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We Have No Confidence In Nigeria Police, Army, DSS – Governor Wike

Wike

“Rivers people must work as brothers and sisters and defend our interests. We don’t have Police, we don’t army, but we have God. And so, we must put our house in order and be our own police, be our own Army.

“We have no confidence in the Army, we have no confidence in the police, we have no confidence in the DSS. They have shown that there is no democracy in Nigeria.”

Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike made, who led thousands of Rivers people on a victory March across the streets of Port Harcourt, which terminated at the Government House, Port Harcourt,  commended the people for standing up in defence of democracy and the interest of the State.

He praised Rivers people for their courage “in the face of murderous invading security agencies who killed, maimed and stole ballot boxes in their bid to subvert the will of the people.”

Governor Wike said that the ultimate sacrifice made by the Rivers people brutally murdered by the Nigerian Army and SARS personnel was for the defence of the collective interest of the state, “because they refused to be conquered by the invaders.

“What has happened today will not happen in 2019. Now they have told us, they will see that we will also be prepared. This will not happen again.

“I have told the security agencies, you come and collect security money from me and use it against Rivers people. Enough is enough. They will now be depending on NDDC for their funding. Let me see where it will take them to.”

The governor said that politicians like the Minister of Transportation,  Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, who were not on ground, would never win elections in Rivers State, adding that those who attempted to re-colonise Rivers State by donating monies from their state governments had been shamed by the vigilance of the people.

“Wherever they are, shame unto them. Whether they are in Abuja, Plateau, Bauchi, Benue or Kano, shame unto them. Shame to the Governor of Plateau, Shame to the Governor of Governor of Bauchi , Shame to the Governor of Benue. They should bury their heads in shame.” [myad]

Atiku Abubakar Is Not Pre-Occupied With 2019 Presidency – Group

Atiku-Abubakar11A socio-political group, The Turaki Vanguard, has said that former Nigeria’s Vice President Atiku Abubakar is not preoccupied with running for Presidency in the 2019 election.
In a statement today, Tuesday, the Coordinator of the group, Dimeji Fabiyi, said: “it will be appropriate to mention that 2019 is still a long way away, and neither Mr. Adewale nor anyone else in his cohort can play God in deciding what happens tomorrow. On that premise, the Turakin Adamawa is not currently pre-occupied with 2019 and any possibilities that year can hold. He is more committed to working with his party, the APC to overcome the challenges of the current economic recession and making life better for Nigerians, expanding the national dialogue towards creating a political structure that works for every Nigerian.”
The Coordinator, who was reacting to a statement by the factional Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State, Segun Adewale, to the effect that Atiku has a hand in the lingering crisis in the erstwhile ruling party, said that Atiku currently has his plate full with issues of education, entrepreneurship and jobs creation; “certainly, 2019 isn’t a menu in that plate.”
He insisted that Atiku remains a committed member of the All Progressives Congress and has nothing to do with the crisis rocking the PDP.
“We are alarmed to read the account of Mr. Segun Adewale on the crisis bedevilling the erstwhile ruling Peoples Democratic Party and our consternation is more confounding because of the witless attempt by the factional chairman of the PDP in Lagos State to string the Turakin Adamawa to the crisis in the PDP.
“For the umpteenth time, Atiku Abubakar remains a committed member of the ruling APC and he is not in any way tangible connected to the crisis in the PDP or any other political party. Mr. Adewale also made spurious allegations about the Turakin Adamawa nursing a presidential ambition for 2019.
“In our opinion as a socio-political group loyal to the political cause of Atiku Abubakar, it will be a welcome development if indeed Atiku decides to contest for the president in 2019, but it will not be asking for too much if the Adewales of this world at least, let that decision come from Atiku Abubakar rather than foist it down as cheap campaign of calumny.” [myad]

Man Who Invested N300,000 In MMM Attempts Suicide As It Closes Shop 2 Weeks To His Wedding

Hanged

A man, simply identified as Adakola, was said to have attempted to commit suicide in Benue State by ingesting insecticide after Mavrodi Mondial Moneybox (MMM) froze accounts of participants in the Ponzi scheme, two weeks to his wedding.

