ADVERTISEMENT
The Sun Nigeria
  • Home
  • National
  • Columns
    • Broken Tongues
    • Capital Matters
    • Diabetes Corner
    • Duro Onabule
    • Femi Adesina
    • Frank Talk
    • Funke Egbemode
    • Insights
    • Kalu Leadership Series
    • Kunle Solaja
    • Offside Musings
    • PressClips
    • Public Sphere
    • Ralph Egbu
    • Shola Oshunkeye
    • Sideview
    • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
    • Tola Adeniyi
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • The Sun TV
  • Sporting Sun
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • National
  • Columns
    • Broken Tongues
    • Capital Matters
    • Diabetes Corner
    • Duro Onabule
    • Femi Adesina
    • Frank Talk
    • Funke Egbemode
    • Insights
    • Kalu Leadership Series
    • Kunle Solaja
    • Offside Musings
    • PressClips
    • Public Sphere
    • Ralph Egbu
    • Shola Oshunkeye
    • Sideview
    • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
    • Tola Adeniyi
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • The Sun TV
  • Sporting Sun
No Result
View All Result
The Sun Nigeria
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
Ley Your Dreams Come Alive – With FCMB Loans
Home Opinion

The party is over

14th July 2017
in Opinion
0
APC-Buhari Administration, Two Years After
0
SHARES
97
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Sufuyan Ojeifo

This piece shares a title with a 1960 Argentine drama film directed by Leopoldo Torre Nilsson, which depicts the political corruption in Argentina in the 1930s, a period referred to as the “Infamous Decade”.  The decade, which began in 1930 with the coup against President Hipolito Yrigoyen by Jose Felix Uriburu, culminated in the ascension to power of Juan Peron after the military coup of 1943.

The decade was marked by rural mass movements, worsened by the 1929 Great Depression, which had decimated rural landowners and pushed the country in the direction of import substitution industrialisation.  Another coup was executed in 1943 due to popular discontent in response to the poor economic results of the policy. 

Are you a Man 40 yrs and above? Do not miss the Vital Information, it goes off in 2 days! CLICH HERE to READ .

Tagged the “Revolution of ‘43”, the coup was masterminded by the Grupo de Oficiales Unidos (GOU), the nationalist faction of the Armed Forces, against the acting president Ramon Castilo, hence putting an end to the “Infamous Decade”. Electoral fraud, persecution of political opposition leaders and government corruption characterised the period, against the backdrop of the Great Depression, which was a severe global economic depression that lasted until 1941, presenting the longest, deepest and most pervasive depression in the 20th century. 

There is, indeed, a similitude between  Argentina’s debacle under reference and Nigeria’s current experience.  Nigeria slid into recession last year.  The All Progressives Congress (APC)-controlled federal government is yet unable to get the country out of it.  A national leader of the party, Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu, in March this year, advised the federal government to ease the monetary policy in order to stimulate the economy.

In a paper to course participants at the National Defence College in Abuja, titled: “Strategic Leadership: My Personal Theory and Practice”, Tinubu explained that the monetary policy must be consistent with the environmental needs of our domestic requirements.  He had argued that too much is tied down and advised the federal government to spend itself out of this recession; and that it cannot do that by consistently stifling the banks of liquidity. Has government heeded Tinubu’s advice?  How significantly has government intervened to push up market demand by undertaking public works?  Only N350 billion has reportedly been released for capital projects.  What is the percentage of that in the 2017 budget of N7.4 trillion?  And what is the level of performance of the N350b released vis-à-vis the implementation of the projects to which the release is tied? 

Breaking!!! Earn up to N2 - N3 million monthly GUARANTEED (all paid in US Dollars). No training or refereal required. Do business with top USA companies like Amazon, Tesla, Facebook, IBM, Netflix, Zoom, etc. Learn more .

Besides, how many Nigerians have been employed or financially empowered through this intervention for capital projects development?  How many local companies which depend on locally-sourced raw materials are factored into this special intervention package? Or is it another opportunity for foreign construction companies to make easy money and repatriate the same to their home countries?

I am not an economist.  I do not understand the plethora of economic concepts, principles and terminologies or jargons, which economy experts daily deploy to explain how our economy is working.  We are so easily bamboozled by statistics, especially from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).  The NBS’ verdict is that Nigeria is the largest economy on the Africa continent and the 26th in the world with its rebased Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which, as of April 2014, stood at US$509.97 billion (N80.2 trillion). 

Premature Ejaculation & "Small Joystick" Resolved in 7Days... Click Here For Details .

