Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by slimmyjimmy(m): 1:28pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
[size=15pt] Help me say
[/size] |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by berrystunn(m): 1:28pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
[size=16pt]72Y old pensioner should look after the house, not after a country.
buhari till 2044 [/size] 1 Like |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Captainswag225(m): 1:29pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
the northgerian president hasnt achieved nutin. At dis rate he is failing fast. 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by U2ice(m): 1:32pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Sums it up 1 Like |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by 247notire(m): 1:33pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
brb |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by vivalavida(m): 1:34pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
God bless this writer. 4 Likes |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Leviseed: 1:34pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
We re scammed 5 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by jazinogold(m): 1:35pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
The Dullard has landed. ..shout BUHARI |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by obinnajr(m): 1:37pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
AFTER MAKING 1 DOLLAR = 1 NAIRA IN 100 DAYS, THE NEXT 200 DAYS IGWE ( BUHARI ) WILL TURN RIVER NIGER INTO WINE MEK GUYS DEY FLEX JOR 9 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by AK481(m): 1:39pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Wise words 1 Like |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Billygee2u: 1:39pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
take my words to the tout dictator buharidullardinhothecunningoldethnicandtribalbigot to repent from his evil mindset before he will die like a lizard,as he has planned to arrest bloggers which he and APCscammers used to wrestle power from GEJ. 1 Like |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by steppin: 1:40pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
sammyj: I wonder when this paid wailers will stop wailing about 197 days when their former clueless corrupt pay master looted the treasury leaving this new government almost redundant. Corruption is truly fighting back through this wailing agenda!!! www.nairaland.com/attachments/2739269_clvrh3ow8aawwho_jpegb9410a887cc29efdba8c24c0caffdad6
Bro, it's getting old...putting up the same pic in every thread that castigates buhari. some of your die-hard mumu followers are slowly catching up. Give it a damn rest bro! 18 Likes 4 Shares |
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Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Multispanzy: 1:41pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
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Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Nobody: 1:42pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Are u saying Buhari and his team deceived us with d change mantra Dose pple saying Buhari didnt say it himself, are u distancing him frm d party?? 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by mcnuel001(m): 1:42pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Kai walai dis writa na kwampam person,dis atiku na kwaret adbise to shehu and adesinaa, ip to say dem go read am. Walai I por hafi well well. All d pight against kwaruption na por fafer fage we dey see am, and e neba arresh anibidy wey guilty all dis while, na soso mouth epriday. Mininiko? Jonathan I no better bt I no dey talk flenty. Walia APC na wayo,..APC make una change ooooooooo 6 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Billygee2u: 1:44pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Leviseed: We re scammed but,we warned you people before,but ethnic,tribal and party bias blinded your sense of reasoning,greedy fellows 4 Likes |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by coldsummer: 1:48pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Richie0974: Am not in the mood to read too long stories like this... Same here |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by amusadele: 1:49pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
This Buhari who is less wiser than a local animal and his members have not seen anything yet. Am sure very shortly he will offer a REVERSE prayer that who sent him to contest in this country. He thinks, to govern is like leaking honey. He thinks this is military era where only orders, command etc are popular. Buhari who comfortably appointed his Fulani members into government and abandoned people from other regions think any normal persons will allow his proble to succeed. When Osholmhole returned from the US, he told lies against GEJ government about stolen monies, which the US government denied almost immediately. The same Oshiomhole costed the Onitsha Bridge and came out with figures that was are very far from even the actual total cost and the dunce Buhari is planning to proble people. How and why does Buhari and his apc think that probe will bring fair results when apc is propaganda and propagansa is apc? Tufiakwa to them all. |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by IDERAWOLE(m): 1:51pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Splashme: [b]Spin doctors, the ones renowned for their skills in advancing government propaganda know the wisdom of subtlety and skilful persuasion instead of unhandily and shiftily passing off barefaced lies as truth. Proselytising – even for a government with mounds of goodwill like that of President Muhammadu Buhari – requires some expertise that the administration needs to urgently learn.
