2023: I WILL RUN BECAUSE WE THE PEOPLE MATTER

1. What is the value of a Nigerian life?

2. We live daily today under the shadow of terrorists. Our economy is collapsing. Many families cannot afford the price of food. Millions of young men and women have no jobs and have no hope
3. Our university students know more about ASUU strikes and long school closures than any skills they need to be competitive in the world of the 21st century.
4. Only the rich and powerful can access quality healthcare in our country or abroad as medical tourists, because our health system, like most other systems, is broken. I lost my father, Isaac Moghalu, in December 1998 because he had a stroke but the doctors were on strike, and
therefore we could not get him adequate healthcare on time.

5. Soon after we found a private clinic and moved him there, he went into a coma and passed on shortly afterwards. I was heartbroken. Today, 23 years later, not much has changed. Like many, I have suffered the
effects of bad governance in our country.

6. With life in it increasingly nasty, brutish and short, the very idea of Nigeria is now almost meaningless to many Nigerians. Cries for self-determination fill the air in response to fundamental injustice.
7. Meanwhile, politics in Nigeria does not bring change, and its benefits go to only one group - the political elite. Their message is loud and clear: we the people —you and I - DO NOT matter.
8. The bodies of Nigerians are buried in cold corners of foreign cemeteries, strewn across the Sahara desert, and float in the Mediterranean Sea, as a consequence of a non-existent leadership. Our country can no longer speak confidently in the gathering of nations.
9. Life as ordained by our Creator, that we may experience His Goodness in this land of the living, has eluded us as a people.
10. Only the emergence of visionary, competent and inclusive national leadership, on the one hand, and a fundamental restructuring of Nigeria based on a new people’s constitution, on the other, can arrest Nigeria’s ongoing disorderly and violent degeneration into a completely
failed state. We were not born to be miserable and to die miserable. Enough is Enough!

11. It is now more than ever necessary that we elect in 2023 a leader who is TRULY committed and has the capacity to initiate the constitutional restructuring of Nigeria.
A leader who is competent to secure our lives and property, successfully manage our diversity, save our economy, and restore our international respect.
12. For the sake of the youth of our country — including my four children — whose future is being drowned in reckless foreign borrowing, and for the sake of all Nigerians suffering and seeking a clear alternative to the status quo, I intend — with all humility — to present myself
— again — as a candidate for the Office of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in the 2023 general elections.
13. If elected, I will run a government with a dream team of highly competent Nigerians from all parts of our country. Along with strengthened, independent institutions, we will deliver results on a 4-point agenda in four years (4 by 4):
— Security for all Nigerians and Nigeria’s territory;

— War against poverty: skills, jobs for our youth, and an innovation economy;

— Accelerated education and healthcare reform;

— Good governance: inclusive, transparent, effective, and accountable.
14. This is my SWAG Agenda for a 21st century Nigeria. I seek the support of all compatriots — of everyone who is tired of our present national situation. We also need the energy and support of our youth, the middle class, entrepreneurs, and our compatriots in the diaspora.
These important segments of our population have in the past been reluctant to engage actively in our electoral process, ostensibly because of the flaws in that process.
15. The National Assembly @nassnigeria must now pass into law, without further delay, necessary electoral reforms that will make democracy yield real dividends for Nigerians. Our votes must count, and be counted transparently. The amendments should include a provision for
Diaspora Nigerians to be able to register and vote in all elections in Nigeria from abroad.

16. I am only one face of a movement. A movement of silent and suffering Nigerians fed up with the insecurity, poverty, and a seemingly hopeless future for our country. A movement that
has decided that Enough is Enough.

17. That movement, soon to be present in our numbers in every voting ward in Nigeria, will announce within the next few months the political party we will join en masse and seek its platform for the presidential, legislative and gubernatorial
roles in governance.

