It was External Affairs Minister Professor Bolaji Akinyemi who, in the 1980s, spearheaded the formation of a Concert of Medium Powers. What we got in Nigeria this weekend was a Concert of Anti-Party Activists. At the weekend, news-hungry media houses splashed stories that former Secretary to the Government of the Federation [SGF] Babachir David Lawal and former Speaker of the House of Representatives Yakubu Dogara visited Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike in his country home in Rumueprikom, Obio-Akpor Local Government Area.
Insofar as Governor Wike is actively seeking to undermine his PDP party’s Atiku Abubakar/Ifeanyi Okowa presidential ticket and insofar as Babachir and Dogara are actively trying to undermine their APC party’s Bola Tinubu/Kashim Shettima presidential ticket, the threesome meeting is best described as a concert of anti-party activists. I do not know if the term existed in the First Republic. But when Second Republic politics kicked off in 1978-79, political pages of newspapers were soon replete with stories of politicians being expelled by their political parties for what was called “anti-party activity.”
Anti-party activity was broadly defined in that era to include paying a social visit to the home of a member of another party, giving out your daughter in marriage to the son of a member of a rival party, allowing tenants in your compound to hoist the flag of another party, or even being seen exchanging banters by the roadside with a member of a rival party. To politicians, anti-party activity is the equivalent of a soldier fraternising with the enemy in wartime. There was this story I once read that during the First World War, German and Allied unit commanders in one small sector in France declared a Christmas Day truce. The guns fell silent; one German soldier stood up in his trench, waved at enemy soldiers and wished them merry Christmas! Some Allied soldiers responded, and they soon emerged from trenches, met in the no-man’s land in-between and fraternized.
When the truce ended, the soldiers dived back into their trenches and resumed fighting, but with less enthusiasm. As one American soldier later recounted, a German soldier he met during the truce was his age mate, who just like him was from a rural area, who just like him dropped out of college when he was conscripted into the army, and who just like him had a mother and a sister who were praying for him to survive the war. The commanders on both sides who orchestrated that damaging truce were arrested and, at least on the German side, were executed.
Babachir, Dogara and Wike may not be in danger right now of facing the political equivalent of arrest, trial and execution by their respective political parties because both major parties are still reeling from the aftermath of their nominating conventions and in particular, their choice of presidential running mates. What did the three men discuss at their meeting behind closed doors? Babachir told reporters after the meeting that “their mission was a brotherly visit to the Governor of Rivers” because “every now and then, the Bible enjoins you to visit one another.” The question is, why did Babachir ignore this biblical prescription to visit Wike all these years, until now, when he thought he found common political cause with him? Dogara on his part said “they were on a quest to build an all-inclusive Nigeria,” meaning that his party’s Muslim/Muslim ticket is an all-exclusive Nigeria.
Tellingly, the two men went to Rivers straight from a meeting in Abuja of a hastily formed organization called APC Northern Christian Political Leaders. Back in the Second Republic, when different political associations often came together to form political parties, the first rule was to disband all previously existing groups and to insist that “everyone joins the party as an individual, not as a group.” No formal groups are allowed to form within the party afterwards, though in practice old alliances and camps persist. When a formal faction emerges within a party, such as nPDP in 2014, it was usually preparing the ground for exit. A disgruntled politician does not however exit from a party until he does as much damage to it as he possibly can. That way, he will be more valued by the new party that he defects to. In 2015 Governors Rotimi Amaechi, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Murtala Nyako, Aliyu Wamakko and Abdulfatah Ahmed did much damage to PDP before they defected to APC, where they were welcomed with open arms and state party structures were promptly handed over to them.
If Babachir and Dogara were merely setting the stage for their exit from APC, they probably overdid it because the APC Northern Christians Political Summit they organized in Abuja resembled The Great Schism of 1053AD. They did not stop at the political issue at hand, but threw in many other issues from appointment of polytechnic rectors to selection of traditional rulers. The Babachir/Dogara Schism however falls short of a Reformation because it lacked Martin Luther’s moral authority. Babachir is a problematic champion of Christendom. He fell from a prestigious government position due to the infamous grass cutter scandal. In the run up to the APC presidential primaries, Babachir did much to derail a prominent candidate, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who is also a pastor.
The most obvious reason was that Osinbajo chaired the presidential panel that probed Babachir’s deals in the grass cutter scandal and recommended his sack. How can a man who helped to torpedo the presidential aspiration of a Christian pastor, turn around and say Christians are marginalized because they did not get a running mate? Between running mate and the candidate, who is in a better position to help the faith? As for his allegations against Tinubu, it was rather late in the day to accuse him of religious sectarianism because Babachir was on record in 2015 as saying that it was Tinubu who stood firm and ensured his appointment as SGF despite opposition from some Northern quarters.
Dogara too could be interrogated for multiple standards. In 2015 when he clinched the House Speakership even though he was not favoured by President Buhari, he filled a plane with Sayawa tribal chiefs from Bauchi State and took them to Sokoto to thank Governor Aminu Tambuwal, whom he credited with single handedly making him the speaker. Maybe, as Babachir and Dogara alleged at the Summit, there is an agenda to politically, religiously and economically suppress and oppress the Northern Christian. But neither Babachir nor Dogara is a good bearer of this message, if first Tinubu and then Tambuwal helped them to attain the highest positions in their political career, as they themselves attested.
