Category: Lead

  • Free Kanu as parting gift, Ohanaeze tells Buhari

    Free Kanu as parting gift, Ohanaeze tells Buhari

    Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide yesterday urged President Muhammadu Buhari to free the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) Nnamdi Kanu.

    President-General, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, urged President Buhari, who he described as an Igbo son and honourary Ohanaeze member, to ensure Kanu’s release before May 29 as a parting gift to the Southeast.

    Iwuanyanwu spoke at the flag-off of the Oguta/Orashi Waterways hydrographic survey and dredging in Degema, Imo State.

    Kanu was charged with violating the Terrorism Prevention Amendment Act 2013.

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja struck out the remaining seven charges after Justice Binta Nyako of the Federal High Court in Abuja had dismissed eight of the 15 amended counts.

    The appellate court held that Kanu’s extradition from Kenya in June 2021 was a flagrant violation of Nigeria’s extradition treaty and a breach of the IPOB leader’s fundamental human rights.

    It ordered Kanu’s release from the custody of the State Security Service (SSS), where he has been held since he was brought back to Nigeria.

    But, the Federal Government appealed to the Supreme Court and was recently granted leave to file nine new grounds of appeal.

    Iwuanyanwu, addressing Osinbajo, said: “Please, finally, our Vice President, tell our brother and son, President Buhari, that the Ohanaeze Ndigbo – the over 60 million Igbos – request that he should release Nnamdi Kanu.

    “He should release Nnamdi Kanu. Igbos are not seceding. I don’t see why anyone will say Igbos are seceding. Igbos are everywhere. We have investments. Are we going to leave our investments?

    “So, please, I am passing this message to him, because he is my President in Nigeria, but in the Ohanaeze, he has been honoured by us and he’s a member, so he’s my subject there.

    “I am now telling him that Nnamdi Kanu should be released before he (Buhari) departs (on May 29). We’ll be very grateful.”

    Iwuanyanwu also praised President Buhari for addressing some of the marginalisation agitations.

    He said: “I would like the Vice President, when you go, tell Buhari we are very grateful. 

    “When he took office, we were not happy, we complained. But today, at the point of departure, things have changed.

    “I can see that in most states a lot has been done. Here in Imo State, a lot has been done for us. 

    “So, I would like you to tell our son, Buhari, that we are very grateful. And I want Buhari to realise that he is an Igbo son, an honorary Igbo man.

    “He has been honoured by some Igbo states. I think Imo State has honoured him, and Ebonyi has honoured him. Chieftancy title in Igbo land is taken very seriously. 

    “You have to help us tell Buhari that he is an Igbo son, he is a member of Ohaneze Ndigbo by this honour given to him and what I am speaking here today, I am also speaking on his behalf.

    “We are very grateful for what he has done, but before he goes, whatever he can do to bring this project to succeed will be highly appreciated.”

    The Vice President performed the flag-off in a ceremony at the bank of the river in the Oguta council area of Imo.

    Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Lucky Irabor and Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Awwal Gambo, said the project would provide the enabling environment for wealth generation and brisk movement of goods and services.

    Also at the event were the Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Alfred Achebe; Minister for Trade and Investment, Alhaji Muazu Sambo; former Imo governor, Chief Ikedi Ohakim; former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Maurice Iwu; officials of the Imo government as well as top officials of the Nigerian Navy.

  • Supreme Court to hear appeals in Kanu’s case Sept 14 

    Supreme Court to hear appeals in Kanu’s case Sept 14 

    The Supreme Court has fixed hearing for September 14 in the appeals by the Federal Government and the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu.

    The prosecution appealed the Court of Appeal judgment ordering Kanu’s release and quashing the treasonable felony charge against him on the grounds that he was wrongly renditioned from Kenya.

    Kanu appealed the ruling by the Court of Appeal staying the execution of the judgment.

    The appeals could not be heard yesterday due to the Federal Government’s request to file its response to the objection raised by Kanu’s lawyer, Mike Ozekhome (SAN) in his brief of argument.

    Prosecuting counsel, Tijani Gazali (SAN), said he required time to respond to the objection raised in Kanu’s brief of argument, which was served on him the previous day.

    Ozekhome suggested that the appellant could respond orally to the objection and allow the main appeal to be heard.

