Tag: Alhaji Atiku Abubakar

  • Atiku: Obasanjo’s endorsement means nothing, Says APC

    …”He will be demystified”

     

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that Thursday’s endorsement of Presidential candidate of the main opposition People Democratic Party (PDP) Alhaji Atiku Abubakar by the former President Olusegun Obasanjo will not in any way affect the fortunes of the party in the 2019 Presidential election.

    National Vice Chairman South south of the party, Utufam Hilliard ETA told newsmen on Thursday evening that the former President has lost political value saying his endorsement has no effect.

    Eta, who said the endorsement is not a threat to his party stated repeatedly: “Obasanjo will be dimistified.”

    When reminded that the same Obasanjo endorsed President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015 presidential election, Eta said: “His (Obasanjo) endorsement has nothing to do with our (APC) victory in 2015.

    Read Also: 2019: You’re next President of Nigeria, Obasanjo tells Atiku

    “I know that politics is more of deception but I tell you that Obasanjo’s electoral value is little to nothing. Remember that Obasanjo in all the elections lost from his ward level to everywhere. Obasanjo is more loved away than at home and like I said earlier, Obasanjo will be dimistfied.”

    On the presence of some religious leaders at Obasanjo’s home during the endorsement, the APC chieftain said: “One of the political wing of the PDP is one organisation called Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), so one is not surprised that CAN can do all they can do,” he said.

  • 2019: Why Atiku can’t be president – Group 

    A group identified as Buhari National Votes Guards and Awareness on Monday reacted to the emergence of the former Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar as the presidential candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), saying that, Atiku cannot rule Nigeria.

    The group said the former Vice President is no match for President Muhammadu Buhari, as they opined that, his political background has been marred with corruption allegations.

    The Coordinator of the group, Engineer Kailani Muhammad at a press conference in Kaduna on Monday however described Atiku’s emergence as a good omen for President Buhari.

    Kailani said “the main fact however, according to the majority of Nigerians is that for a certainty, Atiku Abubakar is no match for president Muhammadu Buhari in the presidential election of 2019 because of his alleged political corrupt marred background and President Muhammadu Buhari’s antecedent as a man of impeccable pedigree that is focused towards building a socio-political and economic development.

    He explained that the former Vice President before securing his ticket under PDP has made four unsuccessful attempts to get a party ticket to contest for the presidency, but “he is not suitable to lead Nigeria at this moment,” as Nigerians have made their stand.

    Kailani explained that, “Politics in our country today is big-time business. The only impediment for actualization of aspirations in the space in our mother Nigeria is the financial capacity and muscle. It is in no doubt either that Atiku has both in abundance. Nigerians are aware that those with the financial muscle to procure the venture hope to reap a million fold.

    He said the Buhari’s government has achieved in 3 years, what previous administrations failed to achieve in 16 years, which includes rapid economic growth, transformation in power sector, education, empowerment of Nigerians and among others.

    While commending the president’s achievements so far in the fight against corruption and insecurity, Kailani also remarked that “Mr President has taken a giant stride to improve the image of the country at the global stage. This are the glaring evidences on ground that some politicians refused to acknowledge,” he said.

  • Bindow embraces Buhari as Atiku’s victory divides Adamawa

    Governor Mohammed Umar Jibrilla (Bindow) of Adamawa State has declared unreserved loyalty to President Muhammadu Buhari and support for his candidacy of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the 2019 presidential election.

    The declaration came against the background of the emergence of a son of the state, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, as the presidential candidate of opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), a development which has divided an Adamawa State that was otherwise solidly behind Buhari.

    The state Commissioner of Information and Strategy, Mr Sajoh Ahmed, who spoke for Bindow at a press conference in the Government House in Yola Monday, condemned what he described as a looming blackmail by elements who he said were planning to design a poster pairing Bindow with ‘the presidential candidate of another party’, a ploy which he said was wicked and baseless.

    “Bindow is an APC governor working for APC and has no intention to support or canvass support for any presidential candidate outside APC. He has no support for any candidate other than Buhari,” he asserted, adding that anybody who prints any document to portray anything to the contrary should be disregarded.

    Read Also: 2019 election: Atiku can’t stop Buhari’s victory–UK APC

    The commissioner who refrained from specifically mentioning Atiku’s name in his initial address, submitted at the question and answer session of the press conference that Atiku as an Adamawa man winning the presidential ticket of a major opposition party was ‘a factor’ but that Bindow already had the candidate of his party and that Adamawa would always choose reality rather than promises.

    He said Buhari had done enough for Adamawa State since he became president to make the people prefer him to any other candidate.

