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Presidential Legal Battle: Atiku Tenders 26,175 Exhibits, Buhari Objects

The Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic (PDP), and the PDP have tendered a total of 26,175 exhibits against the February 23, 2019 election that produced President Muhammadu Buhari as President.

This was even as the Counsel to President Buhari, Mike Igbokwe (SAN), as well as that of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Yunus Ustaz Usman, and that of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Charles Edosomwan (SAN) objected to the admissibility of the documents. They informed the tribunal that reasons for their objections would be made at the address stage of hearing in the Petition.

At the hearing of Atiku’s petition today, July 5, at the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal in Abuja, the party and its candidate presented the exhibits in support of their petition seeking nullification of the election on grounds of fraud, election malpractices and non qualification of Buhari to stand for the poll.

The documents were tendered through Atiku’s lead counsel, Dr. Livy Uzoukwu (SAN).

Atiku had, yesterday, Thursday, kick-started hearing of his petition before Justice Mohammed Lawal Garba led tribunal when he tendered a total of 5,196 documents as part of efforts to establish fraud and malpractices in the February 23 election that produced Buhari.

The documents tendered yesterday comprised mainly result sheets from polling units, wards and local governments in eight states, while receipts for certification of documents from the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) were tendered and admitted as exhibits along with the result sheets.

The eight states where the documents emanated from are Katsina, Kebbi, Borno, Jigawa, Gombe, Bauchi, Kaduna and partly Kano.

The breakdown of the documents indicated that 3,378 came from Katsina; 2,106 came from Kebbi; 3,472 from Borno; 3,162 from Jigawa; 1,912 from Gombe; 3,539 from Bauchi; 3,335 from Kaduna and 5,271 came from Kano.

Atiku’s lawyer, while tendering the documents, told the tribunal that the remaining ones from Kano state would be brought on Monday, the adjourned date.

Atiku’s lawyer, Uzoukwu, also told the tribunal that his team will begin to call witnesses at the end of tendering of documents by the team.

The tribunal adjourned further hearing in the petition to Monday, July 8.

Leave Sentiments Out Of Judicial Pronouncements, Presidency Cautions Atiku

Femi Adesina

The Presidency has taken exception to the reaction of the Presidential candidate of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar to the Supreme Court’s judgment on Osun State governorship case and advised him to leave sentiments out of judicial pronouncements anywhere in the country.

Quoting part of Atiku’s statement in which he said: “I urge the nation’s judiciary to take a pulse of the nation and reflect it. In their hands, God has placed a great responsibility. The duty to ensure that justice is done, irrespective of the pressure to do otherwise, by the powers that be,” the Presidency said that it is an attempt to browbeat the judiciary, thus causing it to entertain sentiment in the ongoing petition on the presidential election before the tribunal.

A statement today, July 5 by the special adviser to the President on media and publicity, Femi Adesina, described Atiku’s reaction to the supreme court judgment today as “very ridiculous, and even comical,” adding that most of his thoughts flew in the face of logic, reason, and legality.

“Alhaji Abubakar urged the judiciary to reflect the pulse of the nation in their judgments. Learned people know that the judiciary comes to conclusions drawing from matters of law placed before it, and not sentiments, or so-called “pulse of the nation.”

“A pertinent question is: how does the judiciary gauge the pulse of the nation? Is it even positioned to do such? Is the judiciary established for that purpose, or to dispense justice, even if the Heavens fall?

“Again, there is insinuation of inducement in the statement, when the PDP candidate said the judiciary should ensure justice is done, “irrespective of the pressure to do otherwise, by the powers that be.”

“If anybody has the tendency or proclivity to put pressure on the judiciary, Nigerians know where the finger points, and it is definitely not at President Muhammadu Buhari. This was a man who had thrice taken his electoral challenges to the judiciary, up to the Supreme Court. And not once was he accused of trying to influence the process, or put pressure on the courts.

“When the All Progressives Congress (APC) lost Zamfara and Rivers States, arising from judicial proclamations, then, there was no “pressure to do otherwise, by the powers that be.” But now that the victory of the party in Osun was upheld, there is insinuation of pressure from those who have never learnt to play straight.

“President Buhari has always been committed to fair play, which was clearly evident in the last general elections. He remains committed to even-handedness and justice always.”

