Suspended Chief Judge of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen has appeared before the Code of Conduct Tribunal today, Friday, pleading not guilty to charges of failure to declare his assets as provided for in the nation’s constitution.
The Chairman of the Tribuna, Danladi Umar, had on Wednesday, ordered the arrest of the suspended Chief Judge after he failed to show up for trial at the previous hearings.
Justice Onnoghen came to the court today, voluntarily and formally entered a not guilty plea to six charges related to the non-disclosure of foreign currency bank accounts.
He was granted bail and the case was adjourned until March 11.
Speaking after the hearing, prosecutor, Musa Ibrahim described it as “a sad day” for the legal profession.
“But law is law. “The entire legal profession is on trial if the chief justice of Nigeria is on trial.”
Onnoghen’s lawyer, Chris Uche, said that the case was a “struggle for the maintenance of the independence of the judiciary … the rule of law … (and) for the separation of powers.
“Today, his lordship had to suffer the indignity of coming before this tribunal to take his plea,” he said, expressing confidence that Onnoghen would be exonerated.
“The world will eventually know the truth and know that there is more behind this prosecution.”
As the head of the Supreme Court, Onnoghen would have played a key role in any dispute over the result of this weekend’s presidential and parliamentary elections.
Buhari has previously expressed frustration that the court had overturned corruption convictions, including of some opposition politicians.
Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State has assured International Republican Institute, United States of America of adequate security during and after the Presidential election tomorrow, Saturday and other subsequent polls.
The governor, who had a meeting with members of the Institute today, Friday in the state capital, said that everything will be done to ensure their safety and security in the state.
Governor el-Rufai whose recent warning to foreign observers against interfering in the elections sparked controversy told his guests to “feel free while moving in the state.”
Speaking to reporters at the end of the meeting, the governor said: ”we invited them to feel free and if they need additional security,we will provide for them. We told the foreign observers to feel free while moving in the state.
“They asked me about my comment on the NTA live programme, the security situation in the state and I explained to them.
“The last security review we did was on Friday with all security agencies. All the paramilitary like the Immigration Service, Prisons, Civil Defence and the Nigeria Customs, will all go out to provide security. The security agencies are ready for the task to assist the police.
“As you observed we have a history of violence during elections in Kaduna State. We have made it very clear that vigilance groups will not be allowed to provide security tomorrow.
“I call on all voters to come out and vote.We are confident that everything will go well. No one should be involved in taking another person’s life. So we are confident that the elections will go smoothly.”
INEC Chairman, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu displays Specimen Ballot Paper
The 2019 presidential election will feature no fewer than 73 Presidential candidates, of the 91 registered political parties for the election holding tomorrow, Saturday, February 16.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), had on January 17, released the final list of presidential candidates. Two of the parties, the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN) had issues over the nomination of presidential candidates, but both remain on INEC’s final list.
The 2019 elections also promise to have the highest number of registered voters in Nigeria’s history with over 84 million on the register.
Below is the list of candidates and their running mates who will be on the ballot tomorrow, Saturday.
1. Isaac Ositelu (64 – M) – Accord (A) V.P – Lawal Muhammad (33 – M) – Accord (A)
30. Felix Osakwe (54 – M) – Democratic Peoples Party (DPP) V.P – Mohammed Ali (42 – M) – Democratic Peoples Party (DPP)
31. John Onwubuya (47 – M) – Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) V.P – Ahmad Muhammad (64 – M) – Freedom and Justice Party (FJP)
32. Chris Okotie (60 – M) – FRESH party V.P – Binutu Adefela (57 – M) – FRESH
33. Davidson Akhimien (53 – M) – Grassroots Development Party of Nigeria (GDPN) V.P – Ibrahim Hamman (56 – M) – Grassroots Development Party of Nigeria (GDPN)
34. Samuel Eke (48 – M) – Green Party of Nigeria (GPN) V.P – Hadiza Musa (42 – F) – Green Party of Nigeria (GPN)
35. Albert Owuru (56 – M) – Hope Democratic Party (HDP) V.P – Yahaya Shaba (42 – M) – Hope Democratic Party (HDP)
36. Nnamdi Madu (48 – M) – Independent Democrats (ID) V.P – Adamu Abubakar (41 – M) – Independent Democrats (ID)