  • Police nab man who threatened to blow up Atiku’s plane 

    …Used stolen phone to threaten Atiku, wife, daughter

    Speaks fluent English, Ibibio, Russian and Portuguese languages

     

     

    The Nigeria Police Force on Wednesday paraded a 43 year old man suspected to have made scary threats asking former Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar to either withdraw from the 2019 presidential race or have his plane blown up mid-air.

    According to police spokesman, Jimoh Moshood, an Acting Deputy Commissioner of Police, the suspect named Augustus Akpan allegedly used a stolen phone to explicitly threaten wife and daughters of the former Vice President with rape.

    Akpan who hails from Edemaya village, Ikot Abasi LGA, Akwa Ibom State was arrested while fleeing to Lagos was also said to have extorted huge sums of Naira and foreign currencies from unnamed high profile citizens, with false claims of being a US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) operative.

    The police spokesman further said that the suspect who speaks fluent English, Ibibio, Russian and Portuguese languages is to remain in police custody until investigations are concluded and he is arraigned in court.

    “On the receipt of complaint of threat and intimidation from former Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, GCON, the forty three years old Augustus Akpan was trailed and eventually arrested by the IGP Intelligence Response Team.

    “The suspect, Augustus Akpan was arrested at toll-gate along Lagos-Ibadan express way, Lagos State, while on the run to escape arrest; during interrogation, he confessed to the crime and admitted that he resorted to the threat and intimidation when all efforts to extort money from the former Vice President were unsuccessful.

    “The suspect, Augustus Akpan also admitted in his confessional statement that he is a professional fraudster and not working for any political party, that his mention that ‘Let Buhari run against your against your PDP members’ in his threat message to the former Vice President was merely to divert attention.

    “The suspect is fluent in English, Ibibio, Russian and Portuguese languages respectively; the phone and the SIM card he used for the threat and intimidation were recovered from him and were discovered to have been robbed by him from a lady (name withheld) who identified him as the person that robbed her few months back.

    “The suspect, Augustus Akpan further confessed that he had threatened, defrauded and extorted huge sum of money in Naira and foreign currency from so many prominent personalities and their family members while posing as a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) agent,” Jimoh Moshood stated.

     

    THE THREAT TEXT MESSAGES (AS DISCLOSED BY POLICE)

    i.      Text Message to Fmr Vice President, Alh. Atiku Abubakar GCON

    “ Turaki Atiku, we are watching you and your family, we ask you right now to withdraw from the race for Presidency , we will kill, rape your wife and daughters. That your ambitious and black daughter Maryam who worked at CBN and left because we were going to mess her up. We will molest, rape, deform her and kill her. Your daughter Fatimah the former Commissioner of Health in Adamawa State, we have a lot of information about her. Also pictures of her naked body, we will mess your overly prostitute wife Jennifer up. We have a lot about. Let Buhari run against your against your PDP members. We know that you are bigger than all those candidates in PDP. That is why we need you to step down. We will blow your plane off from the sky and we will poison you and your family. Atiku Abubakar, take our words for granted and watch what will happen to your family before you. You are going to see what we will do to you and your family. We know where and where your children travel to. We have watched your daughter who is a strong supporter of her father (your daughter Maryam) at number 5, Buzi close and number 5, Lake Maracaibo close”.

    ii .     Text Message to Wife of Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar GCON

    “Jennifer. Tell your husband to step down. We will blow up his plane and kill all of you his family. We will rape you and all his daughters and also kill all of you out there. Do not underestimate us. We know your office at 13 Danube Street Maitama. We will blow up the place and rape all your step daughters that we know you don’t like already . Tell him to step down now and forget about running for the presidency’’

    iii .    Text Message to Daughter of Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar GCON, Rukaiya Atiku

    “Tell your dad to step down. He should forget about the Presidency. If he refuses, we will blow up his plane the Gulf Stream from the sky and also rape you and kill of his daughters. No amount of Police or protection will stop us. We know where all of you live in. We know number 5 Buzi close and number 5, Lake Maracaibo close. Try us and blood shall spread.’’

  • 2019: Atiku urges Oyo PDP to unite for success

    A presidential aspirant on the platform of the Peoples’ Democratic Party(PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has implored members of the party in Oyo State to unite for the success of the party in the 2019 elections.

    Abubakar, who stated this on Tuesday in Ibadan when he met all national delegates and other party stakeholders from the state, stressed that unity was key to winning the 2019 general election.

     

    Read also: Atiku promises to take Nigeria to higher level

    The former vice president said that PDP would take the mantle of leadership from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) both at the state and national levels in 2019.

    He further sought for the support of all the party delegates to the presidential primary so as to emerge as the party flagbearer.

    In his remarks at the occasion, Elder Wole Oyelese, a chieftain of PDP in the state, assured Abubakar of the support of the members in the state.

    Oyelese, a former Minister of State, Power, urged all party members to work towards the success of the party in the 2019 polls.

