Tag: Abdullahi

  • Fleet-footed Abdullahi selected for Bayern Youth tourney

    Fleet-footed Abdullahi selected for Bayern Youth tourney

    Youngster Kamara Abdullahi  has  been selected to  represent Nigeria at the 11th  Bayern Youth World Cup this October in Germany.

    Abdullahi  was spotted  during the recent Cohesion Football Tournament-a grassroots initiative to nurture talents through competition and character-building .

    He was  first discovered at the inaugural tournament in 2019, where he played for Brightstar Football Academy.

    His dedication and passion  has captured the attention of scouts  in and outside Nigeria and his recognition by Bayern Munich’s scouts is a testament to his abilities and potential.

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    Damilare Obagbemi, convener of Cohesion Football Tournament and chair of Cohesion All-Stars, said: “Abdullahi’s selection for the Bayern Youth World Cup is a moment of honour for  us at Cohesion, his journey from our tournament to the world stage shows the essence of our mission. We are developing footballers and shaping leaders. Kamara carries the aspirations of every young Nigerian with big dreams.”

     ‘‘We greet VOE Foundation for its support and commitment to nurturing young talents like Abdullahi.

     ‘‘We support Abdullahi as he embarks on this journey. From Aguda, Surulere, to the grand stadiums of Germany, he represents our hopes and the spirit of Nigerian football.’’

  • NPFL: Five star Abdullahi shine in vital win for Pillars  (BOX IT DOWN)

    NPFL: Five star Abdullahi shine in vital win for Pillars  (BOX IT DOWN)

    Kano Pillars’ Yusuf Abdullahi scored all five goals as Sai Masu Gida thrashed Gombe United 5-2  at the Pantami Stadium for their first away win of the season in one of the remaining Nigeria Premier Football League Matchday 11 ties played yesterday.

    Abdullahi put Kano Pillars 2-0 up with quick taking goals in the seventh and 14th  minutes but Sadiq Shuaibu reduced the goals deficit in the 17th  minute for the Desert Savannah.

    It was Abdullahi’s show thereafter scoring two more goals in the 33rd  and 10th  minute of the first half additional time. Ahmed Jimoh reduced it to 4-2 before the end of the first half also.

    Sai Masu Gida’s Abdullahi nailed the final coffin with the fifth goal in the 60th  minute.

    The win has taken Kano Pillars to the seventh spot with 16 points while Gombe United are in the 16th spot with 12 points.

    At the Remo Stars Stadium, Ikenne, Remo Stars’ Sikiru Alimi”s 61st minute goal was enough to hand the Sky Blue Stars a 1-0 win over stubborn Plateau United.

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    The win has taken Remo Stars to the top of the league table with 22 points while Plateau United have dropped to the 12th  spot with 13 points.

    In Ibadan, Shooting Stars dropped their home invincibility against Heartland FC who fought like warriors to secure their first clean sheet of the season in a goalless draw at the Lekan Salami Stadium.

    The Oluyole Warriors are now in the fifth spot with 18 points while Heartland FC even though are at the bottom of the table with seven points have more reason to believe they could still rescue their season.

    Bayelsa United failed to win at home again following a 2-2 draw against Abia Warriors who squandered a two goal lead before settling for their first away point of the season.

    Obi Samson and Dehinde Ibrahim put the Umuahia side two goals up in the 76th and 79th minutes but the Prosperity Boys came back through Robert Mizo’s double in the 82nd and 87th minutes for his ninth goal of the season.

    In Lagos’ Mobolaji Johnson Arena, Sporting Lagos pipped Katsina United 1-0 with Clement Naantaum scoring the only goal of the game in the 14th  minute.

  • Abdullahi shares visionary plans to revamp tennis

    Abdullahi shares visionary plans to revamp tennis

    Nigeria had long produced some excellent tennis players including David Imonite, Nduka Odizor and Sadiq Abdullahi who went ahead to win many national laurels. The now retired Abdullahi, a University don in the United States, speaks candidly about slide in the sport even as he offered panacea to make it great again, TUNDE LIADI writes.

    Former Nigeria’s tennis star, Professor Sadiq Abdullahi, is bullish that the sport can bounce back and regain its lost glory with proactive and decisive measures by stakeholders.

    Abdullahi with a motley crowd that  included the likes of David Imonite, Nduka Odizor and Sule Ladipo, lit up the sport in the past but things are no longer the same even as  tennis experts proffer solutions  to take the sport out of the doldrums,

    Speaking on Global Sports anchored by Godwin Enakhena,  Abdullahi said that the sport could not build on the exploits of the 1970s due to lack of succession plans to incorporate young players that should have replaced the then ageing superstars.

    He said the 1970s and other generations of tennis stars had a working succession programme which was stuck to and that this helped to produce tennis stars that place Nigeria in global prominence back then.

    The former Dala Hard Court Open winner said the problem started in the 1990s, adding that it nosedived after the country’s participation at the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996 through Sule Ladipo.

    “The reason why we do not have players to replicate what we achieved back then is because we did not have succession programmes,” Abdullahi said. “Our first set of outstanding tennis players came in the 1970s.

