Tag: Agbaje

  • Agbaje, Quakers, others okay Assembly leaders’s emergence

    Agbaje, Quakers, others okay Assembly leaders’s emergence

    Two lawyers yesterday described as constitutional Tuesday’s National Assembly elections that saw the emergence of Bukola Saraki and  Yakubu Dogara as Senate President and Speaker.

    Constitutional lawyers Norrison Quakers (SAN) and Fred Agbaje said the lawmakers complied with constitutional provisions in selecting their leaders.

    They argued that in line with Section 50 and 52 of the Constitution, the procedure for selecting the leadership of the National Assembly are unambiguous.

    According to Quakers, the APC should accept the outcome of the elections and work with the Saraki-led Senate because his emergence is valid and constitutional.

    Citing Sections 50 (1), 52 (1) and 52 (2) of the Constitution, Quakers said: “Once Senate is convened, members appoint their President and Deputy before the Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office is administered to any member. This is because the constitution states that the members will each take their Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Office before the Senate President or Speaker of the House.

    “The issue of quorum does not even arise because it comes to play after the NASS has been properly constituted.

    “The APC should know that what it is trying to do is political suicide. The argument of disenfranchisement does not hold water. There is nothing in the constitution that says all the members must be present during the election.

    “APC should embrace the outcome of the process because any step taken will be contrary to the constitution. The entire process was also carried out by the Clerk of the National Assembly and followed the laws accordingly.”

    Agbaje described the poll as the best thing that could have happened in the nation’s democracy.

    He said the process was constitutional because the legislators took charge of the process of electing their leaders without external influence.

    “What happened is in clear tandem with Sections 50 of the constituion, which enjoins members of the NASS to elect among themselves, their leaders. The constitution did not say leaders of the Assembly should be selected from outside.

    “Provided the elections took place within the walls of the NASS and by the members themselves,  it is constitutionally sanctioned.

    “Therefore, what the party ought to have done was to lobby the members long before the election. Lobbying is not illegal, it is a part of democracy.

    “But APC was rather carried away by the euphoria of victory and refused to lobby lawmakers to support the party’s candidates.

    “APC must accept the incontrovertible verdict of the NASS as exemplified in the election of leaders of the two Houses.

    “Who asked the absent Senators not to be in the House? Why did they choose an important day as that to be distracted?”

    Also the Senator representing Cross River South, Geshorm Bassey  said the inauguration of Eight National Assembly had the full blessing of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Bassey spoke to journalists in Abuja on the controversy trailing the election of the presiding officers of the Senate.

    He said that since President Buhari issued the proclamation memo, the Clerk was right to inaugurate the Senate.

    He said: “You know the President signed the proclamation and in the proclamation which was read to us, it was actually the President that convened the Senate by signing a proclamation.

    “Everybody knows that it was going to start at 10 am and the President himself had asked us to start at that time. So, I think that a proclamation was superior to any other thing messages.

    “I think a proclamation that was signed by our president is superior to any other message.

    “You know, once you enter the Senate chamber, a lot of party considerations are secondary.

    “What we did yesterday (Tuesday) was to consider the interest of the nation. Some people may be upset, some people may not be happy about it but that also is democracy.”

    Senator Shehu Sani said that what transpired on the floor of the Senate on Tuesday may be a true reflection of a brewing crisis in the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Sani noted that that if the party is unable to manage its electoral victory, the country may be heading for a major crisis.

    The Kaduna Central lawmaker said that he has no problem as an APC member for an APC person to occupy the office of the Senate President, but has problem with the party sharing positions with the PDP.

    Sani, who is a member of the Senate Unity Forum, was of the view that the inauguration of the Eight Senate was constitutional.

    He noted that the inauguration had been done and cannot be canceled, saying that it is left for those that felt aggrieved to go to court.

    Sani also urged Buhari to take steps to heal the wounds within the two factions and bring them together.

  • Agbaje gets tribunal’s permission to inspect poll materials

    Agbaje gets tribunal’s permission to inspect poll materials

    The Lagos State election petitions tribunal has granted leave to the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Mr. Jimi Agbaje, to inspect all polling documents and devices used for the April 11 election in the state.