  • Restructuring: Stop this needless war

    The verbal war between Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and his predecessor, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, over the nation’s administrative structure has come under the radar of prominent Nigerians who advised that the two parties should sheathe their swords.

    The Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF); frontline Igbo leader and politician, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu; constitutional lawyer and former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Chief Wole Olanipekun and former president of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), Chief Ledum Mitee, among other prominent Nigerians who spoke in different interviews with our correspondents, were of the opinion that the two statesmen were saying the same thing in different ways, hence there is no need for the media war they have engaged themselves in in recent times.

    The verbal exchange between Osinbajo and Atiku had begun with an article Atiku published, criticising Osinbajo over the latter’s stance on the restructuring of the country. At a town hall meeting in Minnesota, United States last week, Osinbajo had said: “The problem with our country is not a matter of restructuring and we must not allow ourselves to be drawn into the argument that our problems stem from some geographical restructuring. It is about managing resources properly and providing for the people properly.

    “I served for eight years as Attorney General in Lagos State and one of the chief issues that we fought for was what you call fiscal federalism. We felt that there was a need for the states to be

    “Stronger; for states to more or less determine their fortunes. All that we have been able to deal with is grand corruption. When we started the TSA, the whole point was to aggregate all of the funds of government that were in private banks.”

    Few days after Osinbajo made the remark, Atiku, an aspirant for the presidential ticket on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), published in Premium Times, an online news medium, an article titled ‘Osinbajo got it wrong on restructuring’, criticising Osinbajo for arguing that Nigeria’s problem is not restructuring.

    Atiku had said: “It is a surprise that the Vice President would take such a position and, in particular, fail to appreciate the connection between Nigeria’s defective structure and its underperformance. “It is unhelpful to reduce the construct of “Restructuring” to a geographical concept as VP Osinbajo does, which in itself demonstrates a lack of appreciation of the core tenets of the concept.”

    Atiku’s criticism of Osinbajo’s remark sparked off intense debate between the duo as the Vice President swiftly reacted to his predecessor’s criticism of his comment.

    The Vice President in his unsparing reaction said: “First, let me say that I really would have expected Alhaji Abubakar to at least get the full text of my comments before his public refutal of my views. But I understand; we are in that season where everything is seen as fair game!

    “He quoted me as saying that ‘the problem with our country is not a matter of restructuring… and we must not allow ourselves to be drawn into the argument that our problems stem from some geographic re-structuring.’ Yes, I said so.

    “As the quote shows, I rejected the notion that geographical restructuring was a solution to our national problems. Geographical restructuring is either taking us back to regional governments or increasing the number of states that make up the Nigerian federation.

    “As we all may recall, the 2014 National Conference actually recommended the creation of 18 more states. And I argued that, with several states struggling or unable to pay salaries, any further tinkering with our geographical structure would not benefit us. We should rather ask ourselves why the states are underperforming, revenue and development wise.”

    While many thought that the Vice President’s explanation of his stance on restructuring would mark the end of the brickbats, Atiku published another article titled: ‘Restructuring Is a Necessity, Not an Option’ to counter Osinbajo’s reaction to the former Vice President’s earlier comment.

    Atiku in the article said: “Faced with an avalanche of public condemnation for his 360-degree turn on the concept of restructuring, it is understandable that the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, has written to Premium Times to douse the tension his comments created. However, in doing so, the Vice President should not attempt to revise history by saying that he spoke against ‘geographic restructuring’.

    “I have been in the forefront of the discourse on restructuring since the 1995 Abacha Constitutional Conference, and to the best of my knowledge, there has not been any term like ‘geographic restructuring’. It is a strange concept, not only because it is not what the restructuring debate is all about, but also because the words of the Vice President, which prompted my response, were clear, unambiguous and unequivocal.

    “Mr. Osinbajo said: ‘The problem with our country is not a matter of restructuring.’ That I disagree with and so do many other Nigerians. If the Vice President has changed his stance, I welcome it. But we should not use one finger to hide behind semantics.

    “For the Vice President to say ‘Alhaji Atiku’s concept of restructuring is understandably vague, because he seeks to cover every aspect of human existence in that definition,’ is most unfortunate.”

    Prominent Nigerians react Former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), backed the positions of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and his predecessor, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, on restructuring. Olanipekun, along with a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr Ahmed Raji, and constitutional lawyer, Ike Ofuokwu, said Osinbajo’s and Atiku’s views both contain elements of the restructuring Nigeria needs.

    While Osinbajo advocated restructuring through the deepening of fiscal federalism, Atiku, a presidential aspirant on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) platform, called for power devolution, among others.

    Olanipekun said: “The restructuring we need comprises the suggestions of both the former and serving vice presidents and more if we are to make any tangible progress as a nation operating a federal system of government.