    The SAN urged the court to grant a short adjournment if the appeal will not be heard in view of Kanu’s worsening health conditions or alternatively hear his bail application.

    He added: “If this is not possible, my should Lords kindly hear the respondent’s application seeking to transfer Kanu from the custody of the Department of State Service (DSS) to the National Correctional Center.”

    Ozekhome said his position was informed by his understanding that Kanu could die in DSS custody.

    Justice John Inyang Okoro said he hoped Kanu would not die in custody. 

    He then called for the court’s diary, and later announced that the only available short date is September 14, 2023. 

    The Justice said: “It would amount to an exercise in futility if any of the application is taken because there is no time to write the ruling and deliver it in three months’ time, particularly because the court will proceed on vacation soon.”

    He said the court was currently preoccupied with political cases, which are time-barred.

    Justice Okoro granted four separate applications brought by the Federal Government for an extension of time.

  • Supreme Court to hear FG’s, Kanu’s appeals Sept 14

    Supreme Court to hear FG’s, Kanu’s appeals Sept 14

    The Supreme Court has scheduled a hearing for September 14 in the appeals by the Federal Government and the leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra, (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu.

    The Fed Govt is appealing the Court of Appeal’s judgment ordering Kanu’s release and quashing the pending treasonable felony charge against him on the grounds that he was wrongly renditioned from Kenya.

    Kanu is appealing the ruling by the Court of Appeal, saying the execution of the judgment appealed by the Fed Govt.

    On Thursday, the appeals could not be heard owing to the Fed Govt’s request to file its response to the objection raised by Kanu’s lawyer, Mike Ozekhome (SAN) in his brief of argument.

    The lawyer to the Fed Govt, Tijani Gazali (SAN), said he required time to respond to the objection raised in Kanu’s brief of argument, served on him the previous day.

    Replying, Ozekhome suggested that the appellant could respond orally to the objection contained in his brief of argument and allow the main appeal to be heard.

    Read Also: Iwuanyanwu urges Buhari to free Kanu before May 29

    Ozekhome urged the court to grant a short adjournment if the appeal will not heard in view of Kanu’s worsening health conditions or alternatively hear his bail application.

    He added: “If this is not possible, my Lords kindly hear the respondent’s application seeking to transfer Kanu from the custody of the Department of State Service (DSS) to the National Correctional Centre.”

    Ozekhome said his position was informed by his understanding that Kanu could die in DSS custody.

    Owing to Ozekhome’s submission, the Presiding Justice, Justice John Inyang Okoro said Kanu will not die. He then called for the court’s diary, and later announced that the only available short date is September 14, 2023.

    The judge said: “It would amount to an exercise in futility if any of the application is taken because there is no time to write the ruling and deliver it in three months time particularly because the court will proceed on vacation soon.’’

    He said the court is preoccupied with political cases which are time bound.

    Earlier, the court granted four separate applications brought by the Fed Govt for extension of time and to deem as properly filed and served on respondents the processes it filed out of time.

  • PEPC to hear Atiku’s motion for live telecast, others Thursday

    PEPC to hear Atiku’s motion for live telecast, others Thursday

    The Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) has fixed hearing for next Thursday in the application by the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar for live telecast of the court’s proceedings.

    While ruling on Thursday, Justice Haruna Tsammani said the application will be heard along with other applications by the respondents including those seeking the dismissal of the joint petition by Atiku and the PDP.

    Read Also: VIDEO: Atiku attends PEPC sitting

    Some of the applicants seeking the dismissal of the entire petition or some aspects of it are filed by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Bola Tinubu and the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The decision to shift further pre-hearing session in the case till Thursday was informed by information by lawyer to the petitioners, Chris Uche (SAN) that parties have met to streamline their positions in relations to documents to be admitted or objected to.

    The court’s sitting was witnessed by Atiku;  former Chairman of the PDP, Uche Secondus; former Cross River Governor Senator Liyel Imoke; Senator Dino Melaye and former Adamawa Governor Boni Haruna among others.

    Details shortly…

  • JUST IN: Atiku attends hearing of petition against Tinubu’s victory

    JUST IN: Atiku attends hearing of petition against Tinubu’s victory

    The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Atiku Abubakar has arrived at the presidential election petition court in Abuja.