Both men were initially mentioned as likely running mates to Tinubu after he won the APC ticket. Trouble is, politicians’ top calculus in these matters is demonstrable electoral strength. Both men’s home states of Bauchi and Adamawa are PDP controlled. It was not for nothing that the three men shortlisted for Atiku Abubakar to choose his running mate from were all from PDP-controlled Southern states. APC members from Babachir’s Adamawa State and from Dogara’s Bauchi State were quick to point out that both men lost their local government areas to PDP in the 2019 presidential polls. In Babachir’s Hong LGA, they said, APC got 20,471 votes while PDP got 23,039. In Dogara’s Bogoro LGA, APC got 5,284 votes while PDP got 23,664. The kind of figures that party chiefs like are those from running mate Kashim Shettima’s Maiduguri Metropolitan LGA, where APC got 146,181 votes to PDP’s 9,632.
But if Babachir and Dogara were looking for a way out of APC, why did they go to Wike, who is possibly looking for a way out of PDP? While the two of them may be looking towards PDP, Wike might be looking in the direction of APC. He recently said that his party’s presidential candidate, Atiku, told many lies during his Arise TV interview. Wike recently tweeted that he “will speak soon and Nigerians will know the truth of all that has transpired in the PDP in recent times.” It promises to be quite a story. The operational word here is “all.” Can Wike tell all that transpired, including the tools that he used to come second at a convention widely alleged to be awash in monetary inducement of delegates?
It is not for nothing that Army Generals do not allow their troops to fraternize with the enemy in war or even in peacetime. They may find out that they have much in common. Babachir and Dogara’s visit to Wike may not achieve much because each side is looking to cross over to the side that the other is trying to exit from. Trouble is, in case each one remains where he is, they, just like that German soldier and his American enemy, will be thinking that they have much in common with the other side. Governor Wike, whose mouth is a human assault rifle, may hold off some rounds lest he hits his new found friends.
“We have two very important people contesting this (Presidential) election in 2023. They are Atiku Abubakar of the PDP and Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the APC.”
Former Senator representing Kogi West Senatorial district, Dino Melaye, who made this observation today, July 31 at the Public declaration for Atiku and induction ceremony by the Diamond Ladies in Politics in Abuja, said that the notion held in certain quarters that the presidential candidate of the Labour party would spring surprises at the presidential poll is not true.
According to Dino Melaye, Peter Obi has no political clout to spring a surprise in the presidential election because his supporters, for now, are only on social media.
“Obi is a fantastic Nigerian but he was not known nationally until Atiku identified him. Atiku is a talent hunter. Everyone who was a reformer in this country between 1999 to date was a discovery of Atiku.”
This was even as the Convener of the Diamond Ladies in politics, Princess Maimunat Wada, promised to mobilise over two million votes for Atiku in the presidential poll.
She contended that Atiku has the wherewithal to address the challenges bedeviling the country.
“With Atiku Abubakar on the saddle of leadership of the country, there would be inclusiveness of Nigerians irrespective of their tribal and religious affiliations. Atiku choice of his running mate, His Excellency Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, his array of business partners, investments spread across the country and even the ethnic backgrounds of his spouses are clear testimony that he would be a true Nigerian president.
”As of today, His Excellency Atiku Abubakar remains the only candidate that has released a clear roadmap to economic recovery of the country. This simply means he is the most prepared presidential candidate in the country.”
The newly elected President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Archbishop Daniel Okoh, has predicted that a miracle is waiting to happen in Nigeria, advising Christians not to put their trust in man.
He said, in his sermon at the 2022 men’s conference of Christ Holy Church International, titled, ‘By faith, give leadership,’ that “there is a miracle waiting to happen in this country and it will surely become a reality. We should not put our trust in man.”
The CAN President described Nigeria as one of the best places to live in, because of the liberties the people enjoyed compared to the citizens of other nations.
“Nigeria, for me, is one of the best places to live in. I love Nigeria, and we must put our collective freedom to good use.”
The cleric said that the problems facing Christians are not peculiar to Nigeria, even as he tasked the body of Christ to demonstrate leadership by providing hope to the rest of the country by faith in God.
“The Church is under attack, but not only in Nigeria. Globally, the truth is under attack.
“There’s no generation that had not had its own challenges. We are facing ours and must find a way to wriggle ourselves out of it.
“So many things polarize the people at this time, but as Christians, we need to always stand together, knowing that we serve the same Lord and share in the same heritage.
“It is our unity and oneness that gives us the force to contend with whatever that opposes our very existence. When we are together, as people of God, there’s nothing we cannot conquer. Together, we can give a sense of security to our nation.”
He called on the youths not to allow themselves to be used as political thugs, adding that the era of thuggery in the nation’s electoral system is over.
“They must positively participate in the political process. I am saying with a sense of duty that our youths must not give in to electoral violence.
“We must expand the space to inject new ideas into the systems. The world is moving on, and Nigeria cannot afford to be left behind.”
“In this (election) season, the Christians are going to provide leadership by faith, but with our two eyes opened.
The CAN President is sure that Nigerians, especially Christians would not use the political party as a deciding factor in the choice of a candidate to succeed President Muhammadu Buhari in 2023.
According to him, Nigerians have gone beyond voting based on the political party presenting candidates.
