Tuesday, November 30, 2010

WORLD IGBO YOUTH CONGRESS ENDORSES RIBADU

WORLD IGBO YOUTH CONGRESS ENDORSES RIBADU

The World Igbo Youth Congress (WIYC) has endorsed the aspirations of Mallam Nuhu Ribadu as a presidential aspirant in the 2011 general elections under the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

The WIYC which is the youth wing of the Ohaneze Nd’Igbo, the umbrella organisation of Igbos world-wide gave the endorsement at a courtesy call paid by the leadership of the body to the campaign headquarters of Mallam Nuhu Ribadu in Abuja yesterday.

The delegation was led by the president of the WIYC, Dr. Ronald Okechukwu, who stated that the body was identifying with Mallam Ribadu because of his track record of fighting corruption while he was the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission. (EFCC) and the need for the country to depart from what he called “Chop-i-Chop” politics.

“There must be a 360-degree deviation from “Chop – I – Chop” stance by Nigerian political gladiators for Nigeria to really move forward. Without fear of contradiction, I want to say that Nigeria is in dire need of an emancipator that can save her from the current state of abject penury,” Dr. Okechukwu noted.

Mallam Nuhu Ribadu while thanking the group noted that the huge support from an important organization such as the World Igbo Youth Congress is an indication that the message and quest for change for a new Nigeria is being accepted by all.

“We need leadership that can give confidence for a new Nigeria. I am glad to receive a group of Igbo youth today, Mallam Ribadu said, adding “it shows that our youths have gone beyond ethnic parochialism that is gradually becoming the hallmark of our politics, it is a good development for all to see themselves as Nigerians first.”

Others in the WIYC delegation included Chief Onukwube Ekwedike, secretary general, Comrade Kindness Jonah, publicity secretary, and Dickson Izuorah, director of planning and strategy.
Sunday, November 28, 2010

RESTORING HOPE TO NIGERIA

Have you joined TEAM RIBADU yet?


We have watched for decades as our nation transformed from the cascade of optimism to the chasm of pessimism. We are all living witnesses to the metamorphosis of our Motherland from a continental power-house to a browbeaten regional state. We now recall with nostalgia the era when the West cannot ruffle Nigeria’s feathers without expecting real consequences in its wake. Today, the erstwhile “Giant of Africa” has become the “Charlatan of Africa.”


Our corrupt leaders have demoted Nigeria from the land of hope to the terrain of despondency. No nations, including fellow African countries that Nigeria rescued from the grips of colonialism, respect Nigeria and Nigerians any more. Our green passport is scrutinised and disrespected everywhere. The rest of the world now identify Nigeria with “scam,” as they identify America with the Statue of Liberty, Egypt with the Pyramids, Greece with the Parthenon, France with the Eiffel Tower, Rome with the Coliseum, and India with the Taj Mahal.


There comes a time when the abused, tired, and threadbare people of a nation should ask for accountability from the gang of corrupt leaders who lack respect for the common good of the people. It is time to bear our collective destiny in our own hands. It is time for the exploited, ill-treated, and weary people of Nigeria to demand for the dividend of democracy from the fraudulent, incompetent, and non-patriotic leaders who continue to clone and recycle themselves in power.


Join the teeming crowd of Nigerians who are seeking CHANGE, ACCOUNTABILITY, and HOPE today. Join the TEAM RIBADU in your area. As the chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Dr. Nuhu Ribadu fought corruption in an unprecedented manner – even without an executive power. Imagine what Ribadu will do with an executive gavel in his hand. Fellow Nigerians, allow Ribadu to start the ethical revolution now!


Team Ribadu USA For Launch

As part of the on-going efforts by Nigerians in the Diaspora to support Dr. Nuhu Ribadu in the 2011 presidential election, Nigerians in the United States have formed the “Team Ribadu USA”. The North America chapter of the Team Ribadu also formed the “Ribadu for Nigeria Coalition” to bring
all Team Ribadu groups around the world under one umbrella. The “Ribadu for Nigeria Coalition” and the “Team Ribadu USA” will be launched on Sa...turday, December 4, 2010 at George Gershwin Junior High School, 800 Van Sicien Avenue (Van Sicien on Linden), Brooklyn, New York City, at
4pm.

The USA chapter of the Team Ribadu, through its coordinators in all of the fifty States of the United States, has embarked on series of activities in the Nigerian communities in the USA to mobilize and sensitize Nigerians to support Nuhu Ribadu’s candidacy in the 2011 presidential election. Between now and the 2011 presidential election, the Team Ribadu USA plans to raise $1m dollars among Nigerians in the USA to support Ribadu’s campaign. This amount is expected to be used to mobilize Nigerians to register and vote for Ribadu as the next president of Nigeria.

