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Showing posts from August, 2023

Tinubu’s loud silence on restructuring

  The Nasir El Rufai-led True Federalism Committee set up by the All Progressives Congress to look into the issue of restructuring submitted its reports to the National Working Committee on Thursday, January 25, 2018. The committee in its reports called for more devolution of powers to the states and urged that the police and prisons be moved from the Exclusive to the Concurrent List. According to the report, the state government would be allowed to establish state police to handle certain crimes as well as state prisons. The committee equally recommended independent candidacy but with a clause that individuals who intend to stand for elections must not have been a member of any political party at least six months prior to the elections in which they intend to contest. On local government autonomy, the committee said since “one size does not fit all,” the states should be allowed to legislate for local governments, including creating more councils. Former President Muhammadu Buhari w

Agenda for Tinubu’s cabinet

  I watched the colourful swearing-in of the 45 out of the proposed 48 ministers of President Bola Tinubu last Monday, August 21. It came 84 days after the president’s inauguration on May 29, 2023.   It’s the seventh of such in this Fourth Republic which started in 1999. Hearty congratulations to the lucky few who made the president’s cabinet. It’s indeed a rare privilege to be selected for such enviable appointments among over 40 million estimated members of the All Progressives Congress and over 200 million Nigerians. I have granted several media interviews across some of the print and broadcast media since the inauguration of the ministers. Prominent among them are the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria better known as Radio Nigeria, Spectrum TV, TV 360, News Central Television and Blueprint newspaper. I do not hide my disapproval of the size of the cabinet which I strongly feel is bloated. What’s the president doing with a cabinet of over 50 persons (President, Vice President,

Revised public service rules for directors and permanent secretaries

The public service, comprising civil servants and non-civil servants, constitutes the bureaucracy of every country. They (civil servants and non-civil servants) are the people who implement government programmes, policies and projects. They work in government ministries, departments and agencies better known as MDAs. Not every public servant is a civil servant, but every civil servant is a public servant. The public service is established by section 169 of the 1999 Constitution. The civil service consists of several ministries, being a subsidiary of the public service. The public service contains the civil service, Armed Forces, judiciary, statutory corporations, etc. which are owned and financed by the government both at the state and federal levels. Most public service organisations are service-oriented, rather than profit-oriented (See Part 1 of the Fifth Schedule to the 1999 Constitution, paragraph 19). The bureaucracy known as public service has been subjected to reforms over th

President Tinubu’s economic relief packages

  Barely 15 minutes after last Monday, July 31, President Bola Tinubu’s national broadcast on relief packages to ameliorate the removal of fuel subsidy, I was privileged to analyse the speech on Nigerian Television Authority programme called “Nigeria Today.” The programme ran from 7:30pm to 8pm. On set with me was Dr Mainasara Umar while the anchor was Lydia Ochi.   Truth be told, these relief packages are long-awaited and it would seem the president had to make the speech in order to pull the rug off the feet of the Nigeria Labour Congress and its affiliates who are adamant to go on nationwide protests. As of the time of writing this piece yesterday, it is unclear if the NLC will still be embarking on the protests more so as there have been Federal Government team marathon meetings with the unions in the last 72 hours. Before examining the intervention programmes rolled out by the president in his broadcast, I dare say that it would have been tidier if the interventions aimed at cus