Tuesday 25 June 2013

YouWiN! - A Plus For The Transformation Agenda

I went into the Corporate Affairs Commission office in Kaduna a few weeks back to pick up the result of a name search I did. While waiting to be attended to I saw a lady that came in to register an enterprise. I heard the CAC staff mention YouWiN! and that raise my ears. Just yesterday I was with another lady who won the YouWiN! grant. She told me about all the process involved in submission and the screening that followed until the last stage when she was selected as one of the beneficiaries.

Entrepreneurship is an area after my heart and whenever I heard anything in relation to that field I get excited. YouWiN! is a good step in the right direction in promoting entrepreneurship and job creation among Nigerian youths. YouWiN! is an introduction of the Jonathan administration with input from corporate organisations as well as international development agencies. YouWiN! stands for Youth Enterprise with Innovation in Nigeria. It is an innovative business plan competition aimed at job creation by encouraging and supporting aspiring entrepreneurial youth in Nigeria to develop and execute business ideas.

What fascinated me more was the process of selection of beneficiaries. All the beneficiaries that I have met in both the first and second phase of the programme shared a pleasant experience with the selection process. They told me that they knew no one in the agency responsible for selection of beneficiaries. All they did was to submit their business plans and waited until they were called on for the next stage.

This gave me some joy that things can be done transparently in Nigeria. It is a common belief that if don’t know anyone in Nigeria you cannot get anything. This belief is so ingrained in the mind of many people that it stops them from attempting to try anything. I am not saying that it is not true that ‘who you know’ syndrome exists but I am saying that there places that we can get things done transparently. The experiences of these beneficiaries give me some hope.

The disbursement of the fund is also something that impressed me. Each beneficiary has a supervisor who works along with him/her to ensure that he/she is making progress according to what was stated in the business plan. The fund is not released all at once; it is divided into four tranches. The first disbursement is usually large and you only get the second after you have used the first judiciously. After the second disbursement you are expected to start the business you proposed. Without starting the business you cannot get any more money. I also heard that there are sanctions for defaulting beneficiaries.

These checks and balances are there to ensure that the beneficiaries use the grant for what it was meant for. In essence this will prevent the beneficiaries from wasting the fund on other projects for which the money was not meant for e.g. buying clothes, cars or marrying new wives (hahahaha). Actually there are many people applying to this programme with the intention of getting their piece of the national cake and not necessarily because they want to build a business and a future.

Entrepreneurship is one of the ways to go in solving the unemployment and poverty problems in Nigeria. Entrepreneurship creates job as each entrepreneur can employ at least one other person or more. YouWiN! beneficiaries have the potential to employ four to five or more Nigerians each directly and this will translate into over six thousand new jobs. This does not include jobs created indirectly. This
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Thursday 13 June 2013

June 12! Would Nigeria Have Been Different If Abiola's Election Was Not Annulled?

June 12 every year is marked in some western states of Nigeria as public holiday in honour of Chief MKO Abiola whose election of 1993 was annulled by the Babangida administration. The election held on June 12 was adjudged to be free and fair. The winning ticket of Social Democratic Party was widely accepted by Nigerians irrespective of religious or tribal inclinations. The presidential and vice preseidential candidates for SDP were both muslims. Nobody cared about that or whether MKO is a yoruba man. Nigerians wanted a change and see the leadership desired in Abiola-Kingibe ticket.

Another characteristic of the June 12 election that was commendable is the introduction of Option A-4 by the National Electoral Commission under the leadership of Prof. Humphrey Nwosu. Option A-4 requires that voters queue behind the candidate of their choice. This is to ensure that the level of electoral irregularities are reduced to the very minimum. Although days before the elction there was efforts made by some people to thwart the elections but the NEC stood firmly by their resolve to conduct a credible election. Part of these antagonising forces include Chief Arthur Nzeribe's Association for Better Nigeria which took the election tocourt with the purpose of stopping its conduct.

After the election, the military government abruptly halted the counting, collation and announcement of the election results even though 14 states have been announced and Abiola was taking the lead. By the same order Prof. Nwosu was kept under house arrest.This action created a lot of tension across the nation. Ten days later, on June 23, 1993, the June 12 election was annulled by the Babangida administration.

When General Ibrahim Babangida addressed the nation on June 26, 1993, he said; “There were allegations of irregularities and other acts of bad conduct levelled against the presidential candidates but NEC went ahead and cleared them. There were proofs as well as documented evidence of widespread use of money during the party primaries as well as the presidential election. These were the same bad conduct for which the party presidential primaries of 1992 were cancelled.”

These were flimsy excuses given to annulled the election. It goes to show that the annulment was a premeditated event and a part of a long list of action which was to stop the emergency of democracy so that the military can perpetuate itself in office.

The June 12 saga was a unique event but when we hear discussions surrounding it, it was like Abiola was the saviour of Nigeria. It was seen as if the plot was solely targetted against Abiola. Even though he paid the supreme price in the struggle, was annulment of June 12 election only about Abiola or about truncating democracy?

In my opinion, irrespective of whoever it was that won the June 12, 1993 presidential elections, the election would still have been annulled looking at the events that happened before, during and after the election. The main aim of the military junta was to prevent Nigeria from going into democracy. If we can recall, the date for return to democracy was shifted many times by the military government, meaning that there was no true intention to get Nigeria into democracy.