     “Thompson Onibokun, Lawrence Awopegba, Yemisi Alani, Kehinde Ajayi, and so on passed what they had to the second set which were Ola Ogunrinde, Nduka Odizor among others.

    “I was in the third set. It was after the fourth succession that Sule Ladipo represented Nigeria at the Olympics in 1996 in the United States.

     “It was at this period everything started to crumble. We do not have deliberate plans because of several factors including coaching, players and so on.

     “There are a lot of challenges that impede the production of players,” he affirmed.

    Now based in the United States as a  scholar  and sport  consultant, Abdullahi,  stressed that proactive measures must be taken to revamp  tennis, adding he  would rebrand the sport and bring it back to limelight if given the  chance to lead the Nigeria Tennis Federation (NTF)  for instance.

    He said his first port of call as President of the NTF would be to seek the support of former tennis stars and get their contributions on the way forward for the sport.

    He further noted that his next agenda would be to take the sport to the various state associations to ensure that tennis is reintroduced at the grassroots again among other reforms.

    “If I am the President of Nigeria Tennis Federation (NTF), I will first seek the support of tennis players that represent the country at all international levels and get their contributions,” the former CBN Open champion said.

    “We shall come up with a plan together to address the issues on ground. Tennis is capital intensive and a person cannot solely raise a champion. These former players will come up with a lot of strategies that are needed to mobilize and get funding and sustain the plans.

    “The reason why we are not doing well in tennis is because the system that created us is not the same system now. I emerged from Lagos Lawn Tennis Club, Nduka Odizor from Ikoyi Club and there were lots of grassroots competitions for us back then.

     “But all these are no longer there. We need to have a new strategy and system to produce new players now.

    “I am going to work on state associations. I would give them some funds and be willing to work with them. I will train them on how to market and be there physically.”

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    The three- time Guilder Tennis Open champion further added that he would ensure he moves around the country to ensure that talents are discovered from the grassroots and he would also ensure he makes the federal government through the Ministry of Sports to invest in tennis facilities and equipment in partnership with the private or corporate firms.

    “All of the NTF presidents in the past stayed in Abuja or Lagos and they expect states of the federation to produce players. It won’t work. NTF boss must be active but they need help,” he surmised. “It takes seven to ten years to produce a tennis champion if it is started at a young age. It is a process and collective effort.

    “We can work with what we have. Government officials can help with the building of one or two tennis courts in their domains. Schools can also build tennis courts that will be accessible to the players to train.

    “I am working on trying what we call a Tennis Equipment Depository. It is easy for me when I come home to get people to donate shoes and rackets ahead of upcoming programmes.

    “I am planning to bring in two containers of equipment to Nigeria starting next year or so. We will need people to promote the vision of the programmes we are about to do and making sure that the equipment go to those that need it.

    “Competition has a role in sports development but development itself has its own life and nomenclature. It has its focus and it must be taken seriously. Development goes back to the schools.

    “When we talk about sports development we must talk about the grassroots.

    “The role of the federal government in grassroots sports development needs to be re-examined. The private sector needs to be getting involved too. Development must start from the grassroots level.”

    Abdullahi who took part in the Ogbe Hard Court Open and Kenyan Open in the past, disclosed that with a 10-year plan, Nigeria can have top tennis stars that can compete among the best in the sport.

    “Ten years is the standard and we will definitely have a product in any of the grand slams if it is done,” he added. “China, Russia, America and others are doing it and their players are in the Top 100 in the ATP and WTA rankings.

    “We have the template but we are revising it. If we come together as a country and hold ourselves accountable and be serious about it, we can produce solid players from each state.”

    He equally highlighted the importance of coaching, complemented by good facilities and equipment, saying Nigeria’s tennis coaches need to upgrade themselves to leave the average rating they are having presently.

    “We have average coaches. They are doing their best but we do not have a national coaching body that meets regularly to discuss improvement,” he noted.

  • Abdullahi: Another lawyer in incoming cabinet

    The incoming cabinet will include a good number of lawyers.

    The Senate screened 46 ministerial nominees sent by President Muhammadu Buhari, including five lawyers, namely Festus Keyamo (SAN), Senator Godswill Akpabio, Ms. Sharon Ikeazor, Chief Emeka Nwajiuba and Hassan Mohammed Abdullahi.

    Returning lawyers in the list are former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami (SAN), former Minister for Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Boss Mustapha and Minister for Information and Culture Lai Mohammed.

    We profiled four of the new lawyer-nominees last week.

    Here is the profile of Hassan Mohammed Abdullahi.

    Abdullahi

    Hassan Mohammed Abdullahi is an accomplished lawyer, seasoned administrator and master of corporate governance. Until his nomination, he was Secretary to the Government of Nasarawa State.

    He was born on April 21, 1968 in Karu Local Government Area of Nasaraw State.

    He studied law at the Usmanu Danfodio University Sokoto (1985 to 1990), where he graduated with a degree in Common Law/Sharia Law. He was called to Bar in 1991.

    Abdullahi did his court attachment at the Chief Magistrates Court, Keffi in Nasarawa State, and in 1991, he became a Pupil Counsel in the law firm of Messers   Ukpabi, Ukpabi and Co where he underwent his National Youth Service Corps (NYSC)  programme.