    The tribunal chairman, Justice Sylvanus Oriji, granted the prayer of the petitioner while ruling on an application filed by Agbaje through his counsel, Clement Onwuenmonor.

    Justice Oriji also ordered the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) to provide certified true copies of all polling documents including printed data from card readers in each polling‎ units in the state.

    The two orders were given out of five prayers filed by the petitioner‎ before the tribunal.

    The tribunal had earlier ‎taken the submissions of Agbaje’s counsel and that of the All Progressive Congress, Ademola Sadiq.‎

    ‎In his reaction to the ruling, the APC counsel noted that the ruling was made on point of law.

    ‎Meanwhile, Justice Oriji has warned lawyers against delaying the petitions before it.

    He said the tribunal would not tolerate strategies aimed at delaying the expeditious hearing and determination of petitions by lawyers.

     

  • Tinubu hails Agbaje’s ‘good spirit’

    Tinubu hails Agbaje’s ‘good spirit’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu was last night excited over Akinwunmi Ambode’s victory at Saturday’s governorship election.

    He ascribed it all to the party’s members’  hard.

    Tinubu said Ambode’s victory was predicated on the radical transformation and well-articulated programmes he started 16 years ago, hinting that Lagos would start another race in its transformation drive given its alignment with the federal government.

    The former Lagos governor hailed the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, Mr Jimi Agbaje, for his statesmanship, describing him as a man of good values and character.

    “We must bear in mind that a good democrat must accept result of a free and fair election.,” he said.

    Tinubu said Agbaje showed good spirit by calling Ambode on telephone to congratulate him and for accepting his party’s loss in Saturday’s poll.

    Tinubu said: “Our victory in Lagos is as a result of hard work I started 16 years ago. Constistent radical transformation of Lagos and well-articulated programmes, including education, infrastructure, urban renewal, innovative system of finance, knowledge-based economy and job creation in partnership with private sector. That resulted in leap development of Lagos.”

    The APC leader said there would always be a winner in all contest, congratulating Ambode for his success.

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola described the APC victory in Lagos as product of good leadership exhibited by the outgoing governor, saying the victory came with a task to meet people’s expectations in service delivery and good governance. He praised Ambode’s fighting spirit.

    Lagos Commissioner for Environment Tunji Bello said the victory would take the state to another level of development.

  • Agbaje congratulates Ambode

    Agbaje congratulates Ambode

    The Peoples Democratic Party governorship candidate in Lagos State, Mr. Jimi Agbaje, has called to congratulate his All Progressives Congress (APC) counterpart, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, on his electoral victory.

     Agbaje called Ambode  at 6:50 pm and prayed for the governor-elect. He said he looks forward to a more prosperous Lagos.

    Also, in Oyo State, Labour Party (LP) governorship candidate Adebayo Alao-Akala has hailed Governor Abiola Ajimobi for his victory at the poll.

    A statement by Alao-Akala’s Director of Public Affairs, Oludare Ogunlana, said the former governor called Ajimobi before the result was announced.

    He said his decision to congratulate the governor was borne out of the need to respect the people’s wish.

    Alao-Akala advised the governor to be magnanimous in victory and devise ways of taking the state higher.

    He reaffirmed that he did not see himself as a loser as he heeded the people’s call to serve.

    Emphasising the need to run a people-oriented government, he said: “At this point in time, all governmental policies must reflect the yearnings and aspirations of the people.

    “The governor should deploy all resources at his disposal for the development of the state, leaving no region behind.”

    Alao-Akala thanked those who voted for him and other lawmakers-elect, saying “defeat makes people stronger. We will go back to the drawing board to see where we went wrong and readjust for future aspiration”.

    “Our supporters should not be sad; rather they should be happy that a party they joined few months ago is able to make a good showing at the poll.

    He also advised the people to cooperate with Ajimobi. “No government can work on its own; the people must cooperate and contribute their quota to the development of the state,” he advised.

  • Agbaje calls Ambode, concedes defeat

    Agbaje calls Ambode, concedes defeat

    The Peoples Democratic Party’s candidate in Lagos, Jimi Agbaje, has called the All Progress Congress candidate, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, to congratulate him on his victory at the Lagos governorship election.

