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Between “Reviving” the hope of the people and “Recovering”the nation
By Abdu Labaran Malumfashi
It has been some month when I was last in Abuja. But what assailed my eyes when I visited the Federal Capital last Monday was the pictures of the presidential candidates of the two leading parties and their running mates.
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With the pictures are the slogans: “Reviving the people’s hope” (by the All Progressives Congress APC) or the ruling party in the country) and “Recovering the nation” (by the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, or the main opposition party in the country).
former number two (2) to dispute him, and he will come out with the evidence that Atiku did and succeeded in pressurising him to hand over Bakassi Island to Cameroon, a thing no country worth its name would ever contemplate doing.
The two Presidential Candidates are also stupendously rich, so said the London Economist, Magazine about three (3) years ago.
Listing the 10 richest Nigerian Politicians, the magazine named both of them on the list as being Dollar Billionaires, who made their money under different circumstances (explanation is my own).
Conversely, the insistence of the CBN and the FG to stand by the new notes is not unconnected to their belief in the status quo as the state of affairs before the litigation by the governors at the Supreme Court. In other words, their status quo means a return to the new notes. This has been the bone of contention which has continuously pitched the FG against some states and their governors.
At our own end, we have been curious in locating the correct position of status quo in this context. We believe that the subject is not just tangential, but is inextricably interwoven, and integral to the core of the Supreme Court order. The opinions of legal experts can also be instrumental in locating the contextual status quo.
We hope that all parties in the dispute could come to a common understanding, and indeed agreement as to the correct position of the status quo meant by the Supreme Court. This will help to douse the tension, and address the growing confusion, and indeed conflict as to what the status quo in this matter truly is. We need to do this quickly to help our nation transit smoothly from one democratic governmnet to another. All eyes are on us as a political leader in our region.
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I do not know about you, but I do know who gave us hope, and also who made it almost impossible to realise that hope into reality.
I also know who had said that “they would make the country ungovernable” if they didn’t win the 2015 Presidential election. They did not win the presidency, and the rest, as the saying goes, is ‘history’.
The wilful ungodly conduct of some people nearly killed the nation, which is why they want to bring it back to life.
The question begging for answer is: who is to trust between the one who wants to add to my hope and the one who wants to bring back the nation from the near-death they had left it.
Perhaps, they want to recover the nation so that they could kill it COMPLETELY?
Because, by the time they are thorough with their vengeance on some people and the rampage on the economy of the nation, not much will be left of the country.
Again, I do not know about you, but I do know that the one to choose between them.
BECAUSE, while the former attempts only to revive a hope that was, in the first place, not raised by him, the later will ONLY kill the country completely if they get the chance again.
Don’t tell me that he was not incharge of the country at the time I referred to, because he was, more or less.
His former boss, President Olusegun Obasanjo has alleged that his number two, and current PDP cadidate, Alhaji (although he once warned against calling him ‘Alhaji’) Atiku Abubakar, it was who persistently begged him to hand over ‘Bakassi Island’ to Cameroon.
Obasanjo also challenged his
While the APC’s Bola Ahmed Tinubu or the Jagaban Borgu, is from a wealthy family, and a one-time Governor of Lagos State, at which time he made the state to be self-sustaining, without waiting for the monthly hand out from Abuja. He made Lagos State into the success story that it is today.
The same thing can not be said about Atiku (not his fault for not coming from a wealthy family). This writer is also from a very poor family, in terms of money, though.
Atiku had started public service in the Customs Service, where he retired as a very rich man, before he became Governor of his Adamawa State, before he even take over the rain of affairs in his state.
Of importance to us is his leaving Nigeria almost on its knees, but him as a Dollar Billionaire after Eight (8) years as a Vice President.
Another question begging for an answer is: where did all their money come from?
While we have earlier explained part of the source of Tinubu’s wealth, what we have not said was his claim of having invested in the American Apple Company, makers of the iPhone, among other products, while he was in that country.
This act in itself is enough to make one stupendously rich even without the benefit of inheritance.
As I was writing this piece, a friend of my Daily Trust days, who is unaware of my health challenge, called to ask for “any kind of assistance” from me.
I told him about the tragedy that befell me long before I was struck down by a stroke, although the complete story of my sojourn in the Katsina Government House is for another day.