10,000 Additional Police Not Enough For Nation’s Security, Governors Complain

Kayode fayemi

Governors of the 36 states of the federation have complained that the additional 10,000 Nigerians approved by President Muhammadu Buhari to be recruited into the existing number of police men and women will not be enough for the kind of security challenges facing the country.

Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), who doubles as Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi told news men today, July 5, after a closed door meeting with the President at the Presidential Villa, Abuja: “we (the governors) feel in our humble opinion that 10,000 policemen and women are not enough to add to the police in tackling the dearth of security agents in the country.”

He said that there is urgent need to figure out a way to increase that number, “either out of the N-Power cadets who are coming to the end of their service year having spent two years, or Youth Service Corps members, or any of the other institutions that will enable us to boost the manpower of the Nigerian police force.”

Governor Fayemi appreciated the community policing arrangement which the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Adamu had announced publicly as his own way of effective response to security challenges across the board.

He said another point he raised with President Buhari was the issue of coordination between governors and security chiefs within the six zones as well as the recruitment into the law enforcement agencies.

The Governor said that he briefed the President on the outcome of the security committee of the National Economic Council (NEC) which has just met to review concerns, issues around security and our proposed reactions on those.

“This was a meeting that had in its membership the governors from the six zones, the Inspector General of Police, Chief of Defence Staff and the National Security Adviser.

“It was the outcome of the last Economic Council meeting which focused exclusively on security; that committee has just met a couple of days ago and I was asked to brief both the Vice President who chairs the National Economic Council and the president as well on the aspect of the work of the sub-committee of NEC that will require the Commander-in-Chief’s support.”

Buhari Signs FCT Budget Of N243 Billion For 2019, Okays 2 Polytechnics

President Muhammadu Buhari hasassented to the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Appropriation Act, 2019 in the sum of N243, 374,511.077, even as he also signed into law, the establishment of two polytechnics, one in Gombe and another in Katsina State.

Speaking to news men today, July shortly after the Presidential assent to the bills, the Presidential Liaison to the National Assembly (Senate),  Senator (Dr.) Ita Enang said that out of the FCT’s budget of N243, 374,511.077, the sum of N130.7 billion is for capital expenditure while the balance is for recurrent.

Senator Enang said that this amount is from the Statutory Revenue Allocation due to the Federal Capital Territory, in addition to the budgetary provision of N23, 023, 593, 146for Capital Expenditure made in the 2019 National Budget earlier assented to by the President on May 27, 2019.

“Also, as part of his desire to improve and expand admission opportunities for children in tertiary institutions in the country, President Muhammadu Buhari assented to Bills for the establishment of two Federal polytechnics in Nigeria, namely:

“Also, as part of his desire to improve and expand admission opportunities for children in tertiary institutions in the country, President Muhammadu Buhari assented to Bills for the establishment of two Federal polytechnics in Nigeria, namely: Federal Polytechnic, Kaltungo, Gombe State and Federal Polytechnic, Daura, Katsina State.”

He said that the laws establishing the named Polytechnics is standard with the Laws establishing all other Federal Polytechnics in Nigeria.

PDP Suspends Elumelu Over Minority Leadership Crisis In House Of Reps

The National Working Committee (NWC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has suspended Ndudi Elumelu and other members of the party involved in a leadership crisis surrounding the minority leadership of the House of Representatives.

The decision was taken at the NWC held in Abuja today, July 5. In a statement after its meeting, the NWC condemned the roles played by the suspended members which resulted in Gbajabiamila reading another list for minority leadership other than the list submitted to him by the party.

It listed the members suspended as Ndudi Elumelu, Wole Oke, Lynda Ikpeazu, Anayo Edwin, Gideon Gwadi, Toby Okechukwu and Adekoya Abdul-Majid.

“After preliminary examination by the NWC, it was evident that the roles played by the above-mentioned members, bordered on indiscipline, insubordination and disobedience of party directives contrary to Section 58 (1)(b)(c)(f)(h) of the PDP Constitution (as amended in 2017), which provides that:

‘Subject to the provision of this Constitution, the Party shall have power to discipline any member who says or does anything likely to bring the party into disrepute, hatred or contempt; disobeys or neglects to carry out lawful directives of the party or any organ or officer of the party; engages in anti-party activities; or engages in any conduct likely to cause disaffection among members of the party or is likely to disrupt the peaceful, lawful and efficient conduct of the business of the party.