    In February 1994, he founded Tafida Chambers (Messrs Hammart & Co.) in Abuja where he remains the founding partner till date.

    Between January 1996 and February 1997, he served as Deputy Chairman of Karu Local Government Council, Nasarawa State.

    Between August 2000 and 2002, Abdullahi was posted to Nasarawa State Investment and Property Corporation Limited, Lafia as General Manager and Company Secretary, where he oversaw the entire operations of the secretariat and departments.

    Between September 2003 and August 2005,  he served as Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice.

    Between June 2006 and February 2008, Mohammed was posted to Transnational Corporation of Nigeria Plc as Group Company Secretary and Legal Adviser.

    In March 2008, he was appointed Vice President/ Executive (Administration and Regulatory) , where he served until November 2011.

    Between November 2011 and January 2013, he served as Nasarawa State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice for the second time.

    From May 2013 to January 2015, he served as Special Adviser on Special Duties to the Governor.

    Abdullahi was a member, Council of Legal Education (2003-2005); member, Body of Benchers (2003-2005); member, Nasarawa State Security Council, (2003-2005); Chairman, Nasarawa State Council on Prerogative of Mercy and Vice Chairman, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Lafia Branch, among others.

    He has attended several courses abroad.

    Married with three children, his hobbies include reading, music, traveling and photography.

  • Abdullahi, Abubakar, six others withdraw from Kwara PDP governorship race

    Eight Kwara State governorship aspirants on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have withdrawn from the race.

    Speaker of the House of Assembly Ali Ahmad announced his withdrawal before the botched Sunday primary. Three others – Saka Isau (SAN), Ladi Hassan and Zakari Mohammed – withdrew before yesterday’s primary.

    The other four aspirants – Prof Abubakar Suleiman; Bolaji Abdullahi; Aliyu Ahman-Pategi and Ibrahim Ajia – were absent.

    The contest is now between House of Representatives member Razak Atunwa (Kwara Central) and Senator Sha’aba Lafiagi (Kwara North.

    Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed, who said the eight aspirants withdrew from the race because of the party’s interest, thanked them for their magnanimity.

    The governor also thanked Senate President Bukola Saraki for his counsel and purposeful leadership which have kept members of the PDP united in the state.

    The voting is ongoing and delegates are conducting themselves orderly.

  • Parliamentary system panacea to Nigeria’s corruption – Ango Abdullahi 

    Leader of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF), Professor Ango Abdullahi has said that the only way Nigeria can end corruption and the numerous challenges standing on its way to greatness is to abolish ‘corrupt and expensive’ presidential system for parliamentary system of government.
    Professor Abdullahi, one time Vice Chancellor of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria said the major reason Nigeria is still in a state of confusion after almost 60 years of independence is the mistake of changing to presidential system from the parliamentary system of government that the country inherited from its colonial masters.
    The Northern Elders Forum spokesman stated this in Kaduna at the weekend during the launch of national moral awareness campaign, organised by a youth group, Moral Initiative of Nigeria (MIN).
    Ango Abdullahi said, “until tomorrow, if I have the power, I will throw away this presidential system and return Nigeria to parliamentary system of government, because of so many reasons. The most important of those reasons is that, parliamentary system is not as expensive as the one we operate today. Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto led the entire Northern Nigeria alone with just few people and a governor  in Kaduna.
    “This system we operate today does not give birth to anything other than waste, stealing and the corruption that we are all making noise about. But, in parliamentary system, you don’t become minister except you are elected from your constituency, which means that, you have where to account for your stewardship. But today, once you master the acts of boot-licking, lying and hypocrisy, you will just be called to come and be commissioner or minister.
    “That is why up till tomorrow, we cannot stop talking about Sardauna. No matter how close you were to him he never gave appointment to people who were not capable of delivering the responsibility. He would tell you, you can’t handle this kind of responsibility, but, we will look for what you can do for you. That is why you never saw lopsided appointment with him. But today, what you hear is that, this one is my in law’s son, my friend’s son and so on.

