianity the right way. Perhaps some counselling from those who have received the grace to become Deacons and Pastors in RCCG may suffice to instruct you on how to treat political leaders aside from your pastors provided you truly belong to the Kingdom.

Funso Olukoga
Lagos.

Address

Croydon

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when 9jadiaspora posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share