Sunday 31 May 2015

Barcelona and Bayern close in on Gundogan

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The midfielder will not renew his contract at Borussia Dortmund and has been linked with a move to the German and Spanish champions as well as Manchester United.
Borussia Dortmund midfielder Ilkay Gundogan has confirmed that he is in talks with other clubs over a transfer this summer and has hinted that Barcelona or Bayern Munich could be his destination.

The Germany international, whose contract expires in 2016, had been linked with a move to the Premier League, were Manchester United and Arsenal were among the suitors, but the 24-year-old has hinted he is set to snub those approaches.
While a move to Barcelona would be impossible this summer because of their transfer ban, the midfielder was asked if he is in the process of learning Catalan or Bavarian, to which he replied: "We are holding talks yes, but no decision has been made. I can't say more than that on this."

He added that his future does not definitely lie away from Dortmund.
"I'll leave it open as to whether they continue with or without me. 
“BVB are a great team and a really good coach is coming. 

“I don’t know how the team will look next season. The challenge will be to get the great potential of this team back on the pitch. We managed to do that too little during the last year.
"In some ways we're glad this difficult season is over now."
Dortmund spent the campaign off the pace in the Bundesliga and only qualified for the Europa League on the final day of the season. On Saturday, they lost the DFP-Pokal final 3-1, ending the reign of coach Jurgen Klopp on a disappointing note in the process.

Flying Eagles are ready to conquer the world - midfielder Akinjide Idowu

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The midfielder believes his side is fully prepared to begin their title bid against Brazil on Monday morning in winning form as they look to conquer the world.

Nigeria U20 midfielder Akinjide Idowu has stated the readiness of his side to record a resounding opening start against five-time winners Brazil at the 2015 Fifa U20 World Cup in New Plymouth.

The 18-year-old, nicknamed ‘Magic 4’ who was discovered at the NNPC/SHELL Cup, is arguably the only player to have featured virtually in all the national team’s matches from the U17 level since 2013 U17 African Championship.

Idowu, who was a member of the Golden Eaglets’ 2013 Fifa U17 World Cup winning team, said the Flying Eagles are unstoppable as they had quality preparations and high-profile friendly games in their build up to the tournament.

“I'm extremely satisfied with our preparation, the morale of the boys and quality of training is very high and we are focused that come rain, come shine we want to win as a team,” Idowu told Goal.

“I can boldly tell you with what I’m seeing within the team that the World Cup is going to be won here in New Zealand by God's grace.
“Going to Germany was a very good tour for us. We had very competitive friendly matches and trained with top facilities and equipment. The experience makes me feel Germany is one of the best places to prepare for the World Cup.

“Right from Abuja to Germany and now in New Zealand - everyone here has shown great desire to achieve success at the World Cup,” he said.

The Kogi-born youngster insists his sole ambition in New Zealand is to give his very best to power his side to win the championship just as he solicited for the prayers of Nigerians.
“The coaches have nothing to worry about with the players. They have been with us from the U17 level and know what they want. There is nothing new to them about the players except for those coming into the team freshly.

“I can tell anybody that the team can win the tournament. We are very determined and ready to give everything to win all matches.

“I hope for nothing short than winning the World Cup. I have no other prospect and dream at the World Cup than helping my team to win the trophy,” he concluded.

Manu Garba’s lads, who secured the World Cup qualification ticket as African champions, have been paired against Brazil, North Korea and Hungary in Group E.
The African powerhouse will begin their campaign at the age-grade international competition against Brazil on June 1 by 2am Nigerian time.

Flying Eagles at the Fifa U20 World Cup in numbers

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Nigeria U20 team will be making their 11th appearance at the world youth football showpiece and Goal chronicles the key numbers that have marked their participation.

Coach Manu Garba’s side go to New Zealand with the ambition of ending the jinx of not lifting the Fifa U20 World Cup. Plausible as this optimism may sound, Goal gives an account of the Flying Eagles’ outing in this competition’s history in numbers.

0-  The number of titles won by Nigeria at this championship.
1-  The number of times Nigeria hosted the Fifa U20 World Cup. This was achieved in 1999 as the Flying Eagles finished eighth after they were bundled out of the quarter final by Mali at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium, Enugu. They became the second African country to host this tourney after Tunisia staged it in 1977.

