Home Blog Page 1527

Kogi APC Asks Court To Stop INEC’s Process To Recall Dino Melaye

APC national chairman, Oyegun
APC national chairman, Oyegun

Kogi State Chapter of the All Progressive Congress (APC), today, Tuesday, approached the Federal High Court in Abuja, praying it to halt the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from activating process for the recall of Senator Dino Melaye.

The party chieftains in the suit, prayed the court to “declare that the recall process initiated, vide a purported petition against their sponsored member of the Senate by some of his constituents, pursuant to Section 69 of the 1999 Constitution, is illegal, unlawful and of no effect whatsoever for being contrary and in contravention to the rules of natural justice and constitutionally guaranteed right to fair hearing under section 36 of the 1999 constitution.”

The plaintiffs sought for a court ‎injunction restraining INEC from commencing the process of recall of Melaye who they sponsored into the Senate.

Other plaintiffs joined in the suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/601/2017, are Alhaji ‎Haddy Ametuo, Hon. Shaibu Osune, S.T Adejo, Comrade Yahaya Ade Ismail, Chief Gbenga Ashagun, Ahovi S. Ibrahim, Ghali ND Usman, Isa Abubakar, I. Molemodile, Abubakr M. Adamu and Daniel Sekpe.

No date has been fixed for hearing of the suit which is yet to be assigned to any judge

INEC had announced that it would kick-start the recall process on July 10, having earlier received petition and signatures that were collated by Melaye’s constituents.

The electoral body had vowed to go ahead with the recall process, saying that only a competent court of law could stop it from proceeding with the recall process. [myad]

3 Years After Boko Haram’s Bomb Blast In Abuja, Nyanya Bus Terminal Re-Opened

FCT Nyanya bus terminal

The Federal Capital Territory Administration has re-opened the Nyanya Temporary high capacity Bus Terminal which was closed down in April, 2014 following multiple bomb blasts.

The FCT Minister Malam Muhammad Musa Bello, who performed the reopening ceremony, said that the park was re-opened after all necessary security measures have been put in place and to ease the difficulty by commuters since the closure of the terminal over three years ago.

The Minister, who was represented at the occasion by the Acting Secretary of the Transportation Secretariat, Abdulhamid Mohammed Suleiman acknowledged the hardship which commuters were subjected to as a result of absence of a clearly defined terminal.

“The vicinity around the bombed terminal where commuters converge to board vehicles was always congested, thus causing heavy vehicular gridlocks while the commuters board vehicles along the road thereby exposing them to further threat to their lives.”

Mohammed Bello said that the closure of the terminal also impacted negatively on the Terminal Operator who was out of operation during the period and equally spent substantial amount in rebuilding the site.

“The journey to the reopening of this terminal was tortuous. Various security meetings were held to determine the various implications or otherwise of its reopening. I’m happy to announce to you that the various security meetings favored the reopening and that’s what we are here to do this afternoon.

“Let me use this occasion to assure the commuting public that this terminal is safe for use. All necessary security measures have been put in place to ensure the safety of lives and properties. The law enforcement Agents have been fully mobilized to ensure all round security of the commuters in and around the terminal.”

The Minister commended the Law enforcement agents for keeping vigil at the site since April 2014 when the bomb blast occurred, adding that such effort had kept the enemy away from the vicinity.

He advised them to increase their vigilance as the terminal goes into full operation. [myad]

Deputy Senate President Describes Move To Recall Senator Melaye As Dead On Arrival

Ike Ekwerenmadu

The Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, has described the move by the Independence National Electoral Commission (INEC) to effect the recall of Dino Melaye from the Senate back to the village as ‘dead on arrival.’

He gave Melaye assurance of the support of the upper chamber in his present travail with people of his Kogi West Senatorial zone that are working hard to remove him from the Senate, proclaiming the recall process “dead on arrival.”

Senator Melaye had, today, Tuesday, sought for the support of  his colleagues over the drum of recall that is being beating by people of his constituency,  saying that the recall issue is being sponsored by the State Governor, Yahaya Bello.

He cited Order 14 of the Senate Rule and pleaded with his colleagues to act.

Assuring him of the support he sought for, the Deputy Senate President said that the Constitution made recall a cumbersome process, and that as such, it would be difficult for Melaye’s opponents to succeed.

“The Senate would also verify the legitimacy of the votes before a conclusion is made,” Ekweremadu said.

Melaye’s call on his colleagues to intervene came on the heels of a time table for his recall that was released yesterday, Monday, by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

Meanwhile, signatures for Melaye’s recall have been collected at his constituency in an exercise that began on June 10.

