Tag: Ahmed Gulak

  • Adamawa aspirants want PDP to respect pact

    Eight Peoples Democratic Party aspirants that obtained nomination forms for the botched October 11 governorship election in Adamawa State stormed the Abuja secretariat of the party on Wednesday, asking the leadership to respect a subsisting agreement.

    They had stepped down for the former Acting Governor of the state, Umar Fintiri, before a Federal High Court in Abuja halted the by-election and installed the former Deputy Governor, Bala Ngilari, as governor.

    Upon stepping down for Fintiri, in the botched by-election, the PDP had assured the aspirants that their nomination forms would still be valid for the governorship election proper.

    The aspirants, who met with the party’s National Secretary are – Auwal Tukur, Umar Fintiri, Idi Hong, James Barka, Abubakar Girei, Marcus Gundiri, Ahmed Gulak and Aliyu Karma.

    Speaking on behalf of the aspirants, Ahmed Gulak said: “We are all aspirants from Adamawa State that were supposed to take part in the by-election that could not hold.

    “The party, alongside the government at that time, entered into an agreement that our forms will be validated for the 2015 election and the governorship slot will be zoned to Adamawa central.

    “We have met the party and the National Secretary assured us that the agreement is valid and they assured us that the agreement will stand.

    “We are not aware that the governor has picked form but the fact is that there is a subsisting agreement among all parties, including the party that the slot for governorship in Adamawa 2015 will be for the central.

    “On that agreement, the validation of the forms for those from the central and the zoning on that agreement will stand.”

  • Fintiri wins Adamawa PDP governorship primary

    Fintiri wins Adamawa PDP governorship primary

    The Acting Governor of Adamawa State, Umaru Fintiri, in the early hours of Sunday won the governorship primary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to complete the tenure of impeached former Governor Murtala Nyako.

    Fintiri was voted by 60 per cent of the more than 878 delegates at the poll conducted by a former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Dimeji Bankole.

    While a former Executive Secretary of the Universal Basic Education Commission, Dr. Ahmed Mohammed Modibbo, came second, a former Military Administrator of Lagos State, Brig-Gen. Buba Marwa was third.

    A source said: “The poll was free and fair. The power of incumbency worked for Fintiri who had secured the loyalty and support of statutory delegates like local government chairmen, councillors, and other political appointees.

    “Also before the poll, a former Political Adviser to the President, Ahmed Gulak, stepped down for Fintiri, making up to four aspirants conceding the slot to the Acting Governor.”

    The candidate of the All Progressives Congress for the October 11 governorship election is expected to emerge on Sunday.

     

  • Ribadu joins Adamawa governorship race

    Ribadu joins Adamawa governorship race

    … Picks PDP nomination form

    The former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, on Monday picked the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship nomination form to contest the Adamawa governorship election.

    The form, with serial number 0000060, was obtained at the party’s national secretariat through a proxy, Alhaji Hamidu Mahmud, at a cost of N10 million.

    Speaking with reporters shortly after obtaining the form, Mahmud said Ribadu had applied to the leadership of the PDP for a waiver and that he was awaiting the response from the party leaders.

    Mahmud expressed the confidence that Ribadu would get the waiver, saying that the PDP constitution did not insert the waiver clause in anticipation that the former EFCC boss would join the race.

    According to him, there is no reason why the party should deny him the opportunity to vie for the ticket.

    Besides Ribadu, others in the race for the party’s ticket include a former political adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan, Ahmed Gulak; Acting governor of Adamawa State, Alhaji Umaru Fintiri and the former Executive Secretary of the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), Ahmed Modibbo.

    Others are – former Minister of state for Foreign Affairs, Aliyu Idi Hong; former Lagos military  administrator, Buba Marwa; and son of former national chairman of the PDP, Awwal Tukur, and others.

    The nomination closes Tuesday while the return of the forms is expected to close on August 25.

    The party has fixed August 28 for the screening of aspirants.

    The ward congress comes up on September 1, while appeal for the congress will hold on September 3.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has fixed the election for October 11.

  • Adamawa: Ribadu not my problem – Gulak

    Adamawa: Ribadu not my problem – Gulak

    The former Political Adviser to the President, Alhaji Ahmed Gulak has dismissed insinuations that he might have been rattled by the purported interest of the former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu in the Adamawa governorship race.

    Gulak, who addressed journalists in Abuja on Thursday, said Ribadu can never be a threat to his ambition to contest the Adamawa State governorship election, whose date would be announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) any moment from now.

    The state’s Assembly had in July, impeached Governor Murtala Nyako, an action generally perceived to have been instigated by power brokers within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Gulak dismissed the purported plan by Ribadu to join the governorship race on the platform of the PDP.

