Tuesday, January 06, 2015

Usher Gets into Alleged NYE Fight Over Rumored Fiancée Grace Miguel

USHER 
Recently, good news broke that Usher was rumored to be engaged to manager Grace Miguel. Now he’s already fought for his fiancée’s honor.
The holidays were off to a great start when the “Papers” singer allegedly popped the question and then spent Christmas with Miguel’s family.
But the good times didn’t last. As the couple brought in the new year, someone at E11even nightclub in Miami apparently insulted his lady.
Of course Usher wasn’t having that! It went down in Miami as the world rung in the new year. Although details are unknown, a brawl broke out.

Usher didn’t leave the club without proof of a fight. He posted to his Instagram a pic of his injured eye before deleting it.
But whatever the club-goer did to his woman, they didn’t let that stop their happiness. They were spotted on the Left Coast in Beverly Hills shopping at H Lorenzo on Friday, Jan. 2, 2015.

Oprah No Longer the Richest Black Woman; Replaced by Folorunsho Alakija

Oprah and Folorunsho Alakija

Oh no! Say it isn’t so.

OK, put it like this. Oprah had a nice run as the world’s richest black woman, but as they say, all good things must come to an end.
O, move over ’cause Folorunsho Alakija is now the richest black woman in the world. Ventures Africa says she bested Oprah by $500 million. Alakija is estimated to worth $3.3 billion and at last count, Oprah’s in the neighborhood of about $2.7 billion, according to Forbes Magazine.
Would you believe the now billionaire Nigerian oil baroness and fashion entrepreneur started her career as a secretary at a bank in Nigeria? Yes, she most certainly did.
When she moved to England in the 80’s she studied fashion and eventually ended up starting her line called “Supreme Stitches”.
The 62 year old did well with her fashion brand but the bulk of her fortune comes from the oil business. Her company Famfa Ltd got an oil exploration license and they attained a 617,000-acre oil block which was highly lucrative.

Ventures Africa stated that her assets include a $46 million jet and a portfolio over $100 million.
“We have no idea on how much debt (if any, the company [Famfa Oil] has), but even if we take the high side, and subtract 50 percent of the value of her stake for debt, that still gives her 60 percent stake in OML 127 a market value of $3.2 billion, which makes her [Alajika] richer than the $2.7 billion Oprah Winfrey is worth, according to Forbes Magazine’s last rankings,” reported Ventures Africa.

