Tag: Alex Ekwueme

  • Ekwueme buried in Anambra

    Ekwueme buried in Anambra

    Anambra State stood still on Friday as Alex Ekwueme, Nigeria’s former Vice President was laid to rest in Oko, his home town.

    The burial had in attendance the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, as well as Goodluck Jonathan, former President of Nigeria. Top government officials, close friends and family members gathered to pay their lasts respect to the 85-year-old elder statesmen who died in November 2017.

    Some of those present to witness the final moments were Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and former President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife, Patience.

    Read Also: FG renames Varsity after Ekwueme

    Anambra State Governor, Willie Obiano, his colleague, Rochas Okorocha, Governor of Imo State, as well as Akinwunmi Ambode, Okezie Ikpeazu, Ifeanyi Okowa of Lagos, Abia and Delta State respectively, were also in attendance.

    Osinbajo, in his tribute to the former Vice President, described him as a true Nigerian icon, worthy of celebrating.

    He said Ekwueme was being immortalised for his selfless service, integrity and contributions to national development.

  • FG renames Varsity after Ekwueme

    FG renames Varsity after Ekwueme

    The Federal Government has renamed the Federal University, Ndufu Alike Ikwo in Ebonyi state after late former Vice President, Dr Alex Ekwueme.

    Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbanjo made the announcement during a funeral service of the deceased at St John the Divine Anglican Church Oko, Orumba North Local Government Area of Anambra on Friday.

    Osinbajo said that Ekwueme was being immortalised for his selfless service, integrity and contributions to national development.

    He described Ekwueme as a true Nigerian icon and statesman whose life and times were  worthy of celebration.

    He said he wasn’t only being remembered as an accomplished scholar neither for his architectural prowess or for having occupied high public offices but because he practiced eternal principles that set men and women apart from their peers whether they were poor or rich.

    Osinbajo said the deceased showed bravery in the face if terror and set an excellent example of loyalty as a vice president.

    “Ekwueme was a man of principles, of personal sacrifice for others and service to those who cannot offer him reward,” he said.

    In his sermon, Primate Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, Most Rev. Dr Nicholas Okoh, described Ekwueme’s burial ceremony as a crusade rather than a funeral service.

    Okoh said a lot had been said about Ekwueme’s  good Christian upbringing, public service, educational accomplishments and enjoined Nigerians to emulate his virtues.

    Read Also:

    Okoh who tagged his sermon “Get into the Ark” said that the Biblical story Noah’s Ark reminded us of salvation and destruction.

    He noted that if people lived right they will enjoy Divine fellowship when they die and condemnation if they lived badly.

    “Even if you are doing business, in public service or in the Lord’s vineyard and you lack integrity, things will not work fine,” he said.

    The Primate consoled the late Ekwueme’s family and thanked God for having a like as their late patriarch.

    Some of the dignitaries who graced the occasion included, Secretary to the Federal Government, Mr Boss Mustapha, former President, Goodluck Jonathan and his Vice, Alhaji Namadi Sambo and 10 serving governors.

    Others were Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, Chief Bola Tinubu, National President of Ohanaeze, Chief John Nwodo, National Chairmen of the All Progressive Congress, Peoples Democratic Party, Dr John Oyegun and Uche Secondus, respectively, among others.

     

    NAN

     

  • We will respond to Obasanjo’s Coalition Movement at the right time – Tinubu

    We will respond to Obasanjo’s Coalition Movement at the right time – Tinubu

    ….Obasanjo playing politics with letter to Buhari 

    National leader of the All Progressives Congress ( APC )  and former governor of Lagos State,  Bola Tinubu, yesterday said that the party will respond to the Coalition Movement launched by former President Olusegun Obasanjo at the “appropriate time “.

    He accused Obasanjo of playing politics with his open letter to President Muhammadu Buhari, where he accused him of (Buhari) of non performance.

    Tinubu who made a stop over in Owerri, the Imo State capital on his way to Anambra State for the burial ceremony of late former Vice President in the company of another APC leader, Chief Bisi Akande, insisted that Obasanjo could have exploited other better ways of communicating his observations about the Buhari’s administration other than open letter if not politically motivated. 

    According to the APC leader, who jocularly said that the letter was not written to him, “Obasanjo wrote it about the government. It is a very good awareness on his part and they are both from the same background. I believe that is the doctrine  of Military Officers (retired) because he has unrestricted access to the President, either through the Council of State or by any other means that he need to see the current President privately and he was his junior in the Army.  So I think Obasanjo was playing politics with his public letter that’s all I see. He could have used other means,  he met him in the AU too he has a way of discussing privately but the letter is being responded to by the government”.