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    “My elder brother, General Murtala Mohammed is the one that made that first mistake of changing the system of government from parliamentary to presidential without allowing Nigerians to debate and look critically at the differences between the two system of government. This is what brought us to where we are now in a state of waste and expensive government.
    “Now, the people in government don’t want to look at this option of parliamentary system and they don’t want us to talk about it, this is because the presidential system suits them, and they are not bothered whether it suits Nigerians or not. This is why Nigeria is referred to as the headquarters of poverty in the world, and Nigeria is not poor, very few countries are as blessed as Nigeria in terms of mineral resources.
    “Our problem is that of good leadership, because China that has seven times Nigeria’s population has in five years brought 750 million people from its population from abject poverty to better life. So, our problem is that of leadership. If you see a nation in a bad state like ours, it is good leadership it lacks.
    “We must therefore stop lamentations and look for good leadership for our nation. And we should be able to identify good leaders and elect them, and if we fail to do this, we will continue to lament till eternity”, he said.
    Former INEC secretary, Dr Hakeem Baba Ahmed, while delivering lecture at the occasion, commended Moral Initiative of Nigeria (MIN) for the thoughtful steps towards reminding Nigeria of the imperatives of its moral foundation at a point when the people are preparing to exercise their choices over leaders and parties.
    He stressed the importance of raising awareness around immorality and the promotion of peace and love among Nigerians for the nation to “turn the tide against moral decay, the drift towards anarchy and the descent into the nightmare of the rule of terror, evil and violence.
    “There is no value in discussing issues of morality, systems and process, legal system, policies and programmes and development in a nation such as ours without acknowledging that we are fundamentally a people of faith.
    “How does a nation of people who accept the validity of good from evil, right from wrong also seems to tolerate the ignominy of being one of the most corrupt nations on earth; a nation that consigns a huge percentage of its population to the rings of the poorest in the world and one where the value of human life is virtually non-existent?”
    Dr. Baba Ahmed tasked Nigerians ahead of the 2019 general elections to apply themselves demanding responsibilities in judging politicians, who will ask for their trusts and confidence; asking questions, each to the limit of his understanding and knowledge, of the politicians their character, abilities, motives and capabilities before voting for such people.
    President of Moral Initiative of Nigeria, Yusuf Kazeem said the initiative is a social movement aimed at eradicating the challenges that have affected every sphere of Nigeria, the frontiers of a new culture that restores Nigerians’ moral and ethical values.
    “MIN works extensively in harmonizing and uniting Nigerians most especially the youth and children in the acts of reducing the menace of immoral acts with different strategies and supporting the less privilege, orienting them towards future-securing programmes.
    “The target of Moral Initiative includes a united Nigeria where sentiment, ethno-religious bias with all forms of discrimination and immoral acts are expunged, where peace, love and harmony is the norm.”
  • Cole, Abdullahi, Nasiru make NLNG Prize shortlist

    Three books of the list of 11 released in July have made it to the NLNG final shortlist. The books are Embers by Soji Cole, Death and The King’s Grey Hair by Denja Abdullahi and The Rally by Akanji Nasiru.

    The list was approved by the Advisory Board for The Nigeria Prize for Literature, according to a statement signed by NLNG Manager, Communications and Public Affairs, Andy Odeh, at the weekend.

    With this year’s edition focusing on Drama, 89 plays were submitted.

    Come October, at a public presentation, the winner will go home with the prize worth $100,000.  The prize rotates yearly among four literary genres: prose fiction, poetry, drama and children’s literature.

    Prof Emeritus Ayo Banjo, who leads the Advisory Board, assured that his board will retain the high literary standards the prize has attained, ensuring that it remains the most prestigious literary prize in Africa. The panel of judges led by a professor of Theatre Arts at the University of Ibadan, Matthew Umukoro, expressed delight at the high standard of writing evident in the entries for the competition this year.

    Umukoro said all three plays have high literary qualities of effective dialogue, good dramaturgical structure, skilful handling of suspense, and credible characterisation, which have seen them through to this stage of the competition.

    Other members of the panel are Mohammed Inuwa Umar-Buratai, professor of Theatre and Performing Arts and the Dean of the Faculty of Arts at the Ahmadu Bello University, (ABU), Zaria; and Ngozi Udengwu, a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Theatre and Film Studies at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka.

    Death and The King’s Grey Hair by a literary essayist and National President Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), Abdullahi, confronts the issue of perpetuation in power, where rulers, like the king in this drama, employ all sorts of devices to cling on to power, long after he has overstayed their welcome.

    Cole’s Embers focuses on life in one of the Internally Displaced People’s (IDP) Camps in Northern Nigeria. The characters gave testimonies of their ugly encounters in Sambisa Forest, as well as their painful discovery of life in the IDP Camp.

    A member of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Ibadan, Soji Cole, teaches undergraduates play writing at the Department of Theatre Arts.

    The Rally by Nasiru addresses the contemporary political theme of youth versus age. Nasiru is a professor of Performing Arts, Bowen University, Iwo, Osun State.

    This year’s prize has as its International Consultant to the Advisory Board, Jonathan Haynes, professor of English at Long Island University in Brooklyn.

    Advisory Board, besides Professor Emeritus Ayo Banjo, are Prof. Jerry Agada, former Minister of State for Education, former President Association of Nigerian Authors, and Professor Emeritus, Ben Elugbe, former President Nigerian Academy of Letters and President West-African Linguistic Society (2004-2013).

    The Nigeria Prize for Literature has, since 2004, rewarded eminent writers such as Gabriel Okara (co-winner, 2004, poetry), Professor Ezenwa Ohaeto (co-winner, 2004, poetry) for The Dreamer, His Vision; Ahmed Yerima (2005, drama) for his play, Hard Ground;  Mabel Segun (co-winner, 2007, children’s literature) for her collection of short plays Reader’s Theatre; Professor Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo (co-winner, 2007, children’s literature) for her book, My Cousin Sammy; Kaine Agary (2008, prose) for her book Yellow Yellow; Esiaba Irobi (2010, drama) who clinched the prize posthumously with his book Cemetery Road; Adeleke Adeyemi (2011, children’s literature) with his book The Missing Clock; Chika Unigwe (2012, prose), with her novel, On Black Sisters Street; Tade Ipadeola (2013, poetry) with his collection of poems, The Sahara Testaments, Prof. Sam Ukala (2014, drama) with his play, Iredi War; Seasons of Crimson Blossom, Abubakar Adamu Ibrahim (2016, prose); and The Heresiad, Ikeogu Oke (2017, poetry).