Fani-Kayode: The creed of believers

BRING light where there is darkness, joy where there is pain, hope where there is despair and respite where there is suffering. Fear not the mighty, be strong and confident in all circumstances, uphold the truth and defend the weak. Fight the power, bow to no man, stand firm on your convictions and resist the evil. Watch and pray, have faith in God, hold your head up high and fight the good fight. This is the creed of the believer: the obligation and calling of the Sons and Daughters of Zion. 
    Yet we still have so much to learn. Consider the following. We live in an interesting world with interesting people. We only have one life so we must live it to the fullest. Trust and love God, hold on to your dreams, be faithful to your convictions and do as much good as you possibly can to all those around you. Do not be arrogant or forceful but at the same time bow to no man and let none intimidate you.
   Know who you are and where you are in the scheme of things: you are a child of the Living God, dedicated and covenanted to Him alone even before you left your mother’s womb. He is your God and your strength, He is awesome in battle and true to His word and He will not allow you to fail, to fall or to be ashamed. He has a mission and a purpose for you in this difficult, lonely and oftentimes cruel world. The challenge is to identify that purpose and to fulfil it in a glorious way. 
  Yet, despite the ugly storms of life, let your resolve be strong: to live for God and to be a blessing to all those around you. And if nothing else, remember this: that He loves you, that you are very special to Him and that you are destined to succeed. So take hold of your beautiful destiny and espouse its great promise to the fullest. Let it be for you as it was written in the Holy Books before the oracles of time. Let courage, truth and honour be your armour. Let praise, love, faith and compassion be your banner. Let the earth, the wind, the water, the fire and all the elemental forces of the cosmos confirm your greatness and protect your precious soul. 
   Let the Lion of the Tribe of Judah watch over you. Let the Seven-fold Spirit of the Most High God defend you. Let the Holy Angels that guard the seven seas and the four corners of the earth fight for you. Let all of creation bow before you and let He that is more than able, He that sits above the circles of the earth, He that is known as Yeshua, the Son of the Living God be with you all the days of your life.
   And who is this infallible God whose name we consistently invoke? Who is this mighty Lord in whom we believe and whom we exalt and worship morning, night and day? Who is this all-powerful deity that is our strength, on whose name we stand and in whom we make our boast? 
   He is the God of the Holy Bible: the giver of life. He is the Holy One of Israel whose coming was prophesied for thousands of years by the Prophets before it came to pass. He is He that humbled Himself and shed His divinity: who came down as God incarnate in the flesh. Who suffered on the cross under Pontius Pilot, who shed His blood, who gave up His life as a living sacrifice for our sins, who went down into hell and overcame Satan and the principalities and powers, who rose again, who ascended into Heaven and who sits at the right hand of God the Father.
   He is He whose Holy Spirit guides, leads, protects and fights for us on earth today. He is He who holds the universe together by the power of His word. He is He that is high and lifted up, whose train fills the Temple and whose love has no end. He is He that is more than able and whose Kingdom shall reign forever. He is He that makes all things beautiful in His own way and in His own time. He is the Spoiler of our adversaries, our Advocate, our Defender and our Judge.
   He is the Man of War, the Avenger of our Blood, The Ancient of Days, the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, the Lord of Hosts, the Comforter, the Consuming Fire, the Alpha and the Omega, the Creator of all that is, the Prince of Peace, the Lily of the Valley, the Rose of Sharon, the Balm of Gilead, the Blood of the Sprinkling, the Rejected Stone that became the Cornerstone, the Nazarene, the Conqueror of Satan and the Great Provider.
   He is the Author and Finisher of our Faith, the Lifter of our Heads, our Shield and our Glory. He is our Father who is filled with love, who guards us jealously and who never fails. He is the Lord of the Universe, the Lord of the 24 Elders that sit before Him in His heavenly throne room. He is the Lord of the Angels and the Archangels, the Lord of the Cherubim and the Seraphim and He is the King of Glory. Who is this King of Glory? The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle, He is the King of Glory.
   His name is Jehova Sabaoth, Jehova Rapha, Yahweh God and the I Am That I Am. He is irresistible and unfathomable. He is the God of the Armies of Israel and the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. He is the All-Seeing and the All-Knowing. He is the Compassionate and the Merciful: the Adonai, the Elohim. He is the Lamb of God, the Risen King, the one and only Messiah, the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords. He is Yeshua: Jesus Christ of Nazareth, Son of the Living God. We are created for His pleasure, He delights for us to prosper, He displays His splendour, glory and majesty in our lives and besides Him there is no God.
   To those that know and trust Him and that believe in Him I have this to say: He will guide you and protect you through this year and beyond. He will make his face to shine upon you. Your feet shall not slip and neither shall you suffer want. You shall live long and prosper and your joy shall be full. You shall not be cut short because long life is your portion. 
   The Lord shall give you the fat of the land and a place of honour in the land. You shall increase. The Lord shall enlarge your coast and he shall exalt your horn. The seductions and evil of this world will not overwhelm you and neither will they consume you. The Lord shall guide you in all your ways and deliver you from the hands of the wicked one and his agents. 
   You shall rise up to greater heights than you can possibly imagine and neither shall you ever suffer want, shame or defeat. Before your very eyes you shall see the recompense of the wicked and those that seek your hurt and wish you to go astray. You will excel in your work and studies and the Lord will grant you joy everlasting. Because you have honoured Him in all your ways your days will be long and His blessing shall never depart from you. 
   The love of God and his grace and mercy shall walk with you all the days of your life and his angels shall guard you jealously both night and day. May God bless and keep you now and always and may this year and beyond be great in your life and in your family. You are simply wonderful; a great blessing from a great God. You will never be ashamed but rather like a well-watered garden, you will be fruitful and productive. 
   You will flourish forever and neither shall your leaves ever wither. Your pockets shall never run dry for the Lord will grant you plenty and he will cause rivers to flow through your desert places. His precious anointing and Holy Spirit shall never depart from you and his peace and favour shall cover you all the days of your life.
   I soak your body, spirit and soul in the precious blood of the sprinkling; the blood of the Holy one of Israel, the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, Jesus Christ of Nazareth, son of the Living God. I commit you into the hands and power of the God of Heaven and into the presence and power of he who came down as God incarnate in the flesh. 
   May the deep mysteries of his precious blood speak for you at the gates and fight for you in every circumstance touching and concerning your life. Go forth into the world and the New Year boldly with your head held up high knowing who you are and knowing that you serve a mighty God. Because of Him you are safe and sound and you cannot be defeated. Because of Him everything that you set your hands to do that is in accordance with His will, shall meet with good success. 
   Give Him the praise and glory in all things and remember always that He loves you more than life itself. God bless and keep you and all that is yours now and always. We serve a mighty God so go forth into the world in His strength and in His power. Take dominion and conquer, be courageous and be strong and most important of all be thankful and be happy: for in the end He makes all things beautiful. Faithful, mighty and true, that is His name. Have a great year and may God be with you and yours now and always.