    The petition court had adjourned till today for the continuation of the pre-hearing of the petition by the PDP and its presidential candidate against the president-elect.  

    Read Also: Atiku, Makinde PDP, APC mourn Adagunodo

    In the petition marked CA/PEPC/05/2023, the PDP and Atiku are challenging the declaration of Tinubu as the President-elect by the Independent National Electoral Commission.

    Listed as 1st to 3rd respondents in the petition are the Independent National Electoral Commission, Bola Tinubu, and the APC, respectively.

    Details shortly… 

  • APC pledges to revisit zoning amid lawmakers’ protest

    APC pledges to revisit zoning amid lawmakers’ protest

    • Adamu pacifies aggrieved aspirants for speaker
    • More complaints trail recommendation on N’Assembly leadership
    • Akeredolu calls for NEC intervention

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday began moves to douse the tension generated by the zoning and endorsement of candidates for National Assembly principal offices.

    In reaction to the protests by aggrieved Senators and House of Representatives members, the party’s National Chairman, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, said the National Working Committee (NWC) may revisit the zoning formula.

    He also said the protests have imposed on the party leadership the urgency of extensive consultations over zoning.

    APC had on Monday zoned the Senate President to the Southsouth, Deputy Senate President to the Northwest, House Speaker to the Northwest and Deputy Speaker to Southeast.

    Also, the ruling party endorsed Senator Godswill Akpabio for Senate President, Barau Jibrin for Deputy Senate President, Tajudeen Abbas for Speaker and Benjamin Kalu for Deputy Speaker.

    Yesterday, aggrieved aspirants for Speaker –Idris Wase, Aliyu Betera and Yusuf Gagdi – visited the APC National Secretariat in Abuja to protest against zoning and endorsement.

    Also, Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu rejected the zoning of two principal offices to one zone. He urged the NWC to review its positions.

    Senator Osita Izunaso, who is eying the Senate President, urged President Muhammadu Buhari, President-elect Bola Tinubu and Adamu to come up with an acceptable zoning formula in the spirit of equity, fairness and justice.

    But, Abbas and Kalu, who had been nominated by the party, intensified their lobbying and mobilisation of House of Representatives members-elect from the Southeast ahead of next month’s inauguration of the National Assembly.

    Wase complained about the micro-zoning of the presiding offices without consultation, urging the party to review its stand.

    He came in the company with other aspirants: Sani Jaji (Zamfara), Yusuf Gagdyi (Plateau), Muktar Betera (Bornu), Mariam Onuoha (Imo) and Sada Soli (Kastina).

    Also on the entourage were Femi Bamishile (Ekiti), Abubakar Hassan (Nasarawa) and Ahmed Jaha (Borno).

    Rejecting the formula, Wase said: “While we are expecting the zoning arrangement, we heard that the offices had been micro-zoned. None of us was consulted. We only heard that a list has been produced on TV. It is unfortunate. This is one party that enjoys the support of Nigerians.

    “We feel betrayed as if our contributions are not recognised as if we are not members of this party. We don’t know what the party is turning out to be.”

    Wase added: “Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila called for a meeting of the aspirants for consensus. I challenged him that he was working for a candidate. The Speaker alone cannot produce the Speaker and Deputy Speaker.

    “I don’t want to believe that Tinubu is behind this.

    Mr. Chairman, we have worked for the party. We are here to protest and to appeal to you that what has been released would not stand.”

    Commending the lawmakers, Adamu assured that the NWC will look into their request.

    He said: “We have listened to you. We don’t intend to open discussions right now with you in respect of your submissions until we agree we are going to change. If we don’t agree, we would not change.

    “Like some of you who listened to a release from this office, we did say very clearly, that we would endeavour to do more consultations so that we can carry with us the greater number of the members of our great party.

    “There is nothing we do that may not be challenged here and there. But, we should consult with people, giving them their right to a fair hearing before we can say, yes, we are changing positions or we are not changing positions.

    “So, I want to thank you for coming. And you didn’t come with this kind of ‘wuruwuru’ underground, but you chose to come very openly, very straight in broad daylight. The stakeholders are more than the National Working Committee here. Nigerians will hear better what we have just said. 

