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Bola Tinubu Declares for Nigerian Presidency, Boosting Northern Presidency in 2023

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Former Lagos governor Bola Tinubu has made it public: big interest in the Nigerian presidency. Yes, visiting President Buhari on Monday, he made his intention clear that he would like to succeed Buhari in Aso Rock. Call him the frontrunner for APC for the presidential ticket.

With Tinubu in, the Vice President of the nation, Prof Osinbajo seems boxed now as any declaration would be seen as a confrontation with his former boss. But it may not matter, as they say in politics, no permanent enemy or friend, just permanent interest!

With Tinubu’s declaration, the high-voltage tribal warfare will ramp up in the next few months. Yes, if Southwest wants to provide the next president, arguing that it is the turn for the South, the North can flip that point making it clear that by Southwest not yielding to the Southeast, the whole argument for North to cede power becomes voidable. 

In other words, what the South expects the North to do is the same thing Southeast expects Southwest to do. But since Tinubu has broken it, expect new permutations in the next coming months in Nigeria.

The three big tribes will determine the next election but the North holds the ace on whom to anoint. Kano and Zamfara states closely track the whole Southeast and by the time you add other states, it is over.

There is a high likelihood that the North will retain power because Tinubu’s declaration has made it clear that fairness, equity and balance are not central in anyone’s spirit but only when it favours that person. If you want the North to relinquish power, you should also expect that power to go to the Southeast which is yet to test “power”. If not, do not expect someone to do what you cannot do for your neighbour!

But does my political sagacity cut it? Pure distractions indeed. During Jonathan’s government, Southeast had all the key posts but nothing changed in the region. That Obasanjo was president changed nothing in his state. Buhari’s kinsmen in Katsina state are kidnapped weekly and he has not done much to stop the paralysis. People, north, south, east or west, is not the real deal.

But what is the deal?  Eliminate state of origin and enshrine state of residence. That way, the game moves to competence over ancestral roots. For me, that is the only way to look for the best and avoid the politics of tribes and geography. But where that is not the case, let’s rotate the damn office for fairness and equity since we’re already doing a quota system in everything!

Tinubu Reveals Intention to Contest 2023 Nigeria Presidential Election (full text)

One Policy That Will Change Nigeria For Good – Abolish “State of Origin” for “State of Residence”

What comes after the AHA moment?

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There is a lot of hype around how the success of a business is dependent on the validity of the idea, and as a result, a lot of founders cherish that AHA moment. What we mostly refer to as the AHA moment is the exact time the entrepreneur realizes that he could make a business out of this idea.

Guess the first thing most people do when they have a business idea?

They rush online to check if such a business exists, or if someone else has done it already. Nine out of ten times, they will discover that the idea has already been done by someone else. Sometimes, it appears as though all the problems have been solved already. Like there is nothing to be done anymore. It always seems like someone else has done what we want to do, and sometimes, those people have already failed at the same business idea you are just conceptualizing.

Let me state first before going on, that every business idea is valid. Someone else might be solving the same problem, but if you probe further, you could find a segment of the audience that is underserved. You could find a better way to do the same thing. You could find a faster way too, or even a cheaper way.

There is room for competition if you know what you are doing.

But! No matter how valid the idea is, there are points you want to consider.

Does your market need the solution you are bringing?

You could have an idea that is solving a real problem, but no one wants it. It may be too complex for the market to understand. It may be too advanced, or maybe too expensive. To tick the first box on your idea, you want to confirm that the market needs the solution and will be willing to pay for it.

What about the other factors the come into play?

Some ideas are right and the market could need them. But is the timing right? Are all the factors in place? For instance, a lot of internet-based business ideas that are thriving now would have died off if the founders implement them in the 1990s. The internet broadband penetration at that time was still very low, even for very developed countries. That means an online streaming platform that would have withered off, but now, there is room for several of such businesses to thrive because the needed technology is in place. You need the right factors and technology in place.

Can I find out from the market what an ideal solution would be?

Sometimes, the idea that triggered your AHA moment might not trigger an AHA from your customer. Yes, your customer might not be impressed by your almighty novel idea. Often, you could find that your customer has a clearer picture of what he would like the solution to look like. This is often the rationale behind a market survey. The problem you want to solve is right in front of you, but if you do not ask the customer the right questions, you may not find out the best way to solve it.