Apart from calling their families and friends in Nigeria frequently, asking them to vote for Ribadu as the next president of Nigeria, the Team Ribadu USA urges all Team Ribadu groups in the Diaspora to generate questions and answers that remind people about the “Nuhu Ribadu for President” project
in the Western Union Money Transfer question and answer section when sending money to Nigeria. That is a good way to remind their loved-ones to campaign and vote for Nuhu Ribadu in the 2011 presidential elections.

The Team Ribadu USA also charged its members to make a sacrifice in the coming year by going to Nigeria to register and vote for Ribadu as the next president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The Team Ribadu USA believes by so doing, Nigerians in the Diaspora will be part of the efforts to urgently
rescue the Nigerian nation from the brink of collapse predicted in recent times.

The Team Ribadu USA will use its Facebook page and the “Ribadu for Nigeria Coalition” website – www.ribadufornigeriacoalition.org – as the main rallying point for all of its members and other Team Ribadu groups. Nigerians, home and abroad, irrespective of party affiliation, social, and economic backgrounds are free to sign up and donate their widow’s mites to the Ribadu Campaign Organization through the website.


Time
04 December · 16:00 - 19:00

LocationGeorge Gershwin Junior High School
800 Van Siclen Avenue (Van Siclen on Linden)
Brooklyn, NY
Saturday, November 27, 2010

My Camp Ribadu Experience

Camp Ribadu will go down memory lane as the most memorable events I have been privileged to take part in besides my wedding and my daughter’s birth. It was the first time I saw Nigerian youth from different geographical and political orientations come together for the sole purpose of making their country great again; all 400 of us with one goal and one purpose.
We had varying ideas of how we wanted to get things done, but the goal was the same; positive change for Nigeria. And we were clear on whom we wanted as the leader. He is Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, the Founding Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission EFCC, a public officer of 25 years, an icon of humility and courage, an inspiration to the young and old, feared by the thieving in our country and loved by the vast majority of Nigerians who have seen the light.
While it was clear whom we wanted, we had to come together and strategize how to get our man elected as president come 2011. So, we headed to Abuja on September 17, 2010. There, at the campaign office in Abuja, a group of young Nigerians worked hard to make the hundreds us comfortable. This included registering people who were tired and irritable from their long trips, getting them dinner and driving them to their hotel rooms for the night.  It was hard work but they did it well.
The following day was full of debates at the venue of the event, Reiz Continental Hotel, in Central Abuja. We all debated why Nigeria was at such a bad state. Our logics differed; however, we all agreed that the enthronement of good leadership is required to bring this to life.  We agreed Ribadu was the right man for the job.
That night, the organizers distributed nicely branded T shirts with bore the Team Ribadu insignia- an opening bud, symbolizing freshness - and other materials and after much banter, everyone found their way to their hotel rooms.
Saturday morning came and again we converged at the hall. We were a sea of sky blue; with a splash of orange and white- almost everybody had worn their Team Ribadu shirt. After breakfast and some inspiration talk, the big moment came; Ribadu entered the hall.
The Dj slammed the ‘Stand Up for the Champion’ song by the British band, Right Said Fred. We did. We stood up for Nuhu Ribadu, who looked corruption in the eye and spat in its face. We stood up for the man for stood for humility, competence and integrity.
We applauded and sang for a true Nigeria that is strong in times of adversity. We displayed brilliance and intelligence rather than brash and clumsiness. We all stood, all of us, for the man we know will jump-start the era of progress that eludes our nation. We stood up for Champion Ribadu!
With our youthful strength, we carried him shoulders high and tossed him in the air. He laughed through it all; after all he was amongst his peers. He was ours and we his. He exemplified all we want in a leader, and possessed the humility to acknowledge youths. That was a moment I will never forget.
Although, visibly tired from a long trip, Ribadu inspired confidence in us. His voice was strong as he roared, “IT IS POSSIBLE!” over and again. He engraved those words on our hearts. He made known his intention to create a New Nigeria out of this deformed one.
“The time for positive and compete change has come!” Unlike other politicians, he didn’t bore us with long speeches,” He told us. “His words were brief and punchy.
So much needed his attention, but he had made time for us. Wearing his Team Ribadu jersey bearing Ribadu 1, he signed autographs, took photographs and shook every hand offered to him. His faces was lit with smile as he was driven away, like a man who just met a long lost friend and was looking forward to another meeting soon.
A little while later, Camp Ribadu came to an end and every other delegate was merry. Some went back to their hotels, others left immediately. That was it! No throwing around of money, no bribery and no bickering, much unlike other political gatherings in this country.  Camp Ribadu taught us all that money politics in Nigeria could be gone forever.
It taught us that the anger and anguish we feel towards bad leadership transcended religion and tribalism. And most importantly, that we all share the hope of that Nigeria could be great again; that, indeed, A NEW NIGERIA IS POSSIBLE!!!!
 
