Let's Talk Afro-Geopolitics II: The Future of the Nigerian State

Will Nigeria Make it 2060 (Its 100 Anniversary of Independance)?

  • Yes

    Votes: 27 47.4%
  • No

    Votes: 30 52.6%

  • Total voters
    57

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
Joined
Jan 16, 2014
Messages
17,969
Reputation
2,960
Daps
52,727
Reppin
The Republic of Biafra
That is true. Personal accountability must be made in order for us to survive in this world. And the good thing about this is we have other empires and countries where we can see what they did wrong and what they did right and apply what works for us

Nigeria's current elites are very anti-intellectual. Buhari himself said that he wasn't an economist but he doesn't understand the economic argument for Naira devaluation so therefore he will continue to abrogate the independence of Nigeria's Central Bank and control monetary policy.

:mjlol:
 

BigBoy713

Pro
Joined
Nov 18, 2016
Messages
177
Reputation
420
Daps
571
Reppin
H-Town!
Nigeria's current elites are very anti-intellectual. Buhari himself said that he wasn't an economist but he doesn't understand the economic argument for Naira devaluation so therefore he will continue to abrogate the independence of Nigeria's Central Bank and control monetary policy.

:mjlol:
They have intelligence they just use it in the wrong ways and use it for their own personal gain. We have a lot of educated people and a lot of uneducated people in Nigeria. It's time for us to learn or we won't survive but I believe it can still happen tho. Hopefully without bloodshed
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
Joined
Jan 16, 2014
Messages
17,969
Reputation
2,960
Daps
52,727
Reppin
The Republic of Biafra
They have intelligence they just use it in the wrong ways and use it for their own personal gain. We have a lot of educated people and a lot of uneducated people in Nigeria. It's time for us to learn or we won't survive but I believe it can still happen tho. Hopefully without bloodshed

Boko Harm/Niger Delta militancy may be just the beginning.
 

chkmeout

marshawn lynch handshake
Joined
Nov 6, 2012
Messages
8,480
Reputation
-596
Daps
23,383
Bihari ho ass is another puppet selling Nigerian to the North. Muthafukka don't even know the name of his own party.


British we see you fukking devils
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
Joined
Jan 16, 2014
Messages
17,969
Reputation
2,960
Daps
52,727
Reppin
The Republic of Biafra
Boko Haram's Cost to Nigeria's Borno: $1 Billion And Rising
Boko Haram militants have destroyed infrastructure that may cost more than $1 billion to rebuild in the northeastern Nigerian state of Borno, the main theater of the government’s six-year fight against the Islamist insurgency, according to Governor Kashim Shettima.

“Hospitals, bridges, roads that they mined will require about 79 billion naira ($397 million)” to rebuild, Shettima, 49, said in an interview at his office in the state capital of Maiduguri. “If you are to quantify the homes, the figure may reach even three times the figure I quoted.”



Exclusive insights on technology around the world.
Get Fully Charged, from Bloomberg Technology.

The conflict has displaced 1.6 million people in Borno state, or 27 percent of the population, and about 121,000 live in camps in Maiduguri, according to the National Emergency Management Agency. With Boko Haram razing villages, schools, hospitals, clinics and businesses in 22 of 26 of Borno’s local government areas, residents have abandoned their homes and sought refuge in the relative safety of the state capital and the neighboring countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger.


The need to rebuild infrastructure in Borno, the birthplace of the insurgent group, and other badly hit states in the northeast comes as Africa’s biggest oil producer faces a cash crunch due to a halving of oil prices in the past year. Boko Haram’s campaign to impose its version of Islamic law in Nigeria has left more than 13,000 dead.

The World Bank is considering a $2.1 billion loan to rebuild infrastructure in the northeast state after a meeting with Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari in Washington in July. Shettima said he is making efforts to ensure his state gets some of the funds and rebuilding schools will be a priority.

Bama Destruction
“The quantum of funds required for the rehabilitation, reconstruction and resettlement of our people is so enormous,” he said. “It increases by the day.”