Does your customer believe you can deliver on your crazy idea?

One last thing to know. While convincing yourself that you can create that solution, you also need your customer to believe that you can deliver on it.

Tinubu Reveals Intention to Contest 2023 Nigeria Presidential Election (full text)

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All Progressive Congress (APC) chieftain, Bola Ahmed Tinubu visited the State House, Abuja, on Monday where he made his intention to run for the office of the president known.

Tinibu revealed his desire to contest the 2023 presidential election during a media briefing, after meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari.

Below is an edited transcript of the briefing.

Q: Why are you here?

T: I came to see the President on general issues concerning Nigeria, including our political party, APC. Security issues, the achievement, and the New Year agenda. That’s all I can tell you. The new strategy that we must have party congresses and all that.

Q: President Buhari recently said he does not want to divulge his favorite for the APC 2023 presidential ticket. Have you informed him about your ambition?

T: I can answer that with a categorical yes. I’ve informed the President of my intention but I have not informed Nigerians yet. I’m still consulting. And I have no problem consulting. And I’ve not set a parameter of limitation to the extent of how many people will I consult. You will soon hear, all you want to hear is the categorical declaration. You’ve gotten that truth from me that I have informed Mr. President of my ambition, and you don’t expect more answers than that.

Q: What was his response?

T: That’s our business. He is a Democrat. He didn’t ask me to stop. He didn’t ask me not to attempt and pursue my ambition; it is a lifelong ambition. So, why do I expect him to say more than that? Why do you? You are running a democratic dispensation, and you must adopt the principles and the values, and the virtues of democracy. That’s it.

Q: We have seen a number of support groups, drumming up support for your ambition, that of Vice President Osinbajo and Governor of Kogi state too. What’s your perspective on this? How do you see a potential race between you and these other persons for the APC ticket?

T: I don’t want to discuss individuals now. I must discuss myself. I have the confidence, the vision, the capacity to rule, build on the foundation of Mr. President, and turn Nigeria better. I have done that with commitment and unyielding you know, in Lagos State. You’ve seen that experience and the capacity to turn things around and that is what we are doing. You know, the confusion, the drift of the past in PDP is being corrected. And you can’t take away from that. As we are today, go back to the data on how many barrels of oil were we producing when we first came in and what it is today. At the time we came in we did not pay the counterpart funds to start our rail line. Today you enjoy the comfort of having rail from Lagos to Ibadan, you have the Kaduna and you have the one for Kano State on the aggressive pipeline, you see excellent infrastructure. I just came from Azare and I have seen good roads, the carnage of dying on motor vehicles is reducing except you know, lack of compliance with a lot of Nigerian drivers and VIOs. Let us think back, let us be intellectually inquisitive as to the past and the present and what the future holds for Nigeria.

Q: Tinubu as Nigeria’s President, what do we hope to see?

T: You want my manifesto now? Not yet. Not yet.

Q: I would like you to speak on the direct primaries and the convention. And secondly, what would be your response to those that say, the cap of being a kingmaker fits you more than you throwing yourself into the ring, you should remain a kingmaker.

T: First of all, the National Assembly and the president must be encouraged to review and review again. Whatever they come up with electoral amendment is what we must comply with. There is no unlimited elasticity in what we face, because we have to plan and plan well, and be able to manage the time effectively. The great roadmap to success is the ability of a leader to do what he must do at the right time that it should be done. So that to me, the electoral amendment point we will still look at that collectively. And it is our country. It’s our democracy. We had adopted it and we will pursue it rigorously.

About the cap of kingmaker. I’ve never seen the cap of a kingmaker before. That is the truth. And I’ve never seen where it is written in the rule book anywhere in any country, that a kingmaker cannot be a king, unless you commit murder. So, whatever is your attribute is your own opinion. Me, I want to pursue my ambition without the title of a kingmaker. You can write your literature and your story based upon your own perception.

Q: What about the (APC) Convention?

T: It is certain that we are going to get it.

Q: When next month?