“Consequent upon this, the above-mentioned members of our party are hereby suspended for one month and this matter is hereby referred to the National Disciplinary Committee of our party, in keeping with Section 57(3) of the PDP Constitution,” the party said.

Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila had on Wednesday announced Elumelu as minority leader in place of Kingsley Chinda favoured by the opposition PDP.

Gbajabiamila also named Toby Okechukwu as deputy minority leader, Gideon Gwani as minority whip and Adesegun Adekoya as deputy minority whip.

Buhari Re-Appoints Boss Mustapha As SGF, Abba Kyari As Chief Of Staff

Abba Kyari

President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the re-appointment of Boss Mustapha as Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), and Malam Abba Kyari as Chief of Staff (COS) to the President.

A statement today, July 5 by the senior special assistant to the President on media and publicity, Malam Garba Shehu said the appointments take effect from May 29.

Others who have been reappointed by President Buhari are Mohammed Sarki Abba as Senior Special Assistant to the President (Household and Social Events): Ya’u Shehu Darazo as Senior Special Assistant to the President (Special Duties): Dr. Suhayb Sanusi Rafindadi as Personal Physician to the President and Ambassador Lawal A. Kazaure as State Chief of Protocol

Others are Sabiu Yusuf as Special Assistant (Office of the President): Saley Yuguda as Special Assistant (House Keeping): Ahmed Muhammed Mayo as Special Assistant (Finance & Administration): Mohammed Hamisu Sani as Special Assistant (Special Duties): Friday Bethel as Personal Assistant (General Duties): Sunday Aghaeze as Personal Assistant (State Photographer) and Bayo Omoboriowo as Personal Assistant (Presidential Photographer).

Gombe Gov Vows To Defy Presidential Suspension: “We’re Going Ahead With Ruga”

Gombe Gov Alhaji Inuwa Yahaya

Gombe State Governor, Alhaji Inuwa Yahaya has vowed to continue implementing Ruga settlement policy despite the fact that President Muhammadu Buhari has suspended it.

“Uptil now,  I don’t agreed that the pilot scheme is being suspended. We are going to continue with it, because to us it is a very good initiative.

“Considering the hardship our brothers and sisters (Herdsmen), are now facing, we need to find a lasting solution to their plights aimed at saving their lives because they are Nigerians.”

Responding to reporters’ questions today, July 5, shortly after an audience with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Governor Inuwa said that already, 200,000 hectares of land has been earmarked for the project in his state.

“On the issue of Ruga pilot scheme, I said in Gombe, we have more than 200,000 hectres set aside for herdsmen use.

“So, if other States rejected the pilot scheme, we have no reason to reject it. We are even demanding for its implementation.”

The governor made it clear that Gombe State is ready to key into any policy federal government initiates, adding that federal government policies are meant for the development of the country.

Buhari Goes To Niamey, Niger For African Union Summit

President Muhammadu Buhari has been scheduled to leave for Niamey, Niger Republic tomorrow, July 6, to attend the African Union (AU) Summit, scheduled to hold on July 7.

A statement by the special adviser to the President of on media and publicity, Femi Adesina said that the President will participate in the 12th Extraordinary Session of the Assembly of the Union on African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and the First Mid-Year Coordination meeting of the AU and the Regional Economic Communities (RECs) in Niamey.

The statement said that the extraordinary session of the Assembly of the Union is expected to launch the operational instruments of the Agreement establishing AfCFTA.

It listed instruments include AfCFTA Rules of Origin, Tariff Concession Portals, Portal on Monitoring and Elimination of Non-Tariff Barriers, Digital Payments and Clearing Systems and African Trade and Observatory Dashboard.

The statement said that ahead of the Summit, the Buhari Administration had embarked on extensive consultations with stakeholders, culminating in the submission of the report by the Presidential Committee to Assess Impact and Readiness of Nigeria to join the AfCFTA.

It said that the committee had recommended that Nigeria should sign the Agreement which aims to boost intra-African trade.

It said that President Buhari will sign the AfCFTA Agreement on the margins of the AU meeting in Niamey.