3-   Brazil, Portugal and Soviet Union are the countries to have faced Nigeria at this level of competition on the most occasions. The Flying Eagles met Brazil in 1983 (lost 0-3), 1987 (lost 0-4) and in 2005 (drew 0-0). For the Portuguese, the Flying Eagles played them first in the group stage of the 1989 edition as Paulo Alves’s strike in the 88th minute caged them at the Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh. They met again in the final and the Europeans triumphed 2-0 with Abel Silva and Jorge Couto getting on the scorers’ sheet. Their third meeting ended in a 3-2 defeat of Nigeria at the 2013 edition in Turkey. Soviet Union have also met Nigeria thrice; 1983 (Nigeria won 1-0), 1985 (lost 2-1) and the last time known as the ‘Miracle of Daman’ where the Flying Eagles came from four goals down to beat the Europeans 5-3 on penalties.

3- Least number of goals conceded by Nigeria in a tournament, this feat was achieved at the Mexico 1983 edition. Unfortunately, Christopher Udemezue’s team did not make this impressive record count as they failed to get past the group stage which had eventual winners, Brazil.

3- This number also marks the most goals scored by a Nigerian in a single tournament. This honour is shared by Odiaka Monday (1985), Mutiu Adepoju & Christopher Ohenhen (1989), Chinedu Obasi (2005), Edafe Egbedi, Olarenwaju Kayode & Ahmed Musa (2011) and Abdul Jeleel Ajagun (2013).



                                   Mikel against Argentina in the final of Netherlands 2005

5- This represents the most goals scored in a single match by Nigeria at the mundial. In Egypt 2009, the    Flying Eagles spanked Tahiti 5-0 in the group stage. While at Colombia 2011, Guatemala lost 5-0 and Croatia 5-2 to Nigeria.


9- The number of times Nigeria have failed to qualify for the tournament. Their first black-out was at the edition staged in Tunisia in 1977 followed by their absence in Japan 1979 before missing out of Australia (1981), Portugal (1991), Australia (1993), Qatar (1995), Malaysia (1997), Argentina (2001) and United Arab Emirates (2003) respectively.

14- The number of seconds it took Monday Odiaka to score the fastest goal in Fifa U20 World Cup history against Canada in 1985. His compatriot John Owoeri netted the second-quickest, four seconds shy of the record, against the Netherlands in 2005.
              
Peter Ogaba is the youngest-ever Nigerian to have represented the country in this competition at 14 years and five months which was achieved at the Saudi Arabia-hosted tournament in 1989.



 


                               Owoeri: Scorer of the second fastest goal in U20 World Cup history

15- Most goals scored in a tournament. This was achieved at the Colombia 2011 championship where John Obuh’s side ran riot against all opposing teams but were shown the exit door in the quarter final after bowing 3-2 to France after extra time. Whereas at Mexico 1983, Nigeria recorded their least number of goals with one goal in three games. It came off the boot of Tarila Okoronwata in Nigeria’s 1-0 defeat of the Soviet Union.




                              Ahmed Musa scored three goals for Nigeria at Colombia 2011
  20- The number of games Nigeria have won in 10 Fifa U20 World Cup tournaments, a record among African teams. On the other hand, they have lost 18 matches while they have secured a draw 11 times.

  39 - The number of games Nigeria have played at Fifa U20 World Cups, making them the highest playing African side in the history of the competition.

 70-  The total number of goals Nigeria have scored in all Fifa World U20 championships they have participated in. Little wonder they are one of the highest scoring sides in the history of the competition. Also, they have conceded 61 goals in the same number of outings.

77,000- This is the record number of spectators to watch a Flying Eagles game in the World Cup. This was set on March 3, 1989 in Nigeria’s 2-0 defeat to Portugal in the final. The Europeans won by goals scored by Abel Silva and Jorge Couto.

Dortmund 1-3 Wolfsburg: DFB-Pokal won by De Bruyne and Dost

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Although Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang put BVB into the lead after five minutes, Jurgen Klopp's BVB farewell ended in heartbreak as Dieter Hecking's men bounced back in style
Jurgen Klopp was denied a fairytale end to his seven-year reign at Borussia Dortmund as Wolfsburg came from behind to claim their maiden DFB-Pokal crown with an impressive 3-1 win.

