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Osun: Those Accepting Last Minutes Appointments Should Be Ready To Exit Service –  Gov-Elect

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Ademola Adeleke

By Ayodele Oni

Governor-elect of Osun state, Senator Ademola Àdeleke has reacted to last minutes appointments by outgoing administration  of Governor Gboyega Oyetola, warning beneficiaries not to rejoice yet.

Adeleke was reacting to Thursday elevation and inauguration of 30 directors in the state civil service to permanent secretaries by the outgoing government.

Adeleke is expected to be sworn in on Monday. His election is still being challenged by Oyetola at the election Petition Tribunal.

A statement by Olawale Rasheed, spokesman for the Governor elect states that “Any Coordinating Director who accept a permanent Secretary appointment from outgoing Governor Gboyega Oyetola will exit the service from November 28th.

The statement added that the Governor-elect affirmed that taking such appointments at this last minute indicated the readiness of those directors to exit the state service.

” We want to put on records that those who accept the appointments should be ready to leave the service whether or not their service tenure has reached statutory age.

“The occupants will be treated as political appointees, who will automatically follow the outgoing Governor out of public service from November 28.

“At the same time, those who still want to remain in service of Osun state government should decline the Greek gift from the outgoing Governor.

“We affirm that no waiver will be entertained in sacking from office any kangaroo permanent secretary.”

2023: Ayu Says PDP Is United, On A Rescue Mission

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Iyorchia Ayu and Atiku Abubakar

Embattled National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Iyorcha Ayu has disclosed that his party is still a united family and on a rescue mission to deliver the country from its current problems.
Ayu who is at the centre of the crisis rocking his party, disclosed during the party’s presidential campaign in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital.
He spoke to a massive crowd of supporters who had thronged the state to support the presidential candidate of the party, Atiku Abubakar, one of the top presidential hopefuls in the 2023 election.
Top PDP chieftains such as Bukola Saraki, a former Senate President, Governors Emmanuel Udom of Akwa Ibom state, Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta state and the party’s vice presidential candidate, amongst others were present at the meeting.
Five PDP governors who have demanded the resignation of Ayu were not at the meeting. The governors are Seyi Makinde of Oyo State, Nyesom Wike of Rivers state, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu state, Emmanuel ortom of Benue state and Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia State.
In spite of the division in the party, Ayu said the PDP is a united family with a spread a Ross the country, adding that the party will use its popularity to take back the country from the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC.
He said, “Let me tell you that PDP is one big united family which includes all the whole of Kwara State. We are on our way back to victory.
“PDP has come back to rescue this country and put it back on the path of development for every family, for every young man, for every old person.
“We are a party for all; we are not a party for only one part of the country. That is why we selected a unifier, somebody who will bring everybody on board and make sure that we rebuild this country.”

Not a few insist that the party has been highly fragmented since it conducted its last presidential primary which produced Atiku in May this year, The situation may cost the party the presidential election, close watchers of politics in the country  said.

OPINION: The Letter, The Spirit, and The Letterman

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Azu Ishiekwene

By Azu Ishiekwene

If there was a prize for Nigeria’s number one letter writer, journalist-turned-lawyer and one-time minister, Tony Momoh, would appear to be the undisputed champion.

The late Momoh performed the difficult task of making sense of General Ibrahim Babangida’s largely messy and convoluted political and economic programmes by writing regular letters to “fellow countrymen”. His extensive and elaborate undertaking later packaged as a book entitled, Letters to my Countrymen, was, to put it mildly, a labour of misery. It was a thoroughly thankless job.

But how can Momoh’s letters ever hope to compete with those of former President Olusegun Obasanjo? It’s not about differences in the audiences alone. There are also significant differences in approach, temperament, style, context, message and, of course, potency.

Momoh may get the prize for the most consistent cabinet minister who tried to endear a largely despised government to the public through regular correspondences later codified.

But the record of the most controversial, most volatile — and some might even add, most annoyingly pontifical epistles — may deservedly go to Obasanjo, a medal that only his daughter, Iyabo, attempted in vain to snatch in just one devastating piece of literary ambush.