Cost of flight tickets has sky rocketed as Nigerian airlines have increased domestic flight fares to N100,000.00 for an hour flight. Flights from Lagos to Abuja that was going for N50,000 has now doubled.
Checks on airlines showed that AirPeace economy ticket for today, July 31, was priced at N100,000 just as seats on Max Air flights were going for N125,000 and N130,000, respectively. Seats on an Air Peace flight scheduled for 6:30 a.m. today were still selling for N85,000, with flights at 2:55 p.m. and 3:20 p.m. sold out. At the time, Max Air’s flights scheduled for 5:20 p.m. and 6:15 p.m. were still selling for N84,000 and N75,000, respectively.
Also, prices for economy tickets in Arik ranged between N80,595 and N93,452, with Ibom Air’s only available today flight selling its economy ticket for N78,000.
The increase in airfare is the result of multiple challenges confronting the aviation industry, including an increase in the price of jet A1 and the high cost of facility maintenance caused by constant inflation and the depreciation of the country’s currency.
In July, Nigeria’s oldest airline, Aero Contractors, temporarily suspended operations due to the scorching impact of skyrocketing price of aviation fuel. The airline said operations in the past few months had been challenging, citing high cost of maintenance, skyrocketing fuel prices, inflation, and forex scarcity as some of the challenges faced by airline operators.
Also, in a bid to further reduce disruptions in the aviation industry, the House of Representatives ruled in May that six million litres of aviation fuel be sold to airline operators at the rate of N480 per litre for the next three months.
However, reports have predicted that airlines would shut down operations in the country over the incessant hike in aviation fuel, along with other environmental challenges.
Four informants suspected to be leaking information to terrorists about troops’ locations and movements around the outskirts of Abuja have been arrested. They are already in the custody of a security agency. An intelligence operative hinted that the suspects were arrested with sophisticated equipment, including Walkie-Talkies, revolver, knives, amulets and old Chinese-made phones, that do not use data. The source, who was part of the raid that led to the arrest of the informants, said discreet investigations are ongoing to confirm their leaders and financiers. Activities of the terrorist-collaborators were responsible for the recent attacks around the vicinity of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, the source added. “The suspects are currently being interrogated to determine if they are working for terrorist groups or armed bandits or other elements with ulterior motives. “I can authoritatively inform you that, while the military has deliberately refused to provide updates since the attack on Kuje Prison, to last attacks on troops at the Bwari and Zuma Rock axis, the joint security task force has so far killed more than 70 armed criminals, including dangerous Kuje prison escapees and terrorists,” the source added This is even as the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) is said to be coordinating a discreet intelligence operation that is providing new clues and traces of groups behind recent attacks on security personnel and formations. Source: PRNigeria
It has been confirmed that Nigerians are drinking more alcohol with the Nigeria Breweries Plc announcing revenue of N274.03 billion for the first half of the year ended June 30, 2022.
The company, in a statement today, July 31, by its Secretary/Legal Director, Uaboi Agbebaku, in Lagos, said that the revenue represented a growth of 31 per cent when compared with N209.22 billion posted in the preceding period of 2021.
According to him, the company also recorded a profit after tax of N19.08 billion against N7.86 billion in the corresponding period of 2021, an increase of 142.8 per cent. Agbebaku said that basic earning per share stood at 237k as against 97k recorded in the comparative period.
He said that the company’s increase in profit was driven mainly by top line growth resulting from its pricing strategy and better mix.
Agbebaku said that further analysis of the results revealed that cost of sales increased by 18.3 per cent to N155.35 billion from N131.34 billion in the corresponding period, adding that marketing, distribution and administrative expenses rose by 44.6 per cent to N84.45 billion from N58.42 billion in 2021.
These expenses, Agbebaku said, were driven by the increase in commercial activities post COVID-19, rising diesel prices and higher wages arising from collective labour agreements. He added that though interest expenses were lower, the net finance cost was higher due to foreign exchange losses arising from a higher cost of meeting foreign obligations to overseas partners.
“In spite of these challenges, our business continues to build momentum and deliver consistently profitable growth even in the context of a very challenging operating environment. Our best-in-class portfolio of brands provides a unique platform that positions us well to lead and grow the beer and malt category and drive superior long-term value creation.”
He expressed the company’s commitment to continuously evaluate its financial position and business performance to ensure a strong balance sheet, while remaining dynamic in its response to operational challenges vis-à-vis the economy.
“In line with our certification and status as a great place to work company, we would also continue to prioritise the health, safety, and welfare of employees and partners.”
“They (APC) have done their eight years and they are now trying to blackmail us that we too would go along with them in this power shift. The power shift is for them, not for us. For us, power has never shifted to us.”
These were the views of the founding father of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ambassador Aminu Basir Wali in an interview he granted the reporter of The Sunday Sun, published today, July 31.
Ambassador Aminu Wali, who was also the Minister of Foreign Affairs up to the end of Goodluck Jonathan tenure as President of Nigeria, said that the rotation thing in the PDP had been overblown.
“I am a founding father of the party . I was a deputy to Solomon Lar. Yes, Solomon Lar came from the North- Central and the President came from the South. But people tend to forget that either by accident or by God’s action or will, that was derailed when Yar’Adua died.
“As a Northerner and a founding father of this party, we believe in trying to be fair to every side. But when Yar’Adua died what was expected by our people here was for (Goodluck) Jonathan to complete Yar’Adua’s tenure and step aside.
