Tag: Aisha Alhassan

  • Atiku: I am not afraid of being sacked by Buhari – Alhassan

    Atiku: I am not afraid of being sacked by Buhari – Alhassan

    The Minister of Women Affairs, Aisha Alhassan, said on Thursday she stands by her remarks to support former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as presidential candidate in 2019.

    Alhassan had told the BBC Hausa Service that she would not support President Muhammadu Buhari if he decides to seek re-election in 2019.

    Speaking to State House correspondents on Thursday, the minister said she is not afraid of being sacked by President Buhari.

    Related: Nothing wrong in supporting Atiku – Alhassan

    She said: “No, I have no comment. What will I say now? I have said all in BBC Hausa Service. Get someone who speaks Hausa very well to translate it for you.”

    On her relationship with Buhari now, she added: “How will I know? I have not seen the President but I don’t think the President is a naive person.”

    Also: I am loyal to Buhari – Alhassan

    “God gives and God takes. That is all and I have said it all in Hausa. You know that there is an end to everything.”

    On Buhari supporters attacking her on social media, Alhassan said “let the will of God be done.”

  • Disquiet as minister backs Atiku for 2019

    Disquiet as minister backs Atiku for 2019

    Ministers were troubled yesterday following the leakage of a video footage showing Minister of Women Affairs Aisha Alhassan endorsing former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar for president in 2019.

    She also told the BBC Hausa Service yesterday that should Atiku join the presidential race, she would support him instead of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    She does not mind leaving the cabinet because of her preference for Atiku, Mrs Alhassan said.

    Leading an All Progressives Congress (APC) delegation from Taraba State  to Atiku, the minister was shown in the video as saying: “Mr President, our father, Nigeria’s president for 2019,  God willing, in your presence today are your people who have been placed under your care for forever.”

    Most cabinet members were shocked by their colleague’s stance.

    There were fears that the minister’s comments might hasten changes in the cabinet.

    Some ministers said the comments smacked of disloyalty; others said it was typical of Senator Alhassan.

    A minister said: “Some of us called her when the video went viral and she confirmed the comments attributed to her.

    “To me, I think it is like passing a vote of no confidence on your boss. I think it is untidy to write off your boss as incompetent to continue in office.”

    Another source in the cabinet said: “I am not surprised; it is typical of the Minister of Women Affairs. But the ideal thing is to leave and pursue your career. This development might affect our unity in the cabinet. Some will certainly not trust her again.”

    Another minister said: “She shocked me because I used to think she is closer to the President. What you cannot dispute is that the President has never hidden his respect for her. She was away from the cabinet for months when she was ill and the President tolerated her absence. She should have chosen a different approach to it because one good turn deserves another.”

    A government official said he suspected “a script”. It might not be only her. Maybe she is flying a kite,” he said, pleading not to be named.

    An APC stalwart, who also spoke in confidence, said: “I think she is kick-starting 2019 politics. I could see cracks in the coalition which formed the APC.”

    The presidency  has not commented on the video clip.

    A source in the Presidency said: “The President has just come back from Daura and he is just settling down. Actually, there is nothing to say.

    “The Minister of Women Affairs has confirmed to BBC that she made the comments. What else do you want the presidency to say?”

    In an interview with the BBC, the minister said: “Atiku is my godfather even before I joined politics.” She spoke in Hausa. “And again, Baba Buhari did not tell us that he is going to run in 2019.

    “Let me tell you today that if Baba said he is going to contest in 2019, I swear to Allah, I will go before him and kneel down and tell him that ‘Baba I am grateful for the opportunity you gave me to serve your government as a minister but Baba just like you know I will support only Atiku because he is my godfather. If Atiku said he is going to contest.”

    “If because of what I said I am sacked, it will not bother me because I believe in Allah that my time has elapsed, that is why…

    “Baba is not a mad man like those calling for my sack. They have been sending it and spreading that if Baba sees this I will be sacked.”

    A pro-democracy group, the  Coalition in Defence of Nigerian Democracy and Constitution (CDNDC) yesterday  said the minister’s comments was at variance with the position of APC National Chairman  John Odigie-Oyegun.