    “I plead with you in good conscience to give us a little time to take a good and better look at your presentation and open our ears and our eyes more to hear more and see more before we can come up with the finality of your submission and the outcome of it. I thank you for your approach.”

    Akeredolu rejects zoning

    Akeredolu faulted the zoning formula, saying the contents, intentions and motives represented early signs of steps aimed at caging the hard-earned Tinubu Presidency by a few individuals with eyes on Aso Rock power buttons.

    Akeredolu, in a statement he personally signed in Akure, said it stood logic on the head that the Northwest region would be favoured with two presiding officers out of four while the Northcentral was left to suffer the consequences of its innocence and loyalty by having none.

    He said: “The move to zone the National Assembly leadership positions at the behest of interested personalities with perceived closeness to the President-elect, lays the dangerous foundation of distrust, needless suspicion even as it structures nothing but a combination of booby traps. We must avoid all these.

    “Let the North play a stronger, more robust and all-inclusive role in the emergence of the positions zoned to the region, especially the Speakership.

    “Furthermore, it strikes a huge ingratitude that the role of the Progressive Governors Forum appears unimportant. 

    “As leaders of the party in their respective states, there cannot be a greater disservice to them that a consensus was yet to be reached when the NWC hurriedly released a dangerous tool for the opposition in the guise of a zoning formula. To me, even on this note, it’s unacceptable.

    “Does it not also exude a serious discomfort that the aspirants to the Speakership were not consulted, approached and effectively engaged before the purported zoning formula? It does, and clearly so.”

    He added: “It is in this regard that I salute the courage of the Speakership aspirants for their show of solidarity, companionship and applaudable love for the party in their rejection, resentment and objection to the brazenly teleguided zoning arrangement that is skewed and targeted against some zones and identified individuals. 

    “Their action is commendable just as they are urged to ensure they pursue this to a logical conclusion. This is an unworkable arrangement that reinforces injustice and enhances inequity, and I join them in rejecting this zoning formula.”

    Zoning unacceptable,

    says Izunaso

    Izunaso urged the President-elect, President Buhari and Adamu to come up with a new and acceptable zoning formula.

    He said his aspiration to preside over the Red Chamber of the 10th National Assembly is in the best interest of the nation.

    Izunaso spoke during a parley with reporters in Abuja, according to a statement by his media aide, Kehinde Olaosebikan.

    Izunaso said: “Tinubu, Buhari and Adamu should as a matter of importance come up with a new zoning arrangement that would not only produce the best among the senators and House of Representatives members-elect as their presiding officers, but also be seen by Nigerians and the world at large as meeting the best practices in legislative norms and satisfying the political exigencies of the present Nigeria.”

    Abbas, Kalu intensifies lobby

    Abbas and Kalu yesterday urged lawmakers from the Southeast to support their aspirations.

    Anchoring their campaigns is the “Joint Task”, a group of lawmakers-elect rooting for their candidature, following their endorsement by the party.

    Speaking after the meeting of the campaign group, which was also attended by Gbajabiamila, Abbas said he was the right person for the job based on his competence.

    He added: “I feel elated, I feel inspired because I believe that if the party is going use competence as its yardstick, I’m the right person to actually be picked. So, for the fact that they did what I expected they would do, I feel very elated and satisfied.”

    Abbas said he will reach out to other contenders and all the lawmakers-elect in a bid to secure their support.

    Kalu said: “The party has started the strategy for the 2027 elections by making sure that they have a foot in the Southeastern region. What they have done with these nominations is in the spirit of inclusion.

    “The Southeast is going to feel the power of cohesion, and national loyalty is going to be driven by virtue of this that has taken place. 

    “So, it’s a wise decision to include the Southeasterners in the structure of the government that’s being formed.”

  • Tribunal dismisses another party’s petition against Tinubu, APC

    Tribunal dismisses another party’s petition against Tinubu, APC

    Another petition against the election of President-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu was dismissed yesterday.

    The Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) voided the petition by the Action Peoples Party (APP), after it was withdrawn.

    It is the second of such petitions to be dismissed after that of the Action Alliance (AA).

    APP’s lawyer, Obed Agwu, said his client filed a March 9 motion on notice to withdraw the petition, with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Tinubu and the All Progressives Congress (APC) as respondents.