“So, this never happened. Still, they went ahead and elected Jonathan to do his first term. It is only that he failed in the second term simply because of the crime of not leaving after that first term to allow a Northerner to continue the tenure of the rotation.
“These are some of the issues that people tend to forget. Now, we in the PDP, we have had 16 years of power. Out of the 16 years, how many years have a Northerner from PDP governed this country? Tell me. Two years and bit! It was only Yar’Adua.
“So people should not judge me using the values and template of the APC. You should not judge me and say that Buhari has spent eight years in power. Don’t count me under APC. Don’t count my party there. We are not there. It is another arrangement by another party, not my party. It was an arrangement by another party which is now trying to force it on us.”
Full text of the interview, conducted by Desmond Mgbo, is reproduced here:
Let’s have your thoughts on the recently held PDP convention and the challenges that emerged from the exercise, especially the Wike issue that is raging at the moment?
People who are not conversant with our party, the PDP, I mean observers who are not deeply involved in the formation of the PDP, may not understand the complications on issues of this nature. But since we started the PDP, so many things have happened that are more serious than what is happening today. But by the process of consultations we are able to resolve a lot of issues that are even worse than the Wike issue that you are talking about. Historically, because you have to go back, Wike belonged to this party way back from the beginning. He became a local government chairman, he became chief of staff, he became a minister of state and he now became a governor, all on the platform of the PDP. People who are talking are making it look like it is one easy thing for Wike to wake up one morning and say I quit. That is going to be very difficult for him because he has his stakes in the PDP. Like one of my friends had said, how can you go and take away what you gave to your mother. That is the tight position of Wike. The PDP made him what he is today. From a local government chairman to what he is today. So, whatever the people are talking about how he sustained PDP, well that is true. But they should know that your mother cannot give birth to you and then you turn around and say that you cannot take care of her.
So , it is going to be difficult for Wike to leave the PDP, given his stakes in the party?
That is exactly what I mean. But secondly, his followership, till date, are all in PDP. Okay, look at it this way. He wants to win the governorship of Rivers State and his followers have already filled their candidacy on the platform of the PDP. Are they going to throw away everything? Is Wike going to sacrifice all of these and all that we have been through with him simply because what happened, happened. In politics, you win and lose. What I have gone through in Kano by the grace of the then national leadership of the party, I should have quit, I should have left the party, but that is not the option. I took every kind of humiliation as far as the party was concerned, but I bid my time and today things have changed.
The issue of betrayal was one of the things that played out at the convention especially from people like Tambuwal who did what they did. How do you see his action?
Well, I don’t think I will call that a betrayal. Yes, back in 2019 , Wike was a champion that led the charge on behalf of Tambuwal. That was done, they were friends. But this time around, Tambuwal declared that he wanted to run for the president and Wike now declared that he also wants to run for the president too. So, obviously they would have to be opposed to each other unless they sit down and agree on how to resolve it, which never happened and eventually bad blood was created by people from both sides because this is politics and this is the survival of the fittest. At the end of the day, they fell out.
At the convention…?
Even before the convention. They were not as paddy, paddy as they used to be. Each one of them was seriously pursuing to be the presidential candidate. So, I am sure that there wouldn’t be any love lost under those circumstances. So, betrayal or not, it all depends on which side you are. As far as Tambuwal was concerned, he realized that the chances of winning and they probably had not come to terms between him and Wike or some of the other aspirants. So if Tambuwal decided to throw in the towel, the aspirant that he feels can win the election might be his choice. I don’t think that is a betrayal. That is probably his calculation to his own survival. I don’t think that I can call it betrayal. If Wike found himself in the same situation that Tambuwal found himself, maybe he is going to take steps that would preserve his own political survival.
Let’s look at the choice of Okowa, at what point did he come in, he was never one of the gladiators, but he was chosen ahead of many others?
Everybody has got his own way of assessing people and trying to see how best they fit into a context. I don’t know Okowa personally. I only met with him at the National Executive Council meetings. He passes and I pass. But his demeanor and that of Wike are some of the things that those who decided in his favour noted. Wike is somebody that is dedicated to the party and he goes out of his way to do whatever it takes to assist the party, especially financially. But in the process, he creates other problems, which are what people don’t even say. He went about his campaigns and the kind of dust he raised and leaves behind in everywhere he goes left people in scare. What would happen if this man becomes the presidential candidate of the party? He has more or less quarreled with everybody in the party. His language, his demeanor, the way he approaches people and all that. Yes, you can be as blunt as you want, but the language you use should not be offensive. And this is unfortunately what trailed after Wike and I believe that this must have been the main cause for a lot of people to turn against him. He is a very decent human being, one-on-one, when you don’t have any issue with him, you are bound to like him, but he lacked the finishing. We served in the same council even though I didn’t stay long with him. I came in and three or four months after he left to go for his governorship race. And for me as Foreign Minister, mostly I was never in council.
The running mates have become key factors in determining who wins the presidential elections in Nigeria. Can Okowa bring real voting value to Atiku and the PDP come 2023? Does he have the huge followership in the South-south or among the Igbo people where he tribally belongs just like you had with Peter Obi?