    The ex- EFCC chairman is still a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “I don’t believe Ribadu would jettison his ideals and defect from the APC to the PDP for the purpose of contesting the governorship election in Adamawa State.

    “If he is sure of his popularity, he should be ready to contest on the platform of the APC if he so desires, but it is the people that will decide who to govern them.

    “However, if he has decided to join the PDP, as it is being rumoured, then he is welcome. But given a transparent process, no politician in Adamawa State today has what it takes to defeat me in any primary election or the election proper.

    “It is a matter of one’s popularity with the people because Adamawa of today is far different from what obtained about seven years ago,” Gulak stated.

    He dismissed insinuations that his removal from office by President Goodluck Jonathan a few weeks ago, might work against his ambition, stressing that he was not removed as a result corruption or any misconduct.

    “Since my removal from office I have not been invited by the police, SSS, EFCC or any arm of the security agencies for questioning because I did not commit any crime. I was removed because it was time for me to leave.

    “I have been there for about seven years and I discharged my duties creditably well. My support for President Jonathan’s re-election bid remained unshaken because there is no alternative to Jonathan in the PDP,” he said.

     

     

  • ‘Ribadu unlikely to fly PDP’s ticket in Adamawa’

    ‘Ribadu unlikely to fly PDP’s ticket in Adamawa’

    Former presidential adviser on political affairs, Mr Ahmed Gulak, has declared that former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, is unlikely to abandon the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the purpose of contesting the forthcoming governorship election in the state.

    Ribadu, according to newspaper reports, is being wooed by PDP chieftains to switch over from the APC and take the PDP ticket for the election.

    But Gulak who is also interested in the race told reporters in Yola that there is no proof yet that Ribadu will accept to contest on the platform of the PDP.

    He said “Ribadu is a highly respected person who happened to be my classmate and I have tremendous respect for him. I know that he will not run on the PDP platform.

    “Having established his tentacles in the All Progressives Congress (APC), he will not abandon the party midstream.”

    Gulak said some youths that are asking Ribadu to seek PDP’s ticket were on their own and not on the errand of Ribadu.

     

    He said PDP has more than enough gubernatorial aspirants and does not need to go begging a non party member to fly its flag.

    He said that during the last  Eid-el Fitr celebrations Ribadu went on radio  wishing the people of Adamawa State happy Sallah under the banner of the APC so he cannot now to  say he is contesting on the PDP platform.

  • Ahmed Gulak’s Archipelago

    Oh boy, oh boy! We know that this is a period of collective tragedy but one single political tragedy diminishes all of us. Has anything been heard about the black box of the flight Gulak 101?  It reportedly took off from Abuja in heavy weather and made an emergency landing in Uyo as a result of political turbulence. The plane was said to have developed technical hitches. Thereafter, the lone occupant was also said to have developed itches and rashes as a result of political rashness. The plane was last seen limping and listless as it flew into the clouds. It was reported that all efforts to plead for a soft landing from the tower in Abuja fell on presidential deaf ears.  This is not a case of a Bermuda Triangle. It is Ahmed Gulak who has fallen into his own archipelago.

  • Many Sins of Ahmed Gulak

    Many Sins of Ahmed Gulak

    Think of been used and dumped, the case of former adviser on political matters to President Goodluck Jonathan, Ahmed Gulak, comes to mind. The Barrister’s unguarded statements and unruly behavior have turned him to a liability capable of causing collateral damage to the president and his political ambition.

    He created unnecessary enemies for his principal. Some staunch loyalists of Mr. President have at some point expressed concern that he might have been a fifth columnist, planted in Jonathan’s government to play a script of unseen hands.

    The former Adamawa state House of Assembly Speaker, tried in vain to spin his mortifying dismissal from the presidency as a honourable resignation to pursue a political ambition in his state.

    If some of the vile comments credited to Ahmed Gulak were vituperations from Asari Dokubo, one would understand but not from a political adviser to the President. His opinion on politics are taken as the official position of the president on such issues. That was how weighty his statements were as the president’s mouth piece.

    The quest for cheap popularity and vain glory or overzealousness if you want to be nice to him, has become his undoing. What now happens to his chest thumping like a schoolboy, a promise to take a bullet for President Jonathan? Now that he has shot himself in the foot by consistently talking before thinking, one wonders what will become of his political career as he leaves the presidency. He will return to face a lot of persons he has hurled insults at and you can be sure they’ll reward him in his own coin, politically.

    Apparently, of all his reckless and peevish remarks, the one that stands him out is the position he took on behalf of President Jonathan in the aftermath of Governor Amaechi’s emergence as Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF) chairman.