T: Oh, well. I’m not a spokesperson for the party. And the President is the leader of the party. So, expect convention, maybe if that’s added to your own anxiety, or the other party’s anxiety, it is good for us. We will get it and we will get it done properly.

Nigeria’s Edtech Startup, Teesas, Raises $1.6 Million in Pre-Seed Round

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Edtech, besides fintech, increasingly adding value to the global burgeoning tech ecosystem besides. Since the past few years, a good number of online classrooms have sprung up. Buoyed by the pandemic-induced digital life, edtech startups have accelerated to unprecedented height, as learners around the world significantly embrace online tutorials.

In this evolution of learning, Nigeria is increasingly becoming visible. The West African country has witnessed growing number of startups in the online learning business, securing millions of dollars in investment – and they are not stopping yet.

Nigerian Edtech startup, Teesas, has raised $1.6 million in a pre-seed funding round led by Haresh Aswani, Tolaram Group’s Africa managing director, with the participation of Olivegreen Advisory Partners, an Africa-focused venture studio, and other angel investors.

The startup is aiming to expand its operations into new markets and also launch a marketplace that will connect learners with tutors for private lessons.

Founded by Osayi Izedonmwen barely two months ago, Teesas’ growth has accelerated in such a short period due to its unique services that are tailored to solve some of the frictions in Nigeria’s early schools.

“We started beta testing around August this year, and fully launched the android version in November. Already Teesas has over 150,000 downloads at the Google Play store, where we are now growing by at least 20% every week,” Izedonmwen told TechCrunch.

The startup provides a platform where educators and learners engage seamlessly and efficiently, to facilitate a fun and effective learning experience via the deployment of technology and the adoption of local culture and dialects.

Teesas has well-developed content in concordance with Nigeria’s national curriculum and is delivered to learners in both live and recorded formats, through a subscription program that starts at $6 a month. In addition to regular school work, the startup also offers local language classes.

Nigerian parents are becoming worried about growing cases of bullying at schools, and are beginning to see online classes as a solution. Teesas is building on this concern among others to provide alternative educational services to Nigerians.

“Live classes deal with concepts where learners have challenges. The learners sit with teachers in small remote classes of 10 or 15 for a personalized engagement, and to get more rigor into the teaching process,” said Izedonmwen.

With this funding and its rapid adoption, Teesas hopes to develop full-curriculum modules for learners aged up to 12 years. The edtech is also working to introduce life-skill classes in the first half of next year to prepare learners for self-discovery. It also offers anti-bullying lessons.

“We foresee a future where kids don’t have to attend in-person classes because they can cover entire curriculums on an app, and be ready enough for their secondary school entrance exams,” he said.

While the pilot phase of its edtech services is focused on Nigeria, Teesas plans to launch a tutor marketplace and enter new markets in Francophone, East, and Southern Africa.

“Teesas is going to have the biggest impact on the future of education in Africa. And I really want to be certain that I’m putting my best effort in leading that transformation – that’s why I’m focusing on it fully,” he said.

With this pace, Teesas is expected to raise more funds in the near future, and expand to several other countries in Africa, especially those with educational challenges similar to Nigeria’s.

“We believe in the mission Izedonmwen and the Teesas team has set forth on, and we are confident that they are best suited to crack the challenge of using technology to enhance access to quality education across Africa,” Haresh Aswani said while commenting on the investment.

The Governor Sanwo-Olu Experience with a Police CSP Calls for State Police in Nigeria

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State/ regional/ provincial/ community policing system is a type of sub-national territorial police force found in nations operating the federal system of government  in practice whereby the regional or state  government are also in control of the police force and not just the federal government. This is typically what is obtained in countries in North America, South Asia etc.

This argument for state policing has lingered for decades in Nigeria and it has been a roller coaster for both the protagonists and the antagonists of the state policing systems as each side of the divide tends to have valid points to support their stand.

The state policing system is currently made impossible unless the constitution is amended to accommodate that as the Nigeria Police force is provided for on the exclusive legislative list of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999. This implies that it is the federal government that is in charge of the police force. The force is directly under the command of the IGP who is an appointee of the President of the Federal Republic. This means that all police officers in the country directly or indirectly report to the IGP who then reports to the Mr. President who is the grand commander of the force.