It would seem that this was a latter-day hobby, cultivated in the last one and a half decades or so after Obasanjo was accused of behaving as if he left something behind in office. But a new book by Nigeria’s foremost investigative journalist, multiple award-winner, and Editor-In-Chief of Premium Times, MusikiluMojeed, suggests very clearly that Obasanjo’s love of letter-writing has been a life-long indulgence.

Mojeed’s new book, The Letterman, an enthralling narrative in presidential history, provides rare access into the literary closet of a man loved and despised almost in equal measure, but who remains – like him or not – perhaps the most consequential leader in Nigeria’s turbulent 62-year history.

As far as good occasionally comes from bad, it is gratifying that the Obasanjo Presidential Library, which was built with over N6 billion largely from cronies rounded up in Obasanjo’s last days in office in defiance of public criticisms, is turning out to be a treasure trove of extremely valuable historical stuff.

Until I read The Letterman, I wasn’t quite sure who the real letterman was — whether it was Mojeed, a journalist with well over two and a half decades of extraordinary variety of stories — or Obasanjo whom most might be forgiven to think used Babangida as first target-practice at letter-writing.

From the account in The Letterman, however, by the time Obasanjo took on Babangida in the public arena around the mid-1990s, the former president was already an accomplished author of sorts, with a fairly large and even dangerously vitriolic collection to show for his long-standing talent.

Apart from letters written to him by his parents 70 years ago, he started cultivating his love of correspondences as far back as over five decades ago. In Mojeed’s words, “Obasanjo’s records show that he has been writing to almost every key person who played important roles in the affairs of Nigeria, Africa and the world since 1969.”

From head of State Yakubu Gowon to President Shehu Shagari and from Babangida to Sani Abacha and even first premier of the Western Region, Obafemi Awolowo, and a number of foreign leaders, Obasanjo never shied away from telling them, in writing, exactly what he thought, sometimes even at considerable personal risk.

His letter to his superior officer, Brigadier EyoOkonEkpo at the height of the Nigerian civil war in 1969, for example, made me wonder if many officers who were compelled to fight Boko Haram with bare hands at some point during the insurgency, would have dared to think of, much less compose, such a letter.

And what did Obasanjo have against his superior? While the war raged, Brigadier Ekpo had managed to enroll as a part-time law student of the University of Lagos. Obasanjo found out.

Instead of enriching the rumour mill with his own version of gossip, he wrote his boss questioning the propriety of his decision in war time, when other officers who could also squeeze out spare time for a past-time sacrificed it for the country.

Yet, credit must also go to Brigadier Ekpo who, instead of taking offence (Major General MammanVatsa was executed for reasons that remain unclear), took the criticism in his stride, saying, “I will continue with my reading, and any officer or individual who does not like it may please himself.”

There’s no indication what Obasanjo did after that.

But that encounter certainly did not impair his appetite for throwing punches above his weight. He landed a literary blow against his army chief, Brigadier Hassan Katsina, who had expressed concern about some changes he was making in his Division.Obasanjo said, in writing, to his boss, that he was “disappointed and disturbed” that his boss should express apprehension based on a suspicion of tribalism.

Obasanjo did not spare his commander-in-chief, Gowon. During the war, for example, he wrote “at least four unsparing letters”, accusing the military authorities of tempting defeat by sleepwalking over his request for vital war equipment supplies, a charge that, if the shoe had been on the other foot, Obasanjo would hardly have taken with the calmness with which Gowon treated it.

But Obasanjo being Obasanjo, neither personal safety nor sense of danger matters when national unity, reputation — or as it sometimes turns out, personal ego — is at issue. In about 130 published and previously unpublished letters and mimeographs, with a collection of a few rare photos of the former president laid out in 462 pages of 25 chapters, The Letterman is a story of Obasanjo’s odyssey through his personal letters.