[/b]The newspeak by the Senior Special Assistant, Media and Publicity to Buhari, Garba Shehu, heralding 100 days of the administration is beyond woeful. It is full of contradictions, needless self-salutations and puerile lies. Coming from a government that is 97 days old today, one wonders what dramatic flourish they will not envision for their 365 and 1461 days.
Shehu’s piece gives the impression that his boss does not have a blueprint of what to do with victory and they are currently winging out governance. After spending years rhapsodising what they – the opposition – will do differently if they snatch power from the Peoples Democratic Party, they are fast becoming what they criticised. Their unending obsession with the PDP, the unrestrained and now boring commentary on PDP’s faults, and the constant appeal for patience now seems like a riveting distraction; to keep the public busy so they will not have to own up for their current lack of ideas and ideological offerings.
The SSA can disown ‘One hundred things Buhari will do in 100 days’ and ‘My covenant with Nigerians’ but he cannot deny that the contents of those documents were extrapolated from APC’s manifesto put out during electioneering. The wordings might not be exactly the same but the scale of promises was just as ambitious, declarative and far reaching. If we distance Buhari from his campaign promises, he at least cannot deny the promises stated in thisisbuhari.com, a document circulated in December 2014.
As the ‘ghostwriter’ of ‘My covenant with Nigerians’ noted, the document is an abridged version of the party manifesto. If ‘My covenant with Nigerians’ was not Buhari’s thoughts as is being intoned presently, why were there no debunks before now? Why wait until your 100 days report card is due? Whether Buhari’s media team authorised the documents or not matters less as to whether they are on track of fulfilling the promises they made. Shehu says he can bet his last kobo that Buhari neither saw nor authorised these documents. Sophistry has a new name and it is resident in Aso Rock.
The question is, the one he saw and authorised – the party manifesto – how far has he laid the groundwork for its realisation? How far has Buhari gone with the promise to, for instance, “initiate action to amend the Nigerian constitution with a view to devolving powers, duties, and responsibilities to states in order to entrench true federalism and the federal spirit” as stated? He does not seem to be talking of restructuring the nation to make administration less unwieldy anymore, what happened? What of the promises he made in the sectors of education, infrastructure, security, economy and yes, foreign policy? How is he driving the reforms he stated in his manifesto? By his body language or through a clear and defined vision? Does Shehu realise that after the 100 days assessment, we would soon be assessing Buhari’s one year in office? His promises remain the yardstick by which we shall measure his effectiveness.
Furthermore, Shehu should stop insulting us by telling us ‘Buhari has given the job his best shot and the whole country is saying that we never had it so good.’ Such hyberbolic statements are disrespectful to both Nigerians who voted Buhari and those who voted against him for good reasons. Where was the poll carried out where Nigerians spoke in unison and agreed that their lives are perfect now since Buhari became President? If what has been seen so far is Buhari’s best, then Nigeria is in for a long and difficult ride. And no, Buhari’s endorsement by both the US President, Barack Obama, and UN President, Ban Ki-Moon, count for nothing. Those men are politicians who say what they are supposed to say even when it is either irrelevant or banal. Obama once praised former President Goodluck Jonathan such that the man questioned – in his infamous spiel, “I am not a General, Goliath, Pharaoh or a King” why Nigerians refused to see any good in him despite those high profile commendations.
Buhari was sold to us as the man with a magic wand capable of solving Nigeria’s recurrent corruption problems. By the time I got to the part of the document that states, ‘President Buhari is being praised at home and abroad for his ongoing fight against corruption….’ I had to wonder what the ‘‘ongoing fight against corruption’’ was all about and where it was taking place. What we have had so far is propaganda and lots of noise about who and who stole what.
There is practically no ruler in Nigeria – military or democratic – that has not paid the obligatory lip service to fighting corruption. The collapse of the First Republic via the coup in 1966 happened partly because some soldiers were disgusted by the depth of the corruption in government.
There is no point asking Shehu how the documents being denied presently came into existence; we were alive when the Third Term Agenda was blamed on the printer’s devil. What Shehu owes us now is to explain what Mr. President plans to do to tackle corruption beyond the simplistic and unrealistic mantra borrowed from Narendra Modi, ‘I won’t steal and I’ll not allow others to do it!’