    “As far as the President is concerned,” said Gulak,“Governor Jonah Jang of Plateau state is the Chairman of the Nigerian Governor’s Forum and not Governor Amaechi.” Gulak had made a choice for the president of the federal republic of Nigeria, a public disclosure, declaring Governor Jang, the loser of a credible election with only 16 votes, as the winner, while Governor Amaechi, who polled 19, became the loser. Here was the president endorsing illegality by the unguarded remarks of his aide.

    As Gulak’s irascible disposition has shown, the baggage Jonathan carries along in some aides like Doyin Okupe, Labaran Maku, Reno Omokri and Reuben Abati, who see every attack on the president as an opportunity to “open fire”, often times, bring the office of the President to disrepute.

    Maybe the scales has fallen off the President’s eyes, maybe he felt Gulak has been manipulating him all the while. Mr Gulak’s job description revolves around polishing the image of the president in political matters but he chose instead to abuse anyone that expresses positive but dissenting opinion.

    Some months back, there was this speculative report in newspapers that Obasanjo had dumped Jonathan, and that the former president was equally considering quitting the PDP. Ahmed Gulak, was asked to speak on behalf of his principal who will all know is Obasanjo’s protégé.

    He pulled the trigger: “I will like to say with all sense of responsibility that Nigerians should not make God out of Obasanjo. Obasanjo is not God, and it is only God that gives a person power, it is only God that can say Mr. A, you will be president, and it will come to pass. No human being can play God.” One would have expected a more circumspect response since the reports were merely speculative, but not with Gulak.

    With such a vacuous comment, he pitched the President with Obasanjo. Agreed, no human being can play God but we were witnesses to how Obasanjo almost singlehandedly ensured Jonathan progressed politically from deputy governor in Bayelsa state to President elect.

    “Obasanjo was part of the system from 1976 to 1979, and then from 1999 to 2007. Obasanjo should play the role of a father figure, to advise and not to keep poke-nosing into the affairs of the nation, to choose people who should run and who should not.” That was Gulak as his bellicose best again, slamming the Ota farmer for purportedly endorsing (according to unsubstantiated newspaper reports, again) Governors Sule Lamido and Rotimi Amaechi as presidential and vice-presidential candidates, respectively, of the PDP in 2015.

    Truth is, Obasanjo is part of the leadership crisis in the country today, but such remarks should not come from Jonathan’s aide.

    Of Dr Junaid Mohammed, Gulak had said he suffers from “diarrhoea of the mouth,” adding that the man “enjoys sitting in his comfort zone and criticising.” A case of pot calling kettle black.

    Still smarting from his heroics of hurling insults, it was time for former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, an opposition politician, to take his share of Gulak’s smear.

    He described El-Rufai as “the most disappointing young man in the country.”

    Not showing any signs of slowing down in the business of gathering enemies for his boss, he took on another role as Special Adviser in Imo as he commented on Governor Rochas Okorocha’s reluctance to comply with a court judgement on the tenure of local government chairmen. He garrulously reacted: “What Okorocha has done is illegal and unconstitutional, and where democracy thrives, these are acts that are impeachable. It is just unfortunate that the members of the Imo State House of Assembly have not taken up the matter.”

    In that swagger – reminiscent of talented musicians who just hit the spotlight – of an arrogant and unruly presidential aide, he took a swipe at the National Assembly when a stand-off ensued over Budget 2013.

    According to him, “you cannot rule out 2015 because what I always say, and I keep on saying is that, people should not use their ambition to jettison national issues.” He said National Assembly members should be blamed for poor budget implementation through delayed passage of the Appropriation Bill, and even added that the lawmakers had problem with understanding the budget, because a lot of them were illiterates.

    That Gulak was described as a fifth columnist in Jonathan’s government by a taciturn Senate President, David Mark, was an indication that he hit the members of the Red chamber below the belt.

    Another aide of the President would have none of this Mrs. Joy Emodi (though, like Gulak, she has been sacked), Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly, quickly distanced Mr. President from the controversial lawyer turned politician: “Let me state categorically that the alleged statements neither reflect the views of the President on the National Assembly, nor the enormous respect he has for the institution. In other words, those to whom the statements were credited were on their own, and never spoke the mind of the president.”

    Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, had delivered the Second Zik Annual Lecture Series in Awka, Anambra State, where he stressed that 21st Century Nigeria needed knowledgeable leadership at all levels. He submitted that some parts of the South-East should always send their very best in the mould of Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe to the National Assembly (NASS), given the abundance of intellectuals in the states.

    Gulak did not waste time in twisting Ekweremadu’s speech: “The Deputy Senate President said some legislators could barely write their names. He said so. Go and read it. He said so, I did not say it. So, if most of them can barely write their names, then how will they understand the intricacies of budget? I did not say it. It is the Deputy Senate President that said it, and he really said it. So it means the National Assembly has a long way to go.” Gulak in his disingenuity, spinned Ekweremadu’s comment as all NASS members from around the country are illiterates.