Nzeaka: IBB’s historic declarations on Jonathan

FINALLY, former military president, Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, popularly addressed as IBB by his teeming admirers, has endorsed the Jonathan/Sambo ticket  for the 2015 presidential election. Breaking a long silence in 27 historic words, IBB in declaring support for Jonathan in Minna two days after the Christmas and four days before the momentous New Year, said “the President means well for Nigeria and he is working well. Anybody who means well for this country should support the President to make sure Nigeria survives.” 
  By that historic step, IBB is telling the North in particular that although like the Chinese, all politicians look alike, there is something in a name; President Goodluck Jonathan is to Nigeria what his name depicts: he has distinguished himself as a gem of a leader – a doer, a patriot par excellence, a great achiever and performer. 

Babangida, by that endorsement, is indirectly telling all those nursing misplaced grievances, especially in the North, to sheathe their daggers for as they say, a patient waiter is no loser. It is better to lose the saddle for a while than the horse. Put in another way, IBB is saying that it is better for a region to send a candidate to the Villa by peaceful methods rather than the Buhari style of getting “the monkey and the baboon soaked in blood”, because anything obtained by force naturally requires more force to retain. Obviously learning a number of useful lessons from the Jonathan Presidency, IBB has realised that the North does not need a northern president to develop. If northern presidency were to be a solution to the problems of the region, whatever they may be, the many years of military rule in this country which saw the North presiding over the affairs of the country for so many years would have turned the North into the envy of all. But it did not. Therefore, what matters is purposeful leadership, irrespective of the geographical divide the leader comes from. Jonathan, from all indications, is providing Nigeria with that much needed purposeful leadership. Babangida acknowledged this much.

Babangida’s is a courageous step by a courageous elder statesman and a leader who loves an idea – the idea of Nigeria for all Nigerians – more than his personal comfort, religion or tribe. It symbolises a fitting tribute to the ideal President for Nigeria – a “well-meaning” and “well performing” President who sees the entire country as his constituency. Babangida’s endorsement therefore, caps the nationwide endorsement of the Jonathan/Sambo ticket not just by the PDP family alone, but also by various political stakeholders: Ohanaeze Ndigbo, the Afenifere, the Yoruba Council of Elders, youth organisations, Fulani Cattle Dealers Association, who took the bill for his ticket, the Yakassai-led Northern Elders Council, the Northern Emancipation Network, Middle Belt leaders, women organisations, the omnibus National Unity Council which emerged from the National Conference, labour groups, etc. Even the MASSOB, OPC and such militant groups defer to the Jonathan leadership. All this may have, one way or another, influenced IBB’s decision in favour of a presidential candidate that “means well for this country”. Does it mean that Jonathan’s opponent doesn’t mean well for the country? Well, not necessarily. But coming so soon on the heels of Buhari’s Christmas message in which, sadly, in an attempt to deride Jonathan’s measured but enlightened steps towards getting rid of the Boko Haram insurgency, committed a faux pas by identifying Gombe and Bauchi, the two latest targets of Boko Haram, as “North Central States” – an unpardonable faux pas unbecoming of someone who aspires to the leadership of Nigeria. 
  And how does Buhari eventually intend to tackle Boko Haram? “I intend to initiate consultations with serving generals and those who have served our country and distinguished themselves on the battlefield across the world to work out an alternative strategy to crush the insurgency in the shortest possible time”, said Buhari in the same Xmas message where, ostensibly sympathizing with Nigerians who encounter transport problems during Christmas and other festivals, he said “we promise that by Christmas 2015, our administration would have brought out efficiency in the management and allocation of resources to make the interstate roads smoother and easier to ride.” Really? If an APC government can achieve such a feat nationwide by next Christmas, as a pilot scheme, why hasn’t Fashola achieved as much in eight years in Lagos? Nigerians certainly must shine their eyes in order not to be sold a dummy. If a Buhari government only plans to consult serving and retired, distinguished Generals in order to crush Boko Haram, what does he think President Jonathan has been doing all this while with all the American, British and Israeli military experts and the serving and retired Nigerian Generals working in his team? 
  