Hardly a man of few words when he chooses to write, perhaps the longest of the letters in the book was Obasanjo’s response to Major James Oluleye, who upon the outbreak of the civil war decided to voluntarily forgo his scheduled staff course in India and requested, instead, to be posted to the warfront.

The erstwhile National Chairman of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Audu Ogbeh, had his fair share of Obasanjo’s lengthy epistolary attack too, which eventually ended in his removal; but Oluleye’s letter beats Ogbeh’s for length, though not for vitriol.

A disagreement over strategy between him and Obasanjo led to an incredible literary crossfire, in which Obasanjo reminded Oluleye (the operations officer of the Nigerian Army at the time), in one of the most ponderous pieces in the collection, that he (Obasanjo) read his battle more “on the ground, rather than on the map”, a sarcastic reference to the former’s background role during the war.

If the letterman’s missile to Oluleye stood out for its length and sarcasm, the cache of letters to Babangida in this collection was remarkable for both length and sarcasm, not to mention their frequency, intensity and, well, damning wit. Yet, given Babangida’s gift for taking Nigeria for a ride at the time, not a few thought he was eminently deserving of Obasanjo’s bitter tongue.

Just like he would do to Presidents Goodluck Jonathan and Muhammadu Buhari many years later, although under different circumstances, Obasanjo told Babangida to stop playing games with the country. “Just pack and go,” he said in a letter that summed up the country’s mood at the time.

In six years of painstaking work rendered with significant restraint, Mojeed curated letters that captured Obasanjo’s domestic wars (the face-off with Lt. Col. Godwin Alabi-Isama raged for years, spilling into their post-service era). If Obasanjo was a prophet without honour at home, the book doesn’t leave out his clout on the foreign stage, where he is without question, one of the continent’s most durable, respected and accomplished figures.

The Letterman also portrays the little-talked-about side of the man — his sense of gratitude and loyalty to his friends (he cherished and preserved his relationship with Chukwuma Nzeogwu beyond the latter’s death and never forgot, to the last person, those who stood by him when Abacha imprisoned him).

Obasanjo gave as much as he took. Yet, in over five decades of his epistolary odyssey, two responses to his letters shed important light on his psychology.

One was Obafemi Awolowo’s response to Obasanjo’s letter of December 13, 1979. In an attempt to set the records straight, and possibly absolve his government of favouring Shagari in 1979, Obasanjo had taken exception to Awolowo’s damning address at his party’s congress.

Within two days, Awolowo replied in detail, with logic, argument, facts and language that would seem to condemn the retired military head of state to a place in hell and yet make him feel obliged to look forward to the trip.

It was one of the few responses in the book for which Obasanjo had nothing to say in reply. But more importantly, it also said something about the letterman’s psychology: in spite of his extraordinary appetite for literary pugilism, he knows when to throw in the towel!

Yet, there was another famous reply, omitted in the book, which the letterman will not forget in hurry: the July 18, 2003 reply of Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka.

The letter, released after Soyinka insisted that there was “a nest of killers” in Obasanjo’s government following the murder of the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Bola Ige, was in response to Obasanjo’s letter of July 14, saying Soyinka was harsh with his government because he did not give the laureate’s nominees government positions.

After Soyinka’s reply in which he described Obasanjo as a “Rambo on the loose” and the former president’s letter as “the low watermark of his correspondence career”, nothing more was heard from the letterman for a very, very long time.

But The Letterman is not a psychoanalysis of the bully complex. It’s a story of Obasanjo’s patriotism and his opportunism, his heroics and his hubris, his courage and his conceitedness.

It might be harsh to liken the letters to the Picture of Dorian Gray,Oscar Wilde’s Gothic fiction of how our obsessions reflect our inner turmoil however we might try to disguise or deny them. But the truth is, in those letters, we see Obasanjo, not as fiction, but as he really is.

He is, after all, human.


Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief LEADERSHIP

Ogun PDP Crisis: Court Fixes December 1 For Judgement Delivery

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Otunba Jimi Adebisi Lawal and Oladipupo Adebutu

By Akinwale Kasali

The Federal High Court, Abuja, has fixed Thursday December 1, 2022, for the delivery of judgement on the Ogun Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Governorship tussle.