    Also responding to the former launching of Obasanjo’s Coalition Movement, in the brief interview with journalists at the Imo State Government House,  Tinubu,  said that it is still too early to respond to the development, 

    He said, “the appropriate time is not now for response on the Coalition Movement but we are in a democracy, we are in a country that is a signatory to the Charter of the United Nation which guarantees free movement, free association and free speech”.

    On the reason for his visit, he stated that, “the governor is a very good friend and the government that is here is our government, the APC government. We are here to pay final  respect to the gentleman and Nationalist, Alex  Ekwueme”.

  • Reports on Ekwueme’s burial plans misleading – Ngige

    Reports on Ekwueme’s burial plans misleading – Ngige

    The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige has described media reports quoting him as saying that the Federal Government has spent about N1 billion on the burial plans of the former Vice President,  Dr. Alex Ekwueme, as misleading.

    He said controversy generated by the report were needless.

    The minister said he didn’t attach any figure to plans being made by the government to ensure that the former vice president gets “a deserving national tribute to one of Nigeria’s foremost statesman.”

    In a statement signed by his Special Assistant on Media, Nwachukwu Ngige, the minister said he only gave a summary of the number of projects the  federal government has undertaken to ensure that a man who was Nigeria’s beacon of democracy was given a decent burial.

    The statement said: “Perhaps the Hon. Minister has preempted the rhetorics of cynics and detractors who could have easily run to town to claim the federal government has abandoned Ekwueme in death.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, what he did as a member of the Burial Planning  Committee was to give the details of the road rehablitation projects from the Awka end of the state and from Abia and Imo State axis , all leading to Ekwueme’s home town of Oko, as well as the medical services, the  Mausoleum and others.  But at no time did the minister attach a figure of one billion Naira.

    “An unedited video and audio tape of the interview as recorded by both broadcast and print reporters is easily within reach.

    “The minister is an Igbo man and knows full well that just as a count is not taken of the number of children a parent is blessed with in Igbo tradition, the same tradition holds the burial rites and attendant expenses even more sacred to warrant such display of figures.

    “However, it is important to add that such pieces of information in an administration such as ours that is anchored on openness, and bouyed by the Freedom of Information could be at the fingertips of any investigative reporting.”

    The statement added that the Burial Planning Committee was satisfied with the progress of the work and looked forward to a very successful event which has already kicked off beautifully and successfully in Lagos, Abuja and Enugu.

     

     

     

  • Ekwueme, a strong pillar in National Development – Yakasai

    Ekwueme, a strong pillar in National Development – Yakasai

    An elder statesman in Kano, Alhaji Tanko Yakasai, has described the late former Vice-President, Dr Alex Ekwueme, as a very meticulous and hard working person who contributed a lot toward the development of the country.

    Yakasai made the remark in an interview in Kano on Tuesday.

    Ekwueme died on November 19, 2017, at a London Hospital after a brief illess and he will be buried on Friday.

    Yakasai, who was a Special Adviser to President Shehu Shagari on National Assembly Matters, said the late Ekwueme was also a committed politician who believed in the unity of Nigeria.

    “The late elder statesman was a principled and very intelligent person, who bagged five degrees in different fields.”

    Read also: Senate, Jonathan, ACF, Ita-Giwa mourn ex-VP Ekwueme

    According to him, Ekwueme spearheaded the campaign for a number of issues, including zoning and rotation during the National Constitutional Conference held between 1994 and 1995.

    “So, zoning and rotation was originally part of the defunct National Party of Nigeria ( NPN ) Programme as it was the party that introduced the idea of zoning and rotation.

    “During the conference, Ekwueme articulated a number of issues which the conference eventually adopted.”

    He said that Ekwueme’s connection with the NPN, gave him the opportunity to be adopted as the Chairman of G34, a group of Nigerians who eventually formed Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP ).

    He said he was very close to late Ekwueme even when they were in Kirikiri Prison together after the military coup of 1983.

    “I and the late former governor of old Kaduna State, Alhaji Lawal Kaita, kept Ekwueme company in the prison. He even requested me to teach him Hausa language.”

    He said there was good understanding between them when they were in government as they used to visit each other’s families.

    “We used to disagree on certain issues but we lived peacefully when we were in government,” Yakasai said.

    On the state of political parties, he said disloyalty was the bane of Nigeria’s democracy, noting further that governors had hijacked their political parties in their respective states.