Adakole was said to have been hit hard as he had reportedly invested N300,000 in the scheme and that the money was meant for his wedding. A friend of Adakole said that he is battling for his life at a clinic in Otukpo where the incident occurred.

The friend, who said Adakole had called him to confirm if it was true that the scheme had “crashed” before attempting to take his life, also told Daily Post that he had contacted the fiancée who resided in Abuja.

Meanwhile, MMM: LASEMA is believed to have sent out emergency number as suicide fears increase

MMM had today, Tuesday, announced that it was freezing accounts for one month, a move seen by many as indicating that the scheme had crashed as long expected.

Although those behind the scheme stressed in a notice to participants that it had not crashed, many people believe that it was just masking the fact that it had scammed people as predicted by regulatory authorities.

The scheme had since been declared illegal by the Federal Government. [myad]

Gambian Political Logjam Takes New Dimension, Jammeh Party Goes To Court

Image processed by CodeCarvings Piczard ### FREE Community Edition ### on 2016-12-13 20:15:49Z |  | ÿÿÿÿÿ

Political complication trailing the recent election in Gambia, has taken a new dimension as the ruling party, under which President Yahya Jammwh contested and lost to opposition, has filed a petition with the Supreme Court asking it to nullify the election result.

In the petition, the President’s party insisted that the country’s Independent Electoral Commission had violated the law and and that opposition leader, Adama Barrow was “not duly elected or returned as president, and that the said election was void.”

The ruling Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction (APRC), said that it was not present when the IEC issued a recount on December 5, and claimed that there were irregularities in the process and alleged voter intimidation.

The petition came as a quartet of west African leaders try to persuade Jammeh to respect the election result and leave office after 22 years.

Meanwhile, some African leaders are currently in The Gambia to persuade President Jammeh to respect the wish of the electorate by agreeing to step down for Barrow.

Yahya Jammeh, who seized power in a coup in 1994 and has earned a reputation as a repressive leader, has refused to proceed with a handover of power despite initially conceding his loss to opponent Adama Barrow in the election on December 1.
Jammeh cited irregularities in the official results, but his abrupt about-face drew international criticism, and a delegation of West African presidents under the auspices of the regional body ECOWAS arrived in the capital Banjul early yesterday on a mission to resolve the crisis.
The delegation is led by Nobel peace laureate, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, and includes Nigeria’s Muhammadu Buhari, Sierra Leone’s Ernest Bai Koroma, and Ghana’s John Mahama, who lost an election last week and conceded defeat.
A photo provided by Gambia’s information ministry and taken before the meeting showed the five heads of state seated in Jammeh’s elaborately decorated office at State House wearing leaden expressions, with the exception of Jammeh who had a faint smile.
Asked if Jammeh had been receptive to a message from the delegation, Buhari told reporters shortly after the meeting: “Yes, very much so.”
But just hours before their arrival, Gambian security forces seized control of the Independent Electoral Commission headquarters, which holds the original poll records, according to its chairman.
“The military came to my office and said I am not to touch anything and told me to leave,” Alieu Momarr Njai said. “I am worried for my safety.”
Yesterday, the African presidents’ delegation also met Barrow, who has said he would annul Jammeh’s declaration of Gambia as an Islamic Republic among other reforms.
Diplomats say that if Jammeh seeks to cling to power after negotiations fail, neighbours might consider removing him by force.
Marcel de Souza, president of the ECOWAS commission, told Radio France International on Monday that sending troops was “a conceivable solution.”
Gambia’s president officially has 60 days to hand over power.
Yesterday the ruling party filed a petition with the Supreme Court, asking it to void the recent presidential election result.
The filing seen by AFP said the electoral commission had violated the law and added that opposition leader Barrow was “not duly elected or returned as president, and that the said election was void”.
“(The legal challenge) would put the international community in a strange position and reduce available options,” a diplomat said.
Rights groups say Jammeh exerts strong influence over the court, which has not held a session for a year and a half.
Experts believe that at least four new judges would need to be hired to hear his petition.
Yesterday was the deadline for lodging a challenge to the election result.
Senegal, which surrounds the riverside country of 1.8mn people, called Tuesday’s presidential trip a “last chance mission”.
However, the African Union said in a statement on Monday that it also planned to send a high-level delegation led by Chad’s long-ruling President Idriss Deby.
The role of Gambia’s army is seen as critical, with the United States saying that some military officers had sided with Jammeh.
Army chief General Ousman Badjie had previously called Barrow to pledge his allegiance, the latter’s spokeswoman said.
But yesterday Barrow’s position appeared far less certain.
“I support the commander-in-chief, whoever it may be. I support the commander-in-chief Jammeh,” Badjie said.
Barrow said he had no official state security detail and felt “exposed”.
International rights groups have accused Jammeh, a former army lieutenant, of widespread violations and repression.
He won four previous elections that were criticised by rights monitors, and has survived several coup attempts, the latest in December 2014.
In October, he announced its withdrawal from the International Criminal Court.
He also withdrew the former British colony from the Commonwealth in 2013, saying it was a neo-colonial institution. [myad]