    He called Ambode at 6.50pm, prayed for him and said he was looking forward to a more prosperous Lagos.

    At the time of this report, the final announcement was still being awaited.

  • Bode George defeated in his polling unit

    Bode George defeated in his polling unit

    The Peoples Democratic Party candidate chieftain in Southwest, Chief Bode George, lost in his polling unit during Saturday’s governorship poll in Lagos.

    His party polled 87 votes, while the All Progressive Congress scored 137.

    Mr. Jimi Agbaje is PDP’s governorship candidate in the state, while Akinwunmi Ambode is flying the APC flag in the poll.

  • Agbaje loses polling unit

    Agbaje loses polling unit

    The Peoples Democratic Party governorship candidate in Lagos, Mr. Jimmy Agbaje, lost his polling unit to his All Progressive Congress rival, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, in Saturday’s governorship poll in the state.

    Agbaje polled 84 votes, while Ambode scored 124.

    Counting of votes is ongoing in most polling units across the state.

  • …President met with Obanikoro, Gani  Adams, Agbaje, so what? — Presidency

    …President met with Obanikoro, Gani Adams, Agbaje, so what? — Presidency

    The Presidency yesterday admitted that President Goodluck Jonathan met in Lagos with Messers Musiliu Obanikoro,Jimmy Agbaje and Gani Adams, but denied that the purpose was to rig today’s elections in Lagos State as alleged by the APC.

    Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said “nothing unusual happened” during  the meeting  or during  his principal’s visit to Lagos ,while the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) dismissed the APC allegations as false.

    Abati,reacting  in a statement to the APC allegations  said: “ President Jonathan visited Lagos. He arrived on Thursday and left on Friday. People visited him. So what? Anytime the President is in Lagos or any part of the country, a lot of people come to pay homage to him. Nothing unusual happened during his last visit to Lagos.

    “Senator Musiliu Obanikoro’s visit to the President in Lagos is not something that anybody should use to play politics. Koro is a Minister of the Federal Republic. He came to see his boss.”

    He also said that he did not see how the visit of the governorship candidate of the PDP in Lagos state, Mr. Jimi Agbaje, to the President, who is the leader party, should become an issue.

    “Yes, Gani Adams also visited, but so did a lot of other people.” he added

    Abati said the APC spokesman was  rude and off course to suggest that the President was in Lagos to perfect any plan to rig.

    His words: “President Jonathan visited Lagos. He arrived on Thursday and left on Friday. People visited him. So what? Anytime the President is in Lagos or any part of the country, a lot of people come to pay homage to him. Nothing unusual happened during his last visit to Lagos.”

    Abati also said  that the President did not hold meetings with INEC officials, the police, or polling officials or with anybody who is involved in organizing elections.

    “So to say that the President went to Lagos to supervise the rigging of today’s election is most uncharitable and cruel,” he said.

    He added: “After the presidential election, the President immediately congratulated Gen. Buhari and the whole world has commended him for saving Nigeria. President Jonathan’s sportsmanship, statesmanship and leadership saved this country at that critical moment.

    “He has demonstrated his commitment to free and fair elections, the rule of law and due process. He has shown that he is a man of character, honour and integrity. Nigerians generally are proud of him.  He has left a worthy legacy and shown a great example. That, obviously, is the narrative that Lai Mohammed and his masters want to change, so they are now cooking up meaningless tales.

    “Lai Mohammed should look for another target and leave the President alone. His fatuous tale does not make any sense. I repeat: we will like to advise that the APC should just leave the President alone. President Jonathan was a candidate in the presidential election; he did not rig the election. Why would he want to rig tomorrow’s (today’s) elections?”

    In a separate statement in Abuja,the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP,Chief Olisa Metuh,    called the APC allegations  unwarranted and unnecessary as they are capable of raising tension.

     He said: “The APC must desist from its propaganda, lies and false alarms, especially bearing in mind that it did not win the presidential election on account of such.

    “Nigerians are no longer in the mood for such politics as they have since moved ahead in celebration of the deepening of our democracy by the PDP-led administration.