More than three-quarters of homes and other buildings in Bama, Borno’s second-largest town, have been destroyed by insurgents, Shettima said. Many of Bama’s residents now live in Dalori 1, one of Maiduguri’s largest camps, with a population of nearly 19,000.

Businesses, such as mobile-phone companies, have also been hit with widespread vandalism of transmission towers in the region.

-1x-1.jpg

MAP: Borno State


“I don’t think there is any site in Bama that is still working,” said Mustapha Ahmed, a Bharti Airtel Ltd. shop supervisor at the company’s main outlet in Maiduguri. “Bama is one of our backbones. With the improved security situation, I believe that, within a few months, all the sites will come up.”

Insurgency Victims
With Buhari’s appointment of Tukur Buratai as the army’s chief of staff and Babagana Monguno as national security adviser, both hailing from Borno, the security situation will improve soon, said Shettima.

“They are both victims of the insurgency and they know the terrain very well,” he said. “It has started yielding results.”

Buhari has ordered the armed forces to put an end to the insurgency by mid-November and on Monday in Ghana he said the military is winning the conflict.

Buratai spent two weeks last month meeting with soldiers at the war front to boost their morale and listen to their concerns, said Colonel Tukur Gusau, a Maiduguri-based spokesman for the military. The army chief’s convoy was ambushed during the visit, with a soldier and 10 assailants killed in a firefight in the village of Faljari east of Maiduguri.

“Preparing the soldier’s mind to understand why he needs to go out and fight for his country, that’s also part of the new strategy,” Gusau said in an interview.

‘Dehumanizing Experience’
Civilians displaced by the fighting are “itching” to safely return home and rebuild their lives, said Shettima. In Dalori 1 alone, doctors have recorded more than 340 cases of malnutrition in children, said Noah Bwala, a United Nations Children’s Fund camp coordinator.

“Keeping them in camps is to some a most dehumanizing experience,” said Shettima.

A support fund set up by the federal government to care for victims that has drawn donations from Nigerian billionaires, such as Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote, has been slow to disburse cash, Shettima said.

Only 24 billion naira of a total 54 billion naira promised has been received and about an eighth of that amount has been spent so far, Sunday Ochoche, executive director of the Abuja-based Victims Support Fund, said in an interview in Maiduguri. The state has relied on several non-governmental organizations to respond to the victims’ immediate needs, including counseling.

Many displaced people are struggling to come to terms with trauma, said Gambo AbdulAzeez, a counselor with the UN. One of AbdulAzeez’s patients, Aishatu Musa, a 28-year-old mother of four, left Bama in search of her children before being captured by Boko Haram and forced to marry a militant. She now carries his child.

Sitting on a mat in a Unicef tent, she retold her story in a monotone voice in her native Kanuri language.

“Efforts are also being made for proper counseling and support of victims of the insurgency,” said Shettima. “Especially those that were detained, harassed and tortured by the Boko Haram.”
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
Joined
Jan 16, 2014
Messages
17,969
Reputation
2,960
Daps
52,727
Reppin
The Republic of Biafra
STARVATION IN NIGERIA! Biggest famine-crisis since BIAFRA!
Nigeria grapples with starvation amid Boko Haram battle
The United Nations warns of the 'largest crisis in Africa' as the offensive against Boko Haram moves at a snail's pace.





  • facebook.png
  • twitter.png
  • READ MORE: Nigeria's hunger crisis could kill 200 children per day

    The same day as Irbor made his comments, five people were killed in raids on villages near Chibok, the district that gained notoriety for the Boko Haram kidnapping of more than 200 schoolgirls in 2014.

    The Boko Haram raiders looted and burned houses, set fire to crops that were ready for harvesting, and killed the locals - even though the army had been alerted to the assault.

    "We've heard there are 700 soldiers to secure the zone bordering the Sambisa forest that is the Boko Haram stronghold," said Ayuba Alamson, a resident of Chibok.

    047c7b7c64e54bdcaa2a95cf00167143_18.jpg

    The purported leader of Nigerian armed group Boko Haram Abubakar Shekau appears at an unknown location in a video posted online [File: Reuters]
    The forest covers an area of about 1,300 square kilometres (500 square miles).

