Saturday, 24 October 2015

EMIR OF KANO AND FORMER GOVERNOR, CENTRAL BANK OF NIGERIA, SANUSI LAMIDO SANUSI (SLS), ON THE STATE OF NIGERIA'S ECONOMY - 23rd Oct 2015 in SOUTH AFRICA



Highlights of SLS's Speech:
  • 'I am happy that we have a cabinet (now), because I think this was part of the problem.'
  • 'If we have to make a choice between real economic growth and devaluation, my recommendation is that we protect economic growth. Devalue.'
  • 'Tight monetary policies need to be loosened. It is time to lower interest rates to avoid compounding an exchange rate crisis for businesses, with high borrowing costs and a declining demand.'
  • 'A friend tells Govt when it is wrong, it is wrong to continue with fuel subsidies.'
  • 'I believe a retired General would be more suitable to solve the challenges of insecurity and corruption, but he needs help on the economy.'
  • 'We cannot spend all our time looking at the past, it is time to look at what we are doing now.'
  • 'If we continue on the trajectory with a weak Govt balance sheet, tight monetary policy in the face of falling oil prices we are setting the economy up for a long period of very low growth, and we cannot afford that considering our population and growth rates.'
  • 'We have seen 1% - 2% GDP growth rates before, but since the reforms of 2002/03 we have been lucky to have a GDP growth rate of 5% - 7%.'
  • 'If we go back to an era of 1% - 2% GDP growth rates it's gong to be difficult to get back. Investors will leave this country and go to other countries, they're not going to wait for you.'
  • 'We (Nigeria) are not the only game in town.'
  • 'I do hope that people will know that loyalty is about telling your boss the truth. I do hope that people will remember that ultimately if you are part of an administration and do not speak when you should, then you have forever forfeited your right to speak.'
  • 'I speak as a friend who wants this Govt to succeed. I speak as a friend who has a stake in the success of this administration, having fought hard and having made sacrifices to change what I thought needed to be changed.'
  • 'The only thing we can do is to actually help those who are there to achieve the change that we need. Thank you.'


Friday, 16 October 2015

With cabinet, President Buhari Places Party Above Reforms

President Muhammadu Buhari has chosen a cabinet dominated by political veterans, opting to strengthen his power base rather than surround himself with technocrats who could overhaul Africa’s biggest economy.
Buhari won March’s election on promises to usher in a new era in the West African nation where a rich elite has controlled key state jobs for half a century. Most Nigerians live in poverty despite the enormous oil wealth of Africa’s top producer.
The former military ruler had asked Nigerians to be patient and get ready for “change” as he took four months to pick his cabinet while a plunge in oil prices triggered the worst economic crisis for decades.
But in the end the 72-year-old has selected many familiar faces – those who helped him win the election and some who had hoped for jobs at a national level since he first ran for office in 2003.
Out of 36 nominated ministers, about 20 are veterans from Buhari’s party, former state governors, ministers or associates from his military career. A dozen could be classified as ‘technocrats’.
“It is a cabinet that seems to have been drawn from different interests that brought Buhari to power,” said Clement Nwankwo, director of the Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre, a think-tank in Abuja.
Buhari will unveil portfolios only after the Senate has approved his list.
But his nominations show a desire to close ranks in his All Progressives Congress (APC), an alliance of powerful Nigerians united by a desire to remove the People’s Democratic Party of his predecessor Goodluck Jonathan rather than a shared vision.
While he promised during the election campaign to take on the establishment in order to root out corruption, Buhari’s priority was to overcome APC divisions and reward allies such as party spokesman Lai Mohammed with cabinet jobs, analysts say.
To reinforce his power base, Buhari has even taken on the controversial figure of his campaign manager, former Rivers State governor Rotimi Amaechi, who has been accused of corruption. Amaechi has denied the accusations.
“It was the political trade-offs which definitely cost a lot of time. There was internal wrangling within Buhari’s party,” said Bismarck Rewane, CEO of Lagos consultancy Financial Derivatives.
As a result, most ministers have had careers that span decades making Kemi Adeosun, a 48-year-old former investment banker and one of the technocrats, his youngest nominee.
Other prominent veterans include Babatunde Fashola, former governor of the commercial capital Lagos, who won praise for getting infrastructure projects off the ground but also criticism for clearing slums.
TECHNOCRATS
Buhari’s cohort must stave off a recession next year due to a collapse in oil revenues that has weakened the naira and driven up inflation. The government also needs to win back investors upset by hefty foreign currency restrictions imposed by central bank governor Godwin Emefiele, who filled a vacuum in the absence of a finance minister.
Buhari’s selection process was complicated by the fact that he was constitutionally bound to select a minister from each of Nigeria’s 36 states to reflect the character of a nation of 170 million people from 250 ethnic groups.
Despite this, he picked some fresh faces from outside the establishment with backgrounds in accounting, law, medicine and finance.
“Those expecting a list formed wholly of technocrats were being unrealistic,” said Kayode Akindele, a political consultant and partner at private equity firm TIA capital. “He has a good mixture. You could have key portfolios with technocrats, which would help to drive reforms.”
Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, head of state oil firm NNPC and a former ExxonMobil manager, is expected to become junior oil minister as Buhari wants to head the oil ministry himself.
Reform-minded observers are likely to have been cheered by Kachikwu’s Senate hearing appearance in which he vowed to take action regarding poorly performing refineries, which force Nigeria to import most of its fuel.
Okechukwu Enyinna Enelamah, a former Goldman Sachs banker who heads Nigeria’s biggest private equity firm, African Capital Alliance, is a candidate for the finance minister.
Adeosun, a UK-trained accountant and finance commissioner of southwestern Ogun state, is also a candidate for the finance portfolio. At her hearing, Adesoun sought to assure investors that central bank controls aimed at preventing a collapse of the naira would be accompanied by measures to stimulate growth.
“So what the CBN governor has done just brought in some breathing space … (but the) exchange rate is not the silver bullet,” she said. “It would have to be accompanied with fiscal policies, monetary policies and industrial policies.”
But with no sign of any increase in oil prices, the reliance on crude sales for 70 percent of government revenues will make it difficult for Buhari to keep his promise to diversify the economy.
Source: Reuters – Fri, 16 Oct 2015 11:04 GMT