37. Sunday Chukwu-eguzolugo (46 – M) – Justice Must Prevail Party (JMPP) V.P – Salihu Iman (44 – M) – Justice Must Prevail Party (JMPP)
38. Adesina Fagbenro-Byron (59 – M) – Kowa Party (KP) V.P – Ummar Abbas (54 – M) – Kowa Party (KP)
39. Kriz David (44 – M) – Liberation Movement (LM) V.P – Azael Vashi (35 – F) – Liberation Movement (LM)
40. Usman Muhammed (69 – M) – Labour Party V.P – Tom Akpan (42 – M) – Labour Party (LP)
41. Olufunmilayo Adesanya-Davies (56 – F) – Mass Action Joint Alliance (MAJA) V.P – Anthony Ibeneme (43 – M) – Mass Action Joint Alliance (MAJA)
42. Isah Bashayi (43 – M) – Masses Movement of Nigeria (MMN) V.P – Oluwatoyin Adepoju (35 – F) – Masses Movement of Nigeria (MMN)
43. Hamisu Santuraki (44 – M) – Mega Party of Nigeria (MPN) V.P – Chinwe Ufondu (45 – F) – Mega Party of Nigeria (MPN)
44. Rabia Hassan (66 – F) – National Action Council (NAC) V.P Chineme Uhuegbu (44 – M) – National Action Council (NAC)
45. Babatunde Ademola (37 – M) – Nigeria Community Movement Party (NCMP) V.P – Aisha Tataji (51 – F) – Nigeria Community Movement Party (NCMP)
46. Yunusa Salisu (48 – M) – National Conscience Party (NCP) V.P – Funmi James (53 – F) – National Conscience Party (NCP)
47. Johnson Edosomwan (64 – M) – Nigeria Democratic Congress Party (NDCP) V.P – Nasiru Mohammed (51 – M) – Nigeria Democratic Congress Party (NDCP)
48. Robinson Akpua (39 – M) – National Democratic Liberty Party (NDLP) V.P – Umaru Ahamadu (49 – M) – National Democratic Liberty Party (NDLP)
49. Paul Ishaka (60 – M) – Nigeria Elements Progressive Party (NEPP) V.P – Akinfelami Vincent (46 – M) – Nigeria Elements Progressive Party (NEPP)
50. Asukwo Archibong (50 – M) – Nigeria for Democracy (NFD) V.P – Ite Donald-Ekpo (41 – F) – Nigeria for Democracy (NFD)
51. Eunice Atuejide (40 – F) – National Interest Party (NIP) V.P – Muhammad Bello (39) – National Interest Party (NIP)
52. Ike Keke (39 – M) – New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) V.P – Johnson Omede (30 – M) – New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP)
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has cursed those who have been spreading fake news that he had fled Nigeria ahead of the 2019 general elections, which commenced with Presidential election tomorrow, Saturday.
Obasanjo, who was reacting to the rumor that he had escaped from the country as President Muhammadu Buhari, who he had been campaigning against for a second term is heading to victory, at his Presidential Library, Abeokuta, Ogun State capital today, Friday, said: “those who are carrying that type of rumour or fake news; I leave them in the hands of God; I am used to that kind of thing.
“Let anybody tell lies against you, let anybody issue fake news against you, let anybody abuse you, God will deal with them rightly and appropriately. Why should I travel out of the country before the election?
“If not for anything, I believe I should be here to perform my civic responsibility, which is to vote according to the dictate of my heart tomorrow and on the second of March.”
Reports in some social media sites had said that Obasanjo had left the country as the elections approached.
Few hours to the commencement of the 2019 general elections in Nigeria, security operatives and intelligent community are believed to have discovered plans by both local and foreign internet experts to hack the results of the election in favour of the opposition candidate.
Information reaching us at Greenbarge Reporters said that internet experts in some strategic parts of Nigeria as well as their foreign counterparts, a few of who are accredited electoral monitors, have made grand design to manipulate the results of the election, especially that of the presidency, which comes up tomorrow, Saturday.
It was gathered that hacking experts who manipulated President Donald Trump of America into office are part of those that have arrived in Nigeria and joined their local counterparts to repeat te US presidential election scenario.
Reports have it that the hacking of results of the elections for which millions of dollars have been sank, was one of the strategies adopted by the opposition in desperate move to wrestle power from the incumbent.
It was learnt that Governor Nasiru el-Rufai of Kaduna State made his famous ‘body bag’ statement based on the intelligent reports that foreign experts, under the cover of election monitoring, have been commissioned to come and manipulate the results of the elections.
It was gathered that based on the fear of hacking of results, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has decided to conduct the entire elections manually.
According to arrangements, results of election at polling units will be moved to ward and to local government headquarters and subsequently to state capitals under the security protection of armed police personnel as well as other security operatives.