He may not be able to do that. But even when Peter Obi ran as a deputy to Atiku, the votes we got did not translate to what we had expected in 2019. Yes, Atiku got his 25 per cent in most of these states, but I still believe that Atiku would be able to get the same 25 per cent even from the Southeast without Obi. That is my belief, but I may be wrong. But Okowa by his demeanor is somebody that is peaceful, he is never controversial and for a presidential candidate, somebody that expects to be president, you will want to have somebody that is peaceful, knowing that there would not be a lot of problems in his absence. I think that this is what went for Okowa, because I think that generally within the party, both North and South, Okowa has respect from everybody. He may not be the sort of crowd puller that Wike is, but for the presidential candidate and for those senior members of the party, I know that they would be more comfortable with somebody that would not create a lot of problems wherever he goes and would leave the president to spend most of his time trying to sort out little problems wherever he goes rather than facing administrative problems. This is what, in my assessment, went against Wike. But for me, I don’t have anything against Wike, even though he created my own problems in my state. Him and Kwankwaso, they connived and created the internal party problems that we are facing in the state. But for me this is politics. I will not take it against him.
The national chairman of the PDP is from the North and the presidential candidate of the party is from the same North, What is the party doing about this situation to accommodate the diverse nature of Nigeria?
You see this rotation thing in the PDP is being overblown. I am a founding father of the party . I was a deputy to Solomon Lar. Yes, Solomon Lar came from the North- central and the president came from the South. But people tend to forget that either by accident or by God’s action or will, that was derailed when Yar’Adua died. As a Northerner and a founding father of this party, we believe in trying to be fair to every side. But when Yar’Adua died what was expected by our people here was for (Goodluck) Jonathan to complete Yar’Adua’s tenure and step aside. So, this never happened. Still, they went ahead and elected Jonathan to do his first term. It is only that he failed in the second term simply because of the crime of not leaving after that first term to allow a Northerner to continue the tenure of the rotation. These are some of the issues that people tend to forget. Now, we in the PDP, we have had 16 years of power. Out of the 16 years, how many years have a Northerner from PDP governed this country? Tell me. Two years and bit! It was only Yar’Adua. So people should not judge me using the values and template of the APC. You should not judge me and say that Buhari has spent eight years in power. Don’t count me under APC, Don’t count my party there. We are not there. It is another arrangement by another party, not my party. It was an arrangement by another party which is now trying to force it on us. They have done their eight years and they are now trying to blackmail us that we too would go along with them in this power shift. The power shift is for them, not for us. For us, power has never shifted to us.
But there is this understanding that if the presidential candidate of the party is from a particular section of the country, the chairman should come from another section of the country?
Not the candidate. If the president is elected and he is already a president, then maybe given two, three months, the chairman would have to give way. After all, what the party chairman is doing now is to go out and fight and ensure that we win the elections. The booties are coming in after you have the president in place. Now, once you have the president in place, then the chairman would move to another place. That is exactly what happened when Ahmadu Ali delivered Yar’ Adua and then left.
There is this allegation that because of the old relationship existing between Atiku, Ayu and some of the older members of the PDP, you subtly undermined the zoning process of the party to pave way for Atiku, is this true?
Look we did not. I personally did not. I was a member of the zoning committee of the party. We had a few sessions when (Governor Samuel) Ortom was the chairman. And we argued from angles. I remember Sule Lamido standing up to say that you cannot enforce what is now for the APC for the PDP. He said that as far as I am concerned, I am closer to somebody in Arochuchukwu in PDP than I am close to somebody in APC in Jigawa State. I don’t have anything to do with them, I don’t belong to them. How can you now tell me that we have to zone it to the South simply because APC has been ruling for eight years. For the eight years of the APC, I am still in court. For the eight years of the APC, what has the North gotten out of the eight years of the APC. We have our ways of doing things. If it were the PDP that I have been there for eight years , I am sure we would have something to show. So, the argument still goes back to the fact that they are two distinct parties, with different approaches, with different principles and different reason for being formed.
But the ordinary Nigerian on the street expect that if the North has tested power, let it go to the next region after eight years for the sake of balance?
But we are not quarrelling with that. I asked you a question, in the 16 years that the PDP has ruled, how many years has the North been in power. Out of the 16 years of the PDP’s rule, how many years were ruled by a Northerner? You cannot come an lump me up with Buhari and his criminals and say that you people have ruled. After all, all of us in the PDP, we suffered. The North did not gain anything. The North is in turmoil. I could have expected that Southerners say okay this guy has badly messed them up, let’s get some cool headed person among them to sanitize that side of the country. With the atrocities that my people went through under the APC, you can’t come and tell me – no, no, no, no!
Still on the PDP, what exactly led Peter Obi to leave the PDP?
I really don’t know. I am being honest with you .Peter Obi is a very decent person. I like him. I like him and I remember telling Doyin (Okupe). That was before Peter left. I told him that I have listened to Peter and I have known him for sometimes. He is one of the best materials that we have. But unfortunately, where he is coming from, we have a problem. If they the leadership of the Igbo cannot contain this IPOB and the rascal called Kanu, how can I take my fate and give it to somebody from there? Well, I can’t take my fate and my people’s fate and give it to people that cannot be able to put their house in order.
But we have Boko Haram in the North and yet Nigerians took their fate and gave to a Northerner? How can the people in the East take their fate and give to Atiku?
Yes, we have Boko Haram…
(Cuts in ) And bandits too!