How does the President monitor and prevent people from stealing in a country as large and as complicated as Nigeria? If an anti-corruption agenda can work simply by whom the President permits to steal, a President like Olusegun Obasanjo would have solved the problem long ago! That was one man who hounded those who stole without permission.
Shehu, in that same press release says that ‘Buhari will turn out to be a leader in the tradition of Lee Kuan-Yu and India’s current reform-minded Prime Minister Modi… He may however differ with (sic) them by not micro-managing things.’ A President whose anti-corruption plans is about who is allowed to steal is already a micro-manager.
Shehu cannot convince us this government is serious about fighting corruption until we see their action plan. How do they plan to take the anti-corruption agenda to wards and local government levels? Is their strategy bottom-up or top-down approach?
My advice to Shehu is to take a deep breath and stop talking for a while so they can put their house in order. This administration has talked so much like a tape on repeat. The energy deployed on talking could be useful for other ventures. Nigeria is not a stranger to empty rhetoric. This government talks too much for people who are supposed to be rebuilding a vandalised country. That emphasis on talks without requisite action makes them look unserious. The APC should spend some time poring over their manifesto and reminding themselves of their promises to Nigerians. That, hopefully, might put a spring in their steps.
http://www.punchng.com/opinion/viewpoint/buharis-1461-days-what-will-garba-shehu-do/
One of the most sensible write-ups I've read in recent time. Even though I had to scan through; much of the portion I read is apt for the spin doctors to go to work with. 4 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by ArcSEMPECJ(m): 1:56pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
The HOWSIRS are just after asking HOW to their SIRS.., a core northerner does not care if he is seeing dividends from his leaders...all he is after is Kai DABRU BANKA OUR FROTHER I DEY BOR FOWER....that is why up till this 21st century...many of them are still in darkness...Their SO CALLED LEADERS has nothing to offer them but they are happy...gullible set of people...if you check what Buhari has done so far...all i can see is pictures from his tourist projects with Osho m OLE and LARA at the background kissing out Nigerian money |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by probsolver: 1:57pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
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Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by probsolver: 1:57pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Septemer 1st, 2015 Correct me if I am wrong. At the time I knew we at ENDS dissected the so-called Buhari 100 days covenant and certified it fake for too many reasons. We noticed it was not published in any of the main stream media channels. Not on PremiumTimes, not on Vanguard, not on SaharaReporters, not in Punch. So obviously it was fake and not released by the APC official media channel or by Buhari’s presidential campaign. The so-called Buhari promise only showed up in editorials like AbuSidiqu and NewsRescue, a particular editorial that was openly dedicated to destroying Jonathan by any means necessary. We also noticed the so-called #100dayspromise was riddled with errors, had no formal introduction nor formal ending and had no publicity agent name. It was a sham of a document, albeit a sweet document and certainly not one made by any formal media office. Not unsurprisingly Buhari in Chatham house shortly after his victory as can be heard at 34 minutes of the “Prospects for Democratic Consolidation in Africa: Nigeria’s Transition” speech video rapidly responded that whatever #100dayspromise must be a fake document and that he knew nothing about it. So in conclusion, bright people wrote the #100dayspromise. Rather fascinating and provoking things were written in it. The problem is, it was not written by or signed by President Muhammadu Buhari. It would have been retarded to make such robust promises of the first 100 days of a new government when you have not yet known what you are being handed over or been handed it. Perhaps a young youth who has never occupied a position of authority could imagine and conceive of such overzealous document, but not a professional and never a known to be slow and steady from his first stint, former great president who knows what the job entails. Such promise for 100 days which includes many projects that take years to establish as is contained in the document is simply illogical and we do hope and know our president is not retarded. Now let us keep enjoying our great new nation. Dr. Peregrino Brimah; http://ENDS.ng [Every Nigerian Do Something] Email: drbrimah@ends.ng Twitter: @EveryNigerian |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by sunsewa: 2:00pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
The pictures is getting clearer,bit by bit,but they should ban liar Mohammed from government comments,his own lies doesn't hold water at all,let's manage Adesina that still has conscience, I trust him not to rubbish his pedigrees, his a good Christian, but garbage she hu is a political babbler and turncoats, needs to apply brake,internet saves info for us and is available now to refer to,so he should stop his political jabbing. 2 Likes |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by adconline(m): 2:10pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
mars123: to my knowledge, Buhari never promised anything in 100 days. he cautioned against it when he was campaigning in chatam house. The APC party was desperate no doubt, but Buhari himself didn't promise anything in 100 days, so his integrity still remains intact. #your tantrums are very much welcomed. Stupidity inked on ur encephalon. So Buhari ran on PDP platform and manifesto? Worrisomely, GMB hasn't told us what he would do accomplish in his 1st yr and 2nd, 3rd, and 4th? How did we elect GMB without public debate? We shot ourselves in the foot when we demanded no debate from GMB to know his policy stand 5 Likes |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Rexyl(m): 2:10pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Slow and steady wins the race, but that will work if the system is not biased and run in isolation. To achieve success will require services and cooperation of all, not that full benefits are given to certain group of people while others are given a bitter pill.