By Gbenga Olorunpomi
Thursday, November 25, 2010

REWRITING HISTORY

                            

You really should blame my pastor and teacher, Sam Adeyemi, for what is now happening to me. He taught us that we could have a better nation and a desirable future; that the boundless potential of Nigeria could be turned to reality and we could be a part of the rebuilding of this great nation. Sunday in, Sunday out, I listened to these words, I bought books, tapes and CDs on nation building and national transformation and soon, I began to see in my mind’s eye, a new Nigeria; one where good governance, not ethnicity and religion, defines our rule of engagement. But each time I stepped out of the presence of such wonderful messages, the reality of the nation hit me hard. “Is there any hope for this nation?” People frequently ask. “Nigeria, only God can help us,” we often chorus but my teacher would often says, God will not do for man what man can do for himself. By common sense I agree with him. But how shall these things be? I wondered. Indeed the spirit of pessimism and hopelessness is always hanging in the air above. Then came the day I listened to Ayo Aderinwale, MFR, the Executive Director, Africa Leadership Forum. In a gathering, someone had expressed the feeling of pessimism that Nigeria could not change for the better and that the 1993 election experience had become a definition of our constant fate but Mr. Aderinwale refuted this. Change is constant, he noted. “Whether you like it or not this nation will change; it is a natural process. The question is whether you want to be a part of that change.”  Around me, fellow interns nodded. I saw hope in their eyes. But that change wasn’t just going to happen accidentally, it was going to be by conscious efforts of men and women who would take deliberate steps to stem the tide of underdevelopment and rot which has until now pervaded the nation.


Enter Camp Ribadu and Team Ribadu and I fall in line. “…building a groundswell of motivated volunteers all over the country and in the Diaspora, who are simply fed up with sitting by the sidelines, watching as this great country is pillaged to ruins by unscrupulous leaders, and want to make a change.” Hmm… that sure looked like the direction I was heading, so there is no question of why I joined. I arrived Abuja on Wednesday, September 16, 2010 to join the National Strategic team to prepare for the arrival of delegates. There was Tobi, our national coordinator; Lamidz, Desh, Granny E, B, Ibrahim, Tom, Fred, Psun, Chakor, Idris and a host of others. We were bound by a common goal: the rebirth our nation. Friday, and delegates began to arrive. I knew it wasn’t going to be a Tea Party but the reality was way beyond my expectation. Young men and women from all parts of the nation – over 400 in number - arrived in Abuja to attend Camp Ribadu and all these was with an understanding that they will willingly work as volunteers and give their time, expertise and resources when needed, so that we meet our goal.


Arrival over, registration done, stomachs filled, it was time for real business. In the little 400 sitting capacity hall, at Reiz Continental Hotel, Abuja we all sat brainstormed on the possibility of charting a new cause of our nation. One speaker after another talked about the task ahead. 2011 election was at the corner and we were serious about taking over power from the PDP which had been in office for 11 years without delivering commensurate benefits of democracy. I remember now the quality of the people around me; there was Ahmed Ogunlana from Ogun State; a medical student, young, vocal, vibrant with great foresight. Then also was … From Taraba who spoke less but acted… And Gold from Imo state; a medical student and Laz from Delta State (happy married life Laz); we all chatting, laughing, mingling, dancing, and debating. But never fighting, never shouting down at anyone or looking down on anyone. What an interesting time it was.


But we had out differences too. Many years of bad leadership had engraved in the hearts of people, a distrust for one another and any act of kindness and show of courtesy – from the point of registration - was interpreted as deception. But in the three days of constant interaction and healthy debate, we began to see that the things that united us as a people were more than the things that separated us. But then, isn’t that the beauty of democracy? A system of government that ensures that people’s opinions are heard, respected and debated upon until a conclusion is reached?