Campaigners said that 188,588 signatures were submitted to INEC, which is more than 52 per cent of about 260,000 voters in the constituency.

On June 22, INEC notified Melaye of the recall process. His lawyers responded with a lawsuit the next day, asking the electoral body to stay all actions relating to the exercise.

INEC, however, said that it would proceed with the recall process since there was no court injunction stopping it. [myad]

Nobody Can Stop Senator Melaye’s Recall Except Court, INEC Clarifies

inec-chair-yakubu

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has made it clear that nobody, not even the Senate can stop the recall process of the embattled Senator representing Kogi West zone, Dino Melaye, except by what it called ‘a legitimate court order.’

Chief Press Secretary to INEC chairman, Rotimi Oyekanmi, who spoke to news men today, Tuesday, said that the commission has already fixed August 19 for verification of signatures of petitioners demanding Melaye’s recall, amid various lawsuits instituted to stop the process.

“The constituents came with sacks of documents which they said were `the signatures’ of more than half of the voting population of Kogi West Senatorial District, which Melaye represents.

“They also presented a register of the said signatories and a letter, asking INEC to begin the process of recalling the Senator representing that particular district.

“Subsequently, the commission, in exercise of the powers conferred on it by Sections 116 of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended), on Monday issued a timetable and schedule of activities for the recall of the Senator.

“The first stage is a verification exercise slated for July 10, 2017. To that extent, filing a lawsuit is not enough to stop INEC from carrying out its legitimate duty.

“Only a legitimate court order or an injunction can be considered by the commission.”

On claims by Melaye that some of the signatures submitted to INEC were forged and that names of dead registered voters were also included, Oyekanmi said: “the commission will adopt its normal way of conducting the verification exercise, which will be applicable to both the literate and not-so-literate.” [myad]

EFCC Arrests Ex Jigawa Governor, Saminu Turaki, At Book Launch

Saminu Turaki

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arrested a wanted former Governor of Jigawa State, Saminu Turaki at the launch of a book at the International Conference Centre, Abuja. The book, titled: ‘The First Regular Combatant: Brigadier General Zakariya Maimalari,’ was authored by Haruna Paloma.

The book launch was attended by among others, former President Olusegun Obasanjo; former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon; the National Security Adviser (MSA), General Babagana Moguno; the Chief of Staff to the President, Abba Kyari; the Chief of Army Staff, Lt.General Tukur Buratai and others.

Saminu Turaki is standing trial for allegedly stealing N36 billion when he was governor of the state from 1999 to 2007. He had also been accused in court of using N12 billion out of the N36 billion to fund former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s failed third term bid in 2006.

Last year, operatives of the EFCC went to his house in a bid to execute an arrest warrant for the former governor who had failed to present himself for trial since 2011 when he was arraigned on 36 counts at the Federal High Court in Dutse, Jigawa State.

The court had issued a warrant directing the Inspector General of Police or his officers and the EFCC to arrest Turaki and bring him before the court.

Justice S. Yahuza gave the order after Turaki failed to appear before the court even as the EFCC declared him wanted.

The former governor, who also served as Senator from 2007 to 2011, was said to have continued to evade arrest. He was first arraigned by the EFCC before the Federal Capital Territory High Court in 2007 on 32 counts of misappropriating N36bn while he was governor. The case was later transferred to Federal High Court, Dutse after he challenged the jurisdiction of the FCT court. [myad]

Dino Melaye Dismisses Threat Of Recall, Says No Retreat In Battle To Salvage Kogi

Dino Melaye dancing

“The battle to salvage Kogi state from financial Scavengers and economic canker-worms is a battle of no retreat no surrender.”

These were the words of the Senator representing Kogi West Senatorial zone in the red camber of the National Assembly, Dino Melaye.

Reacting to a time table released by the Independence National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday for his recall back to his village, Melaye said that he will neither retreat nor surrender in fighting his traducerse, amid plans by them to use INEC to recall him.

According to him, INEC and those behind the plot to recall him would fail, saying that he would emerge victorious at the end.

Melaye described the process of his recall as fake and unrealistic, stressing that he has not lost a sleep on it by any means.

In a special message he sent to his constituents in Kogi West titled: ‘Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled,’ called on his supporters in and out of Kogi state to continue to maintain peace as the process of recall set against him would soon expire.

Melaye turned to the governor of his state, Yahaya Bello, asking him to pay the salaries he owed workers in Kogi State.

“To all my constituents good morning. Let not your heart be trouble. There are storms on our way but we will sail through. God is with us so nothing to fear.