This measure, according to reliable security and electoral body sources, was part of the design to minimize the incidence of hacking and ballot box snatching.
Meanwhile, intelligent community is believed to have been battle ready, and had warned anyone, whether Nigerians or foreigners under whatever guises, to stay clear of voting points and routes.
This is even as the police authorities have made it clear that any police personnel and others on election duties who do not wear tags that have been provided for the purpose will be regarded as ‘fake police person’ and will be arrested and detained.
President Buhari raises his eight fingers in front of his enthusiastic supporters in Katsina to signify two terms of 8 years.
A few days after the former Nigeria’s Head of State, late General Murtala Muhammed made his powerful speech at an extra-ordinary meeting of the OAU in 1976, he was assassinated. Late General Murtala delivered the speech in response to a letter addressed to the Nigerian head of state and other African leaders from the then United States President, Gerald Ford, opposing the Soviet backed M.P.L.A which had assumed power in Angola. But in swift reaction, General Murtala made a sudden appearance at OAU meeting and told the America’s President that “Africa has come of age… and that it’s no longer under the orbit of any extra continental power.
Murtala clearly stated “the fortunes of Africa are in our hands to make or to mar…for too long has it been presumed that the African needs outside ‘experts’ to tell him who are his friends and who are his enemies. The time has come when we should make it clear that we can decide for ourselves; that we know our own interests and how to protect those interests; that we are capable of resolving African problems without presumptuous lessons in ideological dangers which, more often than not, have no relevance for us, nor for the problem at hand…”
Over fourty years after he was assassinated on duty and his Africa’s vision stalled, the continent is yet again blessed with another similar courageous leader, and, this time an acclaimed converted democrat who has shown strong commitment to practicalize what Murtala Muhammed preached in 1976 at OAU headquarters, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Ever since he was sworn in May, 2015, after the Nigeria’s historic election, President Buhari has virtually demonstrated the leadership qualities of Late General Murtala Muhammed on international stage. He makes friends across all parts of the world. From America to Europe to Asia and Middle East, seeking their supports on his three major policy programs – anti-corruption, economy and insecurity in the country.
However, about four years after he assumed office as President in the most populous democracy in Africa, the country is yet again set to decide whether to renew his tenure for another four years. But worryingly to note, there is a clear and strong emerging indications that some western powers are trying to meddling into the country’s elections.
Of course, the reason for their alleged planned interference is not far-fetched. The ‘independent mind’ of the incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari to relate, cooperate with any country of his choice without been dictated, remains a disturbing trend for some circles in the west.
There is no doubt, President Muhammadu Buhari is the only current African leader who dare visited the Europe and America and categorically challenged them to return the stolen funds stacked in their land without fear of repercussion.
Also, the President did not lose sight in pursuing a redefined multilateral international cooperation with many nations on mutual benefits, including friends and foes of America. For example, last year, he met with President Donald Trump and ordered about $500 million Super Tucano aircraft from U.S to fight insurgency; then signed $2.5bn currency swap deal with China, engaged in multilateral agreement with France, Russia, Britain, India, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, UAE, Iran, and Pakistan among many other countries across the world on various fronts. The president has exhibited strong and dynamic diplomatic disposition by engendering mutually beneficial relationships with many world leaders.
The successes recorded by Buhari administration on international cooperation is as a result of his doggedness and uprightness and this has yielded many benefits to the country at large – rail projects, improved security, power and economy among other numerous benefit are visible.
But recently, a Trump administration’s “New Africa Strategy”, released by the United states national security adviser, John Bolton, specifically states that “China & Russia influence in the region is threatening America’s interests and must be contained by all cost.” This simply means that Africa must remain subservient and consistently receiving orders from U.S on who and who to relate with. But for the new sheriff in Nigeria, this is no brainer.
Interestingly, many African countries are also standing up against this old mentality of the west. African nations are going close to China and Russia more and more. Just recently, over 37 Africa countries join China Belt and Road Initiative, and more and more African countries are bypassing America’s dollars to transact with China, even going further to subscribe the Asian Infrastructure Bank, rivaling World Bank and IMF. Yet, Africa’s largest nation is on the forefront of this paradigm shift to Asia, against the will of the west.
President Buhari has personally shown a rare close relation with China, seeking her assistance in helping revamping the country’s infrastructural deficit.