 The APC candidate is proposing an old remedy to a new and stubborn problem. Lampooning the PDP in what we see as the kettle calling the pot black, Buhari scolded the ruling party for raising N21 billion to fund the presidential campaign, but completely overlooked press report that a Governor had flown into Lagos on the day of the APC primaries with a huge war chest, about N30 billion, according to Chief Nyesom Wike, with which thousands of delegates were bought over in favour of the Buhari candidacy. This and many other contradictions have combined to do havoc to the strict-disciplinarian reputation of Buhari, turning him into a real politician – someone who believes you don’t have to fool all the people all the time, except during elections. A politician, according to Nikita Khrushchev, is someone who promises to build a bridge even where there is no river. We know for a fact that today’s most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution. By the way, isn’t it a serious food for thought that IBB, an army general, should opt for Jonathan instead of Gen. Buhari, who happens to come from his military constituency? Well, while we chew upon that puzzle, we should, perhaps, also chew upon possible reasons why the IBB intervention took so long in coming and the evident danger the delay had done to the polity which may have swallowed hook-line-and-sinker the bait that a utopian Nigeria is on the horizon.
 Late or not, Jonathan’s wide support and acceptance across the country, which IBB has now capped speaks volumes about the trickledown effect of his programmes and policies in the past three years and six months. 

Name it, is it in terms of education, aviation, power, industry, agriculture, railway, poverty alleviation, and road transportation where, for example, on the Ore-Benin road today the problem is no longer motorability or pot holes, but how to control speed! Taking education as another typical example, Jonathan, as good intentioned as he is, has found an answer to a lingering northern problem – the Almajiri system –which had metamorphosed into a national security threat. By building more than 150 model primary schools for the members, Jonathan has transformed the system into a modern institution for primary education. Consequently, even among the opposition class, Jonathan has a lot of admirers. Let me, therefore, end this piece by citing the example of Senator Ibrahim Abu (Katsina South) who said (Leadership Weekend, (5/5/2012) “There is nothing like the North being against Jonathan. 

It is PDP running Nigeria. Jonathan and PDP have northern ministers; they have northern governors who are working hard to protect and defend the President, like any other Nigerian.” The message here is that those propagating a northern agenda against Jonathan do not know what they do. Jonathan is a pan- Nigerian leader who needs a pan-Nigerian support base. This much Babangida has said. Let us be wise not to be led astray by unpatriotic power mongers.

Mr. President, America is not the enemy

Bayo Olupohunda
It says a lot about a country and the integrity of its leaders when they deliberately deploy propaganda to portray another country as the “enemy” responsible for their own incompetence and domestic crises. In an increasingly globalised world, one would have expected a government responsible enough to understand the dynamics of international laws and how such laws affect other countries’ involvement in her domestic affairs. 

This is even more so when clauses or provisions from extant laws of other countries limit their intervention in others’ internal affairs. As such, no government has demonstrated ignorance or engaged in deliberate propaganda as a diplomatic strategy in its relationship with the international community like this administration.
In the fight against Boko Haram, the United States of America has come under spurious attacks and needless propaganda war by the Jonathan administration. The strategy by this administration to engage in propaganda while feigning ignorance of extant US laws that prevent the latter from a comprehensive engagement with our military is unfortunate indeed. Since the abduction of the Chibok girls in April 2014 and the botched international engagement with our military, the Jonathan administration has been throwing tantrums, belching out North Korean-like propaganda war that portrays the US as responsible for its failure to find the girls and end the terror war. The strategy is to brand America as the enemy. Nothing can be farther from the truth. But this strategy fits into the character of a government long used to shirking its responsibilities while blaming others for its own failing.