“The fake recall will fail and very soon. Please maintain peace as every lie has an expiry date. I will not stop speaking the truth or being voice for the voiceless.

“We shall win yet again. Yahaya Bello must pay salaries and pensioners. Sing the song of victory with me because we shall surely overcome the agents of darkness. In God we trust and not in naira.

“The battle to salvage Kogi state from financial Scavengers and economic cankerworms is a batle of no retreat no surrender.” [myad]

Boye Olusanya Steps Into Belo-Osagie’s Shoe At Etisalat

Moye chairman of etisalat

A pioneer member of Econet in 2001, Boye Olusanya has been appointed to replace Hakeem Belo-Osagie who recently resigned as Chairman Officer of the embattled telecommunication company, Etisalat Nigeria.

The new helmsman, had also at one time, served as Deputy Managing Director of Celtel Nigeria. He had worked through the different stages with the company.

Boye Olusanya holds a BSc in Civil Engineering and MSc in Environmental Civil Engineering from a Liverpool University. He also has another MSc in Computer Science from Manchester University.

Etisalat Group took over Etisalat Nigeria as a result of the telecommunications firm’s inability to repay its debts reaching $1.72 bn (about N541.8bn).

Yesterday, Monday, the company’s CEO Matthew Willsher and Chief Financial Officer Olawole Obasunloye stepped down as part of its transition process. [myad]

Buhari’s Spokesman, Adesina, Mourns Late Abacha’s Spokesman, David Attah

David Attah

Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, has described the death, today, Tuesday, of Chief David Ogaba Attah, former Chief Press Secretary (CPS) to the late Head of State, General Sani Abacha, as a huge loss to the nation and the media industry.

In a condolence message to Attah’s family, Adesina recognized Chief Attah’s distinguished service to the nation as a journalist, politician and opinion leader.

The Presidential Spokesman noted that the Benue-born veteran journalist did not only carve a niche for himself in the course of his journalism career but was a strong voice in the nation’s political terrain during his stint in the House of Representatives in the Second Republic.

Adesina said that late David Attah, who held a traditional title of the Ondoma of Idomaland, will be long remembered for his candid views, measured and mature contributions to national discourse.

He enjoined media professionals and colleagues to draw inspiration from the career of Chief Attah, while urging the family of the departed to take solace in the knowledge that their father lived a fulfilled life. [myad]

The Nnamdi Kanu Phenomenon, By Reuben Abati

Nnamdi Kanu 4

The most discussed subject in Nigeria today is what is called “restructuring” and indeed so popular is this subject that it has attracted the attention of roadside commentators, the bright, the not-so-bright, the mischievous and the outrightly unintelligent all united by the singular claim that Nigeria belongs to all of us and we all have a right to determine its future.  The last person who brought up this subject with me is a mechanic in Abeokuta! He had heard about Biafra, the Arewa youths, the President’s absence, Professor Osinbajo, Nnamdi Kanu, what Igbo leaders, Northern leaders and Yoruba leaders have said about restructuring and he wanted a conversation. That’s how democracy works, not so?  The inclusiveness is actually very good for us…

But the point I have always made stands proven: that Nigeria remains an unanswered question, more than a century after the amalgamation of 1914. Before and after independence, virtually every government has had to deal with this same question, viz, the national question. Brought together in an unwieldy, unequal and uneven union by the British, Nigeria’s about 400 ethnic nationalities have been unable to transform into one nation, one union, a community of people and communities driven by a common purpose – to create a united, progressive nation, under the umbrella of patriotism and the common good.

We have fought each other since 1950 to date, we did not even all agree on independence, and since that happened, we have been at each other’s throats. We ended up fighting a civil war, and from all indications we are at this moment, seemingly preparing for another one. The laziest excuse is that the British caused all our problems, but more than 50 years after independence it should be clear enough that we are the source of our collective agony.

Other countries who were at the same level with us in 1960 have since moved on and developed into better nations despite their own internal contradictions. Nigerian leaders have perpetually lived in denial. Every step forward has resulted in our country taking two steps backwards. A combination of the big-man-syndrome, the too-know syndrome, the us-before-others-mentality, ethnic politics, sectarian politics, greed, cronyism and a terrible leadership recruitment process has turned our process of nationhood into an unending struggle. Today, fewer Nigerians believe in the idea of Nigeria.