However, I decided to look at the issue from another angle. If June 12 election was not annulled, what will Nigeria be like today? Perhaps there would not have been a Shonekan and an interim governemnt in Nigerian history. An Abacha government which was tyranical and terrorised Nigerians from all across the nation would not have existed and billions of naira would not have been stolen. There would not have been an Abdulsalam who, in the course of returning Nigeria to democracy, squandered our foreign reserve. 

The fouth republic would not have been there with an Obasanjo or the sickly and now dead, Umaru Yar'adua. And also our shoesless fisherman from south-south would not have been president. Perhaps Nigeria would have been in a better state than it is now. Maybe we might not been shouting on our dear President Jonathan that he is clueless and in slow motion.

Maybe GSM would have come six years earlier and our epileptic NEPA would have been working well and electricity will be constant. Perhaps, all our roads will be motorable and railway transportation running smoothly. Niger Delta may not have boiled due to neglect and we won't have had miscreants like Dokubo, Tompolo and the militants. Maybe the north-east have been well developed and Boko Haram would not have had jobless and poverty striken youths to recruit. maybe, maybe, maybe....

All these are wishes. It is human character to always think that event would have turn in a different way than it is if something else had happened.The Abiola we are all praising and eulogizing today, does he not have his own hidden agenda? Many will make reference to his philantropy as a yardstick to judge what he might do as president of Nigeria, is philantropy equal to good leadership? We have heard of his sexual escapades and having children from so many different women who were not his wives, is that a sign of responsibility? In what way is that different from an Abacha who was purported have "eaten apple from Indian ladies", or our Baba accused of sleeping with his son's wife.

Many people have said stories, although unconfirmed, of Abiola's idiosyncracies, do those qualify him as being different from the others? Did it ever occur to us that Nigeria may have been worse under Abiola? Did it ever occur to us that Abiola may have gone into alliance with some nations which may not mean well to our nation? Is it not possible for Abiola to sign some treaties which may have kept Nigeria under bondage? Would Abiola have been more tolerant of opposition than other governments we have had? During Abiola's government is it possible that we may not have seen the kind of Ghana-must-go politics we see these days, putting in mind the amount of money that exchange hands during 1993 election?

I am not in anyway castigating the late Chief Abiola. I am not saying he is not worthy of the memory and remembrance he is getting. I am not saying the man who paid the supreme price for the achievemnet of democracy should not be immortalised. I admire his courage for standing by his mandate even unto death. Very few will do that, even his vice presidential candidate reneged.

What I saying is that we should not exalt Abiola as if he is the saviour of Nigeria, as if since Abiola did not become president Nigeria cannot make it again under another person, as if Abiola may be entirely different from the others, although that is what was expected. Abiola is a president we never had as a country but Abiola is not the only president we could have had.

Celebration and remembrance of June 12 should be about democracy and not about Abiola alone. Many people have misdirected this unique occasion. June 12 will make more meaning if we look at it from the point if what and how our democracy will look like. 

God bless Nigeria

#2015OnMyMind

#PoliticalGabriel
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Tuesday 11 June 2013

Another Mid Term Report With A Better Scoring System


I just finished watching a recorded airing of the mid-term report of the House of Representatives of the Nigerian National Assembly on African Independent Television. The broadcast showed the address of the speaker of the house and other invited speakers. This broadcast is the review of the last two years of the 7th assembly.

As I watch the broadcast, my mind went to what I watched and listened to on 29th May, 2013 from the Aso Rock during the mid-term report of the transformation agenda. The executives had their own session of assessing their activities over the last two years in power.

The information from the session of the House of Representatives was profound but the purpose of the piece is not to discuss the content. I shall take time to look at that at a later date. The purpose of this post is to compare this session with that of the executives.

While both of them were a report card presentation, one was a praise singing the other is a case of third party review. The ministers listed their achievements and how the economy is growing, markers quoted which is hardly visible to the average Nigerian and do not translate to food on the table. The House of Representatives listed how much of their functions they have performed which are easily measurable. Some may want to observe that we have not felt the impact of these laws passed; I wish to state that it is the function of the executive to implement those laws.

The intriguing part of the session is the third party assessment of the activities of the legislature. The speakers were independent and expressed sincere and objective assessment of the House of Representatives over the two years. These are notable and respected Nigerians which include Prof. Isawa Elaigwu, Femi Falana, Dr Abubakar Mohammed, NLC President and many more.

All the speakers admitted that the House had a modest performance. I was also pleased that they did not mince words in pointing out areas of deficiency. In addition they also gave suggestions and recommendations to a better outcome for the rest of the legislative tenure. This action of inviting Nigerians to assess and gave their views on the legislative actives of the House is highly commendable unlike the action of self assessment that the executive did. The House may have learnt from what the executive did and therefore did theirs differently but it is really exemplary.

From the comments of the speakers, I agree with them that most Nigerians are ignorant of the real function of the legislature. There are misconceptions about the National Assembly in general and I think this should be addressed promptly. Misconceptions arise when people are not properly informed and/or are ill informed. 

There is more to do in terms of enlightening Nigerians on the proper functioning of government. This function should not be left to organs of government alone. Everyone should be involved in this: civil society, non-governmental organisations, the mass media, writers, bloggers, and enlightened individuals. Together we can create an enlightened society and a better government.

God help Nigeria!

#2015OnMyMind

#PoliticalGabriel
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