But my attitude towards economic development, which refers to the problems of under-developed countries, is very simple: let us see how well the masses are faring.  How has the rebased GDP transformed our economy and the various aspects of our nation, especially the lives of the individual citizens?  How has it attacked widespread absolute poverty?  How has it reduced inequalities and removed the sceptre of unemployment?  That, in spite of the “biggest economy’ status, Nigeria still slid into recession is evidence of how superficial and vulnerable the economy is to absorb shocks both at the micro and macro levels.

Businesses are collapsing on a daily basis.  Prices of goods and services are consistently going up.  Purchasing power of citizens is ebbing away.  Job losses have become daily occurrences.  The number of people earning money is decreasing.  The gap between the rich and the poor has grown much wider.  A vast majority of Nigerians are under financial pressure and unable to meet their basic needs.  There is pain on the faces of the people and anguish in their hearts. 

The scenario painted supra is symptomatic of leadership failure and economic upheaval.  In pre-1999 Nigeria, such a scenario would have provided an objective condition for leadership overthrow.  But post-1999 Nigeria is averse to that.  The democratic foundations have been laid and there is evident commitment by all to nurture the building of democratic structures in the land. 

Validation: Nigerians stringently condemned, some months ago, the statement by the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur Buratai, hinting at an unholy relationship between members of the political class and high-ranking soldiers.  Although, the impression created was that of a possible coup in the offing, Nigerians ferociously kicked against it, anyhow.  Defence Headquarters also reined in to debunk the coup rumour.  

Now, assuming, just for the purpose of argument, that coup has now become impossible in Nigeria, what is the APC-controlled federal government doing to avert the looming tsunami of people power in the 2019 general election?  The people are disenchanted.  The APC government has not been able to fulfill up to 10 percent of its campaign promises; and, instead of meaningfully engaging the people through cogent explanations, not Lai Mohammed’s chicanery, it is living in self-denial. 

100% Natural Herbs to Finally End Premature Ejaculation, Weak Erection and Small Manhood. >>>Click Here for Details<<< .

I can safely vouchsafe that on the balance of probability, the Nigerian people should not expect anything spectacularly different from the current half-measure offerings before 2019, judging by the lingering lacklustre performance of the APC government.  The president, Muhammadu Buhari, is out of action due to ill-health.  The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Babachir Lawal, is on suspension due to a contract scam.  Two of the critical positions in government are, unfortunately, encumbered.    

Some cabals in the presidency, rather than support the acting president, to prudently set its priority right by focusing on “the economy, stupid” in this recession period so as to turn things round for the betterment of Nigerians, are fighting dirty to survive the cloak-and-dagger politics in furtherance of their enlightened self-interests.   

Why should the Presidency and the National Assembly, for instance, be flexing muscles on whether or not Ibrahim Magu would remain chair of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)?  There is no harmony between the executive and the legislative arms.  The administration is on a free course to immolation.   It is, indeed, inopportune that the APC government has, up until now, been its own opposition.  Its elected leaders can decide to shut down their government.  That is their problem.  As far as I am concerned, the APC party is over.  And this assertion is reinforced by the July 12, 2017 Supreme Court judgment resolving the leadership tussle of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in favour of the Senator Ahmed Makarfi faction.

I welcome resilient Nigerians to a robust and focused oppositional politics that we expect the PDP to play.  For us, the voter cards, the power to decide our destiny, are firmly in our hands, and with the cards, we should put an end to this mumbo-jumbo that the APC has foisted on us since 2015.  We should heed the lines of Willie Nelson’s song “The Party is over”  to “Turn out the lights…” We should allow God to use us to save Nigeria-through our votes in 2019.

Ojeifo, an Abuja-based journalist, writes via [email protected]

 

 

Sufuyan Ojeifo

Editor- in- Chief

The Congresswatch Magazine

+234 8034727013    +234 8023024800

sunnews

sunnews

Related Posts

Restructuring better than secession, Fayemi tells Kanu, Igboho, others
Opinion

Governor Fayemi and the moneybag syndrome

25th May 2022
Ojodu truck accident: Buhari, Sanwo-Olu condole with parents of dead students
Opinion

Reviewing Buhari’s 3-point agenda

25th May 2022
Celebrating Africa Day
Opinion

Celebrating Africa Day

25th May 2022
Next Post
Serendipitous tale of Olajumoke Orisaguna and other matters

What’s the acting President not telling us?

IRT arrests Idris gang members terrorising  northern roads

IRT arrests Idris gang members terrorising northern roads

Deborah Oko 07013771923

Deborah Oko 07013771923

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Highlights

Protesting NANS members want FG to stop lecturers’ salaries

Bauchi gov hails non-signing of Electoral Act by Buhari

Rivers 2023: Dagogo fails to stop PDP primary

Murder of OAU student: Why we took oath – Receptionist

Ohanaeze, Northern elders condemn killings in South East

Terrorism: Court moves Kanu’s trial to June 28

Trending

Residents lament as erosion threatens to swallow Abia estate
Features

Residents lament as erosion threatens to swallow Abia estate

26th May 2022
0

From Okey Sampson, Umuahia When the Alhaji Shehu Shagari-led administration implemented one of its cardinal programmes in...