This federal system of policing as provided by the constitution encores that the regional governments; the state and the local government has no control over the police and this should clear your amazement why a chief inspector of police can’t stand his ground and flaunt the orders of the governor of a state who is the chief security officer of the state; the reason is simple, the police officer is not under the state government and does not report to the state government, he takes order and reports directly to the federal.

For us to understand why the Nigeria police force is the way it is, we would cast our mind to the colonial times when it was first established by the colonial masters. Of course, the Nigeria Police Force started as a body to meet the colonial masters’ needs. History holds it that the force was established as guards to enforce colonial orders on the citizens of Nigeria, surmount insubordination from citizens, collect taxes for the colonials masters and if the citizens resists or riots, they quell riots and protect the colonial masters. 

They were empowered to use any force necessary in carrying out these duties, hence the word “force” on their name. Historians and analysts tend to link this to the current behaviors of an average police man. He thinks he’s a police man just to protect the government against the citizens and use any force necessary in discharge of that duty, little did he know that according to s.4 of the police Act which provides for the general duties of the police, he’s a police man for the protection of the citizens.

Why Nigeria really needs state/community policing system:

Everyone (even those on the other side of the argument) will rationally agree that the state/community policing system will curb the insecurity challenges currently staring Nigeria in the face. A Niger state born police man who grew up in the state knows the terrain, the environment very well and in most case knows the bad area boys who have metamorphosed into the criminals and bandits and if deployed to the state as a police man definitely knows how to employ his initiatives, knows how to work with the locals in fishing out those causing havoc in the state. 

Same also, a Nnewi man who’s an indigene of the community deployed to that community as a police man will be more useful in curbing insecurities in the community more than a Kwale man that’s deployed from the federal to the community as a security agent. A criminal will think twice before shooting a police man that speaks the same language with him and grew up in the same community together, chances are that they know themselves. A Kanuri bandit will tend to listen more to a Kanuri police man who speaks his local dialect with him due to sentimental reasons rather than an Omo Yoruba or an Iyamuri (as they call Igbo folks) who is just deployed to the state from the federal. State Police will no doubt help confine criminal activities to their areas of origin and trash it out from there.

Furthermore, state policing will solve the youth unemployment rate by at least 70%. When states employ capable youths, give them proper training and assimilate them into the state security agencies, jobs have been created and this will boost the economy of the state.

State policing system will also cut down the bureaucratic bottleneck that is currently in existence in the force. For example, during the Gov. Jide Sanwolu and the Csp Magodo face off, the Csp categorically stated that he was deployed to the estate on the order of the IGP through the AGF and can only disengage at the instructions of his boss, the IGP who he reports directly to. 

The bureaucracy of reporting directly to the federal government slows down the decision making process and has its own effect on governance and policy making. The magodo squabble between the Mr. Governor and the Csp took more time to get resolved due to the fact that the Governor does not have the power to issue order directly to the police officers to disengage, rather he has to call the federal to get clearance to instruct the men to stand down.

The above point spins over to the point of the state policing will cure the constant friction between the policemen and the state government. There are a lot of states in Nigeria where the commissioner of police doesn’t see eye to eye with the Governor of the state and this causes a lot of friction and security breaches. When there are two captains in a ship the struggle of who is in charge or ought to be incharge will cause havoc to the ship.

State policing will also whittle down the extravagant corruption going on in the agency. The corruption of roadblocks and extortion of motorists will stop. A disguised thief will not want to steal in a community where everyone knows him. A state policeman would not want to exert corruption in his community where he’s known by everyone; everybody knows the Police officer up to his family and kindred.

Also, the police officers will work more with passion with the belief that they are protecting the lives and properties of their brethren and kinsmen. The way a family member will protect and safeguard his family even without pay will definitely be different from the way a stranger who is even paid will protect the folks.

These and many more are some of the reasons why the Nigerian government should consider the state/community policing system. We are however not ignorant of the fact that the system has its demerits but putting it in the measurement scale, the merits weigh high and above the demerits hence the reason for advocating for its adoption.