Tag: Akande

  • Akande, others honour Adewole

    •UI to build cancer centre

    Outgoing Vice Chancellor of the University of Ibadan (UI) Prof Isaac Adewole has been described as a “spectacular performer who uplifted the premier university”.

    Former Interim National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Chief Bisi Akande said selfless people like Adewole were promoted by God for contributing to the development of their people.

    The APC chieftain said this when he chaired a dinner and award ceremony organised by the UI Alumni Association in honour of Adewole at the weekend.

    It was the gathering of bigwigs from the town and gown, including the Esama of Benin, Dr Gabriel Igbinedion, Chief Kayode Aderinokun, Governors of Oyo and Osun represented by Moses Alake Adeyemo and Muyiwa Ige, Prof Emeritus Olujinmi Akinkugbe, Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) chief, Prof Elias Bogoro, Prof Bayo Okunade (Distance Learning Director) and Prof Idowu Olayinka (incoming VC).

    Akande said: “I know him by reputation. His contribution is spectacular to the development of University of Ibadan. The presence of the dignitaries here attests to his selfless service.

    “Prof Adewole has been said to be selfless to this university and as we are celebrating him and his exit from UI, he is being appointed as a minister. God will continue to uplift Prof Adewole.”

    In his welcome address, National President of UI Alumni Association Dr Kemi Emina described the VC as an achiever, role model and change agent.

    He said the association would build a Centre for Cancer Research in his honour because “he has spent his life researching cancer and medicine to save lives”.

    Emina said cancer destroys and kills, adding that the centre would encourage research on cancer.

    Adewole thanked workers and students, adding that he would have achieved nothing without a supporting team.

    He said late presentation of cancer cases led to the death of many Nigerians, who only come to the hospital when the situation could not be remedied.

  • Nigeria U-23s drop 3SC goalkeeper Akande

    Nigeria U-23s drop 3SC goalkeeper Akande

    AfricanFootball.com can report that Shooting Stars first-choice goalkeeper Abiodun Akande has been dropped for the All Africa Games football event and his place taken by Jimoh Lucky Abdullahi from amateur club 36 Lion of Lagos.

    Akande has for several months been the cover for Rangers shot stopper Emmanuel Daniel, but he has now been asked to leave the team’s training camp in Abuja.

    AfricanFootball.com also scooped that Lucky Abdullahi, who joined the team four days ago, will now be the third goalkeeper for the AAG.

    “There is going to be one big surprise when the list of players to the All Africa Games is made public – Shooting Stars goalkeeper Abiodun Akande has been dropped to the surprise of everyone in camp. The other players couldn’t believe their eyes when he left the camp,” the source told AfricanFootball.com.

    The goalkeepers for the AAG are Emmanuel Daniel (Rangers), Yusuf Mohammed (Pillars) and Jimoh Lucky Abdullahi (36 Lion Lagos).

    Akande is back in Ibadan now but wasn’t available for selection for a Nigeria league Week 26 game on Sunday.

  • Borno deputy  governor: Tinubu, Akande commiserate  with Shettima

    Borno deputy governor: Tinubu, Akande commiserate with Shettima

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has commiserated with Borno State Governor Kasim Shettima on the death of his deputy, Zana Mustapha.

    Tinubu described the late politician as a committed party chieftain and a man of humility, adding that his loyalty to the party and his boss was total.

    The APC‘s national leader, who condoled with Borno State on behalf of Lagosians and the Southwest, urged the governor to take heart and embrace the reality with calmness.

    He prayed for the repose of Mustapha’s soul, saying God would give the governor the fortitude to bear the loss.

    Tinubu was accompanied on the visit to Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, by the former APC Interim National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande and Southwest APC leader Chief Pius Akinyelure.

    Shettima thanked the party leaders for their support and solidarity at this trying period.

    Describing his deputy’s death as shocking, the governor said filling the vacuum created by his demise would be difficult.

    Shettima praised Tinubu for his contributions to the cause of power shift and change, adding that when the history of this political dispensation is written, his name would be written in gold.

    He said Tinubu’s contributions should be documented for future generation to learn from his sacrifices for the nation.