    "We need another battalion," said Alamson.

    Though Boko Haram has been weakened and casualty numbers followings its attacks are often low, the frequency of their strikes "enable it to keep up the pressure on security forces and force them to deploy", said Omar Mahmood, a researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, stretching them further.

    'Famine-like'
    Troop numbers are also being pulled away to fight on another front in the south where fighters have been sabotaging oil pipelines and other installations vital to the country's export earnings in a fierce dispute over local autonomy and the distribution of petrodollars.


    The number of killings in the northeast, which increases after the end of the rainy season each year, is a particular cause for concern - especially on the border with Niger.

    Territory in Niger has become the stronghold of Abu Musab al-Barnawi, who was declared a local leader by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) armed group after Boko Haram declared allegiance to them.

    Yan St-Pierre, director of the Modern Security Consulting Group, said that pressure on ISIL fighters in northern Libya has pushed its activities further south, to countries bordering Nigeria.

    As a result, their "effectiveness for supplying [fighters] with weapons and logistic material has greatly improved over several weeks," he told the AFP news agency.

    READ MORE: HRW says Boko Haram refugees in Nigeria raped by officials

    While ISIL and Boko Haram fighters battle the Nigerian army, hunger is spreading among both villagers and the swelling ranks of displaced people in the ravaged northeast.

    The UN has warned that 75,000 children in the region are at risk of death within "a few months".

    What the World Food Programme has called "famine-like" conditions have prompted experts to warn against seeking victory over the armed groups at all costs.

    "The Nigerian army, which has adopted a purely military strategy for seven years, needs to change its approach if it wants to win this war," said St-Pierre.
 

DrBanneker

Space is the Place
Joined
Jan 23, 2016
Messages
5,786
Reputation
4,885
Daps
20,223
Reppin
Figthing borg at Wolf 359
Tbh, I think Nigeria will only make it if the oil dries up. Oil will always be corrosive to the politics and industrial development of Nigeria as long as it is an option. Plenty of opportunity for corruption and putting off reform. Until forced to use its great human capital, Nigeria will drift apart I fear.
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
Joined
Jan 16, 2014
Messages
17,969
Reputation
2,960
Daps
52,727
Reppin
The Republic of Biafra
The governor of Kaduna State, Nasir el-Rufai ( a Fulani) has paid Fulani invaders who according to him are from other countries to stop killing people in his state.
:francis:
We’ve paid some Fulani to stop killings in Southern Kaduna – El-Rufai - Vanguard News
We’ve paid some Fulani to stop killings in Southern Kaduna – El-Rufai ON DECEMBER 3, 201611:00 AMIN NEWSCOMMENTS

Kaduna State Governor Mallam Nasir el-Rufai has said his government has traced some violent, aggrieved Fulani to their countries and paid them to stop the killings of Southern Kaduna natives and the destruction of their communities saying that the renewed violence is carried out by bandits. El-Rufai made this known while fielding questions from some select Journalists in his office in Kaduna. Mallam El- Rufai He said: “For southern Kaduna, we didn’t understand what was going on and we decided to set up a committee under Gen. Martin Luther Agwai (rtd) to find out what was going on there. What was established was that the root of the problem has a history starting from the 2011 post election violence.

“Fulani herdsmen from across Africa bring their cattle down towards Middle Belt and Southern Nigeria. The moment the rains starts around March, April, they start moving them up to go back to their various communities and countries. “Unfortunately, it was when they were moving up with their cattle across Southern Kaduna that the elections of 2011 took place and the crisis trapped some of them. “Some of them were from Niger, Cameroon, Chad, Mali and Senegal. Fulanis are in 14 African countries and they traverse this country with the cattle. “So many of these people were killed, cattle lost and they organised themselves and came back to revenge. “So a lot of what was happening in Southern Kaduna was actually from outside Nigeria. We got a hint that the late Governor Patrick Yakowa got this information and he sent someone to go round some of these Fulani communities, but of course after he died, the whole thing stopped. That is what we inherited. But the Agwai committee established that. “We took certain steps. We got a group of people that were going round trying to trace some of these people in Cameroon, Niger republic and so on to tell them that there is a new governor who is Fulani like them and has no problem paying compensations for lives lost and he is begging them to stop killing.