Our time together did not automatically erode the doubt about our immediate goal: 2011 elections. Logic told us that our goal was noble but the odds were against us. People still doubted whether we could create the needed change, considering the fact that political victory in Nigeria today is largely based on violence. And sometimes, I wonder too. Some people think we are just an idealistic set. Well, no better time to be idyllic but the age of youth. But this is beyond idealism. It is about the determination of a people who are committed to creating a change in the nation which is rightfully theirs. Our goal is beyond winning election, we want to change a culture that has a total disregard for a people’s vote. We want to create a culture where people look beyond violence in times of election. The possibility was again engraved when on Sunday afternoon, the principal of our gathering, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, arrived. We had already dispersed for lunch and he came in. Positive pandemonium - if there was anything like that – broke loose, The guys picked him up and soon, he was airborne. Stand up, stand up, for the champion, for the champion, stand up. For the first time in many years, I saw the possibility of a nation where there could be simplicity amongst the ruling class.


My friends wonder why I believe this man, Nuhu Ribadu, can take the Nigeria to the next level… why I do have faith in him. Well, faith is a risk. But this is no blind risk but a calculated one. Mallam Ribadu’s antecedent speaks for him. Is he perfect? No. Am I looking for a perfect candidate? No what I am looking for is a candidate who can be guided by the tenets and democracy. Also, it is obvious truth that our greatest problem in the nation today is corruption. Well, here is a man who fought corruption and gained victory like no one else ever did.  At Camp Ribadu, we had hotel guests walk up to us to seek how they could support our cause and in my volunteer experience thus far, it has become the norm. Truly a good name is better than riches!


2011 beckons and I am enjoying every part of my volunteer experience. People still can’t believe that I am doing this for no monetary gains. Well, I am not alone. Over 10,000 Nigerians – and counting – are on this mission because we know that if the country is better, we also will be better of for it. Our future and the future of our children will be assured.


So, let us keep the goal before us: Landslide victory at the polls, come 2011. And if Team Ribadu looks like the train you have been waiting to join, come join the voyage. Let’s rewrite history together.


BY OMENA ABENABE



Friday, November 12, 2010

Our Time is Now: Positioning Nigerian Youth for Change

Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, AIG (Rtd.)
Remarks at the 7th Annual Nigerian Youth 
Leadership Awards organised by  LEAP Africa at
the Muson Centre, Lagos
Thursday, November 11, 2010

Good afternoon friends and compatriots, and thank you Leap Africa for this kind invitation. Leap Africa is doing a terrific job and I stand united with your noble goals in the task of fashioning a new youth agenda of promise and relevance to the development of our country.

It is appropriate that in a year that new politics is in the air, the theme of youth and change is the concern of your organization. This is forward thinking and a thoughtful appreciation of the future of our country. Youth matters a lot. It amazes me when people do show compassion for the youths, being that every grown man or woman today was once in that phase of life. It is a phase when the realities of life are best absorbed and it’s rightfully the stage of take off for every person.

In the early 60’s when Nigeria saddled with colonialism relied mainly on exports of groundnut, cocoa, palm produce and cotton, the country was able to place Nigerian youths on scholarships abroad. The reason: that they would be given the best of western education to come back and redeem the nation. Today, the same country is the 7th largest exporter of crude oil in the world, but such opportunities like youth scholarship that existed with limited resources can’t be repeated with even greater resources and independence.

One is forced to ask in anger and protest why we have been so unfortunate with the character of leadership that this country has been saddled with. The conclusion is therefore inescapable that 50 years of independence has left Nigeria with more of a burden than a blessing.

Just look around the whole nation, its like one huge junkyard of failing scores.  Most of our businesses are closing down, the manufacturing sector in particular that puts many of our brothers and sisters in job, to keep the family life alive, have all but shut down. Hundreds of warehouses have transformed from factories to empty sheds or places of religious activities.

I take the manufacturing sector for particular illustration not because it is unique, but only because it helps epitomize the sense of failure in a more glaring, more chilling, and more devastating sense.  Pity the nation that cannot put its people to work because every other index of human living will fall and invariably turn the people in anger and frustration against the very state, and the very nation itself.

Twenty years ago, this country experimented with a number of innovative development steps. It set up about half a dozen-vehicle plants, a number of fertilizer plants, a number of refineries and a handful of aluminum plants. In addition, it set up about a dozen river basin development projects to turn this arable land to a giant food basket.

Ladies and gentlemen, one simple question please: Where are all these projects today? Don’t let us be cynical at all about it; let us get hold of the bitter and honest truth about it all. They have all gone down the drain, or probably in their worst failing cycle, ready to be wheeled out on a stretcher as evidence of yet another failed national aspiration.