A compelling final at the Olympiastadion in Berlin saw Dortmund draw first blood after six minutes courtesy of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang's stunning volley, before Luiz Gustavo reacted quickest to convert Naldo's rebound and restore parity.

Wolfsburg took command and were ahead on 33 minutes thanks to Kevin De Bruyne's magnificent long-range drive, and Bas Dost added a third with a powerful header.
Kagawa slid in to stab just wide after half-time, but Dortmund could not find a way back, denying Klopp a second Pokal title.

The win banishes any bad memories for Bundesliga runners-up Wolfsburg, who avenged defeat to Klopp's men at the semi-final stage of last year's competition to lift the trophy for the first time.

In contrast, it brings a disappointing end to Klopp's tenure at Dortmund, who fought back from being bottom of the league at the start of the year to earn a Europa League berth.
An action-packed first half saw Dortmund take the lead after just six minutes, when a teasing cross from Kagawa from the right was brilliantly met by Aubameyang, who beat the offside trap to volley home.

The lead was nearly wiped out just two minutes later, with Dortmund goalkeeper Mitchell Langerak – Klopp's sole change from the emotional win over Werder Bremen in his final home fixture at the helm - denying De Bruyne's low effort following some good work in the box by Dost.

Marco Reus should have extended the advantage 10 minutes later but could not keep his shot down after Aubameyang had broken free down the right, and his profligacy was soon punished.

A clever free-kick saw Langerak palm away Naldo's bending 30-yard strike, allowing it to fall kindly forGustavo in the box – the Brazilian coolly slotting past the despairing Langerak.
The relentless pace of the game showed little sign of waning and Langerak found himself picking the ball out of the net again just after half an hour, thanks to De Bruyne's superb 25-yard drive.

Klopp's dream send-off was dealt a further blow five minutes later when Dost rose highest to head home Ivan Perisic's cross as a resurgent Wolfsburg seized the initiative.  
Dortmund tried to respond but Aubameyang fired wide when found by Kagawa again shortly before the break.

A mistake from Erik Durm meant Langerak had to be alert to deny Daniel Caligiuri at the start of the second half, before Kagawa slid in to poke just wide at the other end moments later.

Only a deflection from Durm prevented Dost from doubling his tally on 66 minutes as Dortmund struggled to find the inspiration needed for a comeback.
Sebastian Kehl's final outing was brought to an end when he was replaced by Lukasz Piszczek in the 68th minute, before Kagawa forced a smart save from Diego Benaglio, who also did well to parry Aubameyang's free-kick five minutes from time.

But Dortmund's efforts were ultimately fruitless as they signalled the end of an era with a disappointing defeat.

Real Madrid vice-president confirms Benitez deal

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The club official said he is looking forward to which players arrive to work under "an exceptional coach", saying the Spaniard will be one of the best in the world
Real Madrid vice-president Eduardo Fernandez de Blas has revealed the club's intention to appoint Rafael Benitez as coach, hailing him as one of the world's best.

Benitez is widely anticipated to succeed Carlo Ancelotti at the Santiago Bernabeu, after the Italian was sacked on Monday following a season in which the club missed out on the league and Champions League titles.

Fernandez de Blas is reported as telling a meeting of a Madrid members' group: "Ancelotti is an absolute phenomenon - a gentleman whom I have great affection for, and I think everyone else at Real Madrid does too.

"Until three days ago he was the best trainer in the world, as two years ago it was Jose Mourinho, and from this week onwards it will be Rafa Benitez.
"I'm excited and looking forward to July 30 to see how the best players in the world work under an exceptional coach."

The executive added that, despite his sacking, Ancelotti's reputation has been boosted by his time in the Spanish capital.

"Carlo now has more to his name than when he came, but we're here to make decisions, which we think are best for the club. We live and die by them."
Former Valencia, Liverpool, Inter and Chelsea boss Benitez announced his impending exit from Serie A side Napoli on Thursday.