    He, therefore, urged politicians to change the trend by being loyal to their parties in order to strengthen democracy in the country.

    “Disloyalty to political parties is the bane of Nigeria’s democracy and this is a major challenge threatening the system, Yakasai said.

    NAN

  • Osinbajo, Saraki, others honour Ekwueme at Abuja airport

    Osinbajo, Saraki, others honour Ekwueme at Abuja airport

    Dignitaries on Monday stormed the Presidential Wing of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, in honour of the late former Vice President, Dr. Alex Ekwueme.

    A Parade of Honour was held at the Presidential Wing of the airport in honour of the deceased.

    Ekwueme died in London in December 2017.

    The Nigerian Police Force led the Parade of Honour at the brief ceremony.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said Ekwueme was committed to selfless service to the nation, West Africa, Africa and the world at large.

    The deceased, he noted, had timeless ideals of integrity, loyalty and kindness to all.

    He was optimistic that the vision and sacrifice of the late Ekwueme for the nation would not be in vain.

    Osinbajo said: “As we receive the body of the first elected Vice President of Nigeria, Dr. Alex Ekwueme (GCON), this morning, we are reminded of his selfless service to nation, to our region, to Africa and indeed the world.

    “We are reminded of his commitment to the timeless ideals of integrity, loyalty and kindness to all.

    “We thank the almighty God for giving us 85 glorious years of Dr. Alex Ekwueme.

    “When he was asked what his vision was for the county, he said, ‘I will want to see Nigeria to be a nation and not just a country.’

    “Those words tell us how committed he was to the unity of this country and I pray that in death and as we remember him, that this will not only encourage us but also cement the relationship between all of the people and nationalities of this country, so that we become and remain one.

    “We thank the almighty God for his family and for all of us who he left behind and we pray that his great wishes for this nation and all that he sacrificed for will not be in vain.”

    Among those present at the event were – the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, Speaker of the House of the Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu.

    Others were – Deputy Governor of Anambra State, Nkem Okeke, representative of Former President Shehu Shagari, Hon. Aminu Shagari and Senator Andy Uba, who represented Ekwueme’s constituency in the Senate.

  • Ekwueme had impeccable integrity, courage, selflessness – Osinbajo

    Ekwueme had impeccable integrity, courage, selflessness – Osinbajo

    *Ngige: Ekwueme rejected Senate President offer from Obasanjo
    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Sunday said that the late Vice President in the Second Republic, Dr. Alex Ekwueme had impeccable integrity,  courage and selflessness.
    Ekwueme had died in a London hospital last year. 
    Speaking at the Night of Song service organized by the Federal Government in honour of the deceased, Osinbajo said that the late Ekwueme worked tirelessly to build and maintain bridges across the country.
    According to him, Ekwueme understood the symbolism of leaders of the nation to honour God.
    He said,  “Dr. Alex Ekwuene is perhaps  one of the most remarkable persons who have served our nation. Despite being probably one of the most thoroughly educated persons anywhere in the world with degrees in disciplines as distinct as architecture, philosophy, sociology and law. 
    “He possess the profound humility that comes from understanding how much more there was to learn and he demonstrated it by his willingness to listen and to learn at all time.
    “As Vice President he set an excellent example with loyalty, discipline, team spirit and fidelity to the nation. 
    “He was fearless and with the courage of his conviction, he led the G-34, a group of eminent Nigerians who confronted military dictatorship in its darkest and most fiercesome days in Nigerian history.
    ‘In public discourse nationally and regionally as an elder in ECOWAS even in the most emotive subject, he spoke truthfully but maintaining a forthful balance ensuring that his words built rather than destroyed.
    “He worked tirelessly to build and maintain the bridges established across ethnic and religious lines. He never once doubted the validity of one indivisible Nigeria.” he added 

    Also speaking at the occasion, the Minister of Labour, Chris Ngige disclosed that former President Olusegun Obasanjo, offered the late Ekwueme, Senate Presidency, after the later lost the Jos primaries of the People’s Democratic Party ( PDP ).

    Ngige said he personally advised the late Ekwueme to reject the offer as he was sure that the former Vice President was too rigid to be a Senate President and that he would be impeached within three months.

    He said, “I told Ide (Dr. Ekwueme) that he was too rigid and that he would not be able to do that job.  When the committees come to you and say do this and do that, you will not agree and the next thing they will go and gather signatures and in no time, the will impeach you.

    “Ide was very strict on accountability.  Even when we were campaigning, whenever we returned, he would call you and ask you to give account of how you spent the campaign money.  He will have his paper and pen in his hands.  You know politicians don’t like that.  They don’t like accountability.” he said 

    Ngige also disclosed that the late Vice President, lost the Jos PDP presidential primary ticket because he refused to bribe the delegates.