    “The fundamental and true meaning of federalism is the coming together of a group of people agreeing to form a bigger state or nation, donating a fraction of each of their respective powers or authorities to the common union, and retaining the residual powers to themselves.

    “In the other words, the federating peoples or unions give birth to the new state or federation, and not the other way round.”

    Olanipekun said the raging debate on how Nigeria should be restructured is a reminder that the country is not running a federal system of government but “a hydra headed unitary one”.

    “It is only in such a warped federalism that the federal government could pounce on and confiscate Lagos State council funds on the lame ground that the state, through its legislature, established area councils for ease of administration.

    “It is only under such a strange federalism that the same Lagos State would queue for years to seek approval from the Abuja powers before constructing a connecting bridge between Ikoyi and Lekki for ease of transportation. Ditto for the Marina rail as well,” Olanipekun said.

    According to him, the present system, apart from the fact that it is “a deceitful federalism,” retards progress, stagnates the country and cannot provide a better tomorrow for the next generation. “Let’s remind ourselves that at a point in time in this coun try, the three regions we had operated their governments at their respective paces, independent of federal government hindrances, inhibitions and injunctions.

    “The western region, for example, established radio and television stations before the Federal Government ever thought of doing so! This will sound as a moonlight tale to many.

    “The restructuring we need encompasses geographical, fiscal, structural, institutional, governmental, etc.

    “Indeed, the restructuring to usher in a workable federalism for Nigeria has to take a honest and holistic assessment of our previous constitutions and republics, both horizontally and vertically, and also bring out, for critical consideration and application, the recommendations of the last national conference instituted by the Jonathan administration.

    “On the institutional angle, which I believe is very urgent and immediate, successive governments in Nigeria, and this time around, since 1999, have been personalising key national institutions, treating and using them as personal estates of transient powers. This is very unfortunate.

    “We must not allow things to degenerate further. To my mind, the only independent institution we have in Nigeria today, apart from the executive, is the judiciary. Even at that, the judiciary is much freer at the centre. All other vital institutions of good government and governance are substantially in the hands and pockets of the various executives.

    “History won’t be kind to this generation if we fail to face the reality and inevitability of restructuring, which we can conveniently do now, across the table.

    “We should not pass the difficult buck to our children as by then, the knots might not be that easy to loosen. They will then look back and condemn our indecision and aimless soph istry. History will also be harsh on us,” Olanipekun said.

    Raji said Osinbajo’s and Atiku’s views on restructuring complement each other such that if both are married and implemented, the country will benefit greatly.

    “They are seasoned and they both know their onions. I only wish to add that for the restructure to be meaningful, we need to do away with the current presidential system which has proved most unsuitable for us.

    “It breeds dictatorship such that our governors have become despots who can do as they wish to the detriment of the society.

    “Most governors now crave to install their successors without any regard for party structure or seniority in the party, which is not possible in a parliamentary system.

    “This is affecting governance very negatively with attendant huge costs and arbitrariness unknown in the history of our country,” Raji said.

    He believes that parliamentary system promotes moderate and inclusive leadership with great checks and balances such that no leader can think of planting his in-law as a successor.

    “This will also remove the humongous costs of election with its attendant negative consequences on governance. We will just be having only parliamentary elections; no governorship or presidential election any longer.

    “Whether in its modified or original form, the parliamentary system holds a better and greater prospect for our environment,” he said.

    For Ofuokwu, irrespective of the nomenclature, be it geographical or fiscal restructuring, one thing that is agreed upon by both Osinbajo and Atiku is that there is an urgent need to restructure now more than ever before.

    “The present system in operation is fast heading for a doom and a total collapse.

    “Nigerian nation as it is today is standing on not only a false foundation but a fundamentally faulty one,” Ofuokwu said.

    According to him, “It is in the interest of all the regions and federating units that this geographical entity called Nigeria be quickly and urgently subjected to a very radical political surgery.

    “There must be proper devolution of power to the federating units and each unit must be allowed to develop at its own pace and resources.

    “For crying out loud, too much power and absolute power indeed is concentrated at the centre in Abuja where they produce nothing, do nothing but just share our common patrimony.”

    Ofuokwu wondered what value is a state chief executive who has no authority over the security apparatus of his state.

    “Do we need the National Assembly as it is today? The answer is simply no, as most of these characters have to a very large extent become economic and political parasites that this country cannot sustain their insatiable appetite for greed and lust. They spend more time on vacation and dancing than making laws.

    “We must go back to what we have before the unfortunate incursion of the military into politics. If this is done, each federating unit would be better for it.

    “In order to save time and resources organising another jamboree, we must look into, and if need be, adopt the report of the last constitutional confab.

    “Beyond restructuring, we need to imbibe in our ‘leaders’ the right democratic norms that can properly elevate them from being rulers to leaders,” Ofuokwu said.