Sunday's clash with Lazio will mark his final game as Napoli coach, with a place in next season's Champions League on the line.

Probe CAN, TAN, super-rich Nigerians, Anglican Bishop urges Buhari -

vanguardngr.com

Bishop of the Kaduna Diocese of Anglican Diocese, Most Revd Josiah Idowu Fearon, has charged President Muhammadu Buhari to go after super-rich Nigerians who, during the Jonathan administration, were accused of receiving money for political campaigns.


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Fearon mentioned Transformational Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) and the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), in particular, and some public and private office holders, saying Buhari should use the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, to investigate them even as he advised the president  to sanitize the armed forces, get them well equipped, and flush out Boko Haram insurgents within his first six months in office.


The bishop said Buhari cannot afford to fail Nigerians as the situation he has inherited is so bad that he should not expect any period of honeymoon. He spoke in Kaduna during the diocese’s  20th synod.

He advised the president to be careful on the composition of his cabinet, adding that he should guard against powerful individuals who would shield him from what is going on in the country, and  those  in politics to enrich themselves at the expense of the nation.

“We want to give the President some ideas for his consideration and action. It is obvious, the stakes are high; Nigerians have a high expectation. You cannot afford to fail by disappointing,”the bishop said. “The situation you are inheriting is so bad that you should not expect any period of honey moon: security is not there, power supply is at its lowest level, queues at our filling stations, hardly ever disappear in spite of the payment of subsidy to those importing fuel, we hear that in some states and some Federal Government departments, salaries have not been paid for months”.

OH Muhammadu Buhari! Now, the challenge of change

vanguardngr.com

Cultivated chaos!    That is what Nigeria is today.   
And that is what Muhammadu Buhari, President and Commander-in-Chief, has inherited.    What would definitely compound Buhari’s problem are the number of things he cannot change.  As at the time he was being sworn-in, last Friday, all he had were, 1461days to run his first term – one of the four years is a leap year.    He cannot change that. 

The Nigerian Constitution says every state is entitled to one minister; Buhari cannot change that even though changing it would reduce the waste associated with the cost of governance.  Except the constitution can be amended within the first one month or as quickly as possible, some states may drag him to court for putting them at a disadvantage on account of not having their own ministerial slot.   Though a few lawyers are arguing to the contrary, Buhari would not need the distraction that would bring.  

There are many more things he can change.
Firstly, he can slash his ministers pay.
Buhari can also disinfect himself of some political contaminants.
The President can take decisions and stick to them in so far as he is convinced that it would guarantee the utmost good for the largest number of people without going outside the law to do those things.

The perception is that Nigeria has gone to the dogs because blind sentiment, cronyism, nepotism, greed and a culture of indolence in high places, have  been packaged as a staple for the immediate past  President who refused to see beyond his nose.

For Mr. President, an attempt at equitable distribution of political power would be a first step towards enthroning a regime of economic prosperity and political stability.  That was where his predecessor failed.    And that was why he did not realize that his style of administration had become an incubating contraption for disgruntlement and angst.   Disgruntlement! Angst! These states of mind do not bode well for any system – be it the corporate world or the murkier platform of political governance.   Jonathan created a situation whereby a few individuals became lords of the manor, poking fun at millions of Nigerians and further exacerbating a sense of loss.


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Up until 16th   century Britain and after, there were fierce, bloody battles over economic and political control, the seeds of which were sown centuries earlier.    Because of the circumscription of the political space which was largely in the grip of the monarchy and political elites, consequently manifesting in the type of monopolistic economy of that era, nothing other than a stifling political atmosphere and an asphyxiating economic environment were created.


In their celebrated book,  WHY NATIONS FAIL, The origins of Power, Prosperity  and Poverty, Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson  reveal how, by 1621, there were 700 monopolies granted to a few business and political elites of that era.
Indeed, the English historian, Christopher Hill, reportedly put the choking and destructive dangers of a monopolistic economy:

“A man lived in a house built with monopoly bricks, with windows… monopoly glass; heated by monopoly coal (In Ireland, monopoly timber); burning in a grate of monopoly iron …. He washed himself in a monopoly soap, his clothes in monopoly starch. He dressed in monopoly lace, monopoly linen, monopoly leather, monopoly gold thread…. His clothes were held up by monopoly belts, monopoly buttons, monopoly pins.    They were dyed with monopoly dyes.    He ate monopoly butter, monopoly currants, monopoly red herrings, monopoly salmon, and monopoly lobsters. His food was seasoned with monopoly salt, monopoly pepper, monopoly vinegar….    He wrote with monopoly pens, on monopoly writing paper; read (through monopoly spectacles, by the light of monopoly candles) monopoly printed books”.