“In most of the communities, once that appeal was made to them, they said they have forgiven. There are one or two that asked for monetary compensation. They said they have forgiven the death of human beings, but want compensation for cattle. We said no problem, and we paid some. As recently as two weeks ago, the team went to Niger republic to attend one Fulani gathering that they hold every year with a message from me.

"once you have paid him the Danegeld/ You never get rid of the Dane."
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
Joined
Jan 16, 2014
Messages
17,969
Reputation
2,960
Daps
52,727
Reppin
The Republic of Biafra
The Nigerian Army will set up cattle ranches nationwide

  • Context: For the past few years, Fulani militants have raided towns and villages across Nigeria killing thousands. In fact, more than a dozen people have been killed in clashes between Fulani herders and Tivs in Taraba State Nigeria. In response to this violence, the Nigerian state has paid Fulani herders from Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Mali not to attack settlements in Nigeria or it has offered to create cattle ranches in all of Nigeria's 36 states. The result of this inter-ethnic violence and proposal for the creation of ranches has strengthened anti-Fulani rhetoric particularly in Southern Nigeria. Attacks in Ekiti State have made the Governor of that state, Ayo Fayose, popular far beyond Ekiti. Former government officials such as Femi Fani Kayode write op-eds which suggest a Fulani conspiracy to conquer and Islamcize Nigeria. The Buhari government's inaction feeds this rhetoric especially because Buhari identifies with his Fulani heritage.

    So, the Nigerian Army is providing an ill-thought out but typically Nigerian solution to a pressing national crisis...
The Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai has said that the Nigerian Army would be raising up cattle ranches in such a manner that in almost all the divisions, and all the brigades, cattle will be reared. Buratai who was represented by the Chief of Army Logistics, Major General Patrick Akem, stated this on Tuesday at the Commissioning of Mogadishu Cantonment New Mammy Market (former Abacha Barracks), Abuja. The Army Chief disclosed that in keeping up with modern cattle rearing tradition, he sent officers of the Army to Argentina to look at how cattle were reared.
“Argentina has a population of 41 million people, but it feeds about 400 million people around the world with its beef. To take it to the next level, we want to adopt a system where the cattle are not just free ranging coming from Sokoto to Port Harcourt, thereby making their meat tough to eat, the products will soon be coming from our own farms and ranches,” Buratai said. He noted that he has created the Barrack Investment Initiative as platform that affords Army family members the opportunity of raising up fishing ponds, vegetable gardens, fruits, livestock, chicken and their eggs.

According to him, the intention of the Nigerian Army was not just to secure the country, but to contribute in growing the economy of the nation. He added: “We want to tell our wives that they can live beyond the salaries of their husbands, so we are trying to empower the women in the barracks to be able to form co-operatives, so as to access loans and to a large extent be able to fend for themselves and their families, even without the salaries of their husbands. Meanwhile, the Commander Army Headquarters Garrison, Major General John Malu said that the formidable shopping edifice had over 2000 shops, 27 warehouses and a printing press owned by the Nigerian Navy. He added that the services of a reputable private security firm was contracted to handle the security of the market

Read more at: Nigerian Army to set up cattle ranches nationwide - Vanguard News

Nigerian Army to set up cattle ranches nationwide - Vanguard News
 

shadowking

All Star
Joined
Nov 19, 2016
Messages
1,332
Reputation
210
Daps
3,524
2017: That Aso Rock budget that deserves your attention - Vanguard News

The first time this budget analysis series ran was for the 2016 budget; and it becomes visible each day that the 1810 page document was a horrid, hurriedly-put, corrupt-conduit-filled piece of executive cluelessness.

Well, since I’m more of a realist than any of the other-ists, I’ll just say that the fact that the world lost an entire tree to the making of the paper it was inked on is a tragedy.