     

  • Labourer nabbed ‘after breaking into shop’

    An Igbosere Magistrates Court in Lagos on Tuesday remanded a labourer, Ashikpa Abdullahi, who allegedly broke into a shop with intent to steal.

    Magistrate A.A. Famobiwo made the order following Abdullahi’s plea of guilt to a two-count charge of conspiracy and attempted stealing, brought against him by the police.

    She adjourned till August 15 to hear the facts of the case and sentencing.

    Earlier, prosecuting Sergeant Solomon Mawary told the court that Abdullahi, 21, of Alaba Rago area of Ojo, Lagos committed the offences alongside his accomplices who are on the run.

    He said at about 2:43am on August 2, at No. 222, Bamgbose Street, Lagos Island, Abdullahi broke into a shop, with intent to steal, but was caught by guards.

    The offences, the prosecutor added, contravened Sections 411 and 406(2), of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

  • Shuaibu, Abdullahi, Moghalu return to NWC

    •Delegates vote out Izunaso, Ramatu
    •Kwankwaso: why I stayed out

    AFTER keenly contested elections, 33 more candidates emerged as members of the new National Working Committee( NWC) of the All Progressives Congress( APC).

    The new officers yesterday joined the new APC National Chairman, Adams Oshiomhole and 25 others, who were elected unopposed on Saturday –  the first day of the party’s National Convention.

    With the conclusion of the election, 59 members of the NWC have been duly elected.

    Of the 59 slots, 26 candidates were elected unopposed.

    But the election led to the return of some former NWC members, including the National Secretary, Mallam Mai Mala Buni; Senator Lawal Shuaibu (Deputy National Chairman, North); the National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi; the National Auditor, Chief George Moghalu and the National Vice Chairman (North-West), Alh. Inuwa Abdulkadir.

    Some former NWC members and APC leaders, rated as bigwigs, were however voted out by delegates including former National Organising Secretary Senator Osita Izunaso, ex-National Women Leader Hajiya Ramatu Tijjani and Farouk Adamu Aliyu.

    The outcome of the convention indicated that the consensus option adopted by APC governors and endorsed by President Muhammadu Buhari and other party leaders was strictly adhered to by all groups in the party.

    A governor said: “We had a consensus list based on fault lines in the party and we thank God that all governors and party leaders kept faith with our agreement.

    “We accommodated those who have grievances and we dropped some candidates like Izunaso and Ramatu Tijjani as sacrifices for the unity of the party.

    “We will use this benchmark henceforth in reuniting APC and charting a new course for this great party. We want to reconcile as fast as possible because presidential and other primaries for 2019 poll are around the corner.

    “We hope to revisit our coalition and make it to work better for all caucuses in APC.”

    But’ a former Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso yesterday said he boycotted the convention of APC to avoid causing embarrassment to the party.

    He said his group was unhappy that all the congresses it conducted were not recognised by the dissolved National Working Committee (NWC), which was headed by ex-National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun.

    Kwankwaso, who made the clarifications in a statement in Abuja, said his presence and that of his loyalists will not be in the interest of the convention.

    He said: “The All Progressives Congress (APC) group in Kano, which I am opportune to lead will like to congratulate and felicitate with the newly elected Chairman Comrade Adams Oshiomhole and his newly elected members of the Executive Council.

    “I wish to inform the leadership of the party and the public that we had wanted to be part of the National Convention but regrettably all the congresses that we conducted at the wards, local government councils and at the state level were not recognised by the outgoing National Executive Council of the party.

    “Therefore, I felt that presenting ourselves at such an important event will not be in the overall interest of the entire convention, that is assuming we are allowed access into the convention ground.”

     

  • Abdullahi: Obasanjo’s antics worrisome

    Abdullahi: Obasanjo’s antics worrisome

    The special press statement of former President Olusegun Obasanjo urging President Muhammadu Buhari not to run in 2019 drew more flaks yesterday. At a news conference, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, a former Nasarawa State governor urged Chief Olusegun Obasanjo to pull the brake to avoid a self-inflicted injury and personal tragedy of slipping into irrelevance.

    In early February this year, former President Olusegun Obasanjo published an open letter to President Muhammadu Buhari titled: The way out: A clarion call for coalition for Nigeria movement. In it, he raised three fundamental issues.

    One, he called on the President to forget his re-election ambition -an ambition which he has yet to declare in 2019 because of his failure on many fronts.

    Two, he expressed his loss of faith in the capacity of our two biggest parties, APC (All Progressives Congress) and PDP (Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), to drive the nation’s development.

    Three, he advocated the formation of Coalition for Nigeria, a movement according to him, “that will drive Nigeria up and forward.”

    Two weeks or so later, former President Ibrahim Babangida’s media aide, Kassim Afegbua, issued a statement on his behalf in which he claimed that the general too advised the President to bury his ambition for a second term in office because of his alleged failures and because the nation needed a digital and not an analogue leader.