    The group  in a statement by its Co-Convener, Ariyo-Dare Atoye, said: “The comment  by Mama Taraba is contrary to the obscure claim by the National Chairman of All Progressives Congress (APC), John Oyegun  that there is no vacancy in Aso Rock in 2019.

    “Everything that has happened has now confirmed that bombshell of an interview by the President’s wife, Aisha Buhari, when she warned she might not campaign for her husband in 2019.

    “She knew there was a plan to take advantage of her husband for 2019 and this much is known to Alhassan through her latest comment…”

  • Nothing wrong with visit to Atiku – Aisha Alhassan

    Nothing wrong with visit to Atiku – Aisha Alhassan

    Sen. Aisha Alhassan, Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, declared on Wednesday that those criticising her Sallah visit to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar in Yola, were being “mischievous”.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) quotes commentators on social media as alleging that Alhassan’s visit, during which she made philosophical comments on the 2019 presidential contest, was a tacit support for Abubakar’s presidential ambition.

    They also alleged that it signified disloyalty to her current boss, President Muhammadu Buhari, who may still be interested in seeking a fresh mandate.

    But Alhassan, in a telephone interview with NAN, said that her Sallah homage to Abubakar did not amount to  disloyalty to Buhari.

    She explained that Abubakar had remained her political mentor over the years and was still a stalwart of the All Progressives Congress (APC), adding that her loyalty to Buhari and his administration, which she serves as a minister, was “unshakable”.

    The minister accused her “political detractors” of “amplifying and misinterpreting” the visit so as to smear her image because  they were afraid of her growing political strength in Taraba.

    “In a nation where politicians are quick to dump the people that assisted them to get to where they are, for political expediency, I have chosen to maintain a long standing family relationship with Abubakar, as well as Buhari, who I consider as a father.

    “Besides, neither Buhari nor Abubakar has officially told anyone of an interest in seeking election in 2019,” she said.
    Declaring that power comes from God, she said that if she loses her job because of her visit, she would consider it as the will of God.
    She urged Nigerians to support the policies and programmes of the Buhari administration because it was time for governance and not yet time for politicking.

    NAN recalls that criticisms has continued to trail the minister’s pronouncements over the 2019 presidential contest during a Sallah homage to Abubakar on Sept. 4, 2017, with many viewing it as a campaign for Abubakar.

  • Freed Chibok girls ready for re-integration – FG

    Freed Chibok girls ready for re-integration – FG

    The Federal Government said on Friday the 106 Chibok girls that had been released by Boko Haram are ready for re-integration into the society.

    The Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Aisha Alhassan, stated this in Abuja.

    She said the girls would be allowed to spend one week in Chibok communities before proceeding to American University of Nigeria for their foundation programme in September.

    The minister said the girls were not being kept in isolation, adding they will return to their homes after the integration programme.

     

  • Minister’s statement on Mambilla crisis reckless – Taraba

    Minister’s statement on Mambilla crisis reckless – Taraba

    The Taraba State government has criticized the Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Hajiya Aisha Alhassan, for allegedly blaming it for the crisis in Mambilla Plateau.

    The government said it has done more than previous administrations to promote peace in the area, adding that the minister’s reaction to last week’s ethnic violence which claimed several lives, was reckless and without sympathy for the victims.

    Mambilla, in Sardauna local government area of Taraba, is home to the Mambilla, Fulani, Kaka, Kambu and Panso ethnic groups, among others.

    In a statement signed on Tuesday by the media aide to the state governor, Bala Dan Abu, the government described Alhassan’s attempt to blame it for the crisis as “malicious, wicked and ungodly.”

    “She has no soothing words for victims of the crises in the state but she is ever always in a hurry to condemn the genuine and patriotic efforts of government to end the crises and provide care for victims,” the statement said.

    The government accused the minister of being more interested in her political ambition than the plight of victims of the crises.

    The statement added: “The promotion of peace is a cardinal programme of the present administration in Taraba State. The Darius Ishaku administration, more than any other governments in the past, has done more to guarantee peace in the state.