We do, we do. But we have to look at the underlining situation that brought about IPOB and that brought this other people. This is important. The Boko Haram, the ISWAP, they are all imported. This is as a result of the revolution in Libya. We can trace all these problems to Libya. When it sparked off, it affected the Sahel region and eventually affected Nigeria. Yes, we have a problem. It is not people like me and you in the North that are involved. We are still able to control the responsible people. They are not part of these atrocities. But in the Southeast, how somebody like Kanu, gives orders that there is no work on Mondays and with all the paraphernalia of power in all the states in the Southeast, they cannot contain that situation.
Let’s get back to your impression of Peter Obi?
Peter Obi is somebody… as I was telling Doyin about six weeks ago, I said that even if Peter did not become the vice president of this country, from what I know of Peter’s capacity, whatever government that comes, if it is the PDP, he must be in charge of the economy because that is where he is good at. I listened to him , not once, not twice and not three times, he knows his onions and I think that his approach will bring solutions to this country, economic solutions. He is worthy of praise. But the political solution which is the basis on which the economic solution would survive, it is what is causing the problem.
Getting your thoughts clear, you are saying that the Igbo, the South Easterners and the Igbo generally from wherever – Rivers, Delta states and wherever – as long as there is the IPOB problem, cannot be president of Nigeria?
No, no, no! I am not saying that. It maybe there…, but if it is contained to a manageable proportion… you have five states in the Southeast. Now, in every single state, the IPOB has more control…,it is just as you say in Sokoto or Zamfara, Katsina and a bit of Kaduna…in every of the five states of the Southeast, who calls the shots? And once you have an active secessionist tendency in any part of Nigeria, you cannot afford to now allow a leeway for those people to succeed in the succession. Nobody is saying you cannot. If you follow the constitutional way of dissolution of the country, nobody can fight you because it is there in the constitution. Follow the constitution, down to a referemdum. Fine.
Sir, what are the chances of the PDP in the 2023 presidential elections given the fact that Kwankwaso appears to be holding you people to ransom in some of the key northern states?
I am not very sure of that claim, but what I will do here is to make my own assessment.
Yes, let us have your assessment?
We may have a tough thing going in Kano, but that is the only state that I will say we may have a tough thing going on. But from all indications, every educated voter simply knows what he is doing, simply knows that if you are talking about the presidency, you will be risking your votes if you vote for NNPP because the candidate would not make it. So, for those informed voters, we will try to inform them that don’t waste your votes. Give it to whoever is going to win. I supported Atiku. I support him and the last time, I supported him. I was not looking for anything. I supported him because I believe that we started this party with the man and he has more exposure, more understanding of the national problem that we have today more than any other candidate. So far, he is more qualified than any other candidate to face our problems which we inherited from the APC. And it would take another three years or four for any new comer to come in and understand the problems. But for Atiku , he has been there for eight years as the vice president and he was in charge of the economy mind you; like what Osinbajo is supposed to be doing, which is a farce. Because even if the guy is capable, he was never given the chance. But Atiku got the opportunity, thank God for Obasanjo and he brought good people. People who manned those parastatals. He brought good people who knew what they are doing and they were able to help Obasanjo’s administration. By the time Obasanjo left, we had no debts. Today, our total income in this country would not pay for the interest of the loans that we have collected.
Kwankwaso has been accused of controlling the Kano State executive of the PDP under the leadership of Shehu Sagagi despite the fact that he was no longer in the party and, therefore, creating a bulk of the problems affecting the PDP from flying in the state?
That is a fact. When Kwankwaso was leaving, he deliberately left Sagagi and his team to stay put in the party to create as much havoc as they could in the party. Their intention was to have crisis going on whereby we would not have a single candidate in Kano under the PDP. That would have been a hundred per cent success for Sagagi and his group. But thank God it didn’t happen that way. Why because we didn’t give up. If I had left, going through what I did, then they would have succeeded. But I refused. I was a founding father. When I was funding part of this party, none of those people was around. And I was committed to it and I am still committed to it. The only time that I will now throw in the towel is hopefully and hopefully I pray that we take over power in 2023, then I will totally withdraw, not to be part of the party anymore. But for now, we are in very, very difficult situation as a party and as a country.
Kwankwso’s hold on the party in the state through these characters, what will be the solution?
The solution will soon come by the grace of God because there are cases in God. One is the dissolution if the executive by the national working committee which was nullified by Justice Taiwo. It is still there. This is a party’s decision and the court cannot tell the party who to run its affairs. And there a few cases too. We are still waiting for these cases. If Abuja court overturns that Taiwo’s decision, then Sagagi and his company are gone and whatever they had done within that time is illegal, including the Abacha, including congress and including whatever INEC might say, they are all illegal.
One last question, the Muslim-Muslim ticket of the APC seems to have polarized the political space. What is your take on this?
Well, I have always believed in not getting too involved in this religion thing because I have always been a very liberal person. I will still go back to when we formed the party. Up to the last minute, I have always been an (Alex) Ekuweme man, not a (Shehu) Shagari man. I staked my support and everything for Ekwueme, not Obasanjo. And I have always had very, very close friends from all over the country and religion has never played any key role in my political relationships. It is very, very unfortunate that this thing is taking a bigger dimension under the APC because whatever problems that we now had is being exasperated by the seven years or so of the APC. We are not like this before. But because Buhari has not done what he was supposed to do as the leader of this country, which is to be transparently liberal as far as religion is concerned. He is not. He has never been liberal about religion. Religion should not be playing a role in our political development because politics is something that keeps evolving and improving as it evolves. But when you come to put religion into the equation, you are complicating things a lot more because you are forcing the religious divide and unfortunately, unfortunately Buhari has 80 per cent of the blame in what is happening today. He should have had the courage to be the leader of the APC and say yes Bola, we have gone to the convention, yes, this is the person that won, but you go and bring a Christian as your running mate. After all, when Yar’Adua was elected, Obasanjo called all the aspirants, including Peter Odili, who would have won, he said all of you go and withdraw for Yar’Adua. The man never bought any form. That is what leadership is all about.