Acemoglu and Robinson then concluded that “these monopolies, and many more, gave individuals or groups the sole right to control the production of many goods.    They impeded the type of allocation of talent, which is so crucial to economic prosperity”.

It is gratifying to hear Buhari in his inaugural address declare: “I am for everyone and I belong to no one”.   Either on the godfather front or on the ethnic or religious front, Buhari’s statement can be likened to John F. Kennedy’s “think not what your country can do for you, but think of what you can do for your country”.

Therefore, we are today offering Buhari a strategy of hope, as contained in a Washington Post Bestseller, POWER PLAY (Win or lose – how history’s great political leaders play the game, written by Dick Morris, Fox News Channel Political Analyst.

The book is a compelling read for President Buhari not because he must do as it says, but because he can learn to avoid the slipshod which ruined not a few men of power.
Examining 20 leaders as “early as Abraham Lincoln and as recent as Junichiro Koizumi, George Bush and Tony Blair”, Morris examines “how Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) and Winston Churchill succeeded and Lyndon Johnson failed in mobilizing their nations at a time of crisis.”

Noting that “politics is the pursuit of power and history is the story of that pursuit”, Morris insists that “there is nothing new in politics; there are only ingenious reinventions of the wheel”. 

Therefore, Buhari would need a heavy dose of introspection in dealing with the multi-faceted challenges on the way to enthroning a regime of change.  

In the power sector, energy sector, transport sector, health sector, education sector, security, water and other areas too numerous to mention, President Buhari has his work cut out for him. In doing that, he would need to be clear-headed, very clear-headed.   This is so because, in the final analysis, there is a world of difference between the desire to accomplish and the capacity to deliver. That was where Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Omorele Jonathan missed the point – the great mismatch between his desire to perform and his ability to deliver.   However, by his last symbolic act of conceding the election, Jonathan created the platform for the enthronement of change.
It is now left for Buhari to deliver – without excuses, might we add.

PDP lost power because we took things for granted – Haliru Mohammed, acting BOT Chair -

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*’We are ready to perform opposition role to APC’
*Says party will bounce back in 2019

Dr. Haliru Bello Mohammed, from Kebbi State, just became the acting Chairman of the Board of Trustees, BoT, of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, the office vacated by Chief Tony Anenih.

Mohammed was National Vice Chairman, North West of the PDP, comprising Kaduna, Katsina, Kano, Kebbi, Sokoto, Jigawa and Zamfara states; a Commissioner for the Revenue Mobilization Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC); and Minister of Communications
In March 2008, he was elected the Deputy National Chairman and, in January 2011, he emerged the Acting National Chairman of the PDP when Dr. Okwesilieze Nwodo stepped down. He was later made the Chairman of a 20-member Board of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) and thereafter the Minister of Defence.

He was appointed the Chairman, North Central Zonal Reconciliation Committee of the PDP set up by the immediate past National Chairman,  Alhaji  Adamu Mauzu. One major assignment Mohammed undertook for the PDP before the March 28 presidential election was as Chairman of Presidential Declaration Committee with nine sub-committees.
In this interview, the acting BoT Chair of the PDP bares his mind on the presidential election, the PDP before and after the election, why former President Goodluck Jonathan refused the position of the  BoT Chair and his expectations from President Muhammadu Buhari, among other issues.

BY HENRY UMORU
PDP lost the March 28 presidential election. How has it been as an elder of the party?
In the first place, I don’t believe we lost the election, we conceded the election because election is not lost until it is challenged in a court of law; that is what Buhari did the first three times he contested against PDP candidates.