Before the US became a subject of propaganda war, President Goodluck Jonathan had once revealed the presence of fifth columnists sympathetic to the terrorists in his administration. They have not been unmasked. Then, the administration accused the opposition. When that failed to work, the US became the next victim. In all of this, what the government has failed to do is beam the searchlight on how its own incompetence has failed to bring back the girls and jeopardised the entire terror war. In the wake of the Chibok kidnap, the Nigerian government belatedly sought for international help from the US and others.

But this not before President Jonathan had failed to acknowledge that the girls had truly been abducted – choosing to believe the conspiracy theory that dismissed the abduction as stage-managed to embarrass his government. The Americans responded with surveillance drones and about 30 intelligence and security experts. But it wasn’t long before the assistance ran into troubled waters. Now, several months later, the drone flights have dwindled, and many of the US advisers have gone home and not one of the kidnapped girls has been found.

As the foreign assistance stalled, one truth that had become apparent but which the Jonathan administration failed to acknowledge or tell Nigerians was that the US security assistance had been sharply limited by its own army’s incompetence and American legal prohibitions against close dealings with foreign militaries whose military forces are known to have engaged in human rights abuses. This is not Barack Obama’s making, they are extant provisions of the US laws. Among other sabotage and logistics nightmares on the part of the Nigerians that hampered assistance, there had also been concerns that the Nigerian Army was harbouring Boko Haram sympathisers in its fold. This had raised grave concerns among the partners, especially in Washington, from sharing intelligence with the Nigeria military for fear that classified information may be leaked to Boko Haram. There were also reports that the Nigerian Army weary, lacking in transparency, had refused to cooperate with the US by ignoring actionable intelligence made available to it. It had then become clear that the US could not work with a military with a dark past whose operation is shrouded in intrigues. Rather than Nigeria admitting its own failings and re-organising its military, the Jonathan administration began a Cold War-era propaganda war portraying the US as the enemy.

What I find appalling is the role of the Nigerian ambassador to the US, Prof. Ade Adefuye, who, ignoring the facts, had told the Council on Foreign Relations in November 2014 that, “The US government has refused to grant Nigeria’s request to purchase lethal equipment that would have brought down the terrorists within a short time on the basis of the allegations that Nigeria’s defence forces have been violating human rights of Boko Haram suspects when captured or arrested.” In his tirade, Adefuye had said allegations of human rights abuses by the military were “rumours, hearsays and exaggerated accounts put about by rivals of President Jonathan and rights groups.”

In November 2014, the Nigerian government responded by cancelling a military training for its soldiers in the US. Since then, the government has been engaged in propaganda war. I consider these retaliatory actions ridiculous. They detract from the real challenges. The truth is that America and the international community will not help us if our country continues to act in breach of international conventions that guide military rule of engagement. For years, the Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have documented instances of grave human rights violations against civilian population by Nigerian military forces.
These are credible reports the international community take seriously. Has our government probed these allegations? Adefuye referred to the reports as “rumours”. 

This coming from a diplomat who debriefs the President on foreign issues is unfortunate. How about allegations of the Nigerian military harbouring Boko Haram sympathisers? How does our government expect the US to trust our military forces with high calibre fighter jets that may end up being used to decimate innocent villagers?

What has become of $5.8bn security budget for 2014, when allegations of corruption still prevent supplies as basic as bullets and transport vehicles from reaching the front lines of the struggle against Boko Haram? Incidentally, the administration is turning to Russia – a pariah nation groaning under international sanctions for its belligerence, human rights violations and shady gun running deals under Vladmir Putin.

America fought more than a decade old terror war battling Al-Qaeda to a standstill. We certainly need their expertise. If we want robust international military assistance, we must re-organise our military in line with international best practices that respect the rules of engagement. Human rights violations must be taken seriously. Mr President, America is not the enemy; we are our own west enemy.

11 soldiers died in Baga Army base attack

Chief of Army Staff, Maj. Gen. Kenneth Minimah
Over 11 soldiers and scores of civilians were reportedly killed when the Boko Haram sect attacked the army base in Baga, Borno State on Saturday, a security source and witnesses said on Monday.

The Islamists attacked the northeastern town of Baga and the barracks on its outskirts on Saturday, potentially providing a launchpad for more attacks in the country and other neighbouring nations.