    The general promptly denied authorising the statement. Both Afegbua’s statement and Babangida’s are still wrapped in controversy. Afegbua insists his statement remains authentic.

    In his own signed statement titled: “My Counsel to the nation”, the former president advised the political parties to play by the rules and the government to be proactive in matters of security challenges.

    Perhaps, we should read his denial between the lines. While I am prepared to give Gen. Babangida the benefit of doubt for now, I would like to point out that he and his aide appear to have been encouraged to issue their separate statements by Chief Obasanjo’s letter. It is as if they wanted to take advantage of this to say what they had been itching to say about the president all along. I wish to remind the general that although men have short memories; history has a long memory. We can trace nearly all our present economic and political problems to his transition programme. We cannot forget SAP (Structural Adjustment Programme) that sapped the economy, or the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election for which the nation is still paying a stiff price. It is not always advisable to be holier-than-thou.

    l have listened to and read the various responses to Obasanjo’s letter. I am encouraged by those responses because they point to our willingness to engage in a national dialogue, be it organised or informal, on matters that affect our country and our collective interests.

    I can think of no single Nigerian who does not want our country to make the great leap from a struggling third world nation to a first world nation.

    We are all in a hurry for our country to make that leap. Nigerians have never been found wanting in offering informed suggestions on what should be the focus of our political, economic and social development such that we could meld the multiplicity of tongues into a modern nation in which, to borrow from the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, “we are judged by the contents of the mind and the brain and not by tribes and religions. Nation-building remains a work in progress in all countries. This is often slow and frustrating when the process itself impinges on our individual ambition.”

    I believe that it was in this same spirit that Chief Obasanjo issued the letter. It would be uncharitable to ascribe anything other than the purest of patriotic motives to his recent outing. As former military head of state and as a civilian president, Chief Obasanjo is a respected and illustrious son of our soil. He would be morally remiss should he choose to keep quiet when he sees things going wrong in the land.

    For a total of eleven and half years in power, he too struggled with the daunting challenges of our national development. He knows the challenges of ruling a multi-ethnic and multi-religious nation faced with the crises of under-development.

     

    I would like to believe that he is in a better position than any of us to appreciate the difficulties that anyone in Aso Rock faces today. I believe he, more than the rest of us, should have some sympathy for anyone grappling with the historically depressed economy and the complex dynamics of national development and progress.

    I decided to dialogue with the movers and the shakers in our news media this morning/afternoon on the issues raised by the former president. I am not here to defend President Buhari.

    He is quite capable of, and in a better position, to defend himself much better than me. I have initiated this press dialogue for two reasons.

    The first is to underline my belief in the power of dialogue as a veritable instrument through which we can freely contribute to the resolution of our problems and address our challenges.

    Human societies are best served with’ the aggregation of ideas that shape their focus. The late president, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, once put this very well when he said it was “better to jaw-jaw than to war-war”.

     

    Two, I too, being a humble political leader in my own right, as a two-term governor of my state, Nasarawa, and as a ranking senator of the Federal Republic, I have as large a stake as anyone else in the progress and the development of our nation at all levels. I, too, cannot keep quiet when I see attempts by anyone or a group of persons to undermine the integrity of the Office of the President, the integrity of our government and the integrity of our political system. I have earlier said it would be unfair not to accept that Chief Obasanjo was motivated by the good of the country. In his letter, he said, “Some may ask what does Obasanjo want again?” He proceeded to answer the question in the third person thus: “Obasanjo has wanted nothing other than the best for Nigeria and Nigerians…”

    Was he entirely motivated by that noble sentiment? I find that hard to believe. Motives are not always as honourable or as altruistic as one might be made to believe, particularly when such a man as this is so highly placed that we tend to place him above the shenanigans of petty politics. I found it difficult to completely ignore what appears to me like the dark motives hovering over his action because I see it as a behavioural pattern that began with his 2014 letter to the then President Goodluck Jonathan, titled: “Before it is too late”. It seems to me he believes that that letter alone cost Dr. Jonathan the presidency. So, if he is fatigued by President Buhari, he can resort to the same weapon with probably the same consequences. It is a long shot.

    No one can deny him the right to criticise a sitting president but, his method leaves much to be desired. He cannot, therefore, escape the charge of impure motive and that he took this step, not to try and set things right for the sake of the nation but to promote Obasanjo for the sake of Obasanjo.

    Being a former president, he has an unimpeded access to the president and can, therefore, seek to influence him in the privacy of the seat of power. Indeed, in the early years of the Buhari administration, Chief Obasanjo was a frequent presence in Aso Rock. I believe he frequented the seat of power in support of the administration. I now wonder why he suddenly decided to turn a friend into an enemy and rubbish everything the President has done so far in a little over two and half years.

     

    In a civilised political culture, it is taboo for former presidents to openly take a sitting president to the cleaners. Our former head of state, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, has faithfully kept to this time-honoured culture of a former ruler not washing the dirty linens of a current ruler rather gleefully in the public. So, have former President Shehu Shagari and former head of state, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar.

    The implications for the polity of a former president regaling the public with a litany of the failures of a sitting president is a calculated and unholy effort to destroy him politically.