In 1977/78, the Constituent Assembly whose deliberations resulted in the 1979 Constitution almost ended with fisticuffs. The 2005 National Political Reforms  Conference did not fare better either, as the Niger Delta conferees staged a walk-out and the politics of Third Term or no Third Term sabotaged the entire process. In 2014, the outcomes of yet another National Conference could not be followed through because a succeeding administration declared it would not even look at the report.  At every stage when it looks as if this country is faced with an opportunity to address the national question, certain interest groups erect the roadblocks of denial and wishful thinking. No country can live perpetually in denial.  This is the message of former Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union and their disintegration. As for the military, they merely worsened Nigerian politics.

Fifty years after the outbreak of the civil war, we now have a man called Nnamdi Kanu. He may well end up as Nigeria’s nemesis. He is the most frightening product of our many years and acts of denial and he may well throw the country into a nightmare worse than Boko Haram, if care is not taken. He started out as the leader of a group called the Indigenous People of Biafra and as director of Radio Biafra.  He and those who bought into his rhetoric of secession and the renewal of the Biafra dream organized protests across the world, and they looked, from afar, like a group of disgruntled Nigerians in diaspora. In the foreign lands where most of the members lived, they looked like persons over-enjoying the freedom of speech from a safe distance. They didn’t appear to have the force of MASSOB, which is locally based and seemingly more malleable.  The renewed struggle for Biafra that Kanu and his crowd talked about could have been nothing more than an internet and television revolution. But everything went wrong the moment Nnamdi Kanu chose to visit home and he was arrested, detained and taken through a court trial.

Whoever ordered Nnamdi Kanu’s arrest and prosecution did this country a bad turn. Kanu is a character that could have been better ignored. His trial and travails have turned him into a hero and a living martyr among Igbos. And the young man so far, understands the game. Since he was released on bail, he has been taunting the Nigerian state and government. Daily, he dares those who granted him bail and he laughs at the conditions they gave him. He associates with more than 10 persons. He moves about Igboland freely, like a spirit. He addresses rallies and grants interviews.  He has been busy issuing statements. On May 30, he ordered a shut-down of the entire South Eastern region and that order was obeyed not only in the South East but also in parts of the South-South, and Abuja.

Nnamdi Kanu who probably barely struggled to survive as a black man in Europe, has been turned by the Nigerian Government into a credible apostle of a resurgent Biafran revolution. The other day when he held a meeting in Umuahia, over 5,000 persons trooped to his compound.  Kanu is a master of symbolism. He is exploiting the Jewish symbol: to signal to the world that Igbos are being persecuted. He visits symbolic sites of the civil war to prick the injured part of the Igbo consciousness and mobilise the people. His pre-eminence is a comment on the quality of the state and its strategic intelligence system. If he succeeds with his threats, we should know those to blame. A few days ago, someone on social media further compared him to Jesus Christ and described him as the true saviour. Every revolutionary in history graduates from ordinariness to being messianic, propelled by opiumized endorsement.

Nnamdi Kanu is certainly capable of doing more damage to the system than the MASSOB, OPC, and such other groups, and should he push things further, he could ignite a crisis worse than Boko Haram. My gut feeling is that some people in certain places are beginning to realize this and that is why Nnamdi Kanu out of detention appears untouchable; it is the reason he is able to dare the state, and ridicule his bail conditions. The lesson here is obvious enough: the brazen use of force and intimidation to deal with certain situations could create really bad unintended consequences.

The Federal Government under Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has been holding meetings with key stakeholders within the Federation. The consultations are in order, but the Acting President is yet to talk to the right people.  He is talking to people who carry their international passports in their pockets because they don’t know what tomorrow promises in Nigeria. He is consulting persons whose family members are mostly one-leg-in-one-leg-out Nigerians; many of them in fact have dual nationality. Nigeria is their trading post, the place where they make the money they and their children spend in Dubai, UK and wherever.

The people the Federal Government should be talking to are the angry Igbo youths who now kneel down to greet Nnamdi Kanu and call him their god, the Arewa youths who have told the Igbos to get out of Nigeria and get away, and who have called the Yoruba names while further insisting that they are not afraid of the Nigerian government arresting them. The people to talk to are the leaders of the various other groups who are taking sides. Leaders of the Middle Belt and the South South are holding talks; some Yorubas are planning to hold theirs this week in Ibadan. Draw the map of the emerging rhetoric in Nigeria today; what you have is a divided country. The scenario is so painfully reminiscent of the early 60s. Every Nigerian leader since the civil war has boasted that he would not preside over the dismemberment of Nigeria. Some of those leaders have suddenly started saying restructuring is the answer, how nice!- the same restructuring they never wanted and that they didn’t want as at 2015.

