EsinIslam Portal Media Network
29 March 2012
By Raheem Oluwafunminiyi - creativitysells@gmail.com
When President Goodluck Jonathan alonside his economic
shenanigans led by the former World Bank magician, Mrs
Okonjo Iweala, the 100 million naira valentine gift
giving Central Bank Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido
Sanusi and the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory
Agency, PPPRA argued that the amount of money paid to
some faceless oil cabal as subsidy was hurting the
nation and in order to free the economy from
corruption, over pricing, over payment and all manners
of illegality, all forms of subsidies would have to be
removed on New Year day, not many believed and were
disposed to such a fatal policy. Nigerians both at
home and abroad saw the Greek gift as one coloured
with insincerity and simply saw it as yet another
castle in the air which should never be allowed to
have a foundation.
Nigerians led by the heavily compromised Nigerian
Labour Congress, NLC and fellow counterpart, the Trade
Union Congress, TUC braced for a showdown with the
government when the latter insisted there was no going
back on the subsidy removal. For the first time since
the June 12 protests, the vast majority of the people
came out enmasse to vent their anger and show their
displeasure in a manner that neither threatened
national security or the corporate existence of the
country (even as the government of the day had
deployed stern looking soldiers to Lagos and
elsewhere, claiming some elements where hell bent on
hijacking the peaceful protests).
As a result of the embarrassment the likes of lawyers
led by the Fawehinmis, artists led by Daddy Showkey
and friends, religious groups and human rights
activists led by Pastor Tunde Bakare, youths, market
women and children where throwing at the government,
the President whose approval ratings and popularity
had reached an unprecedented low appeared on national
television to tell the vast majority of Nigerians what
they had heard before and the unrealities of the
subsidy removal. The speech was nothing new and
appeared to further aggravate the anger in the polity.
Since the turn of democracy in Nigeria in 1999, no
Presidential speech had witnessed widespread
criticisms other than the ones President Jonathan had
made during the subsidy brouhaha. They were
capricious, insincere, filled with sweet talk and
smacked off a campaign to further malign the Nigerian
people. As a result of the fact that the President and
his economic team where desperate, wanted a compromise
and needed the strike to end as quickly as possible
because of its attendant socio-political and economic
effects, they firstly told a bewildered Nigerians that
a transportation scheme had been evolved to ease
travelling costs and make transportation accessible to
all.
This writer alongside millions of Nigerians were
marvelled to hear Labaran Maku, Olusegun Aganga and
Senator Idris Umar, all Ministers in President
Jonathan's cabinet that the first batch of 1600 mass
transit buses had been taken delivery of at a 10
billion naira revolving loan. This writer is less
concerned about the money used to purchase these
buses, for it had always been a norm for ten
percenters (to borrow a leaf from Nzeagwu's 1966 coup
speech) to inflate contract prices, but the viability
of these buses during and after the strike. Where the
buses enough to ferry over 70 million Nigerians who
travel on a daily basis? Has the second, third or
fourth batch of mass transit buses been bought to
further cushion the effect of subsidy removal? Which
of the government agencies monitor these buses for
better cordination? These are simple questions
President Jonathan and his team should be able to
answer.
However, the January 7 speech delivered by the
President urged Nigerians to prepare to make
sacrifices, but government on it's own part would
undertake several measures aimed at cutting the size
and cost of government coupled with efforts to reduce
the size of current expenditure and capital spending,
reduction in overseas trips, overhead costs by
Ministries, Departments and Agencies, 25% reduction of
basic salaries of all political office holders in the
Executive arm of government (even though the
legislative arm of government gulps 25% of the
nation's budget).
Other measures included the full rehabilitation of the
Port Harcourt - Maiduguri Railway Line and completion
of the Lagos - Kano Railway Line, the immediate
commencement of a Public Works programme that will
engage 10,000 youths across the federation, creating
additional 370,000 jobs and also steps to further
sanitize the oil industry.
Having said this, the Ministers told a listening
Nigerian public that the President had directed all
MDA's to pay the monthly salaries of public service
workers by 20th of January, in order to enable them
cope with the effects of the subsidy removal and also
asked that the monthly meeting of the Federation
Accounts Allocation Committee, FAAC be brought forward
to the 15th of January in order to facilitate revenue
sharing for the month. Aside this, in order to make
the subsidy removal one that will promote and justify
government's initiatives, the Subsidy Reinvestment and
Empowerment Programme Document otherwise known as SURE
was drawn.
The SURE programme had been hurriedly drawn in the
wake of the subsidy strike to douse tensions but after
more than four weeks into the end of the strike, the
SURE had suddenly become ludicrous and old fashioned.
This became evident at the 58th National Executive
Committee meeting when the President told chieftains
of the Peoples Democratic Party that the
implementation of the palliatives to cushion the
effects of subsidy removal were no longer feasible. He
argued that the palliatives had been based on 100%
removal of subsidy on local consumption of fuel and as
a result of its failure to achieve this, he orderd PDP
members to withdraw the circulated SURE document.
This policy reversal has led to criticisms from all
sections of the country, most especially many who
believe had been vindicated on their exposure of the
lies peddled by the Jonathan administration on the
subsidy removal. Many have also argued that since the
trade unions where so blind and lame to have seen the
insincerity in the words, gestures, actions and speech
of the President and his retinue of political elites,
they should not cry blue murder.
This writer, however, have always told people who
cared to listen that the emergence of President
Jonathan as a leader was a mistake and for that
reason, many shouldn't have trusted the man who
claimed to Nigerians he never wore shoes to school. A
leader must at all times be upright and fulfill
whatever policy emerges from his government. The
withdrawal of the SURE document is just one out of the
many measures the government had promised to embark
upon. All of them were bound to fail from the start
because those interested in subsidy removal where only
looking for ways to impoverish the people, yet further
line their own pockets.
We the people must as a matter of urgency begin to
hold responsible all those who dubiously pulled a fast
one on us as far as the subsidy removal was concerned.
We must ensure that policies which turn out to have
stunted growth at the start are not accepted. We must
let the Jonathan administration understand that
goodluck is not the road and path to come into
government, for those who rode on such path never
triumphed at the alter of purposeful and sincere
democracy. The President should ask Hosni Mubarak.
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