    He prayed the court to strike it out.

    Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN) for Tinubu, Lateef Fagbemi (SAN) for the APC and Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN) for INEC did not object.

    Read Also: JUST IN: PEPC dismisses APP’s petition against Tinubu, APC, others

    Justice Tsammani ruled: “Having considered the application and response of the respondents, we are satisfied that there was no collision on the part of the respondents, the petition numbered CA/PEPC/02/2023 is hereby dismissed having been withdrawn.”

    Also yesterday, Labour Party (LP) candidate, Peter Obi, backed the application by his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) counterpart Atiku Abubakar for a live broadcast of the proceedings.

    LP/Obi’s lawyer, Livy Uzoukwu (SAN), told reporters that his clients believe Nigerians should observe the proceedings first-hand.

    He said the live broadcast of court proceedings was jettisoned when Nigeria got independence.

    Uzoukwu noted that the courtroom could not conveniently accommodate 200 people, adding that even if that was possible, they would not adequately represent Nigerians.

    Responses are yet to be filed on the live telecast application by Atiku and the PDP.

    The court shifted further pre-hearing session by Obi and his party to next Wednesday after the lawyers agreed they needed time to file and exchange documents.

    Justice Tsammani ordered parties to also identify issues for determination and file them before then.

  • ‘Why annual budgets fail to perform’

    ‘Why annual budgets fail to perform’

    • Buhari seeks Senate’s nod for $800m loan

    Abandoned federal projects that littered length and breadth of the nation has been blamed on the  called “unimplementable” annual budgets.

    Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation, Ben Akabueze, who stated this yesterday, identified lack of organic law to guide budgeting process, budgets not being anchored on development plan as factors against budget implementation.

    Akabueze who also said that the country was  “in trouble”  due to its shrinking borrowing space, warned that it was wrong for anyone to assume that  Nigeria was a rich nation.

    It added that $100 billion was needed annually to meet  20,000 abandoned projects nationwide.

    The DG stated spoke in a speech at the ongoing induction of National Assembly members-elect in Abuja.

    Also yesterday, President Muhammadu Buhari sought the approval of the Senate for a fresh $800 million loan from the World Bank

    At the lecture, Akabueze challenged the lawmakers-elect to place national interests above constituency interests in their demands.

    He said: “The Federal Government of Nigeria does not have an organic budget law. It is really unfortunate that we don’t have an organic budget law,”

    “There is one in the works in the 9th Assembly and hopefully will be passed before the Assembly winds down. I don’t know any serious country in the world that does not have an organic budget law.

    “We are not a rich nation especially when you look at the parameters with which rich nations are determined. We are not even an oil-rich economy.

    “To classify oil-rich economies, you talk of countries like Saudi Arabia where they are 34 million of them and pump 10 million barrels of crude per day or Kuwait where there are 3 million of them and pump 3 million barrels per day. There are over 200 million of us and we are currently pumping about 1.9 million barrels per day.

    “So, we are not a rich economy and must resist the temptation that we are an oil-rich economy. Let me make it clear that we are a potentially rich country, but we are not rich.

    “I often hear people say that Nigeria is not short of a development plan, but that the problem is implementation.   I disagree with that because a plan that cannot speak to implementation is not a good plan.

    “Development plan in Nigeria dates back to the early 90s, but you can argue that it has not been successful in the desired manner. Annual budgets are essentially bite-sizes of development plans. They contain achievable objectives within a year. A budget that sits outside the development plan is not a good budget.

    “For us to be able to fix the infrastructural needs of the country, we need to be spending about $100 billion annually as a country, including private spending on infrastructure.

    “The aggregate budget of the Federal Government is only about $30 billion and the aggregate of the states and FCT(Federal Capital Territory) budget don’t even add up to the federal budget. This means that even if we spend everything, we will still be left with a huge infrastructural deficit.

    “Each country has to determine its budget system that works for it. Budget is multi-dimensional in coverage. One, it is political because it allocates scarce resources of the country among multiple competing and sometimes, competing interest.

    “You may have heard that we have one of the lowest GDP(Gross Domestic Product)  to debt ratios in the world. While the size of the Federal Government budget for 2023 created some excitement, the aggregate budget of all governments in the country amounts to about N30 trillion. That is less than 15 percent in terms. of ration to GDP.