    Speaking in the same vein, the Dean, College of Social and Management Sciences, Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Prof. Adeolu Durotoye, said the polity needs both good governance and restructuring to overcome the challenges bedevilling it.

    The professor of Political Science, explained that the positions canvassed by Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, and one of his predecessors in office, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, were valid.

    He argued that the nation needs a marriage of the two positions to move forward and overcome challenges of governance and make federalism stronger.

    Durotoye said: “People talking about restructuring are indirectly talking about deeper federalism whereby regions should have enough control over their resources and enough power to operate as federatingunits.

    “The first angle is about those who felt the states are not solvent as they are; that they will be better off if they are in a bigger unit. This is because in those days, states did not go cap in hand to the Federal Government as it is happening now.

    “Another group is of the opinion that we must restructure the exclusive, residual and concurrent lists; that states should have more functions and control over their resources.

    “The third angle is talking about the British model in which we have the federal government and counties and no states in between.

    “As the Vice President was saying, my position is that we need both restructuring and good governance. We need a marriage of both because institutions will not run themselves; they will be run by human beings.

    “A situation in which the President is stronger than the Police is not healthy for our democracy. You remember during the administration of President Umaru Yar’Adua when he could not function due to his health status.

    “You also remember the situation in which a man from Taraba became a vegetable because he could not perform the functions of his office due to accident. My take is that we need strong institutions. We must restructure and we need good governance as well.”

    Durotoye’s position was also shared by former President of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni people (MOSOP), Ledum Mitee.

    Mitee, a lawyer, said Nigerians need both geographical restructuring and good governance to achieve the needed development and equitable distribution of the wealth and power among the generating zones.

    According to the former MOSOP leader, good governance cannot succeed in the country without good geographical structure. He stressed that both the former PDP government and the present APC-led government have at their electioneering campaign period promised restructuring to no avail, and that PDP even set up a committee led by El’Rufai on the subject matter that yielded no results.

    Mitee said: “We need both restructuring and good governance. But my worry is that politicians speak from both sides of their mouths.

    “Last time the APC came up with a committee led by El-Rufai and they were meant to file recommendation touching on the issue of restructuring. Recall also that there were campaign promises before the 2015 elections which made a lot of issues about restructuring and therefore, I don’t know what has changed to the extent that restructuring is no longer a question that we should be talking about. So I believe that we could try it.

    “At the same time, I believe that we need good governance, and in good governance, we need a whole lot of indices. But if the structure is bad, it could also affect the level of governance that we are also having; and I think what the Vice President is saying is that we need good governance. Then let them give it. They are the people in power now.

    “Good governance is not something we should hope for; it is something that needs to be done right away.” he said.

    Asked the way forward ahead of 2019, he said: “No matter how and what people may think and say, ahead of the forthcoming elections, we need, if not anything, people that will bring about restructuring of power. We need people to tell us that some of the load the Federal Government is carrying are not supposed to rest with them.

    “Why should the Federal Government be the one to handle something like railway? Why should the primary education department be with the FG that we now have the National Universal Basic Education, among others?

    “There are whole lot of powers that the FG are carrying which are supposed to have nothing to do with it, including things that are supposed to go to the local government which it is arrogating to itself. These are things that we do not need to play politics with.”

    For the Secretary General of Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), Anthony N. Z Sani, the argument should be a tool for political mobilization and campaign and not a mere media battle. He said both Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar to sell their restructuring ideas to their political parties and use same to canvass for votes.

    He however said that, the country has been restructured many times. Therefore the solutions to the myriad of challenges facing Nigeria do not lie with restructuring but patriotic leaders which are in short supply.

    According to him, “You would note that this country has undergone many restructuring, be it geographic, political or economic, for the express purpose of improving good governance for the unity and stability of the nation needed for common good of the people.

    “As a result, some of us do not see any further restructuring as a means of overcoming the myriad of challenges facing the nation. Rather, we believe improvement of manage practices of both human and material resources that come with patriotic attitudes of our leaders is what matters the most, and is in short supply.”

    He added: “That may account for why there is no national consensus on what the term restructuring of the country means. Or whether restructuring of the country is needed at all. There are many people who see restructuring to mean “true federalism” while some others see it as ‘fiscal federalism.’ Yet we have some people who agitate for “resource control”, whatever that means.

    “It is against such situations that multiparty democracy seeks to address. This is because while there may be national consensus on the problems and challenges of any nation, there is often no similar national consensus on methods and strategy for solutions.

    “Multiparty democracy provides opportunity for each political party to represent distinct methods of solving national concern with clear thought and morality as contained in the manifesto which the party uses to canvass for electoral mandate needed for execution.