    Ekweremadu’s aide in a swift reply released a statement that summarised Gulak’s tenure as political adviser to President Jonathan; Gulak is “either oblivious of his job schedule or lacking the competence to undertake it.”

    Ilevbare is a public affairs commentator. Engage him on twitter, @tilevbare. He blogs at http://ilevbare.com.

     

  • Jonathan sacks political adviser Gulak

    Jonathan sacks political adviser Gulak

    •Jubilation in Adamawa

    President Goodluck Jonathan sacked yesterday his Special Adviser on Political Matters, Alhaji Ahmed Gulak.

    The government announced his sack in a three-paragraph statement by the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati.

    No reason was given for the termination of the appointment.

    The statement reads: “President Goodluck Jonathan has terminated the appointment of his Special Adviser (Political), Alhaji Ahmed Gulak, with immediate effect.

    “President Jonathan thanks Alhaji Gulak for his services to the present administration and wishes him success in his future endeavours.

    “A replacement for Alhaji Gulak will be announced in due course.”

    There was jubilation last night in Adamawa State over the sack of Gulak.

    Scores of residents in Yola, the state capital, and Gulak, the home town of the sacked aide, said Gulak deserved the boot because of his lack of political valour to the President.

    Governor Murtala Nyako said he sympathised with the sacked presidential aide.

    The governor noted that it was a lesson for Gulak and others like him that it is always good to avoid “political rascality”.

    Nyako said he was uncomfortable with the reported jubilation by the people of Gulak in Madagali Local Government Area.

    The governor hoped that Gulak would have learnt a lesson from the transient nature of power.

    Nyako, who spoke through his Director of Press and Public Affairs, Mallam Ahmad I. Sajoh, regretted that Gulak was supposed to be an adviser to the President but became the self-made spokesman of the Presidency, insulting and vilifying elderly people he perceived to be the President’s enemies.

    “But today, the real presidential spokesman has spoken by showing the exit route to him (Gulak) unceremoniously,” Nyako said.

    The governor described the people’s celebration of Gulak’s removal as a pity and a lesson to those in the corridors of power.

    Some politicians told our reporter last night in Yola that the Presidency did the right thing because the sack of Gulak would reduce the number of those overheating the polity.

  • ‘Build Ibaka Seaport’

    ‘Build Ibaka Seaport’

    Former Akwa Ibom State Deputy Governor Nsima Ekere has called on President Goodluck Jonathan to build the Ibaka Deep Seaport.

    Ekere spoke after the inauguration of the Southsouth Zonal Office of the Goodluck Support Group (GSG) by the Special Adviser to the President on Political Affairs, Ahmed Gulak, in Uyo.

    He hailed the collaboration between the federal and state governments on the development of the seaport but urged the President to direct the Ministry of Transport and the Nigerian Port Authority (NPA) to speed up the processes so that work can begin.

    The former deputy governor said the seaport has the capacity to create thousands of jobs, grow the economy and change the perception of Akwa Ibom as a civil service state.

  • Governors’ defection long overdue, says presidential aide

    A MID fears that some governors defection to the All Progressives Congress (APC) may affect the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the Special Adviser to the President on Political Affairs, Ahmed Gulak, said yesterday that the action is a welcome development.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Gulak said their movement was no threat to the PDP and the Presidency ahead of the 2015 general elections.

    He said the pronouncement by the aggrieved governors would spur an influx of new members to the PDP from other parties.

    Reacting to the defection, Gulak said: “Well, I know as of fact that five of them say that they will now join APC. But I know that two of them issued statements that they are not part of that, Governor of Niger and Governor of Jigawa State. This is the fact on ground.”

    “And I believe those others, for long time and I have said it before, that their hearts have not been in PDP. It is good that they have shown the world that they have taken a stand. So that PDP will not be distracted, so that PDP, as a party, will be focused to build our party because a lot of people are waiting for this moment. A lot of people even in the APC, ACN, ANPP have contacted me that they want to come back to PDP and they were just waiting for what happened today to happen. And to us, it is a good development.

    “The Presidency does not feel threatened, the PDP does not feel threatened. The PDP is the party to beat. We have had it before; even people who occupied higher offices left the party and came back to the party. Outside there, there is nothing, it’s empty. PDP is the only party.”

    The presidential aide also maintained that the PDP will be ready to welcome them back if they decide to return.

    “Reconciliation is an ongoing thing. If they go outside, they are like those that went there before them and test that the outside there is empty, they are always welcome back home, like we did before.” He stated