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APC, THE WAR WITHIN, SATURDAY & BEYOND

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APC, THE WAR WITHIN, SATURDAY & BEYOND

BY CHRIS GYANG

As the country gets set to elect a new president next Saturday, there are strong indications that all is not well within the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC.

The cracks are widening at break-neck speed. But even observers of Nigeria’s political evolution, especially from 2015 when the APC took power from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), are stunned by this turn of events.

The pundits predicted that the APC, which was knocked together chiefly to grab power, would sooner or later disintegrate. That it was only a matter of time for this alliance of strange bedfellows to arrive a precipitous cul-de-sac .

But they never envisaged that it would be so messy and lay bare the nature and depth of the desperation of these disparate interests, personalities and political camps scrambling in this final push for power. Certainly, this has further eroded the support base and significantly diminished the already record-low credibility of the APC.

However, never forget that Tinubu, the APC presidential candidate, had declared that his life’s ambition has always been to be president and that this is his turn to rule Nigeria.

Ironically, the open and bitter war of words and wits between Tinubu’s supporters and aides of President Muhammadu Buhari is over the naira swap policy of the same APC administration. This is symbolic of the contradictions that have characterised governance in the last eight years.

And this one is significantly adding to the pains, fears, social dislocations and frustrations assailing an already distraught population buffeted by fuel scarcity, insecurity and other miscalculations and outright failures of this APC administration.

This war is also spawning national security concerns, which should greatly worry citizens. If there is discord within the APC, it definitely has a domino effect on the general well-being of the country as it is the political party controlling the levers of governance, especially the critical security department.

There have been claims from the Tinubu camp that the original reason for changing the colour of the three denominations was to cause mass unrest that would derail the presidential vote for an interim government to be imposed by the Buhari administration. This shows how deep and caustic the wrangling within the ruling party runs.

But the president’s aides have repeatedly insisted that the aims of the cash swap were being gradually achieved. They argue that it has slowed down corruption related to the predominance of the cash economy and there are signs that it would go a long way in curbing vote buying during the general elections.

Buhari doubled down on this in his Thursday national broadcast – a rare occurrence, as he had remained quiet throughout the unfolding national turmoil. Not that he had been a particularly outspoken president, though.

But tormented Nigerians are on tenterhooks. They are disturbed that while the APC Federal Government is upbeat about the successes of the money swap, its own members in Tinubu’s campaign team, leading members of the national parliament and even governors and ministers who had been the president’s closest allies are up in arms against it. Governors El-Rufai and Ganduje of Kaduna and Kano states and Festus Keyamo, a minister, are leading the onslaught.

And this is raising fundamental questions in the minds of sceptical Nigerians. First, do Tinubu’s supporters have something to hide as far as this cash swap policy is concerned? This poser is pertinent considering the matter of the bullion van seen at his palatial Lagos home on the eve of the 2019 presidential poll.

Second, is the Buhari government in possession of certain classified information that has shown that Tinubu had stock-piled cash to use in buying votes or influencing voters on Saturday and the president is bent on thwarting it, no matter the pains it causes Nigerians?

This question is based on the assumption in some quarters that Mr. Buhari, who perceives himself as a ‘Mr. Clean’, could be working towards leaving a legacy of conducting a free and fair election, uncompromised by raw, and perhaps illegally acquired, cash.

Third, could the president truly be using the cash swap to further dim Tinubu’s chances? Is it possible that the allegations of corrupt enrichment, doubts about his true origins, shady educational background and health status, etc, swirling around Tinubu may have raised doubts in the president’s mind about Tinubu’s integrity and, therefore, fitness to occupy the exalted office of president?

As a corollary to this, only the self-deluded would not believe that Buhari was never favourably disposed to Tinubu’s emergence as APC’s presidential candidate. It was the APC governors that forced his hand here. In fact, the party’s national chairman had, before the presidential primaries, announced the president’s preferred choice – who was going to be the much-awaited consensus candidate at the time.

Citizens are also perplexed that it is mainly APC governors and top ranking officials of the Tinubu campaign group that are criticising the president for defying the Supreme Court order on the new currencies. It’s surprising that throughout the last eight years, these same people and even the APC presidential candidate had never spoken out against any of the FG’s serial disobedience of court orders and other toxic policies and systemic failures.

Last year’s eight months university lecturers’ strike, continued incarceration of Nnamdi Kanu, etc, are other examples. As a matter of fact, it’s utterly vexatious that some governors are now rolling out so-called palliatives to cushion the effects of the naira crunch.

This is widely seen as a desperate political manoeuvre only aimed at watering the ground for the general elections. These states never did that before, even during national emergencies such as the lock-downs occasioned by the COVID 19 pandemic.

Now, going forward, is President Buhari using the currency redesign to redeem himself, even if belatedly? Has he finally realized that these people excoriating him also influenced him to make wrong choices and take decisions that were disastrous to the national interest but boosted their egos and feathered their political nests?