    “Government’s mechanism for handling crisis has been very effective. Security men are always promptly deployed and this helped greatly in curtailing the losses of life and property.

    “It is also on record that several cases of herdsmen/farmers clashes were averted in the past through the preventive security measures put in place by the government. Security men who promptly quelled the recent crisis in Sardauna local government area were deployed there at the request of Governor lshaku.

    “Hajiya Aisha Alhassan also accused the governor of not talking to the people on the crisis. That again is untrue. For her information, the better approach in crisis management is to act decisively rather than talk prematurely.

    “Governor lshaku acted first and very decisively to end the crisis before talking. What he said was widely carried in the local and national media. Hajiya Alhassan certainly did not pay attention because she was, as usual, not interested but rather obsessed by her political ambition.”

     

  • Akwa Ibom to partner FG on skill acquisition centres for women

    Akwa Ibom to partner FG on skill acquisition centres for women

    The Akwa Ibom government says it will partner with the Federal Government on the establishment of skill acquisition centres for women in the 31 council areas of the state.

    The state governor, Mr Udom Emmanuel, made the promise on Monday in Uyo when the Minister of Women Affairs, Mrs Aisha Alhassan, paid him a courtesy visit.

    Emmanuel said that he was excited to hear that the Federal Government was planning to build skill acquisition centres in the local government areas to train the rural women.

    The governor said that he would direct the Women Affairs commissioner to liaise with the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs on the proposed skill acquisition centres for the women

    He announced that his administration was already partnering with a German technical firm on the establishment of a mega skill acquisition centre for both women and the youth.

    Emmanuel said that the Child Rights Law enacted in 2008 in the state was on course, explaining that a child rehabilitation centre had also been established to help vulnerable children.

    He pleaded with the Federal Government to include Akwa Ibom in the early phase of the home-grown school feeding programme for school children.

    The governor noted that the feeding programme for school children would complement the free and compulsory education policy of the state government.

    Emmanuel also appealed to the Federal Government to refund at least 50 per cent of the money spent by the state government on federal roads crisscrossing the state.

    He promised that if the money is refunded, he would use it to relocate Uyo Prison currently being threatened by gully erosion.

    “The prison yard is almost inside the ravine and I have proposed to relocate it from there.”

    Earlier, the Minister of Women Affairs, Mrs. Aisha Alhassan, commended the Akwa Ibom government for domesticating the Child Rights Act in the state.

    She lauded the Gov. Emmanuel for supporting the vulnerable, the children and women in the state.

    The minister said that she was in the state to assess the level of women involvement in development and to sensitize them on social investment programmes of the Federal Government.

    She said that the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs would collaborate with the state government on the establishment of skill acquisition centres in the local government areas of the state.

    “The FG has to collaborate if it has to succeed in taking care of the Nigerian women.

    “We are asking for collaboration to assist the vulnerable, the children and women of the Akwa Ibom,” Alhassan said

    She promised that Akwa Ibom would benefit from the next phase of the home-grown school feeding programme of the Federal Government.

    Alhassan assured that when the programme would begin in the state, the Akwa Ibom women would be engaged in the cooking for the children.

  • Chibok girls won’t return to their former school – Minister

    Chibok girls won’t return to their former school – Minister

    All the 106 Chibok school girls released so far by the Boko Haram sect will not be returning to their former school in September, the Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Aisha Alhassan said Tuesday.

    Alhassan who officially received the girls from the various Federal Government medical facilities for rehabilitation and reintegration processes said they will be now be enrolled in other secondary school in chibok.

    Receiving the girls from the Matron, medical services unit of the Department of state services, Anne Okoroafor, the Minister said the girls will from now undergo some skills acquisition and remedial programmes at the National Council for Women Development hostel where they will be living for now.

    “The programme will last till September this year when the school year will begin and the girls will be enrolled in other schools within the country.

    “The decision to enroll them in order school apart from the school where they were abducted is strategic; we want them to forever forget the trauma they have passed through “she said

    Alhassan said that the Ministry have engaged another doctor and two nurses to continue providing adequate medical attention to the girls while at the centre.