At the time of the election, we foresaw that the mood in the country was such that if the result was declared otherwise, the country will be plunged into chaos and there will be protest and possibly loss of lives and property; that is why President Jonathan decided to concede. So I see it not that we lost the election but that we conceded defeat because if Jonathan hadn’t conceded, we would still be in court trying to determine the real winner and there would have been   a lot of evidence to be presented. However, I am glad President Jonathan decided to concede so that we can have the peace that we have now in the country.

Did your party actually prepare to win the election?
PDP prepared very well for the election. It was clear we went round the country campaigning despite the hostility in some northern states where our convoys were attacked. We persisted, we went to all the states including those  considered dangerous because of the activities of Boko Haram and we mobilized our supporters. There were a lot of negative campaigns coming from the opposition especially with regard to religion, terrorism which was active in the North – East of the country and these were the issues that worked against PDP especially in the North – East and North – West.

God has designed that, after 16 years, PDP will now taste opposition and give opportunity  for the other party to also show what they can do for the people of this country. We don’t regret the president conceding because President Buhari has been contesting for a very long time and maybe he has now seen some ideas which he would like to put into practice in the governance of Nigeria. In a way, it is good to give him the opportunity, let the people of Nigeria see what he has to offer and PDP will stay as a viable opposition so that when he falters, we will be there to offer alternative opposition to the people. I believe that come 2019, it will be a clash of ideas. Let us see what Buhari and APC will unfold and compare with what PDP had shown in its performance and the people  will choose. Soon after the PDP lost, there was this blame game between the  presidential  campaign organisation and the PDP leadership. Was it really healthy for the party?

It is true that a lot of mistakes were made; the leadership and followership of the PDP made mistakes. We took certain things for granted, but this is not the time for finger pointing. This is not the time for blame apportioning; this is the time that we should look in retrospect, come together and examine what happened and see how we can put our party together so that we can prepare for 2019. When they are busy putting their government together and showing Nigerians what to do, we will be busy rebuilding our party; we know how we did it in 1998; we know the right people to contact in every state who put the party together.

We are going back to those people. That is why I always say we take this party back to the people. We will go back to the roots and, once we do that, we will identify the founding fathers that have been sidelined and bring them back on board as many of them that are alive and available. We will build a formidable structure as we did in 1998 and it will be ready to offer an alternative government for Nigerians in 2019.
In specific terms, what did your party take for granted?




Jonathan, Haliru and Fayose
Jonathan, Haliru and Fayose

















We took it for granted that the people of the country had accepted PDP as attested to in a number of states that  accepted PDP, not only as  ruling party at the federal level, but also as state governments. We took  it  for granted that our legislators will come back, but, unfortunately, the leadership of the party did not handle the primaries  well. We  took it for granted that whether we removed and replaced or not, whoever got the  PDP ticket will win the elections and it turned out that it was not so. Nigerians  have become more enlightened, they are voting more on the quality of the candidate than on blind loyalty to the party and we did not handle the primaries very well and that is a mistake that we have learnt from our actions and we will correct it come 2019.

We took for granted that the elections will be fought on issues and ideology and not on religion and tribal bases. That did not happen especially in the North where preachers in the mosques were demonising PDP, condemning PDP to hell and threatening our voters that voting for any PDP candidate  was like buying your ticket to hell. All these things happened, but we didn’t envisage that politics will come down to that level; so we took it for granted that it will be based on policies and ideologies. We  have learnt from this experience and, as you can see, PDP is full of people with ideas, great intelligence and we will sit back and re- adjust and we will bounce back in 2019.  Looking at the APC line up, all of them with a few exception were trained by PDP in politics, so where they learnt, the residue is still there and we will stir  it up and come back with a bang.

I want you to comment on the resignation of the Chairman,  Alhaji  Adamu Mua’zu. Was  it just Muazu or the entire leadership of the party that ought to have resigned ?

It is unfortunate that  immediately after the election, some people lost their cool  and started pointing fingers and shouting at one another. But it is not unexpected in a situation where nobody expected what happened to happen. People will feel frustrated  and  will be looking for scapegoats. The  situation degenerated to what led to some of our supporters, out of their for the party and the love for the continuity of the PDP government, to  blame and, naturally, uneasy lies the head that wears the crown.

