How President Jonathan As Governor Gave ThisDay Boss $1m For Beyonce and Jay Z's Nigeria Visit

SaharaReporters has uncovered a document indicating that a million
dollars of Bayelsa State’s poverty alleviation fund was spent by then
Governor Goodluck Jonathan on bringing American entertainers Beyonce and
Jay Z to Nigeria in 2006.
In a letter stamped and signed by
Bayelsa officials, N150 million (approximately a million dollars in
2006) was released from the state’s poverty alleviation fund for the
first ThisDay Music Festival in Lagos.
The document came to light
after a controversy was ignited over how much money American “reality
TV” star Kim Kardashian was paid for a brief visit to Nigeria.
Ms.
Kardashian, star of a US TV show about her idle rich family and who
shot to international fame after a s*x tape featuring her and her rapper
boyfriend went viral, was reportedly paid half a million dollars for
the 24-hour-visit last week.
The sources who provided the 2006
document for Beyonce and Jay Z’s visit told Saharareporters that there
was a shady financial link between the producers of some high profile
entertainment events and the governors and other officials who control
budgets at the state and federal levels. Mr. Obaigbena’s newspaper,
ThisDay, is a major sponsor of entertainment events that brings US music
stars as well as top public figures for flying visits to Nigeria in
exchange for gargantuan paychecks.
“Mr. Obaigbena often lines up
financial bonanzas from numerous governors, ministers and other top
government officials to finance his jamborees,” said one of the sources
who is based in the UK and is knowledgeable about such deals.
SaharaReporters
obtained a letter from Mr. Obaigbena to the Bayelsa State government
soliciting funds from the oil-producing state ahead of Nigeria’s 46th
independence celebrations in 2006. The publisher wrote, “We invite you
to partner with us as co-hosts of the festival.” The letter added: “With
a total budget of $10 million, the co-host is expected to contribute a
minimum of $2.5 million (two million five hundred thousand USD).”
At
the bottom of the letter, minuted by hand and signed by then Governor
Jonathan’s aides as well as the Bayelsa State accountant general are the
words, “Release N150,000,000.00 (One hundred and fifty million naira)
only to be drawn from the poverty alleviation subhead.”
One source told SaharaReporters that Mr. Obaigbena sent similar letters to other south-south states.
SaharaReporters
could not ascertain how much of the released funds was paid directly to
performers at the festival. There is no indication that Beyonce, one of
the few entertainment stars internationally famous enough to only need
one name, was aware that her performance was being subsidized by the
poor people of Bayelsa.
But during Beyonce’s celebrated rendition
of the Nigerian national anthem, pictures of Bayelsa State were
projected onto the wall of the Lagos concert venue.
According to
the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics, 47% of Bayelsans live in poverty. The
World Bank says that per capita gross domestic product in the Niger
Delta is significantly below the country’s average. According to the
state’s own 2005 development strategy, 80% of rural communities have no
access to safe drinking water, a key indicator in judging poverty. In
Yenagoa, the state capital and Bayelsa’s largest urban area, an
estimated two out of every five residents do not have access to safe
drinking water.
In 2005, as part of its UN-approved strategy to
combat poverty, the state promised to make a fund of N100 million
available as soft loans and micro-credit to Bayelsans. The allocated
fund was N50 million less than Mr. Jonathan approved for Mr. Obaigbena’s
music festival.
That promise was made in the Bayelsa State
Economic Empowerment and Development Strategy, published by the United
Nations Development Program and signed by then Governor Diepreye
Alamieyeseigha. A civil rights activist in Yenogoa told SaharaReporters
that the state “has been a woeful failure in its poverty reduction
program.”
The letter from Mr. Obaigbena to then-governor Goodluck
Jonathan said the concert was necessary to show that the news from
Nigeria was “not just…HIV/AIDS, conflicts, poverty, kidnapping, strife
and riots.”
The publisher added: “This is the longest ever period
of democracy in Nigeria, over seven years and counting! And a stable
democracy means more investment and economic prosperity for all.”
The publisher went on to give reasons why the state government should contribute to the concert.
The
stars’ performances would “tell the world, through music, that
Nigeria’s time has come,” Mr. Obaigbena wrote. The letter added, “And
once the good news catches on with the young and upwardly mobile, music
loving new generation it will catch on with the world of investments and
bountiful opportunities.”
In 2006, Mr. Goodluck Jonathan had
just become governor of Bayelsa after his boss, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha,
was impeached and convicted on corruption charges. Mr. Jonathan was
then elevated to Vice President to then President Umaru Yar’Adua. Mr.
Yar’Adua's death in 2010 enabled Mr. Jonathan, a zoologist whose PhD
focused on tropical fish, to assume the presidency.
Since 2006,
Mr. Obaigbena’s parent company, Leaders & Company, has produced a
number of high-profile events that have seen such American stars as
Rihanna, R Kelly, and Usher perform for Nigerians. The ticket prices for
these concerts are usually out of reach of the “average” Nigerian.
The
events feature tickets that cost many tens of thousands of naira,
usually reserved for “VIP access.” ThisDay has also hosted political
luminaries like former US President Bill Clinton and former economic
adviser to the Obama presidency, Lawrence Summers. At an Africa Rising
concert in London, former US Secretary of State Colin Powell came on
stage and danced to the popular Naija jam “Yahooze” by Olu Maintain.
Culled from Saharareporters

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