Lying at the end of a semi-desert road, Baga is the headquarters of a multinational force comprising troops from Niger, Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon.
Soldiers and civilians had fled the town after the attack on the Army base.
Unconfirmed report also said that 18 female soldiers attached to the base were feared dead as they had not been found since the invasion.

The group’s five year insurgency to establish an Islamic state has killed many thousands in Africa’s top economy and most populous nation. More than 10,000 died in the violence last year, the Council on Foreign Relations says.
Witnesses who escaped to the bush said they ran past the bodies of soldiers and civilians along the way.
“I was hiding on a tree top since that Saturday night until this morning at 3 a.m.,” Abubakar Usman, a Baga resident, told Reuters by telephone.
“Women in a nearby house brought us water and food … We snuck out and on our way, we saw lots of dead soldiers and 10 bodies of women.”
A military source said at least 11 soldiers had been killed along with a large number of civilians around the town, which was still in the militants’ hands on Monday.

He said they set fire to houses and shot at residents as they tried to flee. The military did not immediately respond to a request for official comment.
“They are still there and many people (civilians) mostly women, children and aged one are still trapped in the town,” a man who works between the city of Maiduguri and Baga said.

Another witness, who gave his name only as Yusuf, said he tripped and fell as he tried to flee the town. When he got up, he saw about 20 bodies scattered along the ground where he was.
On Saturday, it was reported that the sect killed 15 people when they attacked a bus in Cameroon.

Obasanjo meets women leaders, blasts Jonathan

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo   has said the country is currently facing economic problems due to the failure of the Goodluck Jonathan administration to plan for a rainy day.
He told Iyalodes and eminent women leaders   from the South-West, who visited him at his   Hilltop residence in Abeokuta, Ogun State, that the nation’s reserves which as of 2007 stood at $67bn had been depleted by the Federal Government.
The former President was responding to a call by the delegation led by the Iyalode of Yorubaland, Chief Alaba Lawson, and the Iyaloja General of Nigeria, Chief Folashade Tinubu-Ojo,   to   lend his voice to the socio-economic crisis rocking the country.
Stressing that the country did not deserve the situation it currently finds itself, Obasanjo vowed that he would not keep quiet until the right things were done.
He said, “When I was leaving office about eight years ago, I left a very huge reserve after we had paid all our debts.
“Almost $25bn we kept in what they called Excess Crude Account, it was the excess from the budget we were saving as reserve for a rainy day.
“When we left in May 2007, the reserve was said to have risen to $35bn. But today, that reserve has been depleted.
“After paying our debts which was about $40bn,   including debt forgiveness, the   remaining (debt) was not more than $3bn.
“Our reserves after we had paid off these debts amounted to about $45bn. As I said, they continued to rise till the end of 2007. I heard that the reserves increased to almost $67bn before the end of the year.
“Our reserves now, I learnt, stand at only $30bn.”
Although he noted that the slump in oil price would naturally have a negative impact on a monolithic economy like Nigeria, Obasanjo said that “ anyone who is wise enough should know that since we depend on just one mineral resource and since we have no control over its pricing, we should be planning for this type of situation we currently find ourselves   and the way out of it.”
The former President lamented that “our inability to have healthy reserves had brought us to “this economic quagmire.”
He added, “A leader must be forward-looking and plan ahead. At the beginning of last year, the budget was based on $78 per barrel. That year, the Federal Government spent more on recurrent expenditure and a little on capital expenditure.”
Obasanjo   also pointed out that the devaluation of the naira had unleashed other consequences on the economy.
He said, “That (devaluation) is why the naira has been falling against the dollar. What would now happen? I learnt if you want to buy a dollar now, it’s about N192 or N195. What it means is this, what you had been buying for N150 to a dollar, now you need N192 or N195 to buy it.
“That is the real situation. Is there any remedy? There is but it does not come overnight because it means we have to give up all the bad things we had been doing.”
The Ogun State-born former Head of State also     berated   the leadership for robbing Nigeria of its God-ordained greatness.
He said,”God made Nigeria a great nation. Is it that those living here have no brain? Is it that the leaders are not thinking? Or that we don’t have the resources?
“When I was in the army, our slogan was, ‘There are no bad soldiers but bad officers.’ Wherever soldiers are not doing well, blame the officers. The same thing obtains in the family, communities, towns and the nation.
The former President, who also denied quarrelling with Jonathan, told the Iyalodes and eminent women leaders   that he was surprised to have read in a newspaper on Monday that some people in government were jittery on learning of their visit.
“Is (it) that Jonathan and I are not in good terms?, he asked and immediately provided an answer himself. He said, “There is nothing as such. I have no grudges against Jonathan and I think Jonathan equally has no grudges against me. I’m not quarrelling with Jonathan but all I know is that whatever is good for Nigeria, that I’m ready to die for.
“I emphasise that whatever is good for Nigeria, is what I’m ready to defend with my life. Whoever, I emphasise, whoever says he would not do anything good for Nigeria, even if he says he’s ready to go ‘koko bellow,’ I’m ready to square it up with such a person.
“I say again, whoever that person may be, I want you to get that correctly. If this country is going to change for the better, it must start from the top and if it’s going to be otherwise, it must start from the top too.
“I have had some little experience about this country. I was a Head of State and   a President; so what is left? If I talk, I know what I’m talking about. Whoever wants, should listen to me and whoever feels otherwise, may turn a deaf ear. But when I’m talking, I’m talking with my understanding and intellect.
“I’m drawing from my experience and from what I’ve learnt with others and from other countries and fellow eminent citizens of the world that I relate with.”
Obasanjo   frowned on the alleged impunity being perpetuated under the current administration, warning   leaders of the consequences of such actions.