For the west, particularly U.S, they have found a new puppet that will agree for anything just for him to become President. Atiku Abubakar no doubt stands a best deal for the West to help dislodging other powers from engaging legitimately with the Africa’s largest economy. Atiku, whose policy is obviously crafted from the script of IMF and world bank or better still, Washington consensus is out to serve the West. Atiku has criticised China’s loan to Africa as inappropriate. He has sworn to risk inflation and float the naira, sell the nation sole lifeline, (NNPC), and grant amnesty to corrupt public officials while fully liberalize the economy.
His manifesto is a replication of 1985 World Bank’s Structural adjustment programme which was handed over to Nigeria, that eventually rendered the country ineffective for decades. Without mincing words, Atiku’s policy document is designed to please the western powers so as to influence his emergence as President.
Just like any other President in the world, President Muhammadu Buhari has his own weakness in governance, but his closest rival in this coming election, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar is not an alternative considering his track records and policy documents. Yet, Nigerians cannot afford to gambling into the hands of untested babblers.
As Nigerians getting set to go to the polls in few hours from now to elect their President once again, they must vote wisely, peacefully and resist any attempt to scuttle or influence the process by external powers. As late Murtala put it, “the time has come when we should make it clear that we can decide for ourselves; that we know our own interests and how to protect those interests.”
Aisha, wife of President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed gratitude to Nigerians for the support they have given to the President in the last four years, describing it s unprecedented.
She expressed delight in the show of love he received wherever he went across the country, especially during the electioneering campaign.
Aisha Buhari, in a statement today, Thursday, expressed the hope that Nigerians will vote for her husband en masse so that he will return to continue the good job he has been doing.
She also thanked officials and members of the 700-strong Women and Youth Presidential Campaign Team, who traversed the nooks and crannies of Nigeria.
She expressed appreciation to wives of governors and elders who were on the advisory council even as she stressed the government of President Buhari has done a lot in the area of social engineering, infrastructure, and overall development.
She cited the effort of government in reducing the gap between the haves and have-nots and the school feeding programme.
Aisha promised that government will continue these good works and introduce many more until Nigeria attains the pride of place in Africa and the global community.
National leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Aswaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has said that with the presidential election a few hours away, Nigerians are facing a choice between the progress and the reurn to the dead past.
“February 16 is Election Day and on that day Nigeria shall step into its future. How you vote on that day will determine whether we walk into the future in a manner that guides our subsequent steps toward the national greatness that calls to us or will we walk into it backwards as if feebly trying to reinvent the past.
“One road leads to a certain replay of the economic injustices of the past. It is a road well-worn with familiar pitfalls and setbacks built into the very nature of it. The other road provides the truest, brightest chance for us to enter into our hopeful future but only if we are brave enough to believe in our capacity to improve our nation.”
Aswaju Tinubu, in a statement he personally signed, ahead of the Saturday Presidential Poll, noted that the Saturday election will be more than a contest between two men, President Muhammadu Buhari and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, for that one exalted chair.
Accordingly to him, the election is nothing less than a historic encounter pitting one vision and version of our future against another, saying: ” since walking backwards has never appeared to me as an efficient or responsible way for a person to proceed, let alone for a nation to surmount the difficult obstacles that nations must overcome, I cannot find much good in the policies and programs announced by the PDP.
“Former VP Atiku misappropriated his eight previous years in high office. His occupancy of high office was best characterized by low deeds. Self-enrichment occurred at lightning speed but social welfare moves slower than a dousing snail. Just a few weeks ago, Atiku offered his vision of the economy when he said that enriching his friends would be an appropriate objective of any government he led. At best, patronage is a regrettable and necessary reality of politics that should be severely curtailed. But Atiku goes in the opposite direction. He bypasses patronage to brazenly elevate the much greater evil of cronyism from the shadows to make it the central plank of his national economic policy.
“I have made no attempts to hide my friendship with Atiku. We were friends before this election and hopefully we will be friends after February 16 when he goes into retirement. Despite our friendship, I must say the type of enrichment of friends he envisions does not recommend itself to me. It is unjust and impoverishes all but a handful of Nigerians. I want no part of such enrichment for my love of Nigeria and its people is far greater and deeper than my friendship with Atiku. For the good of Nigeria and even the good of Atiku himself, we do well to send him into retirement on Saturday.”
Tinubu related a comment which he said a friend recently made that shows the wide difference between the two parties and their presidential candidates.
“My friend observed that if you make a deal with President Buhari, you can always be sure of his intention to follow through. Do the same with Atiku, he said, and prepare yourself for disappointment.