    The question is, if Chief Obasanjo meant well for Buhari, his administration and Nigeria, why did he not choose the option of quietly offering his advice to the president? In taking his case to the rowdy market place of sensationalism, he clearly intended to score cheap political points at the expense of the President. He intended to undermine the Buhari administration, subject him to public ridicule and impugn his moral strength and integrity to lead the nation.

    As he must have obviously expected, his statement was intended to heat and is heating up the polity and causing confusion at this critical time when the myriads of our national challenges commend themselves to our statesmen and women for sober reflections rather than indulgence in crass sensationalism. It is a disservice to the country.

    No one, not even Buhari’s most rabid supporters, would be unfair to themselves enough to suggest that everything is right with the administration. It is true that the government has not met the expectations of the generality of Nigerians. But, it is not for lack of capacity or the unwillingness on the part of the President to respond to the needs of the people and those of the country. I know that we invested high expectations on the Buhari administration but is it fair and realistic for us to expect the administration to solve all the problems it inherited in less than three years? Human and resources management towards achieving a desired result is not amenable to the waving of a magic wand.

    No administration is a total success and none is a total failure. Chief Obasanjo cannot honestly claim that he ran a perfect and totally successful administration because he did not.

     

    Every administration grapples with problems thrown at it by circumstances beyond its control. President Buhari inherited an economy that was unsteady on its feet. He also inherited the security problems such as Boko Haram, armed robberies and kidnappings.

    Yes, I agree, that under his watch these problems should grow less, not more. But the solution to problems such as these is a slow and agonising process. He has no powers to simply make them disappear overnight.

    The President was fully aware of these problems and challenges when he sought the consent of the electorate in 2015.

    He did so in the hope that with the support and the goodwill of all Nigerians, he could tackle them. I know he has not given up on that. I do not think he intends to leave a bleeding, disunited nation and disarticulated socio-economic development at the end of his tenure.

    He seems to be overwhelmed by the problems because while problems rain down, solutions to them take time to be effective. I think the President, in the circumstances, deserves support and encouragement rather than antagonism from a constituency that should give him that support and encouragement as he seeks to address these and other problems in his own way.

    I do not intend to comment on all of Obasanjo’s letter seriatim, I will deal with three of his allegations, namely: the president’s alleged clannishness, his management of the economy and his anti-corruption war.

    Before I do so, let me say at this point that I am worried by the antics of Chief Obasanjo and his penchant for promoting himself as the only competent Nigerian leader. Since he left office on October 1, 1979, to local and international applause Chief Obasanjo has systematically sought to undermine every federal administration after him.

    He has today set up himself as the moral conscience of the nation. He believes he has acquired the wisdom of King Solomon and has consequently imposed on himself the right to decide who rules us and how we should be ruled.

    Perhaps, part of the reason is that before leaving office in 2007, his party, the PDP, conferred on him the titles of “Maker of modern Nigeria and father of the nation”. Such titles do have a heady way of making a man seeing his head bedecked in the halos of self- righteousness.

    There is a process for changing our governments through the instrumentality of elections. Chief Obasanjo, one of the architects of that process and a beneficiary to boot, ought to support that process and let the people decide who they want to rule them. It is not for him to decide for the people or the President.

    No one should arrogate to himself eternal verities in the administration of his country. It is his consuming ambition to have his hands on the levers of power under all our presidents. When he loses that grip, he turns against the incumbent in office. He undermined Gen. Babangida’s economic programme – SAP, with his statement that SAP should have a human face and the milk of human kindness. He denigrated Gen. Babangida by advising people to whom the former president says good morning to check their wrist watches to make sure it is morning.

    The Constitution of the Federal Republic obliges the president to compose the executive council of the federation in a manner that reflects the federal character. I do not see that the council is dominated by people from Katsina, the President’s home state.

    Nor do I see that the major ministries such as finance, power and steel, housing, transport are held by people from that state or his part of the country. All these ministries are held by competent men and women from the southern parts of the country. What does this say about Buhari’s clannishness?

     

    I am aware of criticisms that the President appointed only northerners as heads of his security agencies. There may be some merit in a national spread but a president reserves the right to fill such positions with those who command his implicit trust and confidence. That is neither unconstitutional nor a moral crime.

    The management of the economy has always been a frustrating experience but gallant efforts have been made at critical times to reposition the national economy. SAP was one of such efforts intended to structurally reform the base of the economy.

    The late Gen. Sani Abacha’s Vision 10-10 and 20-20 was initiated for the same purpose. So was Chief Obasanjo’s own NEEDS. If these efforts had succeeded in the past, President Buhari would have had an easy ride on the management of the economy today. The recession, for instance, was not Buhari’s making; nor can the security challenges be laid at his door.

    Poor management of the economy in the recent past birthed the recession. I cannot think of any steps the President has taken with deleterious effects on the economy. And to put a fine point on it, the minister of finance and the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) are not from Katsina State.

    President Buhari knows only too well that if he does not get the economy right, he would have a tough time trying to get anything else right. He is struggling with that challenge with my personal sympathies.