We have been given a sequel; the 2017 budget was presented to the National Assembly by the President in the presence of the ministers who drafted it—and even slept while the presentation was on—and it was called the “Budget of Recovery and Growth.” If you noticed, it is quite a change from the previous budget of change just like the government’s change mantra.

Here are some quotes from the President’s speech on what when passed, will be arguably the most important document in the country—sorry, just checked and it is 63 paragraphs long so I will just skip to analysing the 2017 budget as we await the implementation report of the 2016 budget. The 2017 budget is N7.298 trillion.

According to the government, this comprises of
i. Statutory transfers of N419.02 billion;
ii. Debt service of N1.66 trillion;
iii. Sinking fund of N177.46 billion to retire certain maturing bonds;
iv. Non-debt recurrent expenditure of N2.98 trillion;
v. Capital expenditure of N2.24 trillion (including capital in Statutory Transfers).


We will begin with the State House budget, which is, 42,917,666,214.
This almost double what the previous government budgeted for this in 2015 which was 23,465,865,117. Out of this, 19,970,000,000 is the total capital budget while the total recurrent budget stands at 22,947,666,214.
The total overhead is 10,171,082,268 and that for total personnel is 12,776,583,946. This is the first piece in the #SaatahBudgetSeries2017, and I will be looking at the budget of the State House (which was referred to as Presidency in previous budgets). STATE HOUSE There are 16 agencies under the State House, and they are:
State House Headquarters,
The Office of the President,
The Office of the Vice President,
Office of the Chief of Staff to the President, Office of the Chief Security Officer to the President,
State House Medical Centre,
State House Lagos Liaison Office,
Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGS),
National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS).
Kuru,
Bureau of Public Enterprises,
National Emergency Management Agency, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
Bureau of Public Procurement, Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, Nigeria Atomic Energy Commission and its centres, and Office of the Chief Economic Adviser to the President which funny enough the President only appointed in August of this year.
The first piece of shyt I was hit with, ironically, was the “Sewage Charges” budget of the State House Headquarters” It was put at 52,827,800. That means 144,733 every day. That’s a lot of shyt as far as the eye can see. Compare this with the “Sewage Charge” budget for 2015 which was 4,957,143 and for 2016 which was 6,121,643. This simply means the shyt charge went up by 1050% compared with the 2015 budget, and 850% when compared with the 2016 budget. The 52,827,800 question I want to ask now is what exactly are they shytting there?

The State House Headquarters budget for “Honorarium/Sitting Allowance” is 556,592,736. Let me remind you that the previous government budgeted 174,471,371 for same item in 2015, while in 2016, this administration jacked it up to 507,518, 861.


The State House Headquarters still continues to budget for “Residential Rent.” This is something I have failed to understand up till now and I wouldn’t mind someone explaining it to me. That aside, the amount budgeted for this “Residential Rent” in 2015 was 22,459,575, while in 2016 it was put at 27,735,643. I don’t know how or why, but in the 2017 budget of “Recovery and Growth,” this same “Residential Rent” went up to 77,545,700. Whoever the Landlord of that State House Headquarters is, in this economy, he must be a very lucky and fortunate chap.


There is an 8,539,200 budget for “Anti-Corruption” and I’m perplexed as to what exactly it is. The last time there was a budget for “Motor Vehicles” or anything like that was in the 2014 budget by the last administration and it was a total of 132,200,000. This government came in in 2016 and somehow concluded that the State House Headquarters did not have enough “Motor Vehicles,” so they started by budgeting 877,015,000 which was something like a 650% increase from the 2014 budget for the same item. The State House Headquarters still doesn’t think there are enough “Motor Vehicles,” so in 2017 they have budgeted a total of 197,000,000 for the purchase of “Motor Vehicles” and “Buses.”


At this rate, by 2019, this government would’ve succeeded in buying enough “Motor Vehicles” to drive the entire country off the edge. 2016 will end up being one of the darkest years in this country in relation to power supply. So, I do not understand where the State House Headquarters got megawatts from in 2016 that they have now budgeted 319,625,753 for “Electricity Charge” in 2017. Just so you know, the “Electricity Charge” for 2016 was put at 45,332,433.