18. We can do this. We can change Nigeria.

19. Together, let us walk this road to a Nigeria that, within 30 years of successive administrations, will have achieved the kind of economic and technological advancement attained by countries such as Israel,
Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, and the United Arab Emirates within similar timeframes. It is possible. We only need to participate actively in the democratic process, and vote right when the time comes.
20. We the Nigerian people matter. We the Nigerian people deserve better. Let’s do this. Because we can and we must.
[Signed]
Kingsley Chiedu Moghalu, Ph.D. OON FCIB
Ifekaego Nnewi
June 1, 2021

Moghalu4Nigeria.org

kingsleymoghalu.com

#Ends

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More from @MoghaluKingsley

20 May
I am as disturbed by the general narrative against the Fulani, because of the failure of @NigeriaGov to secure our country from invading foreign terrorists - a failure that many Fulani & others in Northern Nigeria find as unconscionable as other Nigerians in the South - as I
am with the @PoliceNG Inspector-General's reported order to police to essentially violate human rights and engage in extra judicial killings in the Southeast under the guise of "Operation Restore Peace" in the region against Biafra secessionist agitators. The IG says President
@MBuhari has ordered a "shoot at sight" against anyone carrying an AK-47 rifle illegally, ostensibly as a justification for his spurious orders regarding the Southeast. I'd like to know how many terrorist "herdsmen" in Nigeria have been "shot at sight" so far since the
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19 May
Consultations: I had a great visit yesterday evening to Prof. George Obiozor, President-General of Ohaneze Ndigbo, at the Ohaneze HQ in Enugu. I was accompanied by Prof. Ernest Madu, Founder of The Heart Institute of the Caribbean, the largest private hospital in Jamaica,
and Barrister Ike Akaraiwe @kizor . Obiozor, a distinguished scholar-diplomat who has served Nigeria as Director-General of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, Ambassador to Cyprus, Israel, and the United States, received us very warmly. I was humbled to be described
by him as “a great man” and “a citizen without reproach” (quoting the late Dr. Kingsley Ozumba Mbadiwe). We discussed the state of Nigeria today and possible pathways to resolution, and of course the role of Ndigbo as an important component of a country in search of real
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4 May
I believe that the @UN Security Council and the @_AfricanUnion should quickly consider the appointment of a joint Special Envoy on the one hand, or a combined one of the US, UK, and @EU_Commission on the other, on Nigeria's political/ security crisis.
This approach has become necessary because President @Mbuhari 's @NigeriaGov appears unwilling or unable to address the real issues facing Nigeria. For this reason, the legitimate agitation of numerous ethnic nationalities for a fundamental constitutional restructuring of Nigeria
(the best way out of our nationhood, security and economic crisis) is met essentially with disdain by the federal government. The reality on the ground, however, is that Nigeria’s sovereignty is now a "shared sovereignty" in which we have vast ungoverned spaces, and the very
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30 Apr
Social media has had impact in Nigeria but with only 33% of us on SM in a population of 200 million, it's still a low ratio. There are still issues of weak broadband infrastructure and access, and high poverty rates affect ability of millions to buy data, I told @WSoyinkaLecture
Then we need to look at quality relative to the goal of driving national reform. SM has democratized opinion, without the same level of truly informed discussion. So there is often more heat than light. Our literacy rate is 62%. Weak.Our political and economic literacy rate, even
lower. There is a massive "digital age divide", with most SM users aged between 17 and 40. This creates an opportunity for strong youth influence on national reform if they can engage effectively. But this opportunity is still limited because SM in Nigeria reflects Nigeria's
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23 Apr
I have refrained so far from commenting on the #Pantami controversy. From information available: anyone can a mistake, and has the right to recant from it. But when the evidence shows that a serving minister of Nigeria has expressed open support for global terrorist groups,
he should never have scaled the vetting process and been approved for that office. The implication of the timing of Pantami's recanting of his views now is that he has been serving as a minister while presumably still harboring those views. His disagreement with Boko Haram
does not absolve him of, at tje very least moral culpability for supporting Al Qaeda and the Taliban. For this reason, Pantami should not continue to serve as a Minister. For him to remain in his position, and for @NGRPresident to support this, is to tell Nigerians that we have
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16 Mar
I'm OUTRAGED at @nassnigeria House of Representatives Dep. Speaker @HonAhmedWase saying Nigerians living abroad have no right to submit petitions to parliament. Remittances from our countrymen and women at $20 billion a year keep alive families impoverished by our politicians!
This is why we must be careful who we elect into high office. We need #electoralreform NOW, and diaspora Nigerians must have the ability to vote from abroad as is the case in Ghana and many other countries. If @cenbank can woo their remittances, we need their votes too!
Nigerians living and earning their living abroad is not a crime. It is their right. Their citizenship shouldn't be denigrated because of where they live. What opportunities exist for them at home if they did not move out Nigeria?
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