Crisis management is an important part of nation-building. We have failed to manage most of the crises that have befallen our nation, on a sustainable basis, and that is why every proverbial snake that is killed suddenly resurrects. It is the reason we have produced a country where the population of the aggrieved appears to be growing daily.  It is the reason Nnamdi Kanu and his followers have become the fish-bone in the throat of government.  As things stand, there is no stronger voice in Igboland today than that of Nnamdi Kanu. The Igbo elites and the self-styled political leaders of the East know that Kanu is more influential than all of them put together. How many among them can command a willing crowd of 5, 000 to their doorsteps? The politicians hire crowds, but the crowds go to Kanu and obey him.

With the kind of influence he wields, Kanu is in a position to dictate the political future of the South East. The same political leaders who posed for photographs at the Aso Villa will go to him at night and beg him to support their candidates if future elections hold in that region.  They will condemn Kanu during the day, but lick his boots at night.

The ancillary challenge however is the worsening trend of ethnic polarization with regards to the control of power at the centre. I describe this as the conflict between the na-my-brother-dey-there syndrome and the no-be-my-brother reactive tendency. It used to be the case in this country up till the time President Olusegun Obasanjo left in 2007, that whoever held power in Abuja was openly and strongly supported by other Nigerians, regardless of ethnicity or religion. Obasanjo got more support from outside Yorubaland, and probably felt more reassured by persons from outside his own ethnic group and religion.

With the death of President Yar’Adua in office, ethnicity, a long-standing threat to Nigerian unity became more potent. The Boko Haram, with its base in the Northern part of the country gave the succeeding Jonathan administration hell.  With the emergence of President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015, the same Boko Haram suddenly became tame. Curiously, the militants of the South East and the South South, who had been significantly quiet during the Jonathan years, also became more vocal and calls for secession became more strident the moment their kinsman and in-law left office. By the same token, the conflict between pastoralists and farmers, an old problem, became worse, with the former asserting themselves more arrogantly for no reason other than that they are sure of better protection under a central government controlled by the North. Our point: Nigeria’s stability should not be so dependent on the whims and caprices of ethnic gladiators. No Nigerian President should be at the mercy of ethnic or religious politics, now or in the future.

The debate about restructuring and renegotiations is therefore useful and most relevant.  It is indeed urgent if we must take the wind out of the sail of the secessionists and nihilists. Those who have always blocked or hijacked the people’s conference must by now realize that we are close to “the point of no return” on a review and rephrasing of the Nigerian question, in order to make every Nigerian feel a part of the Nigerian project. The alternative in all possible shapes appears ominous. [myad]

What I Admired In Maitama Sule, Buhari Narrates In Personal Letter To Gov Ganduje

Yusuf Maitama sule 1

President Muhammadu Buhari has written a personal letter to governor Umar Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano state telling him what he admired in Dr. Yusuf Maitama Sule who died today, Monday, was that he served Nigeria for almost all his life without being tainted with scandal

“He served with distinction in the First Republic, the Second Military regime, as well as the Second Republic, without him being tainted with the remotest hint of scandal.” President Buhari wrote, in a letter of condolence that is scheduled to be delivered to the Kano state governor tomorrow, Tuesday.

The President’s letter, which was released today by his spokesman, Malam Garba Shehu, reads thus:

“I have heard this morning, the death of the venerable Alhaji Maitama Sule, Dan Masanin Kano, and one of Nigeria’s famous sons. Although, I knew he was in poor health for some time, his death nonetheless, came as a profound shock.

“As a Minister in the First Republic, he was one of those who assisted our Founding Fathers, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello and Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, to fashion Nigeria politically and lay the grounds of national co-existence.

“Maitama Sule was blessed by God with a wonderful voice and outstanding eloquence. He served with distinction in the First Republic, the Second Military regime, as well as the Second Republic, without him being tainted with the remotest hint of scandal.

“As a person, I found him personable with unceasing good humour. Nothing personified his faith more than the fact that on losing his sight, he did not retreat in himself sulking on account of his ill-fortune. Quite to the contrary, he honoured virtually all invitations extended to him and spoke as usual with singular eloquence and unparalleled wit.

“In my discussions with him, I greatly valued his counsel, and I never ceased to be amazed by his concern for the well-being of his country rather than his personal interests.

“Let me extend my sincere condolences to Your Excellency, family and friends, the Government and people of Kano, and Nigerians as a whole, for this most heavy loss. We shall not soon see the like of him. May God forgive his sins and admit him to Paradise, Amin.” [myad]

Advertisement ADVERTORIAL
WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com