    The governor described the APC national leader as the symbol of a thriving tendency in the Southwest, urging him to keep the flag of national unity flying.

    Shettima said: “There are three tendencies in the Southwest political arena.

    ‘’The first are the Awoists. The second is Obasanjo/Afenifere, with a reluctance to embrace the North.

    The third are the ‘Tinubuists’, who should be credited for embracing the North by building a bridge across the Niger.

    ‘’This is a true nationalist spirit towards building a new Nigeria.”

     

  • Baraje’s tirade against Akande and Tinubu

    Albert Einstein it was, who posited that if an individual is persistently maligned or persecuted while on a salvaging mission, his traducers do so purely out of envy. To them the unattainable grape is sour. That may perhaps explain the recent tactless tirade by Abubakar Baraje, one of the defectors from the crisis-ridden Peoples Democratic Party, PDP made against revered APC chieftains in the persons of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the prime mover of the coalition of the progressive parties and Chief Bisi Akande  the former interim chairman of the APC. Baraje, we recall was amongst politicians who jumped ship to avoid being swallowed up by the then imminent electoral storm.

    By his political antecedents, Baraje like the current Senate President, Bukola Saraki cannot lay claim to any progressive political ideology. As hard core conservatives they have never been on the side of the people, but have always angled for power for self-serving reasons. Though he successfully ditched the PDP for the APC, Baraje thought, but erroneously so, that he could import that individualistic mindset against the sway of party supremacy that the progressive parties such as the CPC, ACN and ANPP have been known for.

    It is within this context that one could best situate his recent unfortunate remarks. Baraje, a former national chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), described as ‘unfortunate,’ a statement credited to the party’s former interim National Chairman, Chief  Bisi Akande, where he alleged that principal officers of the National Assembly enjoy the backing of some oil business interests and anti-Buhari elements.

    Baraje, in a press statement described Akande’s comments on the crisis as hypocrisy and reminded him of a meeting, which had an unnamed governor from the North-west and a leader of the party from the South-west and the latter was admonished about the crisis in the party.

    He also reminded Akande how he supported the governor against the South-west leader’s antics and described Akande’s statement as “fabrication.” Baraje said he was disappointed that Chief Akande, who had led the party and served as a governor, authored a statement where he sought to divide the nation by setting the North against the South-west.

    Baraje went further:”I do not know where Chief Akande and his cohorts are getting this unsubstantiated information they are circulating. We challenge them to provide proof and let Nigerians make their judgment…”

    “Akande and co believe that they have exclusive right to determine who occupies what position in today’s Nigeria and whoever tries to challenge their position must be subjected to savage attack in the media. That tactic is definitely undemocratic.

    ”My worry has been that President Buhari is being fed with lies and stories that are dangerous to the polity. My fears have now been confirmed with Akande’s statement. It is my prayer that the President should strengthen his information gathering network, so as to have a clear and true picture of what is happening. I am sure they just wanted to poison the minds of the people before that meeting. Akande sure does not want reconciliation and they already have an agenda they are pursuing. Yet, they accused others of different sins. We pray that reason will prevail and they will join others to move the party forward”, he said.

    But on his part, Akande has reiterated his position, based purely on the party’s supremacy. This was his response in a recent media interview, when asked why he considered Saraki and Dogara’s emergence as a rebellion.

    “The party took a position. They did a primary and somebody won. Anybody who goes against the democratic position of the party is rebellious. Don’t you see it as a rebellion? I know that Nigerians don’t know discipline anymore; everybody does things they way they like. You didn’t get there by yourself but by the grace of your party. That is why you can go to the party to say that I want to be this and they would say oh, they are many of you who want to too, come and do election. And somebody won and somebody stood by that person. Once you go against that party, you are committing rebellion. It is an act of indiscipline. I support all of them, they are my colleagues, but I don’t support indiscipline.”

    In another press interview he made a poignant observation. He described Senator Saraki and Honourable Dogara as being all out to foist the fortune of their former party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), on the new ruling party through their “rebellion” which, he said, killed the PDP.