“Atiku is not alone in his disregard for the common man. Such disregard is the true brand name of the PDP and its powerful, rich allies. Several weeks ago during a television interview, Atiku’s Chief Economic Advisor Chike Obi intimated a strong preference to discontinue the social welfare payments the Buhari government established for the poorest of the nation’s poor. Obi’s rationale was that the nation could not afford to offer even this modest safety net. While in Obi’s eyes a nation possessed of the abundant material wealth of Nigeria could ill afford to give its poorest citizens enough naira merely to survive, Obi’s boss was reveling that he would further enrich already wealthy cronies. Obi was completely wrong that the nation does not have sufficient resources while his boss was utterly wrong in how he would use that abundance to fatten the wallets of his friends while leaving the pockets of the masses lean and empty.
“Perhaps, we should also send Obi into retirement along with his boss come February 16. Perhaps together they might manage to discover the place where they might learn compassion for the common man.
Just this week, Atedo Peterside, a banker prominent in PDP circles, published a bewildering lament professing he could not understand why, even in his latest polls, President Buhari maintained a marked lead over Atiku.
“In essence, Peterside was griping that the people are not wise enough to make up their own economic minds. They would be better off if they allowed him to substitute his judgment for theirs. Peterside’s article was written with the desperate yet arrogant frenzy of those who fear their unjust economic privilege is swiftly unraveling. They fiercely clutch to their position yet the castle they have built in the clouds is crumbling into dust then to vanish into vapor. The clock now tolls midnight on their system economic elitism.
“His answer to our economic challenges was to shrink and restrain government from being the active catalyst toward a diversified economy that assured broadly-shared prosperity through the just allocation of wealth and reward according to sweat and toil put forth by the Nigerian people. He proposed an economy that essentially was a free-for-all. If the past has taught anything, is that such an economic free-for-all is never free for most.
“It is merely a license for the powerful and wealthy to do as they might while the poor and modest endure what they must.
“Like Atiku, this PDP banker advocates an economy that gives free vent to the wealthy. The freedom enjoyed by the wealthy is paid for by a heavy tax on the wages and work of the average person. Essentially, the PDP seeks an economy that provides the welfare of riches to the powerful while telling the average man that there is not enough money to go around to build an economy that will ensure he can take care of his basic needs.
“They seek an unfair, unjust and unequal Nigeria. Their definition of Nigeria is a nation run by the greedy, for the profit of the rich, at the command of the mighty.
In this, the PDP is involved neck-deep in the greatest political swindle of this generation. Their real slogan should be “more for the rich, nothing for the rest!”
Only then will they be telling the plain truth about themselves.
Our objective must be no less than to remake Nigeria into a great nation. This is a lofty goal but we should not be afraid of lofty aspirations. Only by reaching upward can we pull ourselves from where we are that we grow closer to what we should become.”
The world economy is in rapid flux. To progress we need to establish a new economic model suitable to this dynamic future.
Our vision is the opposite of theirs.
Unlike the PDP, we, the APC, are anchored to the proposition that every Nigerian is entitled to equal access and sufficient economic opportunity so that he may use his talents, skills and committed exertion to carve for himself and his loved ones the decent and good life every human being seeks.
Yes, the rich and wealthy are entitled to the full enjoyment of the fruits of their exertions and enterprise. But so is the common man. The ordinary person is not to be shortchanged of the fair dividends of his honest sweat and diligent labor simply because he may be poor or because the powerful wealthy want more.
We believe government can spur the economy toward full employment of labour and our national resources during those times the private sector is not strong enough to shoulder this responsibility alone. Government is the agent of the people to further reform our political economy such that the light of shared prosperity, social tolerance and collective purpose shall forever shine across our national landscape and never be extinguished.
Because of the APC’s concerns for the struggles of the average person, we launched beneficial social welfare programs such as the school feeding program, Trader-Moni and N-Power.
As such, we have made progress caring for our most needy and vulnerable through these and other innovative and unprecedented policies. These programs are of the type all great nations do for their citizens.
However, the APC is not satisfied by what has been accomplished. What has been done is but the opening phase of a more ambitious undertaking. We have just begun to fight poverty and reform this economy on the scale required.
Though we have helped millions, several million more need to end poverty’s stranglehold on their lives. We must expand the scope and reach of our social welfare programs to encompass those other people who have been denied access to the productive economy through no fault of their own.
Additionally, we must put idle hands to work to build a modern infrastructure that will energize agricultural output in rural areas and foster labour-intensive industrialization in our growing cities.
Our objective shall be more and decent jobs on the farms and in the factories. Like no Nigerian government before, I believe the second administration of President Buhari shall dedicate itself to changing the very structure of our economy for the better.