    “The PDP successfully nurtured democracy in the last 16 years with attendant benefits to the people. Unfortunately, concerns are already heightening that the APC may not sustain this legacy given its disreputable disposition to national issues and ceaseless resort to propaganda and deceit.

    “We are aware that the APC leader and President-elect, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, has gone to about 12 states meeting and campaigning for his party’s candidates and wonder why the APC should fret about President Goodluck Jonathan’s meeting with our candidates in Lagos.

    “President Jonathan has with the 2015 general elections proven beyond all doubts that he is a true democrat committed to free, fair and credible elections, a fact for which he has continued to receive accolades from well-meaning Nigerians and the international community.

    “Finally, we call on Lagosians to disregard this latest false alert and come out en masse today to exercise their constitutionally guaranteed right. In the same vein, we charge INEC and security forces to ensure that the elections are free, fair and credible not only in Lagos, but also in other states of the federation”.

  • Ambode/Agbaje: The final word!

    Ambode/Agbaje: The final word!

    If there is no struggle, there is no progress – Frederick Douglass

    Like the last presidential election that attracted so much attention, the Lagos governorship contest will be fought for tomorrow, Saturday, April 11. As widely known, the two major contestants are Akin Ambode of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Jimi Agbaje of the conservative Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Since the primaries of the two major parties last December from which the two contestants emerged as the candidates of their parties, all that needed to be known about the duo had been written and said for the sake of profile boosting and garnering of positive public perception.

    But the day of decision is tomorrow and the deciders are Lagosians with Permanent Voter Card (PVC) who would be saddled with the simply onerous task of electing the next governor of Lagos State for another four-year term. At this juncture, that Ambode is a brilliant chartered accountant and an accomplished retired public servant that served without blemish at the pinnacle of his profession in the civil service of Lagos has become a cliché to people in the Centre of Excellence. Also, an attempt by this column to let Lagosians know that Agbaje is a businessman pharmacist that is known more because of his opportunistic proclivity of using ethnic platform, the Afenifere group, to gain undue political prominence among reactionary politicians might no longer be news to people living in and outside the state again. Agbaje is deceitfully hobnobbing with the Igbos in Lagos by trumping the same ethnic card when he promised to elevate their lgwe to the same status with that of the Oba of Lagos. What a laughable insolence to the Yoruba traditional institution on their land simply because of desperation of Agbaje to rule Lagos!

    Tomorrow is D-Day and Lagosians must come out to vote for continuity of the steady progress so far laid through the foundation created by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and consolidated by incumbent governor Babatunde Fashola. The progressive landmarks are there for all to see. Whatever anybody might have against the progressives, what is undeniable is that the state and others governed by them have witnessed unprecedented development under their firm grip.

    If this is so, must Lagosians be hoodwinked by deceits of electoral failures in Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) masquerading as people’s champions? Any desperate politician for such exalted position that is ready to wine and dine with the devil in his bid to gain power is not worth relying upon. And that person is what Agbaje epitomizes today. What manner of man would commence his political career as a champion of Yoruba cause only to end up in desperation, as champion of another ethnic group’s cause, for mischievous political advantage? The political retrogression of Agbaje is enough pointer to the speck on his touted credibility. He moved from being a progressive to being a reactionary in the PDP.

    Agbaje got to PDP and manifested traits that are worse than those he met there. For instance, he won the state governorship ticket of PDP in primaries where the number of votes cast is more than the accredited delegates. Till today, he still could not convince the public how he came about his fictitious extra ‘57 delegates’ in that phantom primaries. When a man’s newfound friends are Bode George, Adeseye Ogunlewe and Musiliu Obanikoro known for everything but honour, then, Lagosians must vote wisely for CHANGE tomorrow and also vigilantly stand by their votes.

    Tomorrow’s election should not be based solely on educational status of the contestants but on their career progression and public service experience. After all, newly defeated incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan who is the leader of Agbaje’s odious riddled political party purportedly had a doctorate degree that did not in any way rub off positively in the way he ruled this country in six wasteful years. When it comes to a truly tested and trustworthy candidate in public service, Ambode is the candidly qualified candidate, not Agbaje of conservative PDP whose touted success in business is heavily a consequence of political patronage over the years. Ambode is not just a theoretician given only to rhetorics like Agbaje.