So  Mua’zu and his NWC were natural targets for this scapegoating, but I don’t think the blame for our candidate to win this election lies  in one direction. We are all to blame including those of us who are elders who saw what was happening and kept quiet; but,  this is not the time to accuse each other, this is the time to come together and see what went wrong and correct it.

How prepared is PDP to play the  role of the opposition?
What is the role of the opposition? The role of the opposition is to offer an alternative to policy and to try to bring the government back on track when it tries to derail. So essentially, the role of opposition is to advice the government and offer alternative where government feels to be clueless on any issue. We already have people of experience, people of high level of integrity and knowledge and we have done governance for 16 years. We are very well placed to play the opposition role of telling the government this is not how to do it and this is what you should be doing; if they listen, of course  they will succeed, but if they don’t listen, then the people of Nigeria will see what is happening and when it is time for the next election, they will decide.

PDP appear to be lucky to have  somebody like you around, because  they only look for you when there is problem. First, you were to look into the implementation of Dr. Alex Ekwueme’s Committee report;  you were also the Chairman, North Central Reconciliation  Committee. You acted as the Chairman. Can  I say the party is lucky to have you?

I am lucky to have the party. There are people who are even better than me in the party. When we started, it was a party where you had the likes of Adamu Ciroma, Alex Ekwueme, Tony Anenih, Bode George, Ken Nnamani, Shauibu Oyedokun, Jerry Gana, Ebenezer Babatope and a lot of them. So you cannot say we lack people of high calibre, people who are materials to be president of this country and people with wisdom. We have all that in PDP. So it is just a coincidence if one person happens to hold a particular office and I believe anyone of us, given the opportunity, if we flock together to give our support, we will be able to deliver the party. Like I said, we are all guilty, we were complacent; that is why what happened has happened and now that we have learnt our lessons, I don’t think it will repeat itself.

You have just been made the acting Chairman of BoT,  Before you came in, the immediate past Chairman, Chief Chief Tony Anenih, said in his letter of resignation that he did that for the immediate past President Goodluck Jonathan to take over. How did it really happen that you came in instead of him. What are you bringing on board as BoT Chairman?

When we lost the election, we had a president who now have more time on his hands, a lot of people including Chief Anenih believed that we could use the president to lead the Board of Trustees. As it happened, after former President Obasanjo finished his term, he was made Chairman, Board of Trustees, so we could use his influence, experience and his wisdom because there is this plot nationally and internationally to move our party forward.

The same thing could have applied to immediate past President Jonathan and the offer was made as you have seen in Tony Anenih’s letter, but the immediate past president made it clear that he doesn’t want to be the Chairman, Board of Trustees; he wants to be one of the leaders of the party who will stay on the sideline and assist the party to rebuild itself. What he said was that if the party rebuilds itself and becomes the party in government again, then if he is called to take up any position, then he will be ready to take it. But for now, he wants to rest and give opportunities for other leaders to work in the party.

We respected his opinion. That is why we thought that one of us in the Board of Trustees should be entrusted to temporally lead until such a time that we are organised and we are ready to go into election to elect a substantive Chairman of the Board of Trustees.

As to what my party expects; it  expects me to galvanize all members of the party, bring them together, stop the bickering that is happening and start the process of re organising the party from the grass roots  to the national  level. In doing that, of course, we are working with the National Working Committee and, as you know, the Board of Trustees is advisory. The executive authority lies with the National Working Committee and the National Executive Committee, but because the residue of all the founding fathers  is in the BoT, the role of BoT becomes very important at this point in time, so that the collective wisdom of the BoT will be put together and forwarded as advice to the National Working Committee and the National Executive Committee.

We believe that the implementation of our collective ideas will bring PDP back to what it was meant to be by the founding fathers because we still have residue of the founding fathers in the BoT, and we know on what premise this party was built and we know the people who built it are still available in the various states of the federation. So if we take this party back to the grass roots, we hand it back to the people, it will resuscitate, revive and roar back into power in 2019.

In taking the party back to the grass roots, how do you avoid what happened in the past when Chief Anenih and his team in trouble shooting efforts were  misunderstood by the former Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, that the former was usurping the functions of the latter?