We must amend our national economic architecture to unlock the full potential of our people and our land. To me, this is the core mandate of government for and of the people.
Throughout the campaign, we have talked about taking Nigeria to the Next Level. To me, this Next Level is informed by forging a New Partnership between government and the governed in order to create a more just, more prosperous economy for all.
The essence of this partnership is that government will provide each and every Nigerian either the modern public infrastructure or the targeted public assistance needed to build a better life for themselves and their loved ones.
The beginning of this New Partnership are already taking shape. As stated before, we have initiated a first phase of social welfare programs.
Additionally, the availability of fuel last December shows President Buhari has solved the perennial problem of year-end fuel crises that plagued all governments before his.
The Southwest has always been at the vanguard of progressive governance in Nigeria. Today should be no exception to this historic role we have played. I ask the people of the Southwest to join the APC so that we attain the Next Level by implementing this bold and good NEW PARTNERSHIP built on the following pillars:
POWER:
We have made more progress in this area in 4 years than the PDP did in 16. Still, our work remains unfulfilled until we can bring light to all Nigerians when they need it, at costs they can well afford.
I believe the second Buhari administration will work to increase electricity generation, transmission and distribution by 5000 MW within the next 4 years.
Under the spirit of true federalism, greater latitude will be provided states in their efforts to build and attract investment for their own power generation initiatives.
We shall push to end the practice of billing people for electricity they never received. This practice is a vestige of the past that should not accompany us into the future. A person should only be charged for the power used.
INFRASTRUCTURE:
Government should put a national infrastructural plan into action. First, we must commit ourselves to a national highway system linking our major cities and towns, our centres of commerce, with each other.
Travel times and costs will dramatically reduce. Farmers will bring more food to market quicker and more cheaply, reducing food costs. Traffic safety will be enhanced. The private sector will save millions of dollars which can be redirected to investment and job creation. More importantly, thousands of lives will be saved.
And hundreds of thousands of young Nigerians will find jobs on these projects.
Water catchment and retention systems in strategic locations should also be built to end the destructive cycles of flood and drought affecting many areas.
INDUSTRIALIZATION:
A national industrial plan aimed at bringing labour-intensive light industries to our cities to provide meaningful employment for our growing urban population should be implemented. To increase our GDP and wisely position the economy for the future, we must increase the percentage that manufacturing contributes to that GDP.
We should focus on strategic industries such as textiles, food processing, automobiles, consumer appliance and machine assembly, communications and manufacture of goods important to the bulk of domestic consumers.
This will require bold and comprehensive tax reform to encourage business investment. We shall help strategic businesses by ensuring inexpensive access to the infrastructure required for their profitability.
We must work with the Central Bank to bring lower interest rates to this sector.
AGRICULTURE:
I believe the government will work with the states and private sector to develop low-tech but efficient irrigation systems to reclaim more land for cultivation.
Commodity boards should be established to provide minimum prices for strategic crops so that farmers will be assured a decent income for their hard labour.
We need a national strategic food reserve. This will enable government to moderate food prices to aid the average person when harvests are lean and to prevent wastage when harvests are plentiful.
HOUSING:
To provide adequate housing for more people, government should integrate under one roof the numerous residential housing and mortgage programs now existing.
This integrated recapitalized home mortgage institution will deepen the mortgage market by provide direct loans to homeowners and by guaranteeing qualified loans made by private banks.
SOCIAL SECURITY:
In the spirit of the social programs inaugurated during the president’s first term, I fully support efforts during his second term toward establishing a government-run social security system for the elderly. Such programs are central and humane aspects of the governments of all great nations. We shall be no exception to this good rule.
This system shall not be intended to abolish the private pension system. The two systems will complement each other so that no elderly person is left unattended during his or her waning years.
The plan I just outlined is a brave step into our proper future. I ask that you have the courage not to be tempted to return to the past as the PDP wishes.
I believe Nigeria is better than this.
If we act wisely yet boldly, no Nigerian should fear what tomorrow will bring.
Election Day comes near. Let it be that dramatic moment where we showed the courage to vote for our larger, more excellent future instead of voting to recede into the shadows of the past as Atiku desires.
Let us continue to fashion a Nigeria that serves all its people, not just Atiku and his band of revellers. In this, we must face the future not turn our back to it. Great possibilities await but we must grab them.
Through this new partnership, let the Southwest once again rally around the banner of progressive governance for the benefit of all people, young and old, educated and not, the wealthy and the modest. This is the future we must enter. This is the future the APC champions. This is future you must choose on Election Day. Vote for yourselves by voting for President Buhari.