FCT Turns Contractor: To ‘Implement’ 19 Constituency Projects In Kogi West

FCT MInister, Muhammed Musa Bello
FCT Minister, Muhammed Musa Bello

The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Administration has confirmed that it is one of the Federal Government agencies that has been awarded 19 constituency projects to ‘implement’ in Kogi West Senatorial District.
In a statement reacting to media report on the projects, the Deputy Director / Chief Press Secretary in the FCTA, Muhammad Hazat Sule, said that the constituency projects are the ones being undertaken by the Federal Government, “which the FCT Administration was given the responsibility as a Federal Government Agency to execute.”
Muhammad Hazat, who frowned at the media insinuation that the FCTA abandoned its immediate constituency, which is the FCT to embark on projects in Kogi State, said: “the FCT Administration is simply an implementation Agency, a role that is also being played by other Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDA) of the Federal Government in respect of the Constituency Projects across the country.
“For reference purposes, this information can be verified and tracked online in the list of approved constituency projects as contained in the 2016 Appropriation Act; specifically, projects number 2498 to 2506.
“There are a total of 2,515 constituency projects in the Act, out of which 9 projects were earmarked for execution in Kogi West Senatorial District for which the FCTA was listed as the implementing MDA.
“The Newspaper ought to have ordinarily balanced their story by contacting the FCT Administration for clarification, thereby fulfilling the major bedrocks of journalism, which are objectivity and fairness.
“The FCT Administration therefore, wishes to advise media organizations to endeavor to balance their stories, as its doors are always open for any kind of inquiry on any matter that concerns it.” [myad]

I Will Contest Against President Buhari In 2019– Senator Ben Bruce

ben-bruce

Senator Ben Murray Bruce of Bayelsa State has indicated that come 2019, he will contest the Presidency against President Muhammadu Buhari and others who will surface for the position.

The Senator, who spoke in an interview, said that but for now, he has no choice than to support the President to succeed because his success is that of the country.

“In 2019, we can fight but right now I want the economy to grow. If I take the position that I want to destroy APC and destroy Nigeria, will there be any Nigeria for me to fix in 2019?

“Buhari is the president today; he is my president. I must respect him regardless of what I feel.

