National Association of Political Science Students - NAPSS, NDU Chapter

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National Association of Political Science Students - NAPSS, NDU Chapter True wisdom begins with a realisation of one's own ignorance -Socrates

Live feeds from the National Conference tagged "Federalism, Democracy and Development in Nigeria".
06/05/2019

Live feeds from the National Conference tagged "Federalism, Democracy and Development in Nigeria".

The conference opens from Monday 6th to Friday 10th May 2019. Time is 9am daily.
05/05/2019

The conference opens from Monday 6th to Friday 10th May 2019. Time is 9am daily.

Opening ceremony of the Faculty of Social Sciences first international conference tagged "Climate Change, National Secur...
05/11/2018

Opening ceremony of the Faculty of Social Sciences first international conference tagged "Climate Change, National Security and Development in Nigeria".

Conference runs from 4th to 7th November 2018. Time is 8:30am

UPDATE SENATE AT ITS 154TH MEETING HELD ON THURSDAY 29 MARCH, 2018 CONSIDERED THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE COMMITTEE OF PRO...
05/04/2018

UPDATE
SENATE AT ITS 154TH MEETING HELD ON THURSDAY 29 MARCH, 2018 CONSIDERED THE RECOMMENDATION OF THE COMMITTEE OF PROVOST AND DEANS (CPD) AND RATIFIED AS FOLLOWS:

1. That payment of students charges and fees for 2017/2018 academic session would be a one off payment;

2. That the earlier decision of Senate for students to split the payment into 60% and 40% respectively be reversed;

3. That amount paid as charges/fees is as reflected on the University website;

4. That payment of fees/registration should be completed two weeks from date of resumption;

5. That late registration will attract a sanction of two thousand naira (N2000) only;

6. That registration for all students in 2017/2018 academic session will end on April 30, 2018.

Signed
Emmanuel Amaegbe
For: Ag. Registrar

FROM THE OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC RELATION OFFICER (P.R.O.), STUDENTS' UNION, NIGER DELTA UNIVERSITY (NDU).Verification for ...
29/03/2018

FROM THE OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC RELATION OFFICER (P.R.O.), STUDENTS' UNION, NIGER DELTA UNIVERSITY (NDU).
Verification for freshers have been suspended due to the Non Academics Staff Union's (NASU) strike. But according to the Vice Chancellor the process will continue after the Easter break as management is setting out modalities to continue the process.
School still resumes on the 6th of April and lectures begins on the 9th of April, therefore discard every rumor of school being on strike.
*Publication of results have started but only students that have completed their school fees for 2016/2017 academic session will be able to access their results.
School fees payment for 2017/2018 academic session has started as well as application for hostels.
N/B: everything is online and fees remains the same as last academic session's fees.

Thanks.

Signed: COMR. OGIDI JOHN EBIKEDOUMENE P.R.O SU

NIGER DELTA UNIVERSITY POST UME FORM IS OUT!Niger Delta University invites application from JAMB UTME candidates for pos...
06/09/2017

NIGER DELTA UNIVERSITY POST UME FORM IS OUT!

Niger Delta University invites application from JAMB UTME candidates for post UME screening exercise for the 2017/2018 academic session. Interested candidates are to be guided by the following;

Eligibility and Application

1. Candidates who took NDU as their first choice and scored 150 and above in the 2017/2018 JAMB UTME examination.

2. Candidates are to make a nonrefundable payment of Four Thousand Naira (N4,000) only, at the bank for post UME fee.

3. Online application will be opened from 6th September, 2017 to 22nd September, 2017.

4. Application test is on 27th to 30th September, 2017.

For more enquiries please call 07062090652, 08126961998

RESUME AND RESIGN? By Simon KolawoleIf you believe in the evolution theory, you are most likely to believe that the lou...
22/08/2017

RESUME AND RESIGN?

By Simon Kolawole

If you believe in the evolution theory, you are most likely to believe that the loud calls on President Muhammadu Buhari to “return or resign” happened just like that. You would believe the campaign was a naturally occurring phenomenon generated from a single “cell” of discontent before acquiring a life of its own. But if you believe in creationism and intelligent design, you would believe the campaign was carefully put together, well funded and well executed to achieve other purposes than publicly stated. You would argue that the campaign is by no means an accident. As the Igbo would say, when you see an antelope dancing by the roadside, the drummer is somewhere in the bush.