In the exercise of our civic duty at this historic and important moment, I ask that you conduct yourself with utmost tolerance and in equal peace toward both political ally and political opponent. Let us show the world that we know the true meaning of democracy. On Election Day let not an angry hand be raised against any Nigerian. No matter our political differences, let us remember we are of one land and of the same national family. This election shall be free and fair and conducted without the arm of violence. For this is as Nigeria and our democratic exercise must be to achieve the excellent destination intended for us.
The Presidential Candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP,), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has described President Muhammadu Buhari’s nationwide broadcast today, Thursday, ahead of Saturday election as a farewell speech. Reacting to President Buhari’s characterization of the opposition in his broadcast, Atiku said that the president has failed as a leader and that he has consistently distorted and twisted facts and events. Atiku, in a statement by his Special Assistant on Publication, Phrank Shaibu said: “We see President Muhammadu Buhari’s attack on the opposition in his nationwide broadcast, Thursday night, as part of the many gaffes which have come to define last days of the Buhari Presidency, rather than an address to be taken seriously by Nigerians.” Atiku said that President Buhari ought to have shown deep introspection in his public comments “because he is not just presiding over any country, but one with the largest black nation on earth, which bestows a lot of responsibility on him.” He complained that President Buhari’s negative comments against opposition elements in his nationwide broadcast are not the attributes of a leader who should be re-elected for another term of office, adding: “even when he is voted out of office come Saturday, February 16, 2019, President Muhammadu Buhari must learn to rise above certain issues and do things that will enhance the respect the citizenry have for the office of the President, rather than rushing to exhibit soap-box mentality when the occasion does not call for it. ”As for which party will better serve the people, we leave that judgment to Nigerians who will decide on 16th February, instead of a highly-partisan and easily excitable President Buhari.” While dismissing President Buhari’s nationwide broadcast as a farewell speech, the former Vice President said: “the Nigerian public is already giving its reaction on General Buhari’s less than Presidential address to the nation this evening. “A review of comments on Buhari’s Facebook Page to the broadcast shows that he should call in the removals-van as people can’t wait for him to leave Aso Rock. When you compare these to the comments on Atiku’s page to his Facebook Live broadcast this morning, the contrast could not be greater. The final verdict is in the hands and fingers of the millions of voters this Saturday. “As our candidate Atiku said in his final message of the campaign ‘Even if you are not voting for me, still come out to vote on Saturday. It is about Nigeria, not Atiku Abubakar. It is about you and your future.’” “So, we appeal to every eligible voter to express their will and contribute to our democracy.”
President Muhammadu Buhari in Katsina for his final rally on 14th February, 2019
President Muhammadu Buhari has confessed that his All Progressives Congress (APC) had no money to rent the kind of crowds that welcome him in the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) where he had gone to campaign. The President, who rounded off his re-election election campaign in Daura, Katsina State, today, Thursday, said that he was enthused with the mammoth supporters who displayed love for him, his party and Nigerian.
President Buhari who spoke at the palace of Emir of Daura, Alhaji Umar Farouk Umar, President Buhari said: “the crowds I saw in every state we campaigned was not a rented one. Money cannot buy them. People turned out en-masse to listen to us and I am encouraged by the willingness of our people to freely choose leaders of their choice and further strengthen our democracy.” The President used the occasion of his homage to the Emir of Daura to emphasise his belief that quality education remains a veritable roadmap to achieve a brighter future for the country, adding that all he had achieved in life was because of the education he received.
In his remarks, the Emir of Daura pledged that the re-election of their son, Buhari, is a task for all Daura people and all Nigerians who desire a peaceful, prosperous and stable Nigeria. ‘‘We believe that President Buhari, our son, has done well for the country and deserves a second term to consolidate on his numerous and remarkable achievements for the good of the country.
‘‘The 16 district heads and 450 village heads representing religious and traditional leaders in Daura Emirate have pledged their full support to the President’s re-election because he has shown responsible and honest leadership.”
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Why Buhari Is Best Deal for Nigeria, By Deen Adavize
A few days after the former Nigeria’s Head of State, late General Murtala Muhammed made his powerful speech at an extra-ordinary meeting of the OAU in 1976, he was assassinated. Late General Murtala delivered the speech in response to a letter addressed to the Nigerian head of state and other African leaders from the then United States President, Gerald Ford, opposing the Soviet backed M.P.L.A which had assumed power in Angola. But in swift reaction, General Murtala made a sudden appearance at OAU meeting and told the America’s President that “Africa has come of age… and that it’s no longer under the orbit of any extra continental power.