Imo explosion: I can’t believe my 17-year-old son is gone forever, father mourns

Imo explosion: I can’t believe my 17-year-old son is gone forever, father mourns

26th May 2022
Nigeria’s oldest Pentecostal movement leader celebrates 93 in style

Nigeria’s oldest Pentecostal movement leader celebrates 93 in style

26th May 2022
Students, youth council, CSOs protest against rape, gender-based violence in Ibadan

Protesting NANS members want FG to stop lecturers’ salaries

26th May 2022
No conflict between Bauchi, Gombe over oil discovery –Gov. Mohammed

Bauchi gov hails non-signing of Electoral Act by Buhari

26th May 2022

Follow us on social media:

Latest News

  • Residents lament as erosion threatens to swallow Abia estate
  • Imo explosion: I can’t believe my 17-year-old son is gone forever, father mourns
  • Nigeria’s oldest Pentecostal movement leader celebrates 93 in style
  • Protesting NANS members want FG to stop lecturers’ salaries
  • Bauchi gov hails non-signing of Electoral Act by Buhari
  • Rivers 2023: Dagogo fails to stop PDP primary
  • Murder of OAU student: Why we took oath – Receptionist
  • Ohanaeze, Northern elders condemn killings in South East
  • Terrorism: Court moves Kanu’s trial to June 28
  • … Family takes legal action against UK over alleged failure to protect him
  • Again, gunmen invade Katsina Catholic church abduct 2 priests, visitors
  • Troops kill 3 suspected kidnappers in Benue
  • Okada ban: Coalition backs Sanwo-Olu, urges total clampdown
  • Kaduna train attack: Abductees’ families beg FG to accept terrorists’ swap deal
  • Ekweremadu, Luke, Abaribe, Gbagi, boycott Enugu, Akwa Ibom, Abia, Delta PDP guber primaries
  • Akwa-Ibom APC members protest alleged imposition
  • Zulum confirms 32 killed by ISWAP
  • Buhari mourns Borno, Katsina terror victims, vows perpetrators’ll face justice
  • Ohanaeze condemns killings in Anambra, tackles governor Soludo over insecurity
  • Ombugadu wins PDP gubernatorial primaries in Nasarawa

Categories

  • Abuja Metro
  • Anambra Watch
  • Arts
  • Broken Tongues
  • Business
  • Business Week
  • Cartoons
  • Citizen Joe
  • Columns
  • Cover
  • Culture
  • Duro Onabule
  • Editorial
  • Education Review
  • Effect
  • Elections
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Features
  • Femi Adesina
  • Food & Drinks
  • Frank Talk
  • Funke Egbemode
  • Gallery
  • Global Square by Kenneth Okonkwo
  • Health
  • Insights
  • Kalu Leadership Series
  • Kunle Solaja
  • Kunle Solaja
  • Letters
  • Lifeline
  • Lifestyle
  • Literary Review
  • Marketing Matters
  • Muiz Banire
  • National
  • News
  • Offside Musings
  • Opinion
  • oriental news
  • Politics
  • Press Release
  • PressClips
  • Public Sphere
  • Ralph Egbu
  • Shola Oshunkeye
  • Sideview
  • South-west Magazine
  • Sponsored Post
  • Sporting Sun
  • Sports
  • Sun Girl
  • Tea Time
  • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
  • The Sun Awards Live
  • The Sun TV
  • Thoughts & Talks
  • Time Out
  • Today's cover
  • Tola Adeniyi
  • Travel
  • Travel & Tourism
  • Trending
  • TSWeekend
  • Turf Game
  • Uncategorized
  • Updates
  • Views from Abroad
  • Voices
  • World
  • World News
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Paper Ad Rate
  • Online Ad Rate
  • The Team
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2019 The Sun Nigeria - Managed by Netsera.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • National
  • Columns
    • Broken Tongues
    • Capital Matters
    • Diabetes Corner
    • Duro Onabule
    • Femi Adesina
    • Frank Talk
    • Funke Egbemode
    • Insights
    • Kalu Leadership Series
    • Kunle Solaja
    • Offside Musings
    • PressClips
    • Public Sphere
    • Ralph Egbu
    • Shola Oshunkeye
    • Sideview
    • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
    • Tola Adeniyi
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • The Sun TV
  • Sporting Sun

© 2019 The Sun Nigeria - Managed by Netsera.

Posting....