Like I said, the  BoT does not have executive powers. If we have brilliant ideas, we should discuss them with the executive arm of the party, that is, the National Working Committee and the National Executive Committee. If the linkage is broken, then you have a situation where there is a breach in communication and then the implementation becomes fractional and therefore unsuccessful. This time around, whatever ideas we have in the BoT, we will implement together with the National Working Committee. If we are setting up a committee, it will be a committee of the party not a committee of BoT. If we are going round, it will be the party going round, not BoT or NWC or National Executive Committee. So the party will work as a unit not in groups of BoT, NWC, NEC.  I have no doubt that we will succeed.

Muhammadu Buhari has been sworn in as the President of Nigeria. Before now, there were calls for the North to produce the President and some leaders of the North operated under the ACF  to have it. Now we have it.  As a Nigerian and not just as a northerner, is he taking us there against the backdrop of the issue of change?

Change was there before he came in. The principle under which PDP operates is that Nigeria should be seen as a united nation, but because of the present circumstances, we believe it will need time to blend as one people. And only when we can blend as one people is when every section of Nigeria will be given a sense of belonging and one of the innovative ways PDP has set out to build this sense of belonging is by making sure that whenever we set up a government, every part of this country, region, state, religious, tribal factors are put together so that the federal character of Nigeria is reflected in the government.

That is why we introduced  zoning and rotation of power so that everybody feels he has something in the government. The six zones will feel that they have a chance and opportunity at one time or the other to produce whatever position, whether it is the president, the vice president, Senate president, the speaker, chairman of the party, chairman BoT.

That is one way we feel will further unify this country until we arrive at a time when Nigerian does not look at you as to where you come from, what religion you belong to, but what you can offer. Meanwhile, before we reach that, we have to create a sense of belonging that will eventually lead us to that position that a Nigerian is a Nigerian wherever he comes from.
That is what PDP has set out to achieve and I believe if all Nigerian parties accept that principle, it will not be long when we will reach the point  where Nigerians will be seen as Nigerians regardless of where you live or come from.

Expectations are very high from Nigerians. The issues  of power, petrol, unemployment, among others, are there.  A  new government is now in charge and I know you are not in the position to set agenda for  it. But  if you are to do that, what would you say and think the Buhari-led government should do if it must take us there?

I can’t think of what this government can do because I haven’t seen their performance. I was old enough to remember Buhari’s performance as a military head of state, but as to advising this government, I believe they have made promises to the people. The only advice I can give is that they should keep their promises to the people. The people expect power to operate normally, they expect security to be restored and enhanced, they expect all aspects of Nigerian life to operate smoothly whether it is education, health, transportation.

PDP has tried very hard and we have tried to publicise all that we have achieved in the last four years of former President Jonathan and in the 16 years that we have operated. For 25 years, the railway wasn’t  working; I was fortunate to be the Chairman of railway when President Yar’dua directed that instead of going into standard gauge immediately we should first of all restore the narrow gauge so that people will start using that while we are working on developing the standard gauge and we thank God that the trains are now moving.
We planned to have railway in every state capital, the Ajaokuta/Warri to extend to Lokoja, the River Niger Marine transport.

The integrated master plan has been worked out and have developed gradually from Obasanjo’s time to Goodluck’s time. All these we expect this government to continue, otherwise  the transport sector will be stagnant. In the power sector, so many turbines have been ordered by the PDP government, they have been put in place, but the required infrastructure to fire them is what is lacking and that is the next phase and we expect this government to carry on with the next phase so that all these turbines will be fired and, once they are fired, there will be enough power all over the country.

The power sector is such that you can’t do it over night, but we have set the trend, we have awarded contracts for many hydro electricity projects and the distribution is also another factor. Contracts have been given out for distribution system to cover all zones of this country. Towards the end of his administration, former President Jonathan and his vice, Sambo were opening various stations to make it possible for these distribution stations to send electricity to all parts of the country.

If the coming government continues with this process, they will set up transmission, which is already awarded in many parts, and distribution, which the DISCOs were set up to do, but you know they are still at the take off point, so the government should help them take off properly and they can do it in the four years they have and hopefully, in 2019, we will come in and continue from where we stopped.