    He said the backers of the “rebellion” as insinuated in his letter, which was made public on Monday, paled in comparison to the “criminal act” which, he said, the action of Saraki, Dogara and others against the party symbolised.

    “The cardinal thing I emphasised in that statement was discipline, obedience to your party. It is our party that made Saraki. He cannot disobey our party”.

    Viewed from a more holistic perspective therefore, it goes beyond Baraje’s assumption that Akande was setting the North against the South-west. His views are patriotic as it has to do with internal party democratic ideals based on discipline.

    Supporters of the rebellion are also at the heart of those accusing Tinubu of obsession with power and being over bearing. They are the ones wrongly accusing him of nominating 19 people as ministers, out of a possible 30. Unknown to Baraje and his cohorts, the duo of Tinubu and Akande have consistently been driven by the patriotic fervour, over the years to seek for what is best for the country. Tinubu, for instance has earned the accolade as a political strategist of no mean measure, across Nigeria’s quicksand political landscape. He was there as an enduring symbol fighting assiduously for the return of democracy during the dare-devil days of military dictatorship. Like other patriots he exhibited that uncommon courage to stand on the side of his people when it mattered most. He spent his money and provided logistic support during the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) days  to fund the famed Radio Kudirat against the Abacha regime.

    It would also be recalled that when the PDP rigging machinery bulldozed its way through those South-west, Asiwaju as the governor of Lagos State, the Centre of Excellence became the ‘last man standing’ in that ultimate battle for political survival.

    And he is still here now, standing tall as one of the few Nigerians who salvaged democracy from  the throes of annihilation. He could not stand aloof to watch Nigeria being besotted by storms of political ineptitude, cluelessness and crass corruption riding high on the wave crests of opportunism. Again, he stood up to  say a vehement “no” to it all.  Only a patriot would do that.

    His towering political stature still sends shock waves down the spine of crass political opportunists, especially those like Baraje and his co-travellers who love to reap where they never sowed.

    Empirical evidence abounds to show that he has been passionately propelled by the principles of equity, fairness, and justice all in the search for the common good. For that he has made a lot of sacrifice; of energy, time, resources and even his cherished freedom.

    Yet, he is most painfully being misconstrued as a self-serving politician. But this could not be true. Were it so, he would have been contented with being the chairman, Board of Trustees of the APC or its National Chairman, or put himself forward for a ministerial post. It should be noted that at no point in time has he ever vied for any of these plum political posts in AD, AC or ACN (all defunct).

    All said, Nigerians who massively voted APC for Change should be wary of politicians who find it difficult to subject themselves to party supremacy and discipline. And those, who defected from PDP to APC for self-serving reasons, wanting to dictate to the founding fathers of the APC.

    Chief Akande and Asiwaju Tinubu are absolutely right; only with discipline can the party fulfil its electoral promises to the people. The earlier the fair-weather politicians sacrifice their inordinate ambitions for the general good, the better for us all.

    ‘Nigerians who massively voted APC for change should be wary of politicians who find it difficult to subject themselves to party supremacy and discipline’

     

  • Akande’s troublous APC analysis

    Akande’s troublous APC analysis

    Former interim chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bisi Akande, issued a statement on Monday alleging that an agglomeration of polluted interests had plotted to undermine the APC federal government and create schisms between the North and the Yoruba. The allegations were weighty enough to draw a lot of diverse and intense flak, some of which are still searingly felt even now. Many northern politicians responded bitterly to Chief Akande’s statement, which they described as divisive, intemperate and unwholesome.

    Chief Akande had framed his diatribe indignantly thus: “Numerous among those calling themselves businessmen in Nigeria are like leaches, sucking from the nation’s blood largely through various governments and particularly through the Nigerian Federal Government. While all these schisms were going on in the APC, those who were jittery of Buhari’s constant threat of anti-corruption battle began to encourage and finance rebellions against the APC democratic positions which led to the emergence of Senator (Bukola) Saraki as the candidate of the PDP tendencies inside and outside APC.”