    “Fortunately for us, the present VP Osinbajo and the former VP Atiku are not of the same political party. They belong to different political parties which place in the order of things is to let Nigerians know how they hope to deliver on the promise of democracy.

    “Now that the duo are seminal figures in their respective political parties, it behoves  them to sell their version of restructuring to their political parties for inclusion in the manifestoes. The ensuing debates in the course of electoral campaigns will help enlighten voters to know what each political parties means by restructuring and make informed decisions during elections.

    “Effecting far reaching reforms of the polity is not a matter of individual preferences but a matter left for political parties which must seek electoral mandate from the electorate as the final authority. That is why ruling political parties are held to account for the performance of the government and not individual. This is odd thing to say, considering that electoral mandates are given to political parties and not to the individual”,ACF scribe said.

    A chieftain of the defunct Congress for Progressives Change (CPC) in Kwara State, Alhaji Abdulrahman Abdulrazak and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, John Baiyeshea (SAN) also described the tango on restructuring between Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as unnecessary. Mr. Baiyeshea, an Ilorin, Kwara State-based legal practitioner, specifically said: “Restructuring is a current debate in Nigeria. It has been a dominant public discuss particularly in the past two years.

    “Alhaji Atiku as a presidential candidate now finds it important to make the issue a vote catching campaign. But until he decamped to PDP, he was a prominent member of APC. That being the case, Alhaji Atiku should know or expect that Nigerians, including the VP, will comment on his campaign or even criticise it.

    “The observation by the VP that Alhaji Atiku’s restructuring mantra does not include the issue of corruption is a legitimate observation which Atiku Abubakar Campaign Organisation needs to take note of to include (if it is true) or if not, all they need do is to point out where the issue of corruption is in their mantra. It is as simple as that. I do not think that the VP Osinbajo’s observation is meant to undermine the Campaign of Alhaji Atiku Abubakar.

    “On a final note, since Alhaji Atiku is an experienced and seasoned politician, as a former Vice President of this country, he is expected to show maturity more than any other politician and handle criticisms with candour, should not engage in political ‘street fight.”

    Alhaji Abdulrazak, now a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), said restructuring or fiscal federalism are mere semantics, depending on which angle the proponents or opponents view it from.

    He added that “politicians are mouthing restructuring as a campaign strategy to canvass for votes, especially from the South-South and South-East geo-political zones.”

    Frontline Igbo leader and politician, Chief Emmanuel Iwuayanwu, said there must be immediate devolution of power to reduce the power of the federal government.

    He said: “More powers should be given to the state governors because when this is done, it makes development to be faster. It will reduce corruption because the bulk of the billions of money that is being stolen is not going to be easy at the state level.

    “When we restructure, it will reduce the powers of the federal government. It will help to reduce corruption. It will help to fast-track development in various states. States should be allowed to develop at their own pace.

    “I believe that the federal government has no business with education, with health, agriculture and even power. If all the billions of dollars we have spent on power since 1999 were shared to states, at least over 30 states today would have been completely reliant on electricity for 24 hours.

    How can someone see all these things and think it is right for us to continue the way we are going?”

    Iwuayanwu noted that the danger of “what we are doing today is that if we don’t restructure, it will create problems. Every part of this country has what can make them independent.

    “This present structure cannot solve our problems. Since after the first republic, even when the military took over and since 1999, every government has been charged for corruption. That means something is wrong with the system.”

    Also speaking, a constitutional lawyer and public affairs analyst, Leonard Anyogo, said: “My position is always in support of devolution of power. Something close to true federalism as envisaged globally, like we always make reference to United States. Abuja is over-burdened. In a federal system, we do not need an overlord but a working partnership that endears unity. Apart from currency, defence and foreign relations, I do not see any other item that should be exclusive to Abuja. On the argument that this may not be necessary if there was good governance, I would say it does not hold water. Good governance comes with good structure. You can even have ‘good governance’ in a military regime. Federalism means wide participation by components units.

    “There are also arguments that such problems of mismanagement may persist even in such federal system, and to this I say, let us make our institutions work that is not subjected to the whims and caprices of the Executive.”

  • Falana: No serious restructuring without equitable wealth redistribution

    Activist-lawyer Mr Femi Falana (SAN) said Wednesday said any restructuring of the country can only be meaningful if wealth is equitably distributed.

    To him, merely restructuring Nigeria will not guarantee unity and political stability without the redistribution of wealth.

    Falana was of the view that while the country needs power devolution, only the democratisation of powers and equitable redistribution of the commonwealth along egalitarian lines would engender unity.

    In a paper delivered at the 19th Mike Okonkwo Annual Lecture in Lagos, the Senior Advocate said since the rich were united in exploiting the country’s national resources, the exploited poor and oppressed should unite to free themselves from poverty.

    Falana said: “A leading People’s Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has become one of the leading proponents of restructuring, but his support for restructuring has not addressed the crucial issue of the redistribution of the national wealth.