    She added that the girls have been divided into four classes and each of the classes have five teachers who will take the girls on skills acquisition and remedial programmes.

    “We have one doctor for the 24 girls, but now we have engaged another one and we have engaged two nurses because the number of the girls has increased to 106, therefore we have two in-house doctors here and two in-house nurses.

    “The medical facilities of the DSS will always be available to us in case there are medical issues we cannot handle here.

    “The girls have been divided into four classes and each class have five teachers, we are training each girl on two skills of their choice”.

    It will be recalled that 24 girls were initially released from captivity before the 82 were released; making the number of girls released 106.

    Speaking further on the girls education, Alhassan said “while they are here, they will be doing ICT training which is compulsory, they will be doing remedial studies, they will be studying five subjects which are English, Mathematics, biology and Agricultural Science”.

    “The girls will be sent back to school to continue from where they stopped, the girls will not return to the Government Secondary School, Chibok where they were abducted from, instead they will be enrolled in other schools within the country.

    “All of them will go back to school together, because if we keep them beyond September, it means that they will lose another school year, they are not going back to their former school, we are taking them back to other schools within Nigeria”, the Minister said.

    Alhassan however said the girls are free to go back to their parents if they wish.

    She said if any of the girls indicates interest of returning to their family, the government will not hold her back, instead her parents will be invited to take them home.

    “If anyone of them today says she wants to go home, we are very pleased to call her parents; it means that she has forgotten the trauma and ready to reintegrate.

    “They are here on their own free will, no compulsion, they are free to go home any time they want, we are keeping them here on the consent of their parents”, she added.

    Handing the girls over to the Minister, the Director Medical Services of the DSS, Dr Anne Okorafor said though some of the girls needs continued medical attention, but they are medically stable and ready to move to the Ministry of Women Affairs.

    “We have done the necessary investigations on the girls, whatever we found during the investigation, we have treated them, some of them are still have some medical issues, we are treating them. They are all stable and we are comfortable to move them to the ministry,” Dr Okoroafor said.

     

  • We must resolve North East humanitarian crises, says Osinbajo

    The Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo on Monday said the country could not wait for another generation of leaders to resolve the humanitarian crises in the North East.

    He said this while receiving a delegation from Borno which came to thank President Muhammadu Buhari for the recent release of 82 Chibok girls from the Boko Haram captivity.

    According to him, it is this generation of leaders who must do what it takes to resolve most of the issues that face the country in the North East.

    Osinbajo said that the Federal Government would re-strategise with all the agencies involved in the rehabilitation of victims of insurgency in order to address their most urgent problems.

    “Perhaps it might be wise for us to take a look first about how to save the children and to save peoples’ lives and then begin to address questions of infrastructure as we go along.

    “But I think it is important that people don’t die while we are thinking, people don’t die while we are planning to ensure that we are able to provide for them.

    “So what I will suggest is that we take some time out to look at this, the Borno State government, the Federal Government, and then of cause the PCNI, PINE and all the other government initiatives that are working out there.

    “And then plan things better, outline what is priority and then determine what it will cost us and then we can work from there.

    “But I think it is important that we take a second look at what we have organized so far so that we will be able to do something more.’’

    Osinbajo said that the crises in the North East had grown deeper but noted that it was gratifying that more people were freed from captivity by the armed forces and international partners.

    He said the government must determine what needed to be done and do everything that it would take to hold the officials to account for the lives of the children and vulnerable people.

    “That in my view is the whole point about leadership, otherwise I don’t see how we can justify our leadership in any other way,’’ he said.

    The Acting President acknowledged that a lot of what happened in the release of the Chibok girls were largely because the international community and development partners believed in the integrity of Buhari.

    He said the partners “recognize his genuineness, forthrightness and felt the need to help,’’ adding that they did not have to wonder if there was any other thing else going on.

    “We are thankful for that kind of leadership that has showed so much integrity.’’

    Osinbajo observed that so many people made sacrifices in the course of insurgency, especially in Borno, and said the disaster in the region was unimaginable.

    He said the administration did not know how long it would take to restore all that were lost in physical infrastructure not to talk about the lost lives.