So, you are largely blaming Buhari for the wave of controversy bothering on the choice of the same faith ticket in his party?
Yes , because he is the leader of his party. He is the leader of the party and he is the leader of the country and he knows the implications of same faith ticket, especially coming from particularly an institution like the military, he knows the implications. So, he should have taken a firm decision and say this is what he wants done to avert this from happening. But he did not. And he is the only person in the APC that has that authority and power to enforce the right decision, but he did not. Well for me, we have picked a Christian as our running mate. Those that are not satisfied with the Muslim-Muslim ticket in the APC are very much welcomed. You too, you are welcomed to PDP if you are not satisfied.
Do you see Nigeria surviving the kind of faith- based crisis that would rock the country should Tinubu emerge as the next president of the country?
Well, I thank God… God loves all of us. He would not make Tinubu win this election because He loves Nigeria.
Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello has directed the suspension of a First Class traditional ruler, the Ohi of Eganyi who serves as Chairman of Ajaokuta Traditional Area Council, Alhaji Musa Isah Achuja with immediate effect.
The Governor, in a letter to the State Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, directed that the Chairman of Ajaokuta Local Government Area, Mustapha Aka’aba should be queried over the security breach in Ajaoukuta with the instruction that the chairman should reply within 24 hours.
The governor’s directive came against the background of the recent security breach in the area which led to the untimely death of some security personnel on their legitimate engagements of maintaining law and orders.
The governor strongly warned other traditional rulers across the state who may have connection in one way or the other with criminal elements in their domains to desist forthwith.
According to him, his administration will deal ruthlessly with anybody who romances with criminal elements no matter how highly placed they are.
Governor Yahaya Bello, in a statement today, July 31 by his Chief Press Secretary, Onogwu Muhammed, also directed that all unofficial movements of the local government council chairmen out of their territories and other journeys without due process are restricted
The governor warned that no amount of connivance with criminals will deter him from his fundamental responsibility of protecting lives and property of the citizens and residents of the state.
Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the 2023 election, Atiku Abubakar is celebrating the crossing over, by a lawyer, Daniel Bwala, from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) to his PDP.
Taking to his Twitter account today, July 30, Atiku welcomed Bwala to the PDP and commended his courage and conviction.
Atiku wrote: “Welcome to the @OfficialPDPNig, the party that truly embodies the associations of the Nigeria of our dreams. Your courage, conviction and kind words are well appreciated.”
Bwala officially joined the PDP yesterday, July 29, after quitting APC weeks ago, saying that his cross over from the ruling party was on principles and convictions, based on its Muslim-Muslim Presidential ticket.
The Presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, has warned Senators not to impeach President Muhammadu Buhari.
Kwankwaso, former Governor of Kano State, who dropped the warning when he visited the Kwara State Governor, AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, in Ilorin, asked the Senators to tread carefully.
“I don’t know the facts that they have. But as their former colleague, I want them to tread very softly.
“They should not be in a hurry to rock the boat. Yes, I know they have reasons to be worried, I am sure everybody in this country is worried about insecurity; because some of these things could happen to anybody. Even the presidential fleet was attacked in Katsina State. So, I think we need to do more.”
Some senators had last week, gave President Buhari a six-week deadline to address the security challenges in the country or face impeachment proceedings.
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Concert Of Anti-Party Activists, By Mahmud Jega
Insofar as Governor Wike is actively seeking to undermine his PDP party’s Atiku Abubakar/Ifeanyi Okowa presidential ticket and insofar as Babachir and Dogara are actively trying to undermine their APC party’s Bola Tinubu/Kashim Shettima presidential ticket, the threesome meeting is best described as a concert of anti-party activists. I do not know if the term existed in the First Republic. But when Second Republic politics kicked off in 1978-79, political pages of newspapers were soon replete with stories of politicians being expelled by their political parties for what was called “anti-party activity.”
Anti-party activity was broadly defined in that era to include paying a social visit to the home of a member of another party, giving out your daughter in marriage to the son of a member of a rival party, allowing tenants in your compound to hoist the flag of another party, or even being seen exchanging banters by the roadside with a member of a rival party. To politicians, anti-party activity is the equivalent of a soldier fraternising with the enemy in wartime. There was this story I once read that during the First World War, German and Allied unit commanders in one small sector in France declared a Christmas Day truce. The guns fell silent; one German soldier stood up in his trench, waved at enemy soldiers and wished them merry Christmas! Some Allied soldiers responded, and they soon emerged from trenches, met in the no-man’s land in-between and fraternized.
When the truce ended, the soldiers dived back into their trenches and resumed fighting, but with less enthusiasm. As one American soldier later recounted, a German soldier he met during the truce was his age mate, who just like him was from a rural area, who just like him dropped out of college when he was conscripted into the army, and who just like him had a mother and a sister who were praying for him to survive the war. The commanders on both sides who orchestrated that damaging truce were arrested and, at least on the German side, were executed.
