Vice President Osinbajo condemns Nigeria’s quota system, insists on merit.

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has identified the importance of merit in giving reward and said that quota system was detrimental to the progress of any society.

He said this in Abuja at the conferment of the Nigerian National Order of Merit, NNOM, on two professors, Omowunmi Sadiq, an environmental scientist, and Tanure Ojaide, a poet and literary critic.

According to him, the nation had placed quota before merit which “we know does not work.”

Nigeria’s quota system, embedded in the constitutional federal character principle, seeks to ensure that all parts of the country are adequately represented in public positions or for public benefits. Critics have argued that it promotes mediocrity as it allows people who otherwise would not be qualified on merit to assume positions or get government benefits based on the part of the country they are from.

On Friday, Mr. Osinbajo called on leaders to make sacrifices and commit to a country run on merit, integrity, hard work justice and patriotism.

“To build a new Nigeria, we need a new tribe of men and women of all ethnicities, of all faith committed to a country run on high values of merit, integrity, hard work, justice and love of country.

“A tribe of men and women who are prepared to make the sacrifices and solve the constraints that is crucial to building a strong society.

“Who are prepared to stick together, fight corruption side by side, insist on justice even when our friends and those of our tribes and faith are at the receiving end.

“A tribe consisting of professionals, businessmen, politicians, religious leaders and all of those who believe that this new Nigeria is possible.

“This requires a new way of thinking, a new leadership corps, a new tribe.

“The challenge for us today is a challenge of finding a society where everyone especially those of us who lead in every aspect of leadership agree that this country is worth fighting for, that this country can truly be great.

“And the evidence we have seen today is that this country can truly be great and so may I just challenge us today that it is time to populate that new tribe.”

The vice president noted that the award recipients demonstrated that Nigeria was blessed with tremendous talent and that her writers, poets and scientist were world class.

He, however, expressed surprise that the individual greatness of the citizens did not correlate with that of the nation.

Mr. Osinbajo said the national predicament was the result of an elite failure to accept responsibility or privilege to shape the values of the society.

“We must define clearly what is lofty, noble and deserving of honour and how these values can be sustained, preserved and enforced.

“This is the burden of privilege so that it is for us to create the moral and philosophical premises for integrity in the public service, fidelity to the rule of law and the creation of meritocracy as a rule,’’ he said.

Mr. Osinbajo commended the laureates for their intellectual accomplishments and said they would remain as mentors for the younger generations.

Also speaking, the Chairman of the Merit Award Board, Moses Essien, said the award was designed to identify the nation’s best and brilliant persons and reward them to serve as role models for the youth.

Mr. Essien said that since its creation, the board had demonstrated that the nation had the best citizens who could compete among their peers in the globe.

He said the awardees had also contributed to national discourse to make the nation great.

Responding, Ms. Sadiq thanked the federal government for the award and gave the assurance that it would spur her for greater contributions toward national growth and humanity.

She noted that the fact that the administration had focused attention on things that matter to the people sent serous message to the rest of the world.

She observed that her award showed that women had as much power in sciences and the academia as their male counterparts.

Mr. Ojaide, a recipient of many international awards, on his part hailed the organisers of the award for recognising intellectualism adding that the award was the most important in his life coming from his country.

On the militancy in the Niger Delta region, Mr. Ojaide said the region was also known for producing good writers and scholars outside militancy.

He appealed for fairness on the side of the Niger Delta people as well as the federal government to resolve the issues in the region.

“I feel that by exposing the problems of the Niger Delta it should make others more sensitive to the problems.

“At the same time I want Niger Delta people to realize that they are part of the Nigerian federation and as such should cede some of the resources to the development of the entire country.

“But the rest of the country should also be sensitive to your own problems,” he added.

Senate Presidency: We Will Not Compromise Merit- Tinubu

The All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader, Senator Bola Tinubu, says merit will not be compromised while choosing the Senate President.

Tinubu said this in Abuja on Thursday after holding a closed-door meeting with the President-elect Muhammadu Buhari.

He said he would not go against anything the party decided but assured that merit would not be compromised while making the decision.

He said: “Well, you have heard from the party; you have heard from leadership. My desire is not to rock the party. I am a disciplined party man and we will look at it critically.

“However, the nation is expecting us to take a decisive leadership decision. Merit would not be compromised. You have to be competent; you have to possess the character for the leadership.

“You have to be PAN Nigerian and be a very solid character to lead the National Assembly and that is what we are talking about,” he said.

Tinubu said the party had decided, in a meeting, that zoning would not be considered in choosing the leader because it could “compromise the credibility, qualification of an individual. “Let everybody aspire just like we aspired”.

He said predictions were rife during the APC presidential primaries that the party would run into “chaotic storm”. “We put those people to shame and came up with the best. Expect the best from us always,” he said.

Credit: NAN

Consider Merit Not Political Patronage In Ministerial Appointments, NANS To Buhari

The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) on Wednesday urged President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, to base his ministerial appointments on merit. This is contained in a statement issued by NANS and made available to newsmen in Abuja. The statement implored that national interest should be placed ahead of party sentiments and considerations.

It said that Buhari should go for technocrats with track records who could collectively bring Nigeria out of its present predicament. “NANS has observed with reservations the intense jostling and lobbying for ministerial and other appointments and deemed it wise to offer a word of advice to the President-elect. “In as much as we recognise that the President-elect came onboard on the platform of a political party, politics should not be allowed to take pre-eminence over national interest.

“NANS, therefore, urge the President-elect to ensure that the ministerial appointments are based on merit—persons with proven record of probity, technocrats, and persons with sound leadership skills are what we look forward to,’’ the statement said. It stated that Buhari could only succeed in turning Nigeria around if his team was well-selected and well-meaning. The statement said that Nigerian students were expectant that the President-elect would deliver on his campaign promises.

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