    Ambode was until retirement, an instrumental financial engineer behind the mammoth roads, bridges and drainages construction effected in the state. He designed financial strategies with which modern standard equipment were procured for security agencies; and with which roads were lit; traffic lamps provided and healthcare facilities of world class standards built across the state. At the most difficult period in Lagos State, Ambode took charge of the state’s finances and ensured that workers’ salaries were paid promptly to the chagrin of reactionary company that Agbaje keeps now.

    Ambode is the man to beat tomorrow because of these lofty empirical credentials. When the nation’s soccer era was booming, the Green Eagles, the nation’s soccer team’s supporters club used to sing a particular song when the going gets tough or the Eagles needs more goals and it goes thus: ‘All we are saying, give us more goals.’ To all eligible voters in Lagos, permit this column to parody the supporters’ club song: ‘ All we are saying, give Ambode this day…all we are saying, give APC Saturday, April 11 and enjoy the best partnership in development of Lagos with the centre government. The south-south people, southeast Igbo and the Yoruba aborigines should all come out tomorrow to vote for the party and its candidate, Ambode, that has given governance in the state and region a truly positive projection.

    The consolidation of the good work started sixteen years ago in Lagos by the resilient progressives must be consolidated upon tomorrow for the sake of continuity of progress. More importantly, if in sixteen years of PDP misgovernance at the federal level, Nigerians are worse off, the fate that will befall any state that still voted for the visionless PDP is better imagined. May such fate never befall Lagos, not even now that the centre government has gotten into the hands of the APC? A Lagos state government that will continue to exhibit high sense of responsibility in public affairs management can only be guaranteed by an APC government as represented by Ambode in tomorrow’s election. That is the final statement!

  • Let the truth be told: Agbaje, you have godfathers!

    While reading the excerpts of the media interaction of the gubernatorial candidate of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State, Mr. Jimi Agbaje in The Guardian of January 23, 2015, and also watching his interview on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily by the trio of Chamberlin Usoh, Sulaiman Aladeh, and Maupe Ogun, the words of German philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche came to my mind. He apparently had Agbaje in mind when he said: “I’m not upset that you lied to me, I’m upset that from now on I can’t believe you.”

    Having unashamedly told lies to Lagosians, it will surely be difficult to believe his campaign promises. When Agbaje told journalists “I don’t have a godfather”, I cringed. Agbaje should tell that to the marines. One question one must ask Agbaje is: how did he, who joined the PDP a few months to the party’s primary election, emerged as the candidate without the support of the godfathers who controls the party’s structures? Agbaje wanted us to believe that Chief Bode George and Chief Adeseye Ogunlewe who allegedly influenced the primary election and deployed state apparatus in his favour did that out of sheer altruism and without vested interest.  Can Jimi Agbaje dispute the fact that he emerged the candidate of the PDP in Lagos State through a manifestly fraudulent and violent process? Perhaps, it is apposite to refresh the memory of sufferers of selective amnesia as no one can build something on nothing, as it will not stand.

    In the primary election that produced Agbaje as the candidate, 806 voters were accredited but 863 votes were counted. This is in line with the PDP’s “democracy” algebra.  To the PDP, 16 is greater than 19 at the Nigerian Governors Forum’s election and seven is greater than 19 at the Ekiti State House of Assembly. Agbaje did not have the capacity to conjure the 57 ghost delegates, as he did not control the structure of the party. It was only the bipolar super power of George and Ogunlewe that could brazenly invent such parody of democracy. Agbaje, tell no lies, claim no easy victory!

    I also recall that the cache of weapons recovered by the Police in a SURE-P bus put at the disposal of Bode George’s thugs on the day of the primary election could have assisted the soldiers complaining of ill equipment in the war against Boko Haram. I did not invent this. The serious allegation leveled against Bode George and SURE-P was made by no less a personality than Musiliu Obanikoro, immediate past Minister of State for Defence and victim of the rigging process. A friend, who passed through Ketu and Ojota on that day, confirmed the scary incident that one of the gubernatorial aspirants donned a bulletproof vest at the venue of the primary election. Television cameras captured this. What other proof do we need?