    As if this was not bad enough, Chief Akande added an even more inflammable supposition to his pungent thoughts. According to him, “Before the party knew it, the process had been hijacked by polluted interests who saw the inordinate contests as a loophole for stifling APC governments’ efforts in its desire to fight corruption. Most Northern elite, the Nigerian oil subsidy barons and other business cartels, who never liked Buhari’s anti-corruption political stance, are quickly backing-up the rebellion against APC with strong support. While other position seekers are waiting in the wings until Buhari’s ministers are announced, a large section of the Southwest see the rebellion as a conspiracy of the North against the Yoruba.”

    This last allegation, so direct and incendiary, was like a red rag to a bull. It was therefore not unexpected that the North would take umbrage in a spectacular fashion by adding their own counter-allegations, suggesting, among other unsavoury things, that Chief Akande had acted mala fide. Responding, however, the former party chairman made startling disclosures about the motives, whys and wherefores behind his statement. Advising critics not to expand his statement beyond measure, he disclosed that he took the main plank of his argument from Senator Banji Akintoye’s last Sunday Tribune article, to wit, the point about the popular perception in the Southwest about a northern conspiracy to diminish the Yoruba in the Buhari government.

    In his original Monday piece, however, Chief Akande made no reference to the renowned historian’s Tribune article. Not only did he fail to paraphrase Prof Akintoye’s ideas on the controversial subject, he also did not quote him directly. Chief Akande presented his statement as original to himself. For a statement so hot and controversial, a little more care by Chief Akande would not have been misplaced. He was a former governor of Osun State and former party chairman. He ought to have taken his positions into consideration before issuing his Monday statement. Had he consulted a communications expert or a qualified speechwriter, they would have advised him how best to handle the Prof Akintoye article in reference. At his level, he has an obligation to always take advice before going public in such a dramatic and effusive fashion.

    The suspicion, however, is that notwithstanding his unsuccessful attempt to deflect the strident criticism against his apparently honest view of the APC crisis, he probably still believes what he said on Monday. More importantly, the view appears also somewhat widespread in the Southwest that some northern politicians may in fact be conspiring to diminish the role and influence of the Yoruba in the current dispensation. Whether this view is real or justified is another thing entirely. Even then, Chief Akande should have framed his arguments better, more sensitively, and more courteously. Having chaired the party in its formative years, surely he had made contacts far wider than his Southwest base, and must, therefore, be aware of how certain thoughts and statements can be easily misconstrued not only in Nigeria’s ethnic patchwork but also in APC’s maze of special interests and contending power groups.

    Those who take Chief Akande to task, especially the northern brethren, must pause to ask themselves whether no excuse had been given Chief Akande and other like-minds (no pun on the Saraki group) to feel queasy about the emerging power configuration in the APC. The positive effect of the Akande statement is that APC leaders probably now know the powerful undercurrents flowing against their party, far more potent than the overt and bitter struggles for National Assembly leadership positions. Assuming APC leaders altruistically believe in reconciliation and growth in their party, Chief Akande’s accusatory statement affords them the opportunity to make deeper, substantial and far-reaching efforts to reconcile party members, infuse the party with a unifying ideology, and build a formidable army of change agents and developmental prefects. If they will be honest with themselves, APC leaders must by now have known that they really have no party properly describable as one, and, worse, that those who are now on the ascendancy in the party do not possess the discipline and intellect to imbue the party with a distinguishing identity and mission.

  • Speakership election: Dogara attacks Akande over allegations

    Speakership election: Dogara attacks Akande over allegations

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives; Hon. Yakubu Dogara has debunked the allegations by the former Interim National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Chief Bisi Akande, that corrupt oil barons sponsored his election to become Speaker.

    Dogara while describing the allegation as baseless and lacking in substance called  on all Nigerians and the general public to disregard such allegations “as they are meant to distract the new leadership of the legislature from concentrating on passing legislations that will help to fight poverty, insecurity, infrastructural decay, and to revive our economy.”

    A statement by his Special Adviser, Media and Public Affairs, Turaki Adamu Hassan, describes Akande’s allegation as “unfortunate and uncharitable.”