Monday, 12 October 2015

Breaking: Senate President Bukola Saraki receives 2nd Batch of Ministerial List



The Senate President, Olubukola Saraki, on Monday received the 2nd batch of the ministerial nominees from President Muhammadu Buhari.

On the last day of September, the Senate received the first batch of the ministerial nominees containing 21 names out of a possible 36 man cabinet. It is expected that this list would contain a minimum of 15 more nominees as enshrined in the constitution that every all 36 states must produce a Minister.

The Senate President acknowledged receipt of the 2nd batch of ministerial list via his official Twitter handle:


Details to follow...

Tuesday, 6 October 2015

BREAKING: Full List of 21 Ministerial Nominees Unveiled by the Senate (Updated)



President Buhari's ministerial list was read by Senate President Bukola Saraki today during plenary session. Today marks the end of a 4 months wait for Buhari to appoint his cabinet. The reason for the delay put forward by Buhari was that he needed time to carefully appoint the right people into sensitive ministerial positions.

Ministerial Nominees (21):
  1. Abubakar Malami (SAN) - Kebbi
  2. Abdulraman Dambazau - Kano (Former Chief of Army Staff)
  3. Aisha Alhassan - Taraba (APC Taraba state Gubernatorial candidate 2015 /  Former Senator)
  4. Lai Mohammed - Kwara (APC Publicity Secretary)
  5. Barr. Adebayo Shittu - Oyo
  6. Babtunde Raji Fashola - Lagos (Lagos State Governor 2007 - 2015)
  7. Sulieman Adam - Jigawa
  8. Amina Muhammed - Kaduna
  9. Ahmed Isa Ibeto - Niger
  10. Kayode Fayemi - Ekiti (Former Ekiti Governor 2010 - 2014) 
  11. Rotimi Amaechi - Rivers (Former Governor of Rivers state 2007 - 2015, APC)
  12. Chris Ngige - Anambra (Former Anambra state Governor, PDP)
  13. Ogbonaya Onu - Abia (Former Governor Abia State)
  14. Solomon Dalong - Plateau
  15. Ibe Kachikwu - Delta (Present GMD NNPC / Former ExxonMobil Director)
  16. Osagie Ehanire - Edo 
  17. Audu Ogbeh - Benue (Former PDP National Chairman)
  18. Kemi Adeosun - Ogun (Commissioner of Finance, Ogun state)
  19. Sen Hadi Sirika - Katsina
  20. Sen Udoma Udo Udoma - Cross Rivers
  21. Ibrahim Usman Jibril - Nasarawa
Do you think the names on the Ministerial list justifies the 4 months wait which crippled economic activities in the country?