Babachir, Dogara and Wike may not be in danger right now of facing the political equivalent of arrest, trial and execution by their respective political parties because both major parties are still reeling from the aftermath of their nominating conventions and in particular, their choice of presidential running mates. What did the three men discuss at their meeting behind closed doors? Babachir told reporters after the meeting that “their mission was a brotherly visit to the Governor of Rivers” because “every now and then, the Bible enjoins you to visit one another.” The question is, why did Babachir ignore this biblical prescription to visit Wike all these years, until now, when he thought he found common political cause with him? Dogara on his part said “they were on a quest to build an all-inclusive Nigeria,” meaning that his party’s Muslim/Muslim ticket is an all-exclusive Nigeria.
Tellingly, the two men went to Rivers straight from a meeting in Abuja of a hastily formed organization called APC Northern Christian Political Leaders. Back in the Second Republic, when different political associations often came together to form political parties, the first rule was to disband all previously existing groups and to insist that “everyone joins the party as an individual, not as a group.” No formal groups are allowed to form within the party afterwards, though in practice old alliances and camps persist. When a formal faction emerges within a party, such as nPDP in 2014, it was usually preparing the ground for exit. A disgruntled politician does not however exit from a party until he does as much damage to it as he possibly can. That way, he will be more valued by the new party that he defects to. In 2015 Governors Rotimi Amaechi, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Murtala Nyako, Aliyu Wamakko and Abdulfatah Ahmed did much damage to PDP before they defected to APC, where they were welcomed with open arms and state party structures were promptly handed over to them.
If Babachir and Dogara were merely setting the stage for their exit from APC, they probably overdid it because the APC Northern Christians Political Summit they organized in Abuja resembled The Great Schism of 1053AD. They did not stop at the political issue at hand, but threw in many other issues from appointment of polytechnic rectors to selection of traditional rulers. The Babachir/Dogara Schism however falls short of a Reformation because it lacked Martin Luther’s moral authority. Babachir is a problematic champion of Christendom. He fell from a prestigious government position due to the infamous grass cutter scandal. In the run up to the APC presidential primaries, Babachir did much to derail a prominent candidate, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who is also a pastor.
The most obvious reason was that Osinbajo chaired the presidential panel that probed Babachir’s deals in the grass cutter scandal and recommended his sack. How can a man who helped to torpedo the presidential aspiration of a Christian pastor, turn around and say Christians are marginalized because they did not get a running mate? Between running mate and the candidate, who is in a better position to help the faith? As for his allegations against Tinubu, it was rather late in the day to accuse him of religious sectarianism because Babachir was on record in 2015 as saying that it was Tinubu who stood firm and ensured his appointment as SGF despite opposition from some Northern quarters.
Dogara too could be interrogated for multiple standards. In 2015 when he clinched the House Speakership even though he was not favoured by President Buhari, he filled a plane with Sayawa tribal chiefs from Bauchi State and took them to Sokoto to thank Governor Aminu Tambuwal, whom he credited with single handedly making him the speaker. Maybe, as Babachir and Dogara alleged at the Summit, there is an agenda to politically, religiously and economically suppress and oppress the Northern Christian. But neither Babachir nor Dogara is a good bearer of this message, if first Tinubu and then Tambuwal helped them to attain the highest positions in their political career, as they themselves attested.
Both men were initially mentioned as likely running mates to Tinubu after he won the APC ticket. Trouble is, politicians’ top calculus in these matters is demonstrable electoral strength. Both men’s home states of Bauchi and Adamawa are PDP controlled. It was not for nothing that the three men shortlisted for Atiku Abubakar to choose his running mate from were all from PDP-controlled Southern states. APC members from Babachir’s Adamawa State and from Dogara’s Bauchi State were quick to point out that both men lost their local government areas to PDP in the 2019 presidential polls. In Babachir’s Hong LGA, they said, APC got 20,471 votes while PDP got 23,039. In Dogara’s Bogoro LGA, APC got 5,284 votes while PDP got 23,664. The kind of figures that party chiefs like are those from running mate Kashim Shettima’s Maiduguri Metropolitan LGA, where APC got 146,181 votes to PDP’s 9,632.
But if Babachir and Dogara were looking for a way out of APC, why did they go to Wike, who is possibly looking for a way out of PDP? While the two of them may be looking towards PDP, Wike might be looking in the direction of APC. He recently said that his party’s presidential candidate, Atiku, told many lies during his Arise TV interview. Wike recently tweeted that he “will speak soon and Nigerians will know the truth of all that has transpired in the PDP in recent times.” It promises to be quite a story. The operational word here is “all.” Can Wike tell all that transpired, including the tools that he used to come second at a convention widely alleged to be awash in monetary inducement of delegates?
It is not for nothing that Army Generals do not allow their troops to fraternize with the enemy in war or even in peacetime. They may find out that they have much in common. Babachir and Dogara’s visit to Wike may not achieve much because each side is looking to cross over to the side that the other is trying to exit from. Trouble is, in case each one remains where he is, they, just like that German soldier and his American enemy, will be thinking that they have much in common with the other side. Governor Wike, whose mouth is a human assault rifle, may hold off some rounds lest he hits his new found friends.