    The statement reads: ” Former All Progressives Congress (APC) Interim National Chairman Chief Bisi Akande issued a statement on Sunday alleging that oil barons who never liked President Muhammadu Buhari`s anti-corruption stance allegedly sponsored the election of Rt. Hon. Yakubu Dogara as Speaker of the House of Representatives.

    “His antecedence, capacity, experience, being a team player, incorruptibility and his progressive mind and activities are the qualities that endeared him to his
    colleagues.

    “These were the selling points among members-elect that made him to be elected Speaker. Therefore, the allegation by Chief Akande is unbecoming of a well-respected elder-statesman and a former Interim National Chairman of the APC.

    “It is baseless and lacking in substance and merit and can best be described as figment of Chief Akande`s imagination. We challenge Chief Akande to name the so-called oil barons whom he alleged sponsored the election of the Rt.Hon. Speaker.

    “In case Chief Akande does not know, the first investigative motion adopted by the 8th House of Representatives under the leadership of the Rt. Hon. Speaker was to investigate the allegation of fraud in the oil-swap contract awarded by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    “A resolution instituting investigation into the allegation was passed with a resolve to constitute an Ad-hoc committee to investigate the NNPC, as well as its subsidiary, Pipelines and Products Marketing Company over the swap contracts. How then can the House under the leadership of Mr. Speaker order investigation into activities of those who allegedly sponsored his election?

    “Chief Akande`s allegation is both unfortunate and uncharitable. What we expect the Chief to do at this critical time in the life of our nation and the APC as a party is to play the role of an elder-statesman and help to bring warring party members to the table and not ignite crisis that will further divide the party that he helped to build.”

    The statement notes that since assuming duty as Speaker, Dogara has not left anyone in doubt as to his stance on corruption which is the bane of Nigeria`s development.

    “Thus, he presented the draft legislative agenda of the 8th Assembly to the House last week which among other things proposed legislations that will help fight corruption.

    ” Mr. Speaker has on different occasions reiterated his resolve to compliment President Buhari`s anti-corruption stance and insists that the present crop of leaders don’t have any excuse to give to Nigerians on the change promised them before and during the election that brought APC into power,” the statement further states.”

  • Akande offers tips out of APC crisis

    Akande offers tips out of APC crisis

    Former Interim National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Bisi Akande has offered some tips on how the ruling party can surmount its internal crisis.

    In a statement, Chief Akande blamed the crisis on those he called, some Northern elite, drug barons, anti-democratic forces and other elements who are afraid of President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti- corruption posture.

    He said the party must reposition for it to offer Nigerians the change it promised.

    The statement reads: “Some times in 2013, the Action Congress OF Nigeria (ACN), All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) resolved to merge and set up a merger committee to work out the modality for glueing together as one political party under one name, one constitution and one manifesto.

    “A splinter of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) sought to be included in the merger.  An application made to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to this end by All Progressives Congress (APC) National Interim Committee, composed of ACN, ANPP, CPC, and factions of APGA and Democratic People’s Party (DPP) was approved in July, 2013.

    “Between Bola Ahmed Tinubu (an ACN leader) and Kashim Imam (a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leader), the idea came up and was adopted  that the new party should embark on a membership recruitment drive to certain PDP governors, whose main agenda was to see President Goodluck Jonathan out of power.

    “The recruitment efforts took APC leaders to Rivers, Kwara, Niger, Sokoto, Kano, Jigawa and Adamawa states. Eventually, five PDP governors of Sokoto, Kano, Adamawa, Kwara and Rivers, together with the majority of their PDP National and State Assemblies members and other PDP National Assembly members from Gombe, Bauchi and Nasarawa, under the banner of the new-PDP, joined the APC.

    “The APC thereafter organised membership registrations in all the over 120,000 polling units and followed up by using these registered members to conduct congresses in all the almost 8000 wards, in over 770 local governments, in all the 36 states (including Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and a convention at the National level, thereby creating one united APC party structure all over Nigeria.

    “With this air of oneness, APC went ahead to conduct primaries to select candidates for state governors and Houses of Assembly and for the presidency and the National Assemblies.