The statement quoted President Buhari while formally accepting the report on June 27, as saying: ”for AfCFTA to succeed, we must develop policies that promote African production, among other benefits.

”Africa, therefore, needs not only a trade policy but also a continental manufacturing agenda. Our vision for intra-African trade is for the free movement of ‘made in Africa goods.’ That is, goods and services made locally with dominant African content in terms of raw materials and value addition.”

Femi Adesina said that President Buhari will be accompanied to Niamey by the First Lady, Mrs. Aisha Buhari, Governors Babagana Zulum, Abubakar Atiku Bagudu and Aminu Bello Masari of Borno, Kebbi and Katsina States, respectively.

Other top government officials include: Permanent Secretary Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Mustapha Suleiman; Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, Sunday Akpan; Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Defence, Nuratu Batagarawa; Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Finance, Mahmoud Isa-Dutse; Director-General, National Intelligence Agency, Amb. Ahmed Rufai Abubakar; and Director-General, National Office for Trade Negotiations, Amb. Chinedu Osakwe.

The President will return to Abuja at the conclusion of the Summit.

Denouement Of Unscripted “Ruga Settlements” Policy, By Sufuyan Ojeifo

The ballyhoo over “ruga settlements”, which the Ministry of Agriculture wanted to mischievously deploy in supplanting the original and scripted National Livestock Transformation Plan (NLTP), was a measure of Nigerians’ edification, intelligence, patriotism and resilient contempt for and passionate disapprobation of the policy.

Tension had dramatically dissipated following President Muhammadu Buhari’s decision to terminate the policy on account of its conceptual fraud and puckish push by the confederates of masterminds and implementers whose motivation has yet to be located within any patriotic rationale and essential goodness of the Nigerian nation-state.

But at least, the “ruga settlements” policy has been upended and President Buhari must be commended for that decision in a moment of extreme national anxiety. Prominent Nigerians must also be commended for promptly speaking up and warning against the inherent tendentiousness and danger in the implementation of the policy.

More significantly, the president has proved to critics that he has the capacity to listen and commit to the highest idea of national unity and peace. Therefore, he must continue on that path as his administration searches for a good-natured and lasting solution to the Fulani herders and farmers’ crises.

The context of the search must be reflective of our national diversity and be ethnically phlegmatic in its ramifications. Stakeholders, both at the federal and state levels, must be clear-headed in the appreciation of the issues involved and responsive to the sensibilities of ethnic nationalities in reviewing and tweaking the idea of NLTP.

To be sure, the NLTP, to which the president has now directed national attention as an alternative trajectory in addressing the elephant in the room, was originally recommended by the National Economic Council (NEC) under the chair of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo as a panacea, by and large, to the obdurate herders-farmers’ crises.

This is important in order to prevent the old animus that galvanised ethnic opposition to the first idea of grazing reserves, then cattle colonies and lastly “ruga settlements”. The conceptual framework of the NLTP transcends the narrow idea of Fulani herders’ settlements and this perception must be sustained.

And, peradventure, it was deficient in its conceptual framework, this is an opportunity to tweak and shear it of such deficiency, including the evident garb ofFulanisation. All hands must be on deck to ensure that the zeitgeist of the NLTP approximates national consensus and produces a passionate sense of appropriation by Nigerians.

Even though the implementation of NLTP remains voluntary as only interested states can sign up to it, yet operationalizing and actualizing the plan must be pan-Nigeria to the extent that all Nigerians would be treated equally in any state or states that signs or sign up for the plan. The point I make here is that the idea must not be hinged on the platform of Fulani herders’ protectionism.

In this context, President Buhari has a whole lot of work to do to reassure and build confidence in Nigerians that his administration will henceforth be catholic rather ethnocentric in the management of the political economy. The NLTP provides him a historic opportunity.

Significantly, in the pursuit of the agenda to transform livestock management in Nigeria, every Nigerian who is interested in cattle rearing must be considered and factored into the plan. It must be clear that pseudo-empires and ethnic fiefdoms are not being created by some ingenious designs and official or administrative fraud.  The entire process must by undergirded by sincerity of purpose and transparency of implementation.

It thus stands to reason that beyond the expansive and extensive proposal to ensure access to all basic amenities in areas to be designated for livestock management, there must be legal and administrative mechanisms that ensure circumscription and regulation by the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution and laws of the respective states.