In truth, the only option being presented to Buhari was resignation. To ask somebody who was under doctors’ care to abandon the treatment table and rush back to office is quite similar to asking him to commit su***de. Buhari had said, weeks ago, that he was feeling well and eager to return home but he would have to take instructions from his doctors. If his doctors said don’t return and the campaigners said he should return or resign, you could argue convincingly that he was given only one option — resignation. Convinced that Buhari was not healthy enough to return, the campaigners were indirectly asking him to vacate power.

Now that Buhari has returned (to the disappointment of many), I can bet that the campaign will not stop. It is a case of “return and resign” not “return or resign”. Why should Buhari resign? He is too sick to lead Nigeria, I am told, and since Nigeria is bigger than him, he should put the country’s interest first and just resign and return to Daura, his hometown, for goodness sake. His sickness, I am further told, has stalled the progress of Nigeria. Someone even said Nigerian institutions are crumbling because of Buhari’s absence, and there was this growing narrative of a cabal running rings round Acting President Yemi Osinbajo such that he was unable to get things done.

On Twitter Nigerian, we were made to believe that the country was at a “standstill” because of Buhari’s sick leave. Not only did government grind to a complete halt, everything went haywire. No single major decision could be taken by Osinbajo in Buhari’s absence, they said. All the things that required the attention of Buhari since he left Nigeria on May 7, 2017 allegedly remained pending. Nigeria was about to fall to pieces. There was only one question I kept asking those propounding the “standstill” and “cabal” theory: what single directive has Osinbajo issued in Buhari’s absence that has not been obeyed? Nobody told me. I don’t know why people were hiding this from me.

By virtue of section 145 of the amended 1999 constitution, the acting president is empowered to exercise ALL presidential powers. Osinbajo had full authority. That is the law. It is not a favour. It is not a suggestion. And the Osinbajo that I observed was exercising these powers. He signed executive orders that were carried out by agencies of government. He signed bills into laws and the laws are legitimate, legal and constitutional — to adopt the verbosity of the “learned profession”. He swore in ministers and assigned portfolios to them. He made appointments into agencies and nobody stopped him. This is not how power vacuum works. Correct me if I’m wrong.

What’s more, he appointed permanent secretaries and swore them in. Nobody stopped him. On top of it all, he ordered service chiefs to relocate to Borno state and I didn’t hear that they disobeyed. So where is the famous power vacuum? Okay, maybe I missed the point. Someone asked me the other day if I sincerely thought Osinbajo could reshuffle the cabinet and appoint new ministers. I said yes. He said: “Simon, you are deceiving yourself. Keep lying to yourself.” He didn’t know that I was not deceiving myself: Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, as acting president in February 2010, actually reshuffled the cabinet. But asking Osinbajo to dissolve the cabinet just to prove he has the power is nonsense.

Let me now explain the way I understand power vacuum. In November 2009, President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua was flown out of the country on medical emergency. He did not transfer power to Jonathan, his VP. On previous medical trips, he did not transfer power either. In fact, his adviser on national assembly matters, Senator Mohammed Abba Aji, had told PUNCH, in an interview published on January 29, 2009, that the president “is not required by the constitution to write the Senate…The President is elected for a four-year term that includes every second of every minute of that period, whether he is asleep, on vacation, on leave or on a trip to the moon”. As a result, Jonathan could not sign the 2010 appropriation bill into law. After a prolonged drama, some people travelled with the budget to Saudi Arabia and returned to announce that Yar’Adua had signed it. As the tenure of Chief Justice Idris Kutigi was coming to an end in December 2009, there was confusion on who would swear in his successor, Justice Aloysius Katsina-Alu. Jonathan believed it would be illegal for him to do so and did not want it challenged in a court of law. Kutigi had to swear in his successor. That is what you call power vacuum. We witnessed it first-hand as Jonathan declined to take so many critical decisions because power was not transferred to him.

Compare and contrast that experience with what obtained when Buhari was in the UK and you would have to wonder where the “standstill” idea was coming from. Buhari did a proper letter to the national assembly and said he did not know when he would return. What else do we want? Buhari has been accused of so many things — but I have never heard anyone accuse him of not delegating power to his deputy. In fact, his weakness, we were once told, is that he over-delegates to his deputy. And if Osinbajo had to consult with Buhari over some key decisions, how is that a problem? Were they at war? Are they rivals or partners-in-progress?