    “After the elections, which saw the APC to victory all round, a meeting was reported to have been held by certain old and new-PDP leaders in Alhaji Kawu Baraje’s house at Abuja to review what should be their share in this new Buhari’s government and resolved to seek collaboration with the PDP with a view to hi-jacking the National Assembly and, having got rid of Goodluck Jonathan, with an ultimate aim of resuscitating the PDP as their future political platform.

    “Unknown to most APC members, while Senator Bukola Saraki was being adopted as the candidate for Senate President by certain old and new-PDP tendencies, the theory was being propagated that, like in most presidential democracies, the APC minority leaders in the old National Assembly (i.e. George Akume for the Senate and Femi Gbajabiamila for the House of Representatives) should automatically become Senate President and Speaker respectively, now that APC has the majority.

    “Certain leaders felt that most past Senate presidents had come from Benue State, which Akume represented and that Benue State should be made to assume the traditional home of all senate presidents.

    “At the same time certain, senators were clamouring for one of the most ranking senators anywhere outside the Northwest zone that produced the President. That was how Ahmed Lawan, who has been in the House of Representatives for eight years and in the senate for another eight years emerged as the candidate for the senate president.

    “Democrats among the APC leadership insisted on selection by mock elections, rather than tribal or sectional considerations. As a result of primary elections, Ahmed Lawan and George Akume emerged as APC candidate for Senate President and Deputy respectively while Femi Gbajabiamila and Mohammed Monguno emerged as the Speaker and Deputy for the House of Representatives.

    “Numerous among those calling themselves businessmen  in Nigeria are like leaches, sucking from the nation’s blood largely through various governments and particularly through the Nigerian Federal Government. While all these schisms were going on in the APC, those who were jittery of Buhari’s constant threat of anti-corruption’s battle began to encourage and finance rebellions against the APC democratic positions which led to the emergence of Senator Saraki as the candidate of the PDP tendencies inside and outside APC.

    “Before the party knew it, the process had been hijacked by polluted interests who saw the inordinate contests as a loop-hole for stifling APC governments’ efforts in its desire to fight corruption.

    “Most Northern elite, the Nigerian oil subsidy barons and other business cartels, who never liked Buhari’s anti-corruption political stance, are quickly backing-up the rebellion against APC with strong support. While other position seekers are waiting in the wings until Buhari’s ministers are announced, a large section of the Southwest see the rebellion as a conspiracy of the North against the Yoruba.

    “What began as political patronages to be shared into APC membership-spreads among ethnic zones, religious faiths and political rankings and experiences have now become so complicated that the sharing has to be done by and among PDP leadership together with cohorts of former new-PDP affiliations in the APC, by and among gangs of past anti-Buhari’s Presidency, and certain APC legislators and party members who dance round the crisis arena to pick some crumbs.

    “Now that the whole conspiracy has blown open, it is doubtful if the present institutions of party leadership can muster the required capacity to arrest the drift. It is my opinion that President Buhari, and the APC governors should now see APC as a recking platform that may not be strong enough again to carry them to political victory in 2019 and they should quickly begin a joint damage control effort to reconstruct the party in its claim to bring about the promised change before the party’s shortcomings begin to aggravate the challenges of governance in their hands.”

    •Bisi Akande is APC’s former Interim National Chairman

  • BUHARI’S VICTORY: Bisi Akande

    BUHARI’S VICTORY: Bisi Akande

    HE was the interim National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress at the inception. He brought his wealth of experience to bear at the teething stage of the party till it stabilised and attained the height it is today.

    Born in Ila Orangun on 23 January 1939, Chief Akande was deputy governor of Oyo State between 1979 and 1983 when the late Chief Bola Ige was governor of the state under the platform of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN).

    From being a deputy governor, he rose to be elected governor of Osun State in 1999 on the platform of the defunct Alliance for Democracy (AD) when democracy returned to the country. He successfully ruled the state for four years.

    He added another feather to his cap when he later emerged the factional chairman of the AD in late 2003 at a convention held in Lagos. In 2006, he was elected the chairman of the Action Congress (AC) by consensus at the party’s Kaduna convention. On December 2010, the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) conducted its National Convention in Benin City, which returned Chief Bisi Akande as the National Chairman.