“So it’s a dumb move to try to destroy your president or somebody you hate and destroy your country in the process. I’ll fight Buhari in 2019 but today he is my president; I will support him.” he said. [myad]

Turkey Jails 81 Journalists Out Of 259 Worldwide In This Year

Somali journalists demonstrate against an article appearing in the British paper The Guardian calling them corrupt, in capital Mogadishu October 18, 2012. A journalist holds up a picture of the article's author Jamal Osman (R). REUTERS/Feisal Omar (SOMALIA - Tags: CIVIL UNREST POLITICS)

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), has released the list of jailed journalists across the world with Turkey topping the list with 81 from a global total figure of 259.

In a statement today, Tuesday, CPJ said: “Turkey’s unprecedented crackdown on media brought the total number of jailed journalists worldwide to the highest number since the Committee to Protect Journalists began taking an annual census in 1990.”

CPJ said that the report reviewed 32 countries.

CPJ in the report said “as of December 1, 2016, there were 259 journalists in jail around the world. Turkey had at least 81 journalists behind bars, according to CPJ’s records, the highest number in any one country at a time-and every one of them faces anti-state charges. Dozens of other journalists are imprisoned in Turkey, but CPJ was unable to confirm a direct link to their work.”

It said that Nigeria has just two journalists in jail along with Myanmar; Russia; Singapore; Cuba and Bangladesh while Cameroun; India; Krygyzstan; Mauritania; Venezuela; Thialand; Tunisia; Panama; Montenegro and Zambia each with one journalist jailed.

The Committee stated further that “China, which was the world’s worst jailer of journalists in 2014 and 2015, dropped to the second spot with 38 journalists in jail. Egypt, Eritrea, and Ethiopia are third, fourth and fifth worst jailers of journalists, respectively. Combined, the top five countries on CPJ’s census were responsible for jailing more than two-thirds of all journalists in prison worldwide”.

CPJ executive director, Joel Simon lamented that “Journalists working to gather and share information are performing a public service and their rights are protected under international law. It is shocking therefore that so many governments are violating their international commitments by jailing journalists and suppressing critical speech.”

He regretted that “Turkey is at the vanguard of this authoritarian trend. Every day that Turkey’s journalists languish in jail in violation of that country’s own laws, Turkey’s standing in the world is diminished.”

CPJ revealed that 2016 “marks the first time since 2008 that Iran was not among the top five worst jailers, as many of those sentenced in the 2009 post-election crackdown have served their sentences and been released. The Americas region, which had no jailed journalists in 2015, appears on this year’s census with a total of four journalists in prison”.

According to CPJ’s census, nearly three-quarters of the 259 journalists in jail globally face anti-state charges. About 20 percent of journalists in prison are freelancers-a percentage that has steadily declined since 2011. The vast majority of journalists in jail worked online and/or in print, while about 14 percent are broadcast journalists.

The prison census accounts only for journalists in government custody and does not include those who have disappeared or are held captive by non-state groups. (These cases-such as freelance British journalist  John Cantlie, held by the militant group Islamic State-are classified as “missing” or “abducted.”) CPJ estimates that at least 40 journalists are missing or kidnapped in the Middle East and North Africa.

The census catalogs journalists imprisoned as of midnight on December 1, 2016, and indicates the country where held, charge, and medium of work for each imprisoned journalist. It does not include the many journalists who were imprisoned during the year but released prior to December 1. [myad]

Continental Reinsurance Appoints Ogunshola As New Chairman

ogunsola

Continental Reinsurance Plc has announced the appointment of Chief Ajibola Ogunshola as the new non-executive Chairman of the Board to succeed Nadia Fettah.

The appointment took effect from November 8, this year.

Continental Reinsurance, which was established in 1985 and listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange in 2007, provides support to over 200 insurance companies in Africa, with its main offices in Nigeria, Cameroon, Kenya, Côte d’Ivoire, Tunisia and Botswana.

It also has a specialist subsidiary, Continental Property and Engineering Risk Services, which is registered in South Africa.

Commenting on his appointment, Ogunshola was quoted to have said in a statement issued on Monday: “I am honoured to accept the Board’s appointment. Continental Reinsurance is at an exciting phase and I look forward to working with the Board and management to build on the success that has been achieved so far.