    “After all, in his capacity as the nation’s Vice President and chairman of the National Council on Privatisation, Alhaji Abubakar presided over the restructuring of the nation’s economy through the liquidation of public assets and the privatisation of the commanding height of the economy.

    “The policy led to a situation whereby all major public enterprises and assets including oil blocks were sold to the so called ‘core investors’.

    “Such official transfer of the commonwealth to a few local and foreign corporate bodies will have to be reversed in the interests of the people.”

    According to Falana, the nation cannot be seriously restructured without equitable redistribution of wealth.

    “Therefore, those who have cornered the commonwealth should not be allowed to talk of restructuring in vacuo.

    “In other words, the campaign for restructuring should encompass the decentralisation and democratisation of political and economic powers which have been privatised by all factions of the ruling class,” he said.

    The leading rights activist referred to the constitutional provision that the welfare and security of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.

    He said Nigerians must therefore demand an end to a policy that allows political office holders and civil servants who constitute less than one per cent of the population to continue to allocate 70 per cent of the nation’s resources to themselves.

    Falana said: “If the Federal Government could withdraw US$12.4 billion from the foreign reserves to pay questionable external debts and subsidise the local bourgeoisie with intervention funds running to trillions of naira, it cannot turn round to complain of lack of fund to fix collapsed social infrastructures, education, health, transportation and agriculture and create jobs for our army of unemployed youths.

    “The recovery of the stolen wealth of the nation from foreign and local thieves should be a collective battle while the fund recovered from corrupt public officers and their privies is spent on job creation and fixing of hospitals and schools as well as the provision of other social services.”

    The senior lawyer believes that the programmes and manifestoes of the ruling party and the mainstream opposition parties cannot take Nigeria to the Promised Land.

    Nigerians, he said, must take their destiny in their own hands by organising themselves to demand for the actualisation of the fundamental objectives and directive principles set out in Chapter two of the Constitution.

    “The economy cannot be transformed in favour of Nigeria on the basis of the dangerous prescriptions of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

    “Nigerians should, therefore, be prepared to challenge the recycled neo-liberal managers of the economy who continue to insist on the dominance of market forces which have been discredited by the crisis of global capitalism.

    “While religious leaders are entitled to prepare the country for heaven, they must team up with patriotic forces to organise, empower and mobilise our people through their unions, associations, collectives and religious groups to rebuild the country on the platform of social justice and equity. Otherwise, the unity of Nigeria will remain a mirage.”

  • Atiku to Reps: Why I want to contest

    …As lawmakers demand automatic return tickets

     

    The former Vice President of Nigeria, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar met with members of the House of Representatives under the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Thursday night in the National Assembly (NASS).

    The caucus was led by the Deputy Minority Leader, Chukwuka Onyema.

    The PDP presidential candidate used the opportunity to acquaint the members of reasons for his ambition.

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    The former Vice President personally distributed his letter of intent to each member of the caucus and some reformed All Progressives Congress (rAPC).

    The letter reads in part: “After thorough consultations with my families,  major stakeholders within man outside the party including party stalwarts, traditional and religious leaders, various youths and women groups, the civil society and the private sector; I , Atiku Abubakar, wishbone inform you about my aspiration for the exalted office of the President of Federal Republic of Nigerian under the flagship of People’s Democratic Party (PDP)

    “As stipulated by the Party constitution and guidelines for nomination, it is mandatory that we go through the process of presidential  party primary election.

    “It is in line with this that I wish to humbly solicit your votes during this all important process.

    “I am in no doubt that with your support, in will emerge victorious amongst other candidates at the forthcoming Presidential primary election.

    “Together, we can liberate, repair and refocus our country Nigeria. Together, we can put Nigeria back inbred right pedestal. Together, we can get Nigeria working again”.

    The Deputy Minority Leader of the House, Hon. Chukwuka Onyema who spoke on behalf of the Minority leader, Leo Ogor, appreciated the candidate for the interactive session.

    He appreciated the consultation with the caucus as being an important part of the process.

    He however reminded Abubakar how important an automatic return ticket is to all the lawmakers.

    Though some of the lawmakers that included reformed All Progressives Congress (rAPC) wanted to ask questions, Onyema prevailed on them to shelve the questions since further meetings would take place even outside the NASS complex.

    He said: “We are happy that you already know the importance of legislators coming back as many times as possible and seeing our former leader Abdul Ningi who does not follow anyone that is going to fail.

    “In our usual way, we will look at this, go over it and come up with one voice. Any decision we take, we go together and try as much as possible to earn 100 percent”.

    Atiku left while the lawmakers stayed behind for more deliberation where Onyema was heard stressing the importance of a united decision.