The truth is that this report card is a national score rather than a regional one and that makes it more disturbing. Go all over the country, that is the sad situation you will get. The Niger Delta offers the most bitter illustration.

The bulk of the resources that financed these development efforts come from this one region -- so why would a person from this region not feel a sense of double loss and double hurt?

Yet the deeper truth is that these evidences of failure point in one simple direction: our long history of incompetent, self-serving, and corrupt leadership.  To large measure, our past leaders have brought us to this very sorry point and no region has a monopoly of this load of incompetence, corruption and failure.

For a nation like Nigeria to succeed, we need to strategically put our youth in place for development. The Nigerian youth is highly energetic, and ambitious. He or she will take any good opportunity available to attain great heights. The Nigerian youth is perhaps the most viable amongst his counterparts, but with no opportunities to realize his potentials, a lot of these qualities and a spark, which would have resulted to light, die out.

His voice would have been heard from a thousand miles, his eyes that would have seen a thousand sites, his heart that would have had love and care for a generation, his hand that would have assisted in building our Nigeria is shut out by denying him free education, by denying him access to health care, by denying him the tools to develop mentally thereby killing his future and dreams.

The time for change is now. Our time is now. We cannot continue to relegate the Nigerian youths to oblivion. Together as we position our great nation on the path of positive change, we must accommodate the Nigerian youths. We must provide them with tools to develop themselves, we must together reopen locked doors for them to walk through to a better future. This is the position and this is a job for you and I.

We also cannot quantify the impact of a good example for our youths. In our homes, schools, work place, and communities, we should be on the lookout for our youths. We should instill in them good values and assist them to reach their full potentials.

We all have a part to play in youth development from favourable youth development policies by the federal and state government, to scholarship, grants and ICT assistance from private and public sectors. The role of NGOs and other international organizations cannot be underestimated to the very important yet underestimated love, care and compassion for our leaders of tomorrow; and I say with great confidence, they are leaders of tomorrow,

There is so much potentials in Nigerian youths, their rights have to be secured, their visions have to be projected, their hopes have to be protected, their future has to be restored to them for our country to move forward. The norm of leaving them behind cannot and will not get us the change we so much desire.

I challenge our people the young men in this hall to take up the mantle. In this election year I urge you all to register en masse, vote en masse and vigorously defend your votes.

Moving on from this point also regarding the massive sense of failure, the central challenge is that we need to a paradigm shift in the governance process of this country.
I strongly believe that leadership matters a lot to the health and progress of every social institution or community.

For me what this ultimately leads to is what should we do now? Dear young compatriots, at this point in our history, I think we need and must come up with a new generation of young leaders whose life and fortune will be defined more by the developments of the next fifty years and more. This is not a generation war, but it is clear that young people have a stake in the future than their parents today, and for that reason we had better roll up our sleeves, and purposefully march forward to design the architecture of that future with reason, and measured judgment in a way that it empowers our communities and our people.

This is the year of the youth voters and I want you to join me in the mission to register at least 10 million young voters. That number can help us create a new Nigeria, a democratic Nigeria.  I believe very strongly that a new Nigeria is possible. Ladies and gentlemen it is possible, let us do it and take back our country.



Thursday, November 11, 2010

South-West Students Strategise for Ribadu

Student leaders from various higher institutions in the South-West converged on Akure, the Ondo State capital on Thursday to map out strategies towards the emergence of Mr. Nuhu Ribadu as Nigeria’s president next year.

The students said the former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, who is a presidential aspirant on the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria, remained the best material for the position.

At a forum held at the Ribadu 2011 Campaign office on Oyemekun road in Akure, student union executives from 15 tertiary institutions resolved to set up various committees to work for the presidential ambition of the former EFCC boss.

They described Ribadu as the most credible among the various aspirants from various political parties who are currently in the race for the seat.

The National Vice-President of National Association of Ondo State Students Mr. Ogundana Olugbenga, who spoke on behalf of his colleagues, said the committees would form a team of vanguards in all the campuses to sensitise students on the need to support Ribadu’s bid.

Punch Newspaper
Friday, November 12, 2010

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Team Ribadu
Team Ribadu is a youth driven, flagship volunteer movement for the Nuhu Ribadu 2011 presidential bid. It is “a political movement, founded in recognition of the legitimate thirst of Nigerian youth for a new kind of leadership marked by integrity and competence. It seeks to harness and support the tidal wave of young people, who are eager to get involved in the electoral process, in order to create political and social change”.
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