Murtala clearly stated “the fortunes of Africa are in our hands to make or to mar…for too long has it been presumed that the African needs outside ‘experts’ to tell him who are his friends and who are his enemies. The time has come when we should make it clear that we can decide for ourselves; that we know our own interests and how to protect those interests; that we are capable of resolving African problems without presumptuous lessons in ideological dangers which, more often than not, have no relevance for us, nor for the problem at hand…”
Over fourty years after he was assassinated on duty and his Africa’s vision stalled, the continent is yet again blessed with another similar courageous leader, and, this time an acclaimed converted democrat who has shown strong commitment to practicalize what Murtala Muhammed preached in 1976 at OAU headquarters, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Ever since he was sworn in May, 2015, after the Nigeria’s historic election, President Buhari has virtually demonstrated the leadership qualities of Late General Murtala Muhammed on international stage. He makes friends across all parts of the world. From America to Europe to Asia and Middle East, seeking their supports on his three major policy programs – anti-corruption, economy and insecurity in the country.
However, about four years after he assumed office as President in the most populous democracy in Africa, the country is yet again set to decide whether to renew his tenure for another four years. But worryingly to note, there is a clear and strong emerging indications that some western powers are trying to meddling into the country’s elections.
Of course, the reason for their alleged planned interference is not far-fetched. The ‘independent mind’ of the incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari to relate, cooperate with any country of his choice without been dictated, remains a disturbing trend for some circles in the west.
There is no doubt, President Muhammadu Buhari is the only current African leader who dare visited the Europe and America and categorically challenged them to return the stolen funds stacked in their land without fear of repercussion.
Also, the President did not lose sight in pursuing a redefined multilateral international cooperation with many nations on mutual benefits, including friends and foes of America. For example, last year, he met with President Donald Trump and ordered about $500 million Super Tucano aircraft from U.S to fight insurgency; then signed $2.5bn currency swap deal with China, engaged in multilateral agreement with France, Russia, Britain, India, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, UAE, Iran, and Pakistan among many other countries across the world on various fronts. The president has exhibited strong and dynamic diplomatic disposition by engendering mutually beneficial relationships with many world leaders.
The successes recorded by Buhari administration on international cooperation is as a result of his doggedness and uprightness and this has yielded many benefits to the country at large – rail projects, improved security, power and economy among other numerous benefit are visible.
But recently, a Trump administration’s “New Africa Strategy”, released by the United states national security adviser, John Bolton, specifically states that “China & Russia influence in the region is threatening America’s interests and must be contained by all cost.” This simply means that Africa must remain subservient and consistently receiving orders from U.S on who and who to relate with. But for the new sheriff in Nigeria, this is no brainer.
Interestingly, many African countries are also standing up against this old mentality of the west. African nations are going close to China and Russia more and more. Just recently, over 37 Africa countries join China Belt and Road Initiative, and more and more African countries are bypassing America’s dollars to transact with China, even going further to subscribe the Asian Infrastructure Bank, rivaling World Bank and IMF. Yet, Africa’s largest nation is on the forefront of this paradigm shift to Asia, against the will of the west.
President Buhari has personally shown a rare close relation with China, seeking her assistance in helping revamping the country’s infrastructural deficit.
For the west, particularly U.S, they have found a new puppet that will agree for anything just for him to become President. Atiku Abubakar no doubt stands a best deal for the West to help dislodging other powers from engaging legitimately with the Africa’s largest economy. Atiku, whose policy is obviously crafted from the script of IMF and world bank or better still, Washington consensus is out to serve the West. Atiku has criticised China’s loan to Africa as inappropriate. He has sworn to risk inflation and float the naira, sell the nation sole lifeline, (NNPC), and grant amnesty to corrupt public officials while fully liberalize the economy.
His manifesto is a replication of 1985 World Bank’s Structural adjustment programme which was handed over to Nigeria, that eventually rendered the country ineffective for decades. Without mincing words, Atiku’s policy document is designed to please the western powers so as to influence his emergence as President.
Just like any other President in the world, President Muhammadu Buhari has his own weakness in governance, but his closest rival in this coming election, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar is not an alternative considering his track records and policy documents. Yet, Nigerians cannot afford to gambling into the hands of untested babblers.
As Nigerians getting set to go to the polls in few hours from now to elect their President once again, they must vote wisely, peacefully and resist any attempt to scuttle or influence the process by external powers. As late Murtala put it, “the time has come when we should make it clear that we can decide for ourselves; that we know our own interests and how to protect those interests.”