For the record, I was not against the “Resume or Resign” agitations. People have a right to voice their opinions. Nobody should be persecuted or molested for their views. It was wrong for the police to attack them. And the comical pro-Buhari protests were childish. Even a fresh idiot could see through the charade. But even if the “resign” movement was playing a political game, political games are legitimate in democracy. If PDP supporters are asking Buhari to resign, that is allowed in politics. It is no treason. APC came to power by demonising PDP, and PDP has every right to play a return match. APC is only getting a taste of its own medicine. Meanwhile, if those under fire for corruption are joining the campaign to force Buhari out, that is also okay. Who wants to go to jail? If those who have lost out in the political equation want to see Buhari’s back, that is enlightened self-interest. Perfectly in order. My amusement, though, is that many people were tricked into the “resign” game without understanding that there is another game within the game. They thought it is a case of evolution. No, it is intelligent design. There is a growing coalition against Buhari for different motives. Buhari has stepped on too many powerful toes and forced too many powerful people to vomit what they illegally swallowed. It’s payback time.

The major lesson in this saga, though, is the issue of absentee presidents. How long can a president be away? The Yar’Adua impasse led to the amendment of the constitution: even if the president does not transfer power, the vice-president automatically becomes acting president after 21 days. The constitution cannot envisage everything, but experiences such as this can help in making the laws better. With the Buhari experience, I think our democracy is growing. The nation kept functioning in the president’s absence. Osinbajo did a good job. Buhari, in the national interest and for the sake of his health, should continue to give his VP a free a hand. Nigeria first, always.

What do you think about Simon's submission? Have your say in the comment section below.

Source: www.thecableng.com

PUBLIC FUNDS AS BUSH MEAT: THE TRAGEDY OF THE COMMONSBy Professor Ibaba S. IbabaExcerpt from the inaugural lecture serie...
18/08/2017

PUBLIC FUNDS AS BUSH MEAT: THE TRAGEDY OF THE COMMONS

By Professor Ibaba S. Ibaba

Excerpt from the inaugural lecture series titled: "MOPPING THE WET FLOOR WHILE OVERLOOKING THE LEAKING ROOF: RETHINKING PEACE BUILDING IN THE NIGER DELTA"

In Africa, including communities in the Niger Delta, a hunter or any man who brings game (bush meat) home is a hero and benefactor. Why? The animal in the bush is not owned by anybody and consequently, you can kill. But the same is not true of the domestic animal that is owned by an individual, a family or the entire community. Whoever kills a domestic animal without consent or even accidentally, pays a price. Where an individual kills a domestic animal without consent and sells or eats it, such a fellow is declared a thief and appropriate sanctions are invoked. If a domestic animal is killed accidentally, the killer sends emissaries to beg the owner and depending on the outcome, he or she may pay compensation or tender an apology.

Paradoxically, public funds that should be like the domestic animal have been turned into "bush meat". Consequently, those who steal public funds are deified, revered, and honoured the way a hunter who brings "bush meat" home is celebrated. They are conferred titles and national honours; given honourary doctorate degrees by universities, and given dignifying titles in church and other places or worship. Worst still, these fellows who are the undertakers of our common destiny have become role models younger ones look up to define their aspirations in life. Significantly, the commons, the victims of "bushmealisation" of public funds are the ones that are mobilised to defend the beneficiaries of this unholy act whenever they are caught by the law. Any time the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) arrests any of the "bush meat hunters", the common citizen is mobilised to protest their prosecution; describing it as persecution. This is a tragedy. The exploitation of the Niger Delta by Niger Deltans (Ijaw, Ikwere, Ogoni, Urhobo etc) is as offensive, unjust, ungodly, preposterous and destructive as the exploitation of the region by Nigerians from other parts of the country. The understanding that the wealth of the political and bureaucratic class is the reason for poor education, poor health facilities, etc. in the region is fundamental to the development of a culture of demanding accountability from the leadership. This is a critical requirement for development in the region and overlooking this is a huge road block to peace building.