    George and Ogunlewe could not have deployed “life and death” and “do or die” tactics to secure the ticket for Agbaje if they were not driven by self-serving agenda. They are waiting for huge return on their ‘investments’ if Agbaje is elected. That Bode George has not been consistently seen on the Agbaje campaign train is not because he is old, as Agbaje wanted us to believe, the truth is that he is being kept away from the public glare like a leper. He is considered a liability to the campaign, as he is much remembered by the masses for his alleged heist on the public till at the Nigeria Ports Authority and his days at Kirikiri Maximum Prison for corrupt enrichment, though quashed by the Supreme Court. Don’t forget that Bode George is the cornerstone of “I don’t have godfather” castle of lies being built in the air by Agbaje. This is what he wants to sell to Lagosians in exchange for their mandate. I say to the electorate, ‘caveat emptor, buyers beware!’ Anyway, Lagosians are too sophisticated for this deceit. Eko oni gba igba kugba, which literally translated means, ‘Lagosians don’t suffer fools gladly’.

    Again, at the media interaction, Agbaje put on a “holier than thou” garb. He mentioned the phrase “vested interest” for almost 10 times while aiming punches at the All Peoples Congress (APC).  Sadly, there was not a giant mirror in the room; otherwise, he would have seen himself in the mirror with bloodied face from a self-inflicted injury. He was apparently desperate to ram it in the head of his guests that if elected, his administration will be devoid of vested interest. As Americans would say: “Mr. Agbaje, gimme [give me] a break!” Is Agbaje saying that he is the sole financier of his multi-billion-naira contest for power project? Or do his campaign financiers see their contribution as donations to charity and therefore no string attached?  Ambrose Bierce apparently had Agbaje in mind when in his book, Devil’s Dictionary he defines politics as “strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles”.

    Agbaje, tell no lies; you owe three people if you are elected governor: godfathers, campaign financiers and the electorate. It is now left for you to hone the skill on how to strike the balance and draw a right scale of preference.

    It is settled that both Agbaje and Akinkunmi Ambode, the APC gubernatorial candidate in Lagos State, have godfathers and financiers whose “vested interests” will also be protected if elected while fulfilling the campaign promises to the electorate.  The coming gubernatorial elections in Lagos State are a proxy electoral battle between Asiwaju Bola Tinubu of APC and Chief Bode George of PDP! One must be a fool to believe otherwise. Therefore, for me, the criterion to choose the better candidate is the capacity of the candidate. This is why I’ll go for Ambode. Agbaje is an accomplished businessman and he is eminently qualified to become the Lagos State governor. But Ambode, with huge experience and fulfilled career in both public and private sectors, embedded with local and international capacity building, is the best man for the job.

    It is interesting to note that Ambode had cause to work with seven governors (civilian and military) in the voyage of his career. The slump in the oil price and attendant decline in federal allocation necessitates having in Alausa a governor that is well adept in financial engineering. Lagos State has experienced sharp drop in the accruable revenue in the past when former President Olusegun Obasanjo, with the blessing of Agbaje’s godfathers (Bode George and Ogunlewe), unlawfully withheld the state’s monthly allocations as a result of the creation of additional Local Council Development Areas that were meant to take governance and development closer to the grassroots. Ambode, as the state’s Accountant General, was credited with excellent management of the account at the trying period, which lasted for four years. The state government survived this period without abandoning its responsibility to the people or sacking a single worker. Lagosians need Ambode’s expertise and experience more than ever in this period and when the era of high oil price is over.

    More importantly, the recent victory of the All Progressive Congress at the federal level will hasten the 25-year development plan in Lagos, with Ambode in the driver seat of governance, where 24-hour power is possible, National Art theatre and National Stadium will be refurbished, Apapa roads will be maintained and more opportunities will be provided for the hardworking Lagosians regardless of tongue, tribe or gender.

     

    • Sewanu, a Public Relations and Brand Communication Consultant based in Lagos.