It seems like the current system and structure doesn't unite Nigerians. |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by chesterlee(m): 2:11pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
8 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Leyemoshood: 2:12pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
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Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Billygee2u: 2:12pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Splashme: [b]Spin doctors, the ones renowned for their skills in advancing government propaganda know the wisdom of subtlety and skilful persuasion instead of unhandily and shiftily passing off barefaced lies as truth. Proselytising – even for a government with mounds of goodwill like that of President Muhammadu Buhari – requires some expertise that the administration needs to urgently learn.
[/b]The newspeak by the Senior Special Assistant, Media and Publicity to Buhari, Garba Shehu, heralding 100 days of the administration is beyond woeful. It is full of contradictions, needless self-salutations and puerile lies. Coming from a government that is 97 days old today, one wonders what dramatic flourish they will not envision for their 365 and 1461 days.
Shehu’s piece gives the impression that his boss does not have a blueprint of what to do with victory and they are currently winging out governance. After spending years rhapsodising what they – the opposition – will do differently if they snatch power from the Peoples Democratic Party, they are fast becoming what they criticised. Their unending obsession with the PDP, the unrestrained and now boring commentary on PDP’s faults, and the constant appeal for patience now seems like a riveting distraction; to keep the public busy so they will not have to own up for their current lack of ideas and ideological offerings.
The SSA can disown ‘One hundred things Buhari will do in 100 days’ and ‘My covenant with Nigerians’ but he cannot deny that the contents of those documents were extrapolated from APC’s manifesto put out during electioneering. The wordings might not be exactly the same but the scale of promises was just as ambitious, declarative and far reaching. If we distance Buhari from his campaign promises, he at least cannot deny the promises stated in thisisbuhari.com, a document circulated in December 2014.
As the ‘ghostwriter’ of ‘My covenant with Nigerians’ noted, the document is an abridged version of the party manifesto. If ‘My covenant with Nigerians’ was not Buhari’s thoughts as is being intoned presently, why were there no debunks before now? Why wait until your 100 days report card is due? Whether Buhari’s media team authorised the documents or not matters less as to whether they are on track of fulfilling the promises they made. Shehu says he can bet his last kobo that Buhari neither saw nor authorised these documents. Sophistry has a new name and it is resident in Aso Rock.
The question is, the one he saw and authorised – the party manifesto – how far has he laid the groundwork for its realisation? How far has Buhari gone with the promise to, for instance, “initiate action to amend the Nigerian constitution with a view to devolving powers, duties, and responsibilities to states in order to entrench true federalism and the federal spirit” as stated? He does not seem to be talking of restructuring the nation to make administration less unwieldy anymore, what happened? What of the promises he made in the sectors of education, infrastructure, security, economy and yes, foreign policy? How is he driving the reforms he stated in his manifesto? By his body language or through a clear and defined vision? Does Shehu realise that after the 100 days assessment, we would soon be assessing Buhari’s one year in office? His promises remain the yardstick by which we shall measure his effectiveness.