MOPPING THE WET FLOOR WHILE OVERLOOKING THE LEAKING ROOF: RETHINKING PEACE BUILDING IN THE NIGER DELTASummary of an inau...
17/08/2017

MOPPING THE WET FLOOR WHILE OVERLOOKING THE LEAKING ROOF: RETHINKING PEACE BUILDING IN THE NIGER DELTA

Summary of an inaugural lecture by Prof. Ibaba S. Ibaba

Vice Chancellor, ladies and gentlemen, you may be wondering what a ‘leaking roof’ has got to do with peace building in the Niger Delta. For the uninitiated, you may also wonder what peace building means. This lecture addresses a question that has elicited several answers. The recurrence of violence in the Niger Delta despite several interventions by the Nigerian State, and the multinational oil companies has elicited concerns. The dominant theme in the literature blames this quagmire on the country’s perverted federal system that is yet to be restructured, ethnicization of resource allocation that has continued to drain resources from the Niger Delta, and the Petroleum Act, Land Use Act, oil Minerals Act and Oil Pipelines Act, among others.

But these issues, despite being valid explanations for the seemingly unending conflict in the region, ignore many others that relate to internal contradictions in the Niger Delta. Significantly, these issues are fundamental to peace building in the region. First is horizontal inequalities (HI) among the different ethnic nationalities in the region, and the resultant suspicion, antagonism and fear of domination of one group by another. The second point is the socio-cultural context of the region that has aided the total disregard and contempt for hard work, dignity of labour and the public good, and the production of personality traits that undermine peace and security. Third is the crisis in the region, and the resultant poor quality of governance, service delivery, overt corruption and the consequent neglect of development. The fourth issue is overlooking the consequences of the violence such as the exposure of young adolescents and youths to violence and the subsequent neglect of behaviour modification in the peace building process. The fifth point to note is the failure to integrate non-oil related but key conflict issues such as climate change into the peace building process.

Ag. Vice Chancellor, ladies and gentlemen, I assert that overlooking the issues note above has created gaps in the peace building process. I therefore argue that overlooking these gaps is like “moping the wet floor of a leaking roof while leaving the points of leakage in the roof unattended to”, noting that the peace building efforts will most likely be futile, the same way the owner or occupant of a house will continue to mop the floor without getting it dry if the leaking roof is not repaired or replaced. Just as the woman in my village has not been able to keep her floor dry whenever it rains because of the failure to mend the leaking roof, the Nigerian state (at all levels – federal, state and local government) has for several years not been able to secure fundamental issues that created the violence and the consequences thereof. My argument does not acquit the present state of the ethnic politics of the flaws in peace building, but insist that peace contradictions and consequences of the violence are not and addressed. Federal restructuring, resource ownership and control, industry cannot stand alone to promote peace in the region. Treating them as stand-alone factors would mean not amending or replacing the leaking roof, and consequently the floor would continue to be wet; suggesting that the region would most likely be in permanent violence.

Culled from Niger Delta University (28th) Inaugural lecture series.

Staff, students, lovers of knowledge and the general public are hereby invited to the 28th inaugural lecture of Niger De...
09/08/2017

Staff, students, lovers of knowledge and the general public are hereby invited to the 28th inaugural lecture of Niger Delta University by Professor Ibaba Samuel Ibaba, tagged; "Mopping the Wet Floor while Overlooking the Leaking Roof, Rethinking Peace Building in the Niger Delta".

Date: 16th August, 2017
Venue: University Main Auditorium, Glory land campus
Time: 2pm prompt

Professor Ibaba is the immediate past Director, Center for Niger Delta studies. He is currently the Dean of Social Science Faculty, Niger Delta University, Wilberforce Island, Bayelsa State, Nigeria.

04/07/2017

WHAT ARE WE RESTRUCTURING?

Restructuring of Nigeria's political system appears to be the only panacea for our ailing socioeconomic and political fortunes by its promoters.

With the concept gaining more momentum by the day, we ask our esteemed audience;

Do you support restructuring?
If given the opportunity, what specifically will you restructure?

Have your say by dropping your comments below 👇 👇

21/06/2017

Share this on WhatsAppIf the rest of Africa expect Nigeria and South Africa to chart a pathway and provide some sort of economic leadership, they would have to look elsewhere for the time being. Africa’s two biggest economies, with a combined Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of nearly $800 billion are b...

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Amassoma
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