    When the ACN, CPC, ANPP and a faction of APGA merged in 2013 to form the APC, he subsequently became the interim chairman of the party. The process of getting the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) to register the party was greeted by daunting challenges and opposition but the Chief Akande-led team never caved in. They confronted the challenges that assailed the party from the outset head long and did not sleep or slumber until they conquered.

    Chief Akande successfully organised  the first National Convention of the party that ushered in the present executive members and bequeathed to the Chief John Odigie-Oyegun-led executive a strong and formidable party, which he (Akande)  described then as the best alternative to the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Speaking during the inauguration of members of the party’s new national executive committee, Akande described the event as “Epoch-making”, adding: “That this day has come at all is a major achievement, because the anti-democratic forces did not give the APC a chance to survive. In fact, they did not believe that the new child called the APC would be born at all. They wobbled in the belief that Nigeria is a one-party state, using PDP as a decoy of the one party by rigging elections since 2003.

    “When the leaders of our various parties came together to consummate the first merger in the history of our dear country, the enemies of progress jeered at us, deriding us as strange bed fellows who could not work together. Today, we are no longer a party of strange bedfellows. We are a truly pan-Nigerian political party that is giving our people hope.”

    Even after leaving as the interim chairman, Chief Akande never hesitated in rallying support for the new executive of the party as he kept calling on the party members across the country to rally round the National Executive Council of the party in order to ensure the fortune of the party in the general election.

    He severally came under severe attack in the hands of the present administration when he chided the president for not doing enough to rescue the kidnapped Chibok girls. On one occasion, Presidential spokesman, Reuben Abati, described him as one of those who run down the country and creating problem for it. But all that did not cow him, rather, it emboldened him the more to speak the truth to those in power.

    With the victory of Gen Muhammadu Buhari at the March 28, presidential election, it is unarguable that Chief Akande’s heart is filled with joy. He can today look back at his struggles, pains and labour in nurturing the party to the state of a ruling party in the waiting and rejoice that all that is not  in vain.

  • Akande to Jonathan: clear the air on Jega’s tenure

    Akande to Jonathan: clear the air on Jega’s tenure

    FORMER Interim National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Chief Bisi Akande has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to clear  the air on the tenure of the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof Attahiru Jega.

    Akande, in a statement yesterday, said the speculation on Jega’s tenure was heating up the polity.

    The statement reads:

    “President Jonathan must put the mind of Nigerians and the world as rest by clearing the air and by speaking out over the loud rumours that he would change the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC’s) chairman midway before the shifted election’s date with a view to throwing Nigeria into a constitutional crisis. It is no longer news that the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan has scant regard for the rule of law and constitutionalism. Over and over again, Nigerians have witnessed the administration bending the rules and the laws to further sectional, parochial and personal interests. When concerned citizens first cried out that the administration was determined to scuttle the scheduled February 14, 2015 elections, many dismissed it as crying wolf. Now Nigerians know better than to assume that the present Federal government administration will not go to any length to frustrate the change earnestly desired by millions of Nigerians.

    “After orchestrating the postponement of the elections, it is now being revealed that the administration’s next act is to remove the Chairman of the “INEC” Professor Attahiru Jega from office. The reason why people assume that the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan now appears ready to sink even lower in its disregard for law and the constitutional order by actively working to remove Professor Attahiru Jega from office as the chairman of the INEC is not far fetched: while the INEC under Professor Jega has delivered a mixed bag of hits and misses in its conduct of credible elections, it is clear that the Professor has exercised commendable independence and has refused to be cowed or induced by the administration and supporters of President Jonathan.

    “While this alarm may again sound outlandish to the innocent and the most optimistic fervent believer in the decency of the holders of the office of the Presidency, it should be recalled that the Presidency under President Goodluck Jonathan has notoriously bent the rules to frustrate the letters and the spirit of our laws in the past. It can be recalled that President Jonathan once removed the President of Appeal Court from his position while presiding over the case of the impropriety of own election in 2011. Also, the controversial removal of the former Governor of the Central Bank is another case in point.  Another such case of maneuvering any issue affecting his personal ambition is the postponement of the scheduled February 14, 2015 elections. For, whereas it has been said that the INEC has the powers to postpone elections, it is instructive to note that the postponement in this case was de facto carried out by the appointees of president Jonathan:  as has been made public, it was not the will of INEC but that of the military chiefs appointed by President Jonathan to have the elections postponed.