He said,   “God   put you in a position for a purpose and if you fail, you will give account to God. It was Prophet Samuel that God sent to anoint Saul to be a king. When he misbehaved, it was the same God that sent Prophet Samuel to the house of Jesse to anoint another king.
“But when Samuel got to Jesse’s house, he was attracted by the physical and outward appearance of Eliab. But God told him, he was looking at outward appearance whereas He was looking at the heart. We must not keep quiet concerning this nation.”
On the general elections, Obasanjo said he had no apprehension, stressing that the country would survive just as it did   during crises such as   Operation wetie, the 1966 coup and the civil war.

He said, “The 1964 election led to Operation Wetie. I saw people being slaughtered . There were also the 1966 coup,   the 1966 progrom and the civil war. We survived them. Then, there was (Sani) Abacha period. We also we survived it.”
Operation wetie was the political crises that erupted in the defunct Western Region after the 1965 regional elections. It was characterised by the wetting of political opponents and their followers with petrol and setting them ablaze.
Obasanjo recalled that when he was about to contest the presidential election in 1999, he was told that it would end up like the botched polls by the Ibrahim Babangida and Abacha juntas.
“They said that Abubakar Abdulsalami was also out to deceive us. Some people said after me, there would be no Nigeria again; But, after me, there have been two presidents .The God we serve is God of Nigeria.”
On the solution to   unemployment in the country, he advised the government to turn to agriculture instead of laying emphasis on oil and gas.

He advised, “If we are going to solve unemployment problem, it is through agric business and not through oil and gas. We have no alternative.
“Agriculture is renewable because the land can be used over and over again, but, once you lift a barrel of oil, it is gone forever.’’

Obasanjo also advised the women and other Nigerians to vote for   candidates with good track records and not those making empty promises.
“Good governance starts with the selection and voting of good leaders. Don’t lose your votes. Ask questions. What are their track records? Pay less attention to what they are saying, look out for what they had done.”

On his membership of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, Obasanjo said, “I am still in the PDP , though not active. With the kind of people and behaviours I see in the party, I don’t think I can stand before God and defend them.”

Obasanjo had in an 18-page open letter to Jonathan in December 2013, accused   Jonathan of promoting deceit, corruption and mutual distrust ahead of national interest.

He said in the letter titled “Before it is too late” that in spite of his previous letters which were neither acknowledged nor responded to, he was again constrained to warn the President that dangers were lurking in the corner should he fail to heed his advice.

At the public presentation of a book by a former Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other–Related Offences Commission, Justice Mustapha Akanbi(retd.) in Novemeber 2014,   Obasanjo again   accused Jonathan and the National Assembly of promoting corruption and poor governance in the country.

He also upbraided the President by describing him as an incompetent leader during the public presentation of his three-part autobiography My Watch on December 9, 2014.

He rated the Jonathan administration as colossal failure, grounded by ineptitude.