Senate screening to commence on Tuesday, 13th October, 2015. (next week)

Sunday, 4 October 2015

Can Nigeria's Buhari take on the import monster and win? (The Economist - Archives)




| Middle East and Africa


Godwin Emefiele, the governor of Nigeria’s central bank, has been criticized in recent weeks for attempting to prop up the value of the naira, the country’s currency, by restricting access to foreign exchange and banning imports of certain goods. In the absence of a clear economic strategy from the country’s new president, Muhammadu Buhari, Mr Emefiele is taking an increasingly central role in determining Nigeria’s industrial policy. His tactics sound familiar. As this article from The Economist archives shows, Nigeria has pursued a protectionist policy like this before, in 1984—under Muhammadu Buhari, a young general who had won the presidency in a coup on December 31 1983.

Nigerians reluctant to tighten their belts for their former civilian leaders were ordered by the soldiers this week to take in another notch. Nigeria's central bank announced a sharp cut in foreign exchange available for imports.
Though the cut may turn out to be less swingeing than it sounds—senior officials told commercial bankers in London this week that a little over 4 billion naira will be made available for the year—there is no doubt that the new government means to cut imports heftily. Foreign bankers and creditors are happy. They see it as a sign that Nigeria is serious about living within its shrinking means.At 287m naira ($380m) a month, the new limit is less than half as much as Nigeria spent on merchandise and invisi­bles last year. It is almost a third lower even than the tough target set by ex-President Shehu Shagari in the budget presented two days before Major-Gener­al Muhammadu Buhari's coup.
Export earnings from oil dropped from $25 billion in 1980 to just under $10 billion in 1983. Though a swift rise in imports from $11.8 billion in 1979 to $18.4 billion in 1981 was checked in 1982, Nigeria amassed a current-account deficit of some $16.5 billion in the three years from 1981.
A deep cut in the import bill will free foreign exchange to service Nigeria's ex­ternal debt. This is likely to take 30-40% of export earnings in each of the next few years. But a big fall in imports could ruin the new regime's reputation at home. It is popular at the moment. Though General Buhari has promised no free lunches, people expect him to bring down prices and increase supplies of essential goods. They were beginning to grouse that he was moving too slowly—but cutting im­ports was not the step most had in mind.
Many consumer goods, including ba­sics such as detergents andcooking oil, are already scarce. Import restraints since April, 1982, and the growing reluctance of foreign suppliers to finance trade with slow-paying Nigeria have combined to reduce both the volume and the dollar value of imports in 1983 to below their 1980 level. Attempts by over-zealous sol­diers in the first weeks after the coup to impose bargain prices in the shops have made shortages worse as traders hoard now what they managed to hide then. Even black-market champagne and French perfume are vanishing as soldiers patrol the borders for smuggling.
Manufacturers are feeling the pinch the most. Nigeria buys about 75% of its industry's raw materials abroad. More than 100 businesses stopped production in 1983 because they could not get foreign exchange for imports. Many employees are taking next Christmas's holiday now. Registered unemployment, up by more than 40% in 1982, is still rising. So is inflation, conservatively estimated at an annual 20%.
Food supplies are affected too, though so far in towns high prices are a bigger complaint than shortages. Nigeria spent some $1.5 billion in 1983 on food im­ports, including 2m tons of grain. It is likely to need $2 billion this year. Drought in the north may have reduced the grain harvest by up to 50%, and there is an outbreak of rinderpest in cattle.
Under still imprecise new rules, 58% of imports will be raw materials and indus­trial spare-parts; 12%, food; 18%, con­sumer goods; and 12% for invisibles, such as foreign travel and management-fee remittances. This is in sharp contrast to the pattern of the past few years; when consumer goods accounted for 40% of all imports and raw materials only 25%.
The new government says it will keep prices of essentials down by cutting out middlemen who used to take a cut on each of five or six transactions between ship and shop. This sounds optimistic, but the true level of Nigeria's imports has long been inflated by overinvoicing and false pricing. Kicking out the crooks at home and buying more competitively abroad should reduce the fall in the volume of imports, officials hope.
Previous attempts to order Nigeria's foreign-exchange priorities have foun­dered on corruption and inefficiency. Will General Buhari and his powerful number two, Major-General Babantunde Idiagbon, do better?

On corruption, modest improvement is likely. Many of the biggest suspected wrongdoers have already left. General Buhari has said there will be no witch-hunt. He probably cannot afford one.

Culled from The Economist.

Friday, 2 October 2015

BREAKING: MULTIPLE BOMB BLASTS IN ABUJA (Updated)




Multiple bomb blasts have just been reported in Abuja at 3 different locations: by Kuje police station, Kuje market and Nyanya; all suburbs of the Federal Capital Territory.

Various Twitter handles have been confirming the reports. No details from security agencies yet.

Casualty Figures from Kuje and Nyanya Abuja Bomb Blast:
Kuje:            15 Dead, 18 injured
Nyanya:         3 Dead, 20 injured
Total Count: 18 dead, 38 injured.