    “With such notorious penchant to take positions and actions without regard to law, processes and procedure as long as selfish, sectional and parochial interests are served, I feel compelled to point out, in the interest of our democracy, that the tenure of the Office of the Chairman of the INEC is protected and guaranteed, not by mere statute, but by the Constitution! The Constitution is the fons et origo from which all other laws and persons and authorities derive their just and competent powers.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, Section 155(1)(c) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) clearly provides for the tenure of the office of the Chairman of the INEC as “a period of five years from the date of his appointment.” Furthermore, Section 157(1) provides that the Chairman of the INEC “may only be removed from that office by the President acting on an address supported by two-thirds majority of the Senate praying that he be so removed for inability to discharge the functions of the office (whether arising from infirmity of mind or body or any other cause) or for misconduct.

    “It is clear that there is no legal basis whatsoever for the planned compulsory terminal leave for the chairman of the INEC or his suspension from office. Any attempt to do such would be departing from time-honoured precedents (as is the case with former chairmen of the INEC and other office holders like the last substantive Director Genera of the Securities and Exchange Commisssion, Ms. Aruma Oteh) and would amount to the subversion of the will of the people as expressed in the ground-norm of the Nigerian legal system, the 1999 Constitution.”

    What the President said  last nighti

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan last night denied any plan to remove the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof Attahiru Jega.

    He spoke during the Presidential Medial Chat.

    Jonathan,  however, added that as his appointees,  Jega and other INEC National Commissioners and Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) could be removed by him. He added that he was satisfied with INEC’s leadership.

  • Akande, Supreme Court director bags doctorate degree

    Akande, Supreme Court director bags doctorate degree

    The Director of Press and Information in Supreme Court of Nigeria, Dr. Akande Aweneri Festus was among the graduands conferred with the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the 44th Convocation ceremony of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka on Saturday January 24, 2015.

    Akande, by this feat is now ranked among the first set of PhD holders in the field of Public Relations in Nigeria; a programme pioneered in Africa by the University of Nigeria.

    A graduate of Mass Communication, Akande holds a Postgraduate Diploma in Business Administration, MSc Degree in Public Relations and MBA Degree in Marketing from University of Nigeria, Nsukka.

    He also has a BSc (Hons) Degree in Marketing from Enugu State University of Science and Technology (ESUT). He bagged the Chartered Professional Certificate and Diploma in Public Relations from Nigerian Institute of Public Relations and Business Education Examinations Council in 1990 and 1992 respectively.

    A Journalist, Public Relations Practitioner and Teacher of over 25 years, Akande had been involved in the training of Journalists and Public Relations practitioners in Lagos State University, Nigerian Institute of Journalism, Times Journalism Institute, Nigerian Institute of Public Relations School (NIPR); and was the pioneer Director of Lagos Public Relations Academy (LAPRA).

    Akande has also had a working stint with the now defunct Abuja News Day Newspapers (the first print media in the Federal Capital Territory), Nigerian Tide Newspapers (Rivers State Publishing Corporation), and TELL Magazine where he rose to Management Cadre.

    He also established the Special Project Unit of FAME Magazine in Lagos. He is an accomplished Speech Writer, Public Speaker and Author of robust international repute having to his credit the following books: In-Road into Public Relations; Contemporary Media Relations Management; Effective Speech Writing and Public Speaking; Principles and Techniques of Public Relations; Application of Industrial Psychology and Sociology to Public Relations Management; Public Relations Strategy in International Marketing; International Public Relations Management; Dance of a Dead Man; Fela Anikulapo-Kuti: The Man, The Myth and The Mystery; Darkness At Noon (which was published in United States of America and got the certification of the Library of Congress); among others.

    He has also published many research papers in different International Academic Journals and co-authored several Monographs in the United Kingdom and United States of America respectively.