The 2016 State House Headquarters budget for the “Rehabilitation/Repairs of Residential Buildings” was 642,568,122, while in 2017, I don’t know, but it looks like an enormous asteroid managed to hit and destroy the residential building at the State House Headquarters because what is budgeted for “Rehabilitation/Repairs of Residential Buildings” happens to be 5,625,752,757. As usual, knowing that we have travelling President, 739,487,784 has been budgeted for “International Travel & Transport.” Last year only the Vice President budgeted for books. This year neither the President nor his Vice budgeted for it. Apparently, they’re tired of reading. Just like in last year’s budget, the entire capital budget for the National Emergency Management Agency is for the “Construction of Office Building,” all 374,473,456 of it.

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has budgeted 5,999,070,468 for the “Construction/Provision of Office Buildings.” In 2016 they spent 58,434,683 on that. If you do the math, that’s an increase of over 10,000% and qualifies as an economic and financial crime.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission also budgeted 230,536,000 for “Legal Services.” I don’t know if this is enough, but since they say it is; and as long as none of that amount goes to the case-bumbling, Twitter SAN, Festus Keyamo, no wahala.
In 2016 the EFCC budgeted 93,136,000 for “Motor Vehicles,” but since maybe the corruption they should be fighting has gotten faster, they have upped that to 455,000,000. So if you had a plan of running away from the EFCC, I am sorry, they will have almost half a billion Naira worth of cars to chase you with. It is a car race now you know.

There a line item in the EFCC budget that mentions the “Procurement and Upgrade of Microsoft Product Licences” which 142,237,198 was set aside for. This is as vague as something can get, and when it comes to corruptly enriching yourself, being vague is the best bet.
In 2016 3,260,000 was budgeted by the EFCC for the “Purchase of Photocopiers” while in the 2017 budget 13,755,000 is the magic number. 1,100,595,088 has been budgeted for the “Furnishing of the New Head Office” whose construction cost in the 2016 budget was put at 7,912,502,911. Now, guess what. There is a budget for the “Consultancy of the Head Office Project” and 244,727,624 is budgeted for it. I am sorry; you will have to guess what again. Let me not stress you, 4,583,616,838 is budgeted for the “Completion of Ongoing New Head Office Building Construction” which 7,912,502,911 was budgeted for in 2016, bringing the total to 12,496,119,749. For those of you that numbers scare, that is over twelve billion Naira for the construction of the EFCC new head office. If the budget for the “Furnishing” of same building is taken into consideration, it becomes almost fourteen billion Naira. That is the anti-corruption model; build a fourteen billion Naira edifice to scare corrupt individuals and firms. The Bureau of Public Procurement has budgeted 52,957,485 for “Defence Software” and I find myself wondering when they became the Ministry of Defence. But things change, just like this government wants us to believe. I wish them a happy defence. In the course of going through the 2107 budget, I noticed a significant change. There no longer existed a column to show the state of a project. Previous budgets had the “New” and “Ongoing” tags designated to line items, and it made it easier to understand or rather follow the money. We might not know, but that little omission, which I believe was on purpose, has the ability to make corrupt practices invisible.


The 2017 budget is beginning to look more like a shyt-storm, but that shouldn’t be a problem because as you saw from the beginning, they started by budgeting generously for it. We have come to the end of the first part of my budget analysis; hopefully the second part will have something better to offer us.

Read more at: 2017: That Aso Rock budget that deserves your attention - Vanguard News
 

shadowking

All Star
Joined
Nov 19, 2016
Messages
1,332
Reputation
210
Daps
3,524
Need to also address manufacturing..No reason why all those natural resources are extracted from Nigeria, sent to European countries to be manufactured, then the finished goods sold back to Nigeria with high tariffs
There's actually no manufacturing plan. Plus you can't really do that without fixing the power grid and there are a lot of incentives not to. ...The diesel dealers make too much money...:francis:
 
Top