Whatever the case, the war within the APC has clearly shown the motives and motivations that have driven public policy in the last eight years. This fierce in-fighting has further exposed the APC for what it truly is – an amalgamation of unprincipled and rapacious people and groups only united by their quests to satisfy their burning greed for power.

Can Nigerians still trust this lot with their destiny in the next four years? Well, Saturday beckons. March 11 too.

(GYANG is the Chairman of the N.G.O, Journalists Coalition for Citizens’ Rights Initiative – JCCRI. Emails: info@jccri-online.org; chrisgyang01@gmail.com)

APC, THE WAR WITHIN, SATURDAY & BEYOND

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Why Borno residents should support the Zulum Administration

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Why Borno residents should support the Zulum Administration

By: Yusuf Adamu

Unfortunately, the lack of electricity and shortage of water in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital, have continued to turn some sections of the state against the government. While many are thinking it is the government job to provide electricity and water, a lot of people are not looking at the efforts the government is putting in during the phase of challenges from saboteurs and terrorists as it affects the issues of electricity in the state, particularly.

Borno State has been in darkness for the last two weeks, and the governor spoke with concern from faraway Saudi Arabia, where he went to worship, and he was informed of the electricity issue back home. Professor Babagana Umara Zulum has done tremendously well in ensuring that Borno State overcomes the issue of electricity, to the extent that he went beyond his jurisdiction to ensure that he solved the problem.

He went further to collaborate with the NNPC, which informed the setting of a gas plant in Maiduguri to support the epileptic power supply as a result of the continuous attacks on the electricity supply lines feeding Maiduguri. However, the activities of saboteurs, who would rather, out of their greed, overload the gas plant, have constantly resulted in the disruption of the gas plant’s capacity to provide adequate supply.

Rather than people condemning the government for some of this man-made distraction, I think the people of Borno State should pray for an end to the activities of terrorists and the saboteurs who continuously take advantage of the situation to speak ill of the government. If the opposition is speaking, we would understand, but when citizens say otherwise, we would like to remind them that the governor of Borno State has been doing everything possible to make Borno State great. 

The collaboration with NNPC and the purchase of electric vehicles to ease pain for people are things to see and agree that the governor meant well for his people. This is aside from the numerous projects he was able to achieve in the state. We are also lucky to have the Vice President, who is our own and whose focus is also to see Borno State become great again.

Just yesterday, he was speaking on the issues affecting the state when he arrived in the state for the sallah celebration. He gave hope for a better Borno state and spoke well of the collaboration the federal government is having with Borno state to end the perennial challenges facing the state at the moment. Let us continue to uplift our leaders in prayer and support their dream of making Borno one of the best things that happens to its people in the current administration.

***Yusuf Adamu writes from Maiduguri and is the former political adviser to Kashim Shettima.

Why Borno residents should support the Zulum Administration

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Katampe Estate: An iftar special for both Muslims and Christians in Abuja

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Katampe Estate: An iftar special for both Muslims and Christians in Abuja

By: Dr. James BWALA

Residents of Urban Shelter Katampe Estate, Jahi, in Abuja organize an iftar—breaking of the fast. One may think that this is only for the Muslim community in the estate, but it was special for the residents of the estate to demonstrate love and togetherness as well as promote and showcase peaceful coexistence amongst the adherents of the two major religions in the country. Christians were part of the jolly evening, and I am also there to share the joy and happiness that brought together human beings that are working to bring understanding and support for one another, as should be in the spirit of Ramadan.

iftar at Urban Shelter, Katampe Estate

It was a gathering that brought the lowly and the might men and women. I kept an eye out and captured the mood, which triggered happiness and informed my decision to write on this. Indeed, if everyone would take a line with this example of love amongst the two religions in the country, we would not be asking what is wrong with the system that governs us as a nation.

READ ALSO:https://newsng.ng/borno-why-would-an-ngo-sponsor-a-fire-outbreak-in-idp-camps/

I was invited for iftar as always by my brothers, who are Muslims, but this one was different. It has been a tradition that the Katampe Estate has kept for years. I was told by some people that we were seated at the same table that those who introduced the occasion desire a community where peace is truly said and practiced, and that can only be achieved when both Muslims and Christians understand that we all have to be humans and also understand that we are all created by God for his worship.

The explanation as I listened gave me the understanding that the problem with Nigerians is not about the religion we practice but the individual understanding of the region we all practice. If the residents of the Urban Shelter Katampe Estate in Jahi have this understanding of building a community, I believe there are many lessons we can learn from their coexistence, where a Muslim and a Christian can look into each other’s eyes with love and sincere wishes.

iftar special at Katampe Estate in Jahi

On the table where I sat, the talk and laughter made me see that Nigeria can build a stronger state if there is understanding between humans and everyone wants the good of the other, as everyone was encouraging each other to eat from the variety and trying to help one another get the best of the table. Such selfless understanding should always be practiced. 