Furthermore, Shehu should stop insulting us by telling us ‘Buhari has given the job his best shot and the whole country is saying that we never had it so good.’ Such hyberbolic statements are disrespectful to both Nigerians who voted Buhari and those who voted against him for good reasons. Where was the poll carried out where Nigerians spoke in unison and agreed that their lives are perfect now since Buhari became President? If what has been seen so far is Buhari’s best, then Nigeria is in for a long and difficult ride. And no, Buhari’s endorsement by both the US President, Barack Obama, and UN President, Ban Ki-Moon, count for nothing. Those men are politicians who say what they are supposed to say even when it is either irrelevant or banal. Obama once praised former President Goodluck Jonathan such that the man questioned – in his infamous spiel, “I am not a General, Goliath, Pharaoh or a King” why Nigerians refused to see any good in him despite those high profile commendations.
Buhari was sold to us as the man with a magic wand capable of solving Nigeria’s recurrent corruption problems. By the time I got to the part of the document that states, ‘President Buhari is being praised at home and abroad for his ongoing fight against corruption….’ I had to wonder what the ‘‘ongoing fight against corruption’’ was all about and where it was taking place. What we have had so far is propaganda and lots of noise about who and who stole what.
There is practically no ruler in Nigeria – military or democratic – that has not paid the obligatory lip service to fighting corruption. The collapse of the First Republic via the coup in 1966 happened partly because some soldiers were disgusted by the depth of the corruption in government.
There is no point asking Shehu how the documents being denied presently came into existence; we were alive when the Third Term Agenda was blamed on the printer’s devil. What Shehu owes us now is to explain what Mr. President plans to do to tackle corruption beyond the simplistic and unrealistic mantra borrowed from Narendra Modi, ‘I won’t steal and I’ll not allow others to do it!’
How does the President monitor and prevent people from stealing in a country as large and as complicated as Nigeria? If an anti-corruption agenda can work simply by whom the President permits to steal, a President like Olusegun Obasanjo would have solved the problem long ago! That was one man who hounded those who stole without permission.
Shehu, in that same press release says that ‘Buhari will turn out to be a leader in the tradition of Lee Kuan-Yu and India’s current reform-minded Prime Minister Modi… He may however differ with (sic) them by not micro-managing things.’ A President whose anti-corruption plans is about who is allowed to steal is already a micro-manager.
Shehu cannot convince us this government is serious about fighting corruption until we see their action plan. How do they plan to take the anti-corruption agenda to wards and local government levels? Is their strategy bottom-up or top-down approach?
My advice to Shehu is to take a deep breath and stop talking for a while so they can put their house in order. This administration has talked so much like a tape on repeat. The energy deployed on talking could be useful for other ventures. Nigeria is not a stranger to empty rhetoric. This government talks too much for people who are supposed to be rebuilding a vandalised country. That emphasis on talks without requisite action makes them look unserious. The APC should spend some time poring over their manifesto and reminding themselves of their promises to Nigerians. That, hopefully, might put a spring in their steps.
http://www.punchng.com/opinion/viewpoint/buharis-1461-days-what-will-garba-shehu-do/
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Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by Omoedeki: 2:12pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
Animal Farm by George Orwell comes to mind |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by MAYOWAAK: 2:13pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
The pertinent questions remain: will the sensational stories we read in the media every day lead to the successful prosecution and conviction of some big fish in the pool of corruption to serve as deterrence to others? Are institutional mechanisms being put in place to make it difficult for people to fiddle with public funds and easily get away? What legal/judicial reforms are ongoing to ensure that public officials who steal billions are not asked to pay peanuts in fines to walk free? How are we going to deal with the private sector that is not only the enabler for the public sector corruption but also has its own monumental rot within? When are we going to get to a situation in which being invited to serve in public office would not attract celebrations and all manner of expensive social and religious thanksgivings? 2 Likes |
Re: Buhari's 100 Days: Punch Writer Advises Garba Shehu And Adesina (must Read) by sammyj: 2:21pm On Sep 03, 2015 |
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