    Osinbajo said that Buhari noted that the arrival of the 82 girls to the Villa had boosted his health.

    He said Nigerians should rejoice that the release of the girls had taken place and expressed optimism that the remaining girls and others in captivity would regain their freedom.

    Borno Gov. Kashim Shetima, who led the delegation, said the state was surprised in October 2016 with the release of 21 Borno daughters by the Buhari administration.

    He added that the record-breaking negotiation also secured the release of another 82 female students.

    Shetima said that his state was in the Villa to thank Buhari, his team, the armed forces, the Swiss government and the International Red Cross committee for the feat.

    The governor whose wife, Nana, was also at the event attributed the feat to the integrity of the President.

    He said the President inherited a battered economy and that with his determination the country would attain greatness again.

    He thanked the parents of the girls for their patience waiting for the girls and urged parents whose girls had yet to return to remain hopeful and prayerful for God to turn the situation around.

    The Chairman Governors Forum, Gov. Abdulaziz Yari of Zamfara , commended the efforts of the President and Vice President for the release of the Chibok girls.

    He also thanked God for His intervention and expressed the hope that more captives would return and that insurgency in the North East would be routed out.

    The former Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, noted the personal interest shown by Osinbajo in the plight of the people of the North East.

    He said that the humanitarian crises in the region were beyond anyone’s imagination in spite of the efforts made by the international community.

    The Senator noted that the budget of Borno could not take care of the problems, adding that the budget of N45 billion for the PCNI was grossly inadequate and urged the federal government to boost the allocation.

    The Minister of Women Affairs, Aisha Alhassan said that all the released girls were in good shape and thanked the Acting President for being thorough in the identification of the girls.

    She also thanked the Borno governor and the UN system for their special interest in the rehabilitation of the released school girls.

     

  • Minister warns against neglect of APC members by FG

    Minister warns against neglect of APC members by FG

    Minister of Women Affairs, Senator Aisha Alhassan has warned against the alleged neglect of  members of the All Progressive Congress (APC) who contributed to the success of the party in the 2015 poll in Taraba State.

    She stated that unless the party members are compensated by the federal government, their support may not be guaranteed in the next election.

    The Minister who spoke when she led a delegation of APC members in Taraba state complaining of being marginalized in the scheme of things by the APC led federal government, said apart from constitutionally mandated appointment, no APC member in the state has been given appointment by the government since coming into power in 2015.

    She stressed that even in the execution of federal projects in the state, the leadership of the APC in Taraba state are not being carried along, pointing out that the state chapter of the party has practically been abandoned.

    She said : “I have come as a party member and a leader, together with my brothers from Taraba state to voice out our problems.  The APC people in Taraba state are very worried. The government in the state is controlled by the PDP and we expect that as our parents and as a government, you should have helped us especially since you knew that we were muscled out, even though we did our best. 

    “No opposition party in the state has performed as good as we did since 1999. Unfortunately, apart from my appointment which is statutory and constitutional and that of the ambassador, we still don’t have any meaningful appointment from this government.

    “Many of those who participated in APC campaign  in Taraba state are still there without appointment. That is why I took the pains to introduce some of the people that accompanied me here so that you will know the caliber of people that we have in the state APC. We have capable hands in Taraba APC. So, please remind the people that make these appointments.

    “We have to take care of our people. Otherwise, we will not know our faith when the next election comes. Even in the federal government projects, they do not involve us. it was only yesterday that I met the state party leader and was told that there is a federal government project going on and they are not involved. It is not that they don’t have qualified persons to handle those projects.

    “Even the struggle to live right, according to the dictates of religion is because of the expectation of Heaven which is the reward. Taraba state APC should be remembered. This is our plea. If projects are sent to the state which is controlled by the PDP, our people should not be left hanging.

    “They are saying that this is a federal government thing which we worked for, but are not gaining anything from it,” she said.

  • Nigerian women, girls have paid heavy price for conflicts – Alhassan

    Nigerian women, girls have paid heavy price for conflicts – Alhassan

    Nigerian women and girls in recent times, have paid a heavy price for the myriad of conflicts that ravaged the country, Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Sen. Aisha Alhassan has said.