    “Even on the African continent, the ratio of spending is about 20 percent. South Africa is about 30 percent, Morocco is about 40 percent and at 15 percent, that is too small for our needs. That is why there is fierce competition for the limited resources. That can determine how much we can borrow relatively.

    “We now have very limited borrowing space, not because our debt to GDP is high, but because our revenue is too small to sustain the size of our debt. That explains our high debt service ratio.

    “Once a country’s debt service ratio exceeds 30 percent, that country is in trouble and we are pushing towards 100 percent and that tells you how much trouble we are in. We have limited space to borrow.

    “Budget is not a shopping list. In the past   budget only contained expenditure, but we have changed that.’’

    “I,  therefore, urge the incoming members of the National Assembly to balance national and regional interests. As it is right now, we have practically unimplementable budget. Every year, we have over 20,000 abandoned projects and that is because they are not properly monitored.

    “Today, we are scored low in the budget credibility index and this is measured.”

    Buhari seeks Senate’s not for  $800m loan

    Buhari, in a letter to the Senate said his administration needed another $800 million loan to scale up the National Social Safety Net Programme (NASSP).

    The letter titled  Request for approval for additional financing of the National Social Safety Net Programme scale-up by the National Assembly was read before members by Senate President Ahmad Lawan during yesterday’s plenary.

    The President explained that the cash would stimulate activities in the informal sector and improve nutrition, health, education, and human capital development.

    The letter reads: “Please note that the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approved an additional loan facility to the tune of USD800 million to be secured from the World Bank for the National Social Safety Net Programme.

    “This request is for your consideration and approval to ensure early implementation. The Senate may wish to know that the programme is intended to expand coverage of shock-responsive Safety Net support among the poor and vulnerable Nigerians.

    “This will assist them in coping with the cost of meeting basic needs. You may wish to note that the Federal Government of Nigeria under the conditional cash transfer window of the programme will transfer the sum of N5,000 to 10.2 million poor and low-income households for a period of six months with a multiplier effect of about 60 million individuals.

    “In order to guarantee the credibility of the process, digital transfers would be made directly to beneficiaries’ accounts and mobile wallets.

    “The NASSP being a social intervention programme will stimulate activities in the informal sector, and improve nutrition, health, education, and human capital development for beneficiary households.

    “Given the above, I wish this $800 million to be secured from the World Bank  for the  NASSP.”

  • JUST IN: PEPC dismisses APP’s petition against Tinubu, APC, others

    JUST IN: PEPC dismisses APP’s petition against Tinubu, APC, others

    The Justice Haruna Tsammani-led five-member panel of the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) has shifted further pre-hearing session in the petition by Peter Obi and his party, the Labour Party (LP)  till next Wednesday.

    The court’s decision was informed by agreement by lawyers to parties that they needed time to enable the file and exchange necessary applications in preparation for their hearing.

    Lawyer to the petitioner, Livy Uzoukwu (SAN), told the court, at the mention of the petition, that lawyers in the case met before the court’s sitting, to seek an adjournment to enable them to file and exchange all processes they plan to file.

    Read Also: VIDEO: Tinubu off to Europe on working visit

    He said the time will also allow them to meet to streamline their positions in relation to documents to be tendered without objection and those to be objected to.

    Lawyers to the respondents – Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN) for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC); Wole Olanipekun (SAN) for Bola Tinubu and Kashim Shettma, and Lateef Fagbemi (SAN) for the All Progressives Congress (APC) confirmed what Uzoukwu said.

    Ruling, Justice Tsammani ordered parties to distill issues for determination in the petition and responses filed and file same before the next date.

    The judge then adjdjourned till May 17.  

  • BREAKING: Buhari urges Senate to approve $800m loan request

    BREAKING: Buhari urges Senate to approve $800m loan request

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday urged the Senate to approve a new loan request of $800million.

    Buhari, in a letter read by Senate President Ahmad Lawan at plenary, said the loan would be utilised to scale up the National Social Safety Net Programme.

    Read Also: Buhari hailed for rescuing Ogoni clean-up project

    He added that the loan would be sourced from the World Bank.

    Details Shortly…