    Chief Obasanjo touts himself as the champion of the anti-corruption war. It is fair to give him some credit for waging the war with the setting up of EFCC (Economic and Financial Crimes Commission). It was the right step towards caging the monster that has wrecked immeasurable havoc on the country. But, as laudable as that was, Chief Obasanjo soon turned the commission into an attack dog against his known and suspected political enemies or detractors. He used it to undermine elected governors in Plateau, Oyo, Bayelsa and Anambra states. The lawmakers in those states were induced or forced by the commission at the behest of Chief Obasanjo to remove their governors from office in a manner that insulted our constitutional government.

    In each of those cases, a handful of legislators, sitting either in a hotel outside the states or in a private house removed the governors from office. We must thank their Lordships Justice Niki Tobi of blessed memory and Justice James Ogebe for stepping this egregious abuse of legislative powers when they, as chairmen of the appeal court panels sitting in Ibadan over Ladoja’s appeal against his unconstitutional removal from office, quashed his removal and affirmed that the court was the primary custodian of the constitution; not the president. That ended Chief Obasanjo’s apparent reign of presidential terror tactics against the state governors.

    Chief Obasanjo said that President Buhari is selective in his anti-corruption war. I agree with him because if the President were not selective, Chief Obasanjo himself would be in the dock today on trial on charges of corruption arising from the corrupt practices in the pursuit of his third term gambit in the National Assembly in 2006.

    Today, he denies that he ever nursed such ambition. And being a man much favoured by  God, he has repeatedly said that if he had wanted it and asked the almighty for it, he would have given him  the third term.

    He knows as well as I, and other leading members of the PDP, that he badly wanted it and initiated the process of constitutional amendment. He bribed each member of the National Assembly who signed to support the amendment, with the whopping sum of N50 million to make the constitutional amendment scale through.

    The fresh, mint money was taken in its original boxes presumably from the vaults of the CBN and distributed among the legislators. The money was not his and it was not appropriated by the National Assembly as required by law. I, therefore, agree that in failing to make the former president account for that money. President Buhari is waging his anti-corruption war selectively.

    Nor, should we forget that President Buhari has also not bothered to interrogate Obasanjo’s role in the Haliburton scandal for which some Americans are cooling their heels in jail.

    Perhaps, President Buhari might look into the Siemens affairs in which the Obasanjo administration was indicted and for which people were on trial. What became of the trial?

    I worked closely with Chief Obasanjo in his eight years in office as president when l was governor of Nasarawa State. I found many things to admire in him. I admire his patriotism and his hard work. But, he systematically sabotaged his legacy by bending the system to his personal service and promotion.

    I do not admire his single-minded determination to promote himself as the strongest and the most incorruptible leader Nigeria has ever had. He waged his anti-corruption war in a manner intended to rubbish all our revered institutions such as the court and the National Assembly and leave him as the only Nigerian without palm oil on his hands.

    His lack of democratic temperament and his refusal to honour the mother of all our laws, the 1999 Constitution as well as the constitution of the PDP, birthed the culture of impunity in our country.

    He had no respect for the rule of law and, therefore disobeyed court orders at will. This once prompted the then Chief Justice of Nigeria, Mr. Justice Muhammadu Uwais, to say that a government that did not obey the courts was a bad government.

    In his eight years in office, Chief Obasanjo did not run a constitutional government, partly because he had no patience with the niceties of democracy and partly because he believed the law should serve him, and not he the law.

    At almost every turn, he undermined the various pillars of constitutional government. For instance, contrary to the provisions of the constitution, he imposed a state of emergency on Plateau and Ekiti states.

    He had no powers to do so but since he saw himself as both the law and the last strongman standing in our country, he assumed unchallengeable powers. The courts quaked over his constitutional rampage. Our democracy is passing through a wrenching experience of constitutional government today because at the end of his eight years in power, Chief Obasanjo left our democracy in a lurch.

    He was like a wrecking ball. In 2007, he alone decided his successor in office contrary to the rules of the game. He imposed governorship candidates of the party too in 2003.

    You would recall that the PDP gave Chief Obasanjo its platform for eight years from 1999 to 2003. Yet, when the party began to have problems in 2014, Chief Obasanjo jumped ship and publicly tore his party card into pieces. He owes whatever he is today to the party. I thought a man made by the party should sacrifice his time and effort to save it from imploding. We wonder if ingratitude has a better definition than that. But, with Chief Obasanjo, ingratitude has a different meaning, obviously.

    His Coalition for Nigeria Movement (CNM) is a red herring across the path of our constitutional government. He is free to form a political party and pursue his ambition of being the power behind the throne but such a national movement would achieve no discernible purpose in the economic management and the social administration of the country.

    I believe that Chief Obasanjo is too high and too big in the estimation of the people to permit himself the continued sickening indulgence in political skullduggery.

    I believe that the Nigerian people and the Nigerian state have been most kind to him. Chief Obasanjo has a moral obligation to make the country succeed in solving its myriads of problems.

    That, I believe, is one way he can give back to the country that has given him so much. As a friend, I wish to advise the former president to pull back from the dangerous path of rubbishing all presidents that came into office after him. Bringing everyone down is not a patriotic duty. I fear that if he continues along this path, he would, sooner than later over reach himself and begin the inevitable descent into national nuisance and irrelevance. That would be a self-inflicted wound and a personal tragedy.