Perhaps I write this piece to trigger the adoption of such an attitude not only in a month like Ramadan but also in all days and months in each year of our existence as people and as a nation. If we can all inculcate this and put it as part of our daily lives, there would not be hunger in the land, and everyone, as I see at the Katampe Estate, where both the mighty and the lowly eat together to their satisfaction and more food remains for a takeaway, reminded me of the Biblical feeding of the five thousand. And this, in my opinion, is the gospel.

James BWALA, PhD, writes from Abuja.

Katampe Estate: An iftar special for both Muslims and Christians in Abuja

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UMTH:…and the testimonies of patients and patient relations

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UMTH:…and the testimonies of patients and patient relations

By: Dr. James BWALA

Recently, one of our colleagues was hospitalized at the UMTH, and I have the ability to constantly be in touch from my base. I have spoken to colleagues and relatives, and the testimonies coming from them were spirited about how the UMTH cares for its patients, putting humanity to duty. 

I had thought this was because the patient is one of the media personalities, and as such, the hospital was doing everything to ensure the best was offered. At a point, I had the pleasure of seeking some assistance for wavers on the hospital bills on behalf of the said colleague, and the CMD graciously agreed to give such assistance to a colleague in need. 

I thought that was perhaps because of the relationship the media and UMTH had built over time. But again, I was wrong in this judgment because such wavers of assistance and this hand of fellowship by the CMD, Professor Ahmed Ahidjo, had been extended to patients coming from far and near, making UMTH one of the most humane health institutions in the country today.

I have seen bad professionalism and inhumane acts by professionals in public health institutions in the country, especially in the government hospital in Abuja, where patients are being attended to based on the heaviness of their pockets. 

When I learned of the cost of the hospital bed for a VIP side room at the UMTH, I told a colleague that the UMTH is humane compared to what I know of at places like the Aso Koro General Hospital, Nyanya, Maitama, Gwagwalada, and the National Hospital in Abuja, and no amount of complaints or pleading by patients or patient relations can be heard if the pocket does not speak first. And the lowest of the luxurious rooms, not a VIP side room, is going for N10,000 and above. No option!

READ ALSO: https://newsng.ng/umth-how-professor-ahidjos-transformation-agenda-impacted-the-information-unit/

About two weeks ago, I heard a chat with someone whose wife was hospitalized, and he was complaining about the issues of lightening in the hospital. However, after that chat and the issue was fixed, he literally call back to appreciate the speed with which the technical staff took in ensuring that adequate light was provided despite the current situation of a hike in diesel prices and the resources coming to the hospital, in which the generated revenue was not enough to power the hospital’s need for electricity for one month.

From another expression, a Letter of Appreciation for the UMTH Medical Team reads: 

Dear Professor Ahidjo (CMD),

I am writing to express my deepest gratitude to the entire medical team at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) for the exceptional care and support provided to my late son, Shafiq, during his illness.

From the moment Shafiq was admitted to UMTH, your team demonstrated professionalism, compassion, and dedication in attending to his medical needs. Your expertise and tireless efforts in diagnosing and treating his condition were evident, and we felt reassured knowing he was in capable hands.

Moreover, the kindness and empathy shown by every member of the medical staff did not go unnoticed. Your willingness to listen to our concerns, answer our questions, and provide regular updates on Shafiq’s progress was invaluable during such a challenging time for our family.

While the outcome was not what we had hoped for, I want to acknowledge the immense comfort and support your team provided to both Shafiq and our family, particularly the role played by Prof. Ahidjo, Prof. Sandabe, and Prof. Sanusi throughout his stay at UMTH. Your unwavering commitment to delivering quality healthcare, even in the face of adversity, is truly commendable and speaks volumes about the professionalism and compassion of UMTH’s medical staff.

Please convey our heartfelt appreciation to everyone involved in Shafiq’s care, including doctors, nurses, technicians, and support staff. Your dedication to your profession and your patients makes a difference in the lives of so many, and we will forever be grateful for the care and attention Shafiq received under your watchful care.

Thank you once again for your exemplary service and for making a difficult time more bearable for our family.

With sincere appreciation,

Prof. Abdulkarim Ishaq

Perhaps one may think that there has been a longtime relationship with the system among those who are speaking or writing to appreciate the hospital and management team led by Professor Ahmed Ahidjo. The truth is that I have also interacted with patients being referred from far and near who spoke well of the hospital and its kind of professionals in my recent visit to Maiduguri. Some describe the hospital as a hallmark of excellence, and I agree with them. In a video I watched, a patient from Oyo State also spoke volumes of humane and professional lines from his testimony of both the medical and technical teams at the UMTH.

A patient from Ibadan, Oyo state.

When patients or their relatives speak about the treatment they received from medical personnel, they always speak from their heart because, at that moment, they are prompted by either the satisfaction they received or otherwise. And for UMTH, these patients and their relatives have no regrets about meeting the team.

** James BWALA, PhD writes from Abuja

UMTH:…and the testimonies of patients and patient relations

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