Otunba Jimi Adebisi Lawal and Oladipupo Adebutu, both Governorship aspirants, are laying claim and counter-claim to the ticket of the Party.

Justice Inyang Ekwo has  fixed the said date to bring an end to the bickering.

Jimi Lawal who contested the May 25 governorship primary election of PDP had challenged the emergence of Oladipupo Adebutu alleging that unlawful and invalid delegates list was fraudulently used by PDP to conduct the election.

Among others, Lawal  prayed that the purported Primary election of May 25 be cancelled and another one be conducted with the authentic Adhoc delegates.

However, Justice Taiwo Taiwo of the Federal High Court in his judgment delivered on July 29 declined to hear the suit filed by Jimi Lawal on merit on the grounds that the Primary election was a domestic affair of any political party and dismissed the suit.

It would be recalled that the Supreme Court had on November 21 ordered the Federal High Court to hear on merit, the suit instituted against PDP and Adebutu by Lawal.

Justice Ibrahim Saulawa who read the ruling of the Apex Court ordered a speedy hearing of the suit after holding that the Federal High Court has jurisdiction to entertain the case.

During proceedings on Thursday, Justice Ekwo, in compliance with the Supreme Court order, heard the case expeditiously in view of the fact that the case would lapse by December 2.

The Judge said that he would do everything possible to deliver judgment  on December 1.

At the proceedings, Kanu Agabi, SAN and Ola Olanipekun, SAN stood for the plaintiff while Chris Uche, SAN, argued for PDP and Oladipupo Adebutu.

While Agabi prayed the court to grant the request of his client, Uche opposed the request and urged the court to dismiss the case on three grounds.

Oyetola Appoints 30 Permanent Secretaries

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By Ayodele Oni

A few days to his exit, the Governor of the State of Osun, Mr. Adegboyega Oyetola, has approved the appointment of 30 Permanent Secretaries into the Civil Service.

Oyetola, since he lost the July Election to the candidate of People’s Democratic Party, (PDP), Senator Ademola Adeleke, has embarked on a gale of appointments into the Public Service.

Apart from appointments, Local Government Election was conducted where only the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC) candidates that participated.

The Chairmen and Councilors have since been sworn in.

Few days ago, the Governor announced names of members of the Governing Council of the newly established State University in Ilesha.

In a statement on Thursday  the Head of Service,  Dr Festus Oyebade, explained that the appointees will fill  existing vacancies in the State Civil Service.

According to him, “The swearing-in ceremony of the officers holds today, Thursday, 24th November, 2022 at the Local Government Service Commission hall at 4 00p.m.”

The PDP has, however, vowed to review some of the appointments, especially those hurriedly announced by the outgoing administration.

NSA, Monguno, Laments Proliferation Of Small Arms, Says Huge Threat To Nation

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By Akinwale Kasali

Babagana Monguno, the National Security Adviser, has lamented that the security of the nation is dangerously threatened following the proliferation of Small Arms and Light Weapons.

The Retired Major General said that this has become a menace to the security of the nation and needs to be urgently attended to, so as to bring an end to the insecurity ravaging the country.

He made this remark during the destruction of over 3,000 small arms recovered from across the country by the National Centre for the Control of Small Arms and Light Weapons, which were destroyed at the Nigerian Army Command Engineering Depot on Thursday in Kaduna State.

Monguno said that the proliferation of small arms and light Weapons was a major source of vulnerability in the society.

“It stood out as a key driver of violent conflict, crime and terrorism within and beyond Nigeria’s borders,” he added.

He stressed that the failure of the global community to control the availability of illicit SALW has continued to undermine global peace and significantly hinder development especially in sub-Saharan Africa.

“We recognise the complexity of the challenge of controlling the proliferation of SALW in Nigeria and the requirement for concerted action between the government, international community and all well-meaning Civil Society Organisations.

“Nonetheless, we are resolved to galvanise our strengths and unity as a nation to confront this monstrous challenge and I am optimistic that we shall overcome it,” he said.