    Alhassan made this known at a meeting with donors and partners on issues that bother on women and girls, at the sideline of the 61st Session of the Commission on Status of Women (CSW) at the Nigeria House in New York.

    “The emergence of extreme terrorism in Nigeria has introduced new dimensions to women and girls’ human rights violations.

    “The situation is further worsened by the humanitarian crisis generated as the internally displaced persons (IDPs) that resulted from the insurgency and the gendered nature of the problem is huge with over 60 per cent of the IDPs population being women and children.

    “Catering for the peculiar needs of this group remains a challenge in the post conflict reconstruction and rehabilitation process,” Alhassan said.

    She said the commitments of donors and partners groups have helped to advance the status of Nigerian women, children and the vulnerable groups.

    Alhassan said the gathering would help to explore how to make strong linkages and consolidate established relationships to help achieve the theme for the 61st CSW, which is to improve the productivity prospects of developing countries that are undergoing recession and decline in national income.

    “Reflections on the progress achieved since our last meeting should help in appraising the value added by the collaborative efforts channelled to different work areas.

    “It is important to examine the impact of investments and support provided since we last met in order to appreciate the transformation that is taking place in the lives of women and vulnerable groups in Nigeria on account of such partnerships.”

    She said the Nigerian women population held a strategic position in the socio-economic and political advancement of the country, regretting, however, that women were still confronted by negative socio-cultural beliefs and practices that shaped their choices and prevented them from contributing optimally to national development.

    The minister, however, said progress recorded through partnerships since the last donors meeting at 2016 CSW, had helped the implementation of strategic policy priorities in many key areas.

    “Working with UNFPA and UNICEF on the abandonment of female genital mutilation (FGM), 100 medical and health workers were trained and 75 ‘FGM Champions’ have also been equipped to conduct house-to-house visitation on the eradication of FGM.

    “Also with UNFPA support, relief materials were provided to the IDPs in the insurgency affected Northeastern States.

    “In collaboration with the ECOWAS Gender Development Centre, rehabilitation and reintegration arrangement is in top gear for the repair and rehabilitation of VVF survivors in Kaduna, Bauchi, Akwa Ibom and Katsina states.”

    “In the area of promoting economic empowerment of women and girls, the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme, which is one of the Social Investment Programmes of the Federal Government aimed at providing micro-finance to rural communities nationwide is being implemented by my Ministry in collaboration with the Bank of Industry.”

    She said under the programme, soft loans were given to rural women entrepreneurs like market women, artisans, farmers and women engaged in other small businesses.

    To further expand women’s economic empowerment, Alhassan said initial approval had been granted for a 250 million dollars World Bank project – Strengthening Women Economic Empowerment Programme – to boost government’s financial inclusion programme for grassroot women.

    “The African Development Bank, on its part, is setting aside the sum of five million dollars out of the 13 million dollars economic growth stimulation project in Nigeria for women.

    “UN Women has also supported the Ministry with the training of 600 women, who suffered various forms of violence as result of the insurgency in the Northeast, on skills and techniques needed to access loans from the National Women Empowerment Fund.

    “In the area of women’s political participation, in collaboration with ECOWAS and INEC, the Ministry is working on strategies for increasing women’s participation in politics with a view to creating entry points into political party structures and systems.”

    She said in collaboration with UNFPA and UN Women, the Ministry had undertaken humanitarian interventions in the Northeast through the provision of relief materials to IDPs in Borno, Adamawa, Yobe, Gombe and Bauchi States.

    “The holistic rehabilitation and reintegration programme of the 24 recently released Chibok girls from the captivity of Boko Haram is being carried out in collaboration and with the support of UN Women and UNFPA,” she said.

    Alhassan also said the country recently revised and validated Nigeria’s National Action Plan on UN Security Council’s resolution 1325, in order to provide a more robust and strategic framework for addressing women peace and security concerns.

    She commended the donors and partners for their collaboration and commitments towards advancing the mandate of the Ministry by ensuring better life for Nigerian women, children, the physically challenged and other vulnerable groups.