“I strongly endorse the strategic vision of building Continental Reinsurance Plc to be the premier private pan-African reinsurer.”

Ogunshola holds a B.Sc. (Honours) degree in Mathematics from the University of Ibadan, and was the first black African to qualify as a Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries, United Kingdom.

He was for many years the representative of the institute in Nigeria, and a member of the International Association of Actuaries.

The Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Continental Reinsurance Plc, Dr. Femi Oyetunji, said: “We are pleased with the appointment of Chief Ogunshola as chairman. His experience and deep understanding of the industry will be instrumental in achieving our strategic objectives.

“Chief Ogunshola has a formidable track record and Continental Reinsurance will greatly benefit from his knowledge and vast experience. I will also like to thank Mrs. Nadia Fettah for her contribution as chairman. She has been a great source of advice and guidance for the business. She leaves with our best wishes.”

Over the years, Ogunshola has contributed to the development of many organisations while serving in various capacities, including as Managing Director of Niger Insurance; Chairman, Alexander Forbes Consulting Actuaries (Nigeria); Chairman, Punch Nigeria Limited; Chairman and Managing Consultant, Ajibola Ogunshola & Company (Actuaries); foundation President, Nigeria Actuarial Society; and President, Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria.

Continental Reinsurance Plc is 58.4 per cent owned by C-Re Holding Limited, a Mauritius-based investment vehicle, with the remainder being free float. [myad]

The Yahya Jammeh Problem, By Reuben Abati

Reuben Abati
Reuben Abati

When President Yahya Jammeh of The Gambia conceded defeat after the December 1, Presidential elections in that West African country of 1.9 million people, the gesture was widely hailed and described as an indication of great hope for democracy in Africa and particularly for The Gambia, which Jammeh had ruled with an iron fist for 22 years. That election was also perhaps the most important political development in The Gambia in 52 years – the first change of government through democratic elections. The winner of the Presidential election, Adama Barrow, was the product of a coalition of opposition parties who provided the platform for the people’s yearning for change. Adama Barrow (the British press should please stop referring to him condescendingly as a former Argos’ security guard!), became the symbol of the people’s hopes, and of freedom from Jammeh’s tyrannical rule that was benchmarked by its brutality, love of witchcraft and human rights abuses. Jammeh’s concession made it seem as if all his past sins would be forgiven.

But on December 9, he made a volte-face going on state television to say he could no longer accept the results of the election and that he had decided to annul the results. It is alleged that Jammeh may have resorted to this because of an alleged missing 365, 000 votes and the adjustment of the final results by the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) which showed that Adama Barrow had won with less than 20, 000 votes, hence Jammeh cited “unacceptable errors” which had come to light. This, if of any consequence at all, seems contrived.

If Jammeh as candidate in the election has any grouse, the appropriate place to seek redress is in court, and the Gambian Constitution provides for a 10-day window within which to file a petition. That 10-day period of grace expires today. By annulling the election single-handedly without recourse to the courts (the promise to do so by his party, the APRC, is an after-thought), Jammeh is guilty of an assault on the sovereignty of the Gambian people.  His conduct is objectionable and should be considered an act of high treason. Jammeh suffers from the delusion that his love of power and personal ambition is more important than the stability and progress of his country. The people’s will as confidently expressed on December 1 is supreme. Jammeh should be made to realize that he is just another citizen and that The Gambia is not his personal estate.

The African Union, ECOWAS and the UN Security Council as well as the international community in general have condemned the infamy that Jammeh is seeking to foist on his people. But the AU and ECOWAS should take the lead in coming to the rescue of The Gambian people. The long-term objective, in case Yahya Jammeh does not relent, is to invoke the Constitutive Acts and Principles of both bodies on democratic transition and thus “criminalize” any further attempt by Jammeh to violate the democratic process. We appreciate the fact that ECOWAS leaders: chairperson Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, and the Presidents of Nigeria (Muhammadu Buhari), Sierra Leone (Ernest Bai Koroma), Ghana (John Dramani Mahama) and Guinea (Alpha Conde) are in fact meeting with President Jammeh today in Banjul. They will also meet with opposition coalition leaders. The primary task of that team should be to bring all parties concerned to the negotiating table, insist on the supremacy of the people’s will and advise Yahya Jammeh to obey the rule of law.