The NSA was represented by Aminu Lawal, Director Policy and Strategy, Office of the NSA.

Adamawa, Taraba APC: Bwacha, Binani’s  Governorship Candidacy Upheld  By Appeal Court

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Bwacha and Binani

By Akinwale Kasali

The Governorship Candidacy of  Emmanuel Bwacha and Aishatu Ahmed popularly known as Aisha Binani of All Progressives Congress, APC, has been upheld by the Appeal Court In Yola, Adamawa State.

In upholding them as the duly elected Candidates, the Appeal Court set aside the ruling by a High Court nullifying their candidacy and ordered that their names be forwarded to the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, as the APC Governorship candidates for both states.

A Panel of three Justices which comprised  Justice T. Y Hassan (the presiding Judge) and Justices M. O. Bolaji and J. G. Abundaga  (JCA 1 and JCA 2) sat over the cases.

It would be recalled that the Federal High Court in Yola had on October 13, nullified the candidature of Binani as the governorship candidate of the APC in the State based on a suit FHC/YL/CS/12/2022 filed by another APC governorship aspirant in the State, Nuhu Ribadu.

The former Presidential Candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, had prayed that the Court declare Binani’s candidature invalid and unlawful and declare him the Party’s Governorship Candidate.

The Court refused to order a fresh APC Governorship Primary in Adamawa State, which didn’t augur well with the former anti graft agency, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Boss as he has lost the opportunity to re-contest.

Ribadu filed an appeal in suit NO.CA/YL/203/2022 between him and All Progressive Congress and two others.

Thursday’s ruling by the Court of Appeal dashed the hope of Ribadu as it dismissed his appeal  and allowed Binani’s appeal seeking to overturn the judgement given by the Federal High Court presided over by Justice Abdulaaziz Anka.

In a similar occurrence, it would be recalled that

on September 20, 2022 the Federal High Court sitting in Jalingo, and presided over by Justice Simon Amobeda, nullified the governorship primary election that produced Senator Emmanuel Bwacha, as the candidate of the All Progressives Congress in the 2023 election.

In his ruling in the case filed by one of the Governorship aspirants, David Kente, the Judge directed INEC to conduct a fresh Governorship primary in the state within 14 days.

The Court also ordered Bwacha to stop parading himself as the governorship candidate of the APC, and ordered INEC to stop recognising Bwacha as a candidate.

But the ruling by the Appeal Court  has quashed the hope of David Kente as Bwacha is to be recognized as the APC Governorship Candidate in Taraba State.

IPOB Leader, Kanu, Sues NIA DG,  Demands N20 Billion Compensation

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By Akinwale Kasali

The Director General, National Intelligence Agency, NIA, Ahmed Abubakar, has been sued by the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, Nnamdi Kanu, for imprisoning  him in Kenya for over a week before extraditing him to Nigeria.

Kanu is also demanding a whopping N20 Billion as compensation for the alleged ill-treatment meted on him in Kenya by the NIA.

Lead Counsel to the IPOB Leader, Alloy Ejimakor, in a tweet via his Twitter handle,  posted a picture of the document containing the suit filed, where he described Kanu’s detention in Kenya as “false imprisonment.”

He explained further that the suit was necessary following a new evidence gathered implicating the DG beyond the “infamous extraordinary rendition.”

Ejimakor said, “Yesterday (Wednesday) I filed a suit against Ahmed Abubakar, the DG of National Intelligence Agency (NIA) for his eight days ‘false imprisonment’ of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu in discovereed evidence that implicated the DG/NIA beyond the infamous extraordinary rendition.”

The Court has given Abubakar 14 days to appear or be represented in Court, adding that failure to show up would mean that judgment would be given in the DG’s absence.

Ejimakor filed the Suit at the High Court of Abia State which reads in part, “You are hereby commanded that within 14 days after the service of this Writ on you inclusive of the day of such service, you do cause an appearance to be entered for you in the Umuahia Judicial Division of the High Court in Abia State in an action at this suit of Mazi Nnnamdi Kanu….and take notice that in default of your so doing, the claimant may proceed therein and judgment may be given in your absence.