    He said that Ekwueme failed in bribery and corruption and refused to give false promises, which were the hallmark of typical politicians.

    Stressing that the late former VP was not a religious bigot, as his father was an Anglican pastor, Ngige said that Ekwueme never discriminated against people of other faiths.

    The Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, urged Nigerians to learn from late Dr. Ekwueme’s courage, which made him confront late dictator, Gen. Sani Abacha, with the G34 initiative.

    He also urged Nigerians to imbibe Dr. Ekwueme’s patriotic zeal.

    He said “We must first see ourselves as Nigerians, irrespective of our religions and tribes.”

    Former Minister of Information, Prof. Jerry Gana, who was also the former Secretary of the G34 and political ally of the Late Dr. Ekwueme, said that Ekwueme was “a great son of Nigeria, a loving leader, creative designer, first class architect, wise counselor, elder statesman, a great patriot, defender of the people, an advocate of social justice, fairness and equity.”

    He said that Dr. Ekwueme led the G34 which confronted Late Gen. Sani Abacha to stop his self-succession bid, and was at the vanguard of the return to democracy after more than two and half decades of military dictatorship.

    Prof. Gana also revealed that the letter by the G 34 was written by himself and Dr. Iyorchia Ayu but that Dr. Ekwueme, who was the chairman of the group  personally edited and submitted it at the Aso Rock Villa, to ensure it got to Late Gen. Abacha.

    Prof. Jerry Gana described the late Ekwueme as a defender of the people, a political colossus and an advocate of social justice and equity.

    The President General of Ohaneze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo said he didn’t come to mourn rather to rejoice for the gift of nature from God to Igboland.
    He said, “He was multi disciplinary and distinctive in what he set out to do and loyal in his convictions and believed in his intellectual perception.
    “I haven’t come here to mourn on behalf of the Igbos, I have come here to rejoice that God gave us an exemplary son. 
    “On a night like this what is important is to christenize the distinctive achievements and characteristics of Dr. Alex Ekwueme and I’m the process hope that those of us who are living will derive example from it and create a better society.” 
    He said that Dr. Ekwueme was very loyal to Shehu Shagari.
    He said “Dr. Ekwueme never thought of leaving PDP.  What was important to him was his sense of contribution.  Whether or not he made money from it or not.  Ekwueme was a very humble man.  Chief Nwodo urged Nigerians politicians to emulate.”
    Also speaking, Prof. Uzodimma Nwala who worked closely with the late Vice President said he respected him for his great intellect and not the typical Nigerian politician, adding that he had the carriage.
    He said that Ekwueme came up with the establishment of six geopolitical zones as basis for optical and resources sharing. 
    “We are celebrating a man that had contributed in laying the foundation of unity in Nigeria.

    “The true components of Nigeria is the ethnic nationalities.  We must come back to a loose federation.”

    “Dr. Alex Ekwueme was not a typical Nigerian politician,” and urged Nigerian politicians to take lessons from the departed VP.” he said 

    The former President, Alhaji Shehu Shagari represented by his son,  Aminu Shagari said late Ekwueme lived a simple and uncomplicated life and that his father’s choice of Ekwueme as his Vice President was a right choice.
    He said the late former Vice President exhibited tolerance and total loyalty, describing him as patriotic and a statesman.
  • Ekwueme: Fearless, integrity epitome – Osinbajo

    Ekwueme: Fearless, integrity epitome – Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Sunday described late former Vice President Alex Ekwueme as fearless and an epitome of integrity.

    He said this in his remarks at the Service of Songs and Night of Tribute in Abuja for the late Second Republic Vice President who died in a London Hospital on November 19, 2017 at 85.

    Osinbajo noted that Ekwueme was the most remarkable person to serve the nation and believed in its indivisibility.

    He said that while alive, the late octogenarian possessed profound humility that came from the understanding of how much there was to learn and demonstrated it by his evident willingness to listen and learn always.

    “As Vice President, he set an excellent example of loyalty, discipline, team spirit and fidelity to the nation.

    Read also: All for Ekwueme

    “He was fearless and with the courage of his convictions, he led the G-34, the group of eminent Nigerians who confronted military dictatorship in its darkest and most fearsome days in Nigeria’s history.

    “He contributed significantly to the return of democracy in 1999,’’ he recalled.