It is possible that he would refuse to listen. Before now, this Gambian anti-hero has shown a capacity to defy the international community. He once turned himself into a herbal doctor and claimed he had found a cure for HIV/AIDS. In 2013, he pulled his country out of the Commonwealth. He is also opposed to the International Criminal Court (ICC). Ironically, the current chief prosecutor of the ICC is a Gambian, Fatou Bensouda. Yahya Jammeh is also an incurable megalomaniac, given his love of titles: H.E. Sheikh Prof. Dr. Alhaji President Yahya AJJ Jammeh Babili Mansa. On many occasions, he wanted to be Chairman of the ECOWAS, but his colleague-Presidents always turned him down in favour of much junior Presidents who met him in office. For a while he shunned many international engagements, sending his Vice President instead. To be fair to him though, he is not as stupid as he is made to appear internationally and he has probably realized that the game is up. But could Yahya Jammeh be playing a game, to negotiate, to gain amnesty?

His relapse out of that moment of lucidity that saw him conceding defeat on December 2 may well have been caused not by his claim of “unacceptable errors”, but fear. The Gambian situation may end up providing special lessons in how triumphant opposition parties should manage victory in order not to provoke a succession crisis. Dictators in general are afraid of what will happen to them when they are no longer in power and hence, many of them hang on to office until they die or they are disgraced out. While the antidote to this is good governance, it is also pragmatic to situate certain responses within the context of post-election realities.

In The Gambia, the post-election situation has been poorly managed. Jammeh and Barrow have met only once since the election was won and lost. They are practically not on speaking terms. The opposition, apparently due to lack of knowledge and tact, has also been busy threatening to deal with Jammeh as soon as he hands over power. Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang, who led the victorious coalition has been busy taunting Jammeh. She is a perfect illustration of how much damage reckless windbaggery can do to opposition politics.

Madame Fatoumata says Jammeh will be prosecuted.  Gambia will rejoin the International Criminal Court and Jammeh will be sent to The Hague for trial. Jammeh says he’d like to retire to his farm in his native Kanilai, Madame says he will not be allowed to do so, because he has “bunkers and treasure” there and enough weapons to start an insurrection. He won’t even be allowed to go abroad. “He can’t leave. If he leaves, he’s going to escape us”, she says. And she adds: “we don’t trust him. The longer we leave him, the more possibilities he has to leave the country to escape the country and even do an insurgency…Senegal is very alert. Nobody trusts him…” She further referred to Jammeh’s wife as a “gold-digger” who should be put on trial and jailed. It is precisely this kind of reckless post-election rhetoric that threatens peaceful ruling-party-to-opposition-tra nsition in Africa. Fatoumata Jallow-Tambalang’s tactlessness has to be managed. She and Samsudeen Sarr should shut up, at least for now!

Yahya Jammeh’s response has just been as vengeful. He quickly promoted loyal officers in the military and got the military hierarchy to recant. He also sent soldiers onto the streets of Banjul and Serekunda and other parts of the country to subdue an already frightened populace. He had admitted the result of the Presidential election as the “will of Allah”, but now he is relying on his own will to protect and preserve himself. The early exposure of the mind of the opposition has driven Jammeh back into the trap of tyranny and unless the situation is well managed, we may have a serious crisis in The Gambia with a well-resourced dictator turned rebel. What is playing out in The Gambia right now is a two-way politics of vengeance, which leaves both the people and the governance process stranded. Getting the country out of that logjam should be the main remit of the ECOWAS mission.