May God keep all of us safe.

BREAKING: Ex-Nigerian Petroleum Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke arrested, granted bail (Updated)


Former Petroleum Minister and OPEC President, Diezani Alison-Madueke has been arrested in London along with 4 others, as reported by Premium Times, a Nigerian media organization based in Abuja.

The former Minister, was arrested the morning of Friday, 2nd Oct 2015, in London alongside 4 other people by the UK National Crime Agency. The identities of the 4 other people arrested along with her could not be confirmed by the time of filing this report.

The UK National crime Agency 
announced on it's website that it's recently formed International Corruption Unit had arrested 5 people across London today as part of an investigation into suspected bribery and money laundering offences.

It has been reported by TVC News, that Diezani has been released on bail, to report to Charing cross station on Monday after her passport was withheld by the agency.





Hilarious Twitter Post of Buhari and Saraki (PHOTO)



The Twitter handle @akaebube posted the hilarious comment with the picture of Saraki and Buhari as shown. I'll let you figure out for yourself the insinuation therein. Genius! Lol

The long awaited list of ministerial nominees was finally sent by President Buhari to Senate President Saraki on the evening of Wednesday, 30th September 2015, as reported by Breaking Times.

NIGERIAN INDEPENDENCE DAY BOMB BLAST IN MAIDUGURI - 1st Oct 2015



  • Five Five girls were alleged to have carried out the attack, some as young as 9 years old.
  • The Nigerian Military estimates 14 killed, and over 39 injured. Exact figures are yet to be ascertained. 





According to BBC''The BBC's Abdullahi Kaura Abubakar in the capital, Abuja, says people were waiting for the last evening prayers when the suicide bombers struck the mosque. Officials fear that the number of those who lost their lives is likely to rise, he says. Witnesses and security sources said some of the girls were as young as nine. Our correspondent says the attacks in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, come as the military says it is winning the war against Boko Haram.''

May the souls of the departed RIP. My heart goes out to the families of the victims.

Thursday, 1 October 2015

CABINET READY BY SEPTEMBER: Did President Buhari renege on his promise?


On the second day of President Muhammadu Buhari's trip to France which commenced on 14th September 2015, he granted an interview to Paris based international news and current affairs station, France 24. During the interview anchored by Francois Picardon on Sept 16, President Buhari re-emphasized his intention to keep to his promise of having his cabinet ready by September as contained in his Op-ed published in Washington Post during his US trip in July.

Buhari made the following statement during the interview, 'As for the cabinet I said we will have one by the end of the month, and time flies. But end of the month is coming too quickly for my liking.' Francois prods further by asking if he will be sticking to it, to which Buhari replies, 'Yes, I will stick to it (September timeline). I will send the names to the...constitutionally...Ministers...err...and some important appointment. I will have to send it to the National Assembly.' Listen from 6:30.




The interview goes on:
Francois: 'Some have quipped that the country runs better without Ministers.'
Buhari: 'Well, ermm, when you started introducing me you said I was around between 1983 to 1985, even then we had Ministers. So under this system we have to have Ministers, and we are going to have Ministers.'
Francois: 'Are markets being a bit spooked by the fact they, they don't have right now a Finance Minister? We've seen the bond market, the volatility right now when it comes to Nigeria. Is the delay starting to hurt a bit?'
Buhari: 'No, it's what we know and which we learnt from the Western system. The civil service provides the continuity, the technocrats. And in any case they are the ones that do most of the work. The Ministers are there, I think, to make a lot of noise. I think Politicians make a lot of noise, but the work is being done by technocrats.'


Buhari promised on 2 occasions, during his US and France trips, to have his cabinet ready by September, not a ministerial list. Buhari only submitted a 21 man ministerial list to the Senate on the last day of September, by 5pm on 30th Sept 2015. The constitution Section.147(3) stipulates that the President shall appoint one minister from each of the 36 states of the Federation, as such 15 more ministerial nominees are expected to be sent to the Senate to complete the cabinet.

The first step in the process of having a cabinet in place is the submission of the list of ministerial nominees to the Senate for screening and swearing in. The 2nd step of the process is the Senate screening and swearing in the successful nominees. While the 3rd and final step would be the President assigning portfolios to the duly sworn in Ministers (or Special Advisers) of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

At the moment the Senate has only acknowledged receipt of the incomplete ministerial nominees list from the President, and have informed the public that the names would be read out on the floor of the Senate during plenary on Tuesday, 6th October 2015 next week. Therefore, as at midnight 30th September, 2015 there was no sworn in Minister, there was no Minister of Finance or Attorney General of the Federation, there was no cabinet in place.

Summarily, a promise was not kept.