Put simplistically, ethnic superiority and religious supremacy must not burgeon. They must not enjoy official recognition whether in the north or in the south (if any state voluntarily signs up for it). Appropriate legislations must be enacted to rein in inhabitants of the designated areas from promoting values that polarize our humanity.

The overreaching goal of the NLTP should be the imperative to deal with an existential problem that afflicts us as nation.  The Fulani herders-farmers’ problem is more real and pernicious in its genocidal dimensions than all other problems that confront us as a people.  That they are increasingly divisive and destructive, the herders-farmers’ crises project a quirky narrative about our country as a contraption of dubious federal nature; whereas, we have the capacity to be our brothers’ keeper.

The reality is that Nigeria as a nation of multi-ethnic nationalities is at a crossroads of decision-making to begin to bunch together through productive and prolific national conversations and compromises that centre on and promote national interests as the core and circumference of decisions and actions.

How President Buhari galvanizes a nationalistic resolution of the herders-farmers’ crises will also determine the kind of legacy that he leaves for posterity. The president would have defined his eon by the magnitude of his pan-Nigeria accomplishment if at the end of the day the crises are resolved in such a way that all Nigerians begin to see ourselves as Nigerians and not as Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Fulani, Edo, Esan, Berom, Jukun, Tiv, Ebira, Ibibio, Ijaw, Itsekiri, Urhobo, et al.

The herders-farmers’ crises represent the critical intersection that challenges the patriotism of the president. This is the time for pragmatic actions and not mere verbal exhortations about those highfalutin ideals that only blow in the winds. Since President Buhari respects his vice president, Professor Osinbajo, who oversees the NLTP, and vice versa, he should expect that he will benefit from a body of well-considered action-plans.

In rounding off, I would like to state that I am in pari materia with the six pillars of the NLTP, to wit: economic investment, conflict resolution, law and order, humanitarian relief, information, education, as well as education and strategic communication and cross-cutting issues. I am also in consensus ad idem with the proposed N91 billion to be spent on the 10-year NLTP.

If the estimated direct and indirect funds are judiciously expended on the plan without the bulk of the funding component sauntering into private pockets, I can imagine the revolutionary infrastructure development that the designated areas will experience. Nigerians will be the beneficiaries. They could even become exemplars to state and local governments on how to keep fidelity to the social contract of good governance through the provisions of effective and efficient social amenities and basic infrastructure.

I believe that the decision to use seven states in the north-Adamawa, Benue, Kaduna, Zamfara, Nasarawa, Plateau and Taraba as pilots was strategic because, apart from recognizing the sensibilities of the southern region about the issue of livestock management enjoying federal government’s priority attention, they understandably represent the herders-farmers’ flashpoints, spawning both centripetal and centrifugal forces that have been pulling our country apart in different directions in the northern region.

Now that President Buhari has told Nigerians that the NLTP is the real McCoy and not the infamous “ruga settlements” policy, the Vice President must become surefooted in the driver’s seat and ensure that as he drives with the assistance of his conductors in the NEC, the NLTP approximates a historic and revolutionary panacea to the perennial menace of herders-farmers’ crises and their concomitant episodic near genocides.

·       Ojeifo, an Abuja-based journalist, contributed this piece viaojwonderngr@yahoo.com

Buhari Congratulates Gov Oyetola, Asks Him To Be Magnanimous In Victory

President Muhammadu Buharihas congratulated Governor Gboyega Oyetola of Osun State on the Supreme Court ruling today, July 5 which affirmed his victory in the State Governorship election of September 2018.

A statement by the special adviser to the President on media and publicity, Femi Adesina quoted the President as saying that the decision of the apex court had laid to rest the tussle over the governorship of Osun State and removed all encumbrances on the path of the governor from fully delivering dividends of democracy to the good people of the State.

President Buhari commended the government and people of Osun in allowing the rule of law to run its entire course, even as he called on them as well as security agencies to sustain the peace.

He asked the victorious governor and the ruling All Progressives Congress party to be magnanimous in victory and make concrete moves towards inclusive governance as may be necessary.

President Buhari also expresseed the Federal Government’s continued willingness to partner with the State Government for the betterment of the people going forward.

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