The ECOWAS leaders visiting Banjul must engage The Gambian military hierarchy. Jammeh is in the process of using them to carry out another coup. His first coup was against Dawda Jawara, 22 years ago, the current effort is designed as a coup against the people and the opposition. And even if he does not get away with it, he is determined to plant enough problems that would make The Gambia impossible to govern after his exit. Right now, The Gambian military has lost its mind. Chief of Defence Staff General Ousman Badjie endorsed the outcome of the 2016 Presidential election and pledged loyalty to the people and the elected in-coming government, but after the bribery of military promotions, the same CDS started insisting on another election. A divided, psychopathic military is a serious problem to any country. We saw that in Guinea-Bissau and Mali. The ECOWAS team must make it clear to The Gambian military leaders that there will be no regional backing for any act of lunacy.

ECOWAS has its own problems. Oftentimes, ECOWAS leaders succumb to unnecessary compromises. They should not return from The Gambia with any unholy compromise. Yahya Jammeh lost the election on December 1. He boasted before then that any election in The Gambia is “rig-proof” and “fraud-proof”. In four previous elections, he won with a landslide. Now, all of a sudden, elections conducted under him are no longer “rig-proof”. He should pack out of the Presidential Villa and allow The Gambia to move on without him. He is the latest victim of coalition opposition politics in Africa. His defeat should send a clear message to the other sit-tight, royalist leaders across the continent. The long-term solution to the Yahya Jammeh problem should be the introduction of a Constitutional term limit for The Gambian Presidency to prevent Jammeh from ruling as he once claimed for “one billion years!”

Above all, Yahya Jammeh is a spoilsport. He jumped out of his moment of lucidity just when we were celebrating the good news from Ghana. John Mahama is Ghana’s first one-term democratically elected President since 1992, but he has been gallant in defeat and most gracious. There is no chance he will behave like Jammeh. He is educated. He has a good head. He is a thinker and a writer. He certainly has a brighter future ahead of him. [myad]

Buhari, Other African Leaders On Peace Mission To Gambia

sirleaf-and-buhari-2

President Muhammadu Buhari, his Liberian and Ghanaian counterparts; Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and John Mahama, will tomorrow, Tuesday, leave for Banjul, Gambia, to put diplomatic pressure on President Yahya Jammeh to transfer power to President-elect, Adama Barrow.

The UN Security Council made the plan known while briefing newsmen after a closed-door meeting by the 15 members on the political situation in The Gambia.

Deputy Permanent Representative of Spain, Mr. Juan Manuel De Linares said that the members of the council stood by their unanimous statement on December 10 that Jammeh should commence the peaceful transfer of power to Barrow without further delay.

“A delegation by the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General to ECOWAS (Mohammed Ibn Chambas) and other ECOWAS and AU leaders will lead high-level delegation to Banjul tomorrow.

“The delegation will include the President of Nigeria (Buhari), Liberia (Johnson-Sirleaf), Ghana (Mahama). These are respected presidents in West Africa and Africa,” Linares said.

He, however, said that the council did not discuss any measure that would be taken should Jammeh refuse the entreaties.

“Our priority is to support the high-level visit tomorrow and ensure the mission succeeds,” he said even as he appealed to all parties in The Gambia to reject any form of violence and ensure peaceful transition of power in the West African country.

Permanent Representative of Angola to the UN, Ambassador Ismael Martins,  said also that the high-level visit was an effort of the ECOWAS leaders.

“The purpose of the visit of the ECOWAS leaders is to keep everybody in agreement to arrive at transfer of power in accordance to the rules of AU and ECOWAS.

“There is a high-level delegation of Heads of State going to visit Gambia, comprising  the President of Liberia as the Head of ECOWAS and other respected heads of state in the ECOWAS sub-region,” Martins said.

In a statement on Saturday, the Security Council “strongly condemned the outgoing Gambian president’s rejection of the official election results proclaimed by the country’s Independent Electoral Commission.” [myad]

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