“The claimant’s claim is for (i) A declaration of this Honourable Court that the defandant’s arrest of the claimant and his imprisonment of the claimant at said location in Nairobi, Kenya amounted to false arrest and false imprisonment.

“(ii) A declaration that the defendant acted in bad faith and/or abused his public office in falsely imprisoning the claimant at the said location in Kenya. (iii) An order of this Honourable Court directing the defendant to pay the claimant the sum of N20,000,000,000.00 (Twenty Billion Naira only) being general and exemplary damages…”

It would be recalled that few days ago, Kanu had, also, filed a  N20bn suit against the Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami. The suit was, however, thrown out by the Federal High Court in Abuja.

Again, Court Disqualifies Rivers APC  Governorship Candidate, Tonye Cole From 2023 Race

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By Charles Igbo

In a repeat of the 2019 Governorship election scenario in Rivers State, a Federal High Court which sat in Porthacourt, has disqualified the Governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Tonye Cole, from participating in the 2023 election.

The Court, on Thursday, November 24, disqualified Cole for being a citizen of Nigeria and the United Kingdom. In its judgment, the Honourable Court posited that Mr Cole voluntarily acquired British citizenship, and pledged loyalty and allegiance to the Crown.

The Court, also, disqualified Cole on the grounds that the process through which he was nominated the APC candidate was untidy and failed to follow due process as enshrined in the new Electoral Act.

The suit which disqualified Cole was filed by the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, against the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC, APC, and Cole. The suit said that the delegates who voted for Cole at the Primaries were not elected democratically.

In Rivers State, the coast is getting clear for the PDP to win in a landslide.

Earlier, the Labour Party had been disqualified from participating in the General elections except in the Presidency. PDP filed the suit.

Also, 16 Candidates of the APC were recently barred from participating in the House of Assembly Election in a suit filed by the PDP.

For the records, the same Tonye Cole was disqualified from participating in the 2019 Governorship election after he had won at the Primaries.

The APC is likely to appeal the judgement.

Airline Operators Blame FAAN For Flight Delays, Cancellations, Reject Aviation Fuel Racketeering

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Airport

By Akinwale Kasali

The Airline Operators of Nigeria, AON, has alleged that the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, FAAN, is responsible for the frequent delays and cancellations of flights due to the inadequacy of critical infrastructure at the airport.

It expressing its displeasure over numerous issues in the aviation industry which is in turn having a toll on their productivity and service delivery.

Chairman of Air Peace, Allen Onyema, speaking at a Press Briefing in Abuja, said that when it comes to flight delays and cancellations, so many things are involved which many people do not know but rather blame the airlines, adding that no airline in the world would want to delay flights because of the cost implications.

Onyema stressed that the Airline Operators are operating in a hostile environment with limited infrastructures in place.

“How would I just wake up and want to delay my flight when I know I am going to incur a heavy cost.

“The Airlines are at the mercy of everybody. The owners of airlines in Nigeria are patriotic because it is not profitable. They are doing it as a service to Nigeria and should be applauded, not demonised.

“Nigerian indigenous airlines are performing under certain conditions that we should be applauded for still staying afloat. Is it forex, or fuel infrastructure? How about bird strikes in a good country? the airlines would have gone to court against FAAN for all the bird strikes because we pay for these services. Air Peace alone had had over twenty bird strikes in a year.”

In the same vein, the Chairman, United Nigeria Airlines and Spokesperson for AON,  Obiora Okonkwo, said there is a huge racketeering in the aviation fuel imports to the detriment of the airlines.

According to him, aviation fuel selling above N800/litre is not acceptable as our calculation shows that it shouldn’t be selling above N500/litre.

He said: “The authorities should make forex available and do something about the fuel racketeering. We are paying above the real cost. We are not asking for free money nor subsidy but the right thing should be done as the burden is transferred to the travellers.”