  • As Atiku goes for broke

    Just recently, former vice president, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, the Wazirin Adamawa, said he was not desperate to be president of Nigeria.  But, to be sure, he is an aspirant on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The race for the office of the president is always tension-soaked. The incumbent president and his supporters tend to become hysterical and abrasive in the race for re-election. Atiku’s statement was, perhaps, made in the context of the usual do-or-die nature of such race.

    Besides, I cannot wager that Atiku’s traducers were taken in by his statement.  He might have intended to either construct a dignifying exit strategy for himself or make his traducers to imprudently drop their guards in what should typically be a fight-to-the-finish race.  I also do not think that those who are opposed to Atiku’s presidency are comfortable with his political moves in recent times.  They do not rest assured in their antagonistic fixation, knowing his capacity for politicking and political survival.

    Any opponent who underrates the Jada-born politician does so at his or her peril.  Historically, he has most of the times been on top of his political game.  In the ill-fated Third Republic, he had wanted to be president.  He had contested for the ticket of the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP) in a race against the late M.K.O. Abiola and Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe.  In a bid to scale the primary hurdle within the party and clinch the presidential ticket, Abiola, who appeared to enjoy a countrywide support, had struck a political rapprochement with the late Major General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, who was Atiku’s political leader.

    The move had resulted in Atiku’s withdrawal from the race. His action and support had ensured Abiola’s victory at the expense of Kingibe in a subsequent run-off.  But because of the massive support that Kingibe enjoyed within the party, it became inevitable that he should be nominated as the running mate, regardless of the fact that they were both Muslims.  That was how the historic Muslim-Muslim ticket that received nationwide approbation crystallized.  The presidential ticket had gone ahead to win the annulled June 12, 1993 election.

    In 1999, Atiku led the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), the political structure of the late Shehu Yar’Adua, to work in partnership with other groups to form the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).  Even though he contested and won election to be governor of Adamawa state, Olusegun Obasanjo, the presidential candidate of the PDP, had nominated him as his running mate. That was how Atiku became the vice president from 1999 to 2007.

    Atiku’s unsuccessful moves to supplant Obasanjo in 2003 upset the governance architecture at the centre and altered his political trajectory.  Although, he was able to lock in the position of running mate to Obasanjo in the 2003 presidential election, once the election was won, Obasanjo strategically sidelined him in their second term in office in a whiff of political vendetta.

    Obasanjo had, unchallenged, pushed a corruption narrative about Atiku in the absence of concrete evidence to nail him.  But presently, a vast majority of Nigerians are now at home with the fact that the “Atiku-is-corrupt” perception was the ingenious creation of Obasanjo to make his (Atiku’s) candidature a difficult sell anytime he decides to contest for the position of president in Nigeria. Atiku’s initial undoing was that he never cared about that.

    Today, the astute politician is jostling for the presidential ticket on the PDP platform.  He is, no doubt, formidable.  He looks the best material that the PDP should deploy for the 2019 battle against President Buhari.  Atiku has the experience.  He has the grassroots and nationwide networks.  He has the financial war chest.  He has the gravitas.  He has the courage to fight to the finish.  He is well prepared for the job, armed with an organic economic blueprint with which to transform Nigeria into a balanced, stable and strong economy.

    Besides, Atiku has clear political philosophies that he espouses regarding the future of the Nigeria as well as programmes of socio-economic reconstruction.  He is restlessly looking for an opportunity to translate them into pragmatic realities.  From that prism, he is desperate, even though he said he was not.  If truly he was not, I hereby call him out to be.  Nigeria is presently being incompetently managed and he happens to be in pole position ahead of other contestants for the job of redeeming Nigeria.  Truth is, the massive battle to upstage candidate Buhari of the APC is not for the lily-livered.

    After the 2019 presidential election, Atiku can no longer offer himself for the position, given his age. He is about 71 and this is his last and best chance of becoming president.  If I were him, I would be desperate in the circumstance of the national emergency to save Nigeria.  I would deploy my human and political capital as well as my massive financial resources to get on the ballot in the PDP and go ahead to fund a massive coalition around my candidature for the epic battle.  The time for him to act decisively is now.

    A cursory look at Atiku’s political trajectory will show a determined man who never says die.  It will reveal an embodiment of a rugged political fighting spirit.  It will show a display of raw guts.  Atiku is, without a doubt, gutsy!  How many of those seeking to dislodge Buhari had the guts to say they would probe him if they got to power before Atiku did? He said he would probe the arms procurement contracts of the Buhari administration.

    Apart from Atiku, how many of the aspirants from the north have espoused restructuring of the federation as a campaign theme? Knowing full well that restructuring is not attractive to the northern political elite, Atiku still dared the Hausa-Fulani hegemony on the matter by pushing it, thus raising general stakes about the fate of our current federal structure before and after the