    Osinbajo stated that in national and international discourse, as an elder in ECOWAS even on the most emotive subjects, the deceased spoke truthfully and ensured that his words built rather than destroyed.

    He also said that late Ekwueme worked tirelessly to build and maintain the bridges established across ethnic and religious lines by many through the years.

    “He never for once doubted the validity of one indivisible Nigeria,’’ the vice president said.

    He recalled the late vice president’s incarceration for about 20 months after the Shagari administration was toppled but that he was cleared as having never abused his office.

    Osinbajo said that Ekwueme’s principled and fearless leadership in confronting the military dictatorship of late Gen. Sani Abacha, especially when it chose to succeed itself, was unequalled.

    According to him, the late Ekwueme had principled interventions in many national debates and in all, he epitomised impeccable integrity, courage and selflessness.

    “His values, like himself, remain relevant in every age and time.’’

    Osinbajo said that Ekwueme had remarked that he would like to be remembered as someone who came into public office to render service and rendered it selflessly.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that other dignitaries, including the President of Ohaneze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo and Minister of Labour, Dr Chris Ngige, paid tribute to the late octogenarian.

    Nwodo said he was not mourning Ekwueme, but was rejoicing because God gave Nigeria such a man.

    For Ngige, Ekwueme was a political master who did not disappoint the nation during the 1994/1995 Constitutional conference.

    Former President, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, represented by his son, Aminu Shagari, in a tribute said he would continue to relish the memorable time he had with his late former Vice President.

    “He lived a simple and uncomplicated life,’’ he said, adding that he nominated to run with him twice because of his high level of discipline and integrity.

    President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, Secretary to Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha, Prof. Jerry Ghana, Prof Uzodimma Nwala, and the deceased’s younger brother, Prof. Laz Ekwueme, extolled his virtues.

    A representative of the Ekwueme’s Community, Oko, Anambra, Mr Handel Okoli, thanked the Federal Government for putting all structures in place for the burial of their son.

    He, however, requested that the late former vice president’s name should be immortalised for his vision of nationalism and patriotism to be exemplified.

    NAN

  • FG begins Ekwueme’s final funeral rites

    FG begins Ekwueme’s final funeral rites

    The Federal Government on Thursday made public the burial plans of late former Vice President, Dr. Alex Ekwueme, who died in London on November 19, 2017 at the age of 85 years.

    Briefing journalists in Abuja, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha, who chairs the national burial committee, said he will ensure that the late elder statesman gets a befitting burial.

    Mustapha, who was represented by the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Chris Ngige, stressed that Ekwueme’s death was a painful loss not only to the family but to the country.

    He said: “The death of Alex Ekwueme is indeed a painful loss, not only to his family but to our great nation Nigeria.

    “His life was dedicated to the service of our beloved country Nigeria.

    “And as the military tribunal panel stated after he and other leaders were detained as a result of the Nigerian military coup d’etat that sacked the civilian government in December 31, 1983, ‘Dr. Ekwueme had left politics more poorer than he was when he entered it.’ He also stated that to ask for more from him was to set a standard in public life which even saints could not meet.”

    According to him, the governments at the Federal and South East levels will be fully represented during the burial ceremony.

    “As we mourn his painful demise with utmost sympathy to the bereaved family, let me also use this medium to assure you that the federal and south east governments will be adequately represented at the final funeral rites.

    Read Also: Ekwueme: Philosopher and king; visionary and practician….

    “We also urge all individuals and professional groups whose lives and interests were touched in one way or the other by our departed statesman, to be part of the burial ceremonies, as we pay Late Dr. Alex Ekwueme our last respects,” the SGF added.

    The final funeral programme as released by the SGF’s office shows that on January 19, there will be a Memorial Service by 2:00 p.m. at Cathedral Church of Christ Marina, Lagos.

    While Evening of Tributes and Music take place by 5:00 p.m. same day at The Landmark, Oniru.

    On January 27, at 5:00 p.m., Memorial Service will hold at St Marylebone Parish Church, London, W1.

    On January 28, there will be another Evening of Tributes at the International Conference Centre, Abuja, by 6:00 p.m.

    There will be Parade of Honour, at the Presidential Wing Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, on January 29.

  • Buhari signs Ekwueme’s condolence register

    Buhari signs Ekwueme’s condolence register

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday signed the condolence register of the late former Vice President, Dr. Alex Ekwueme.

    The brief ceremony held just before the commencement of the second Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting for the week.

    Ekwueme died in the United Kingdom on November 19.

    He was 85.

    The President did not make any remark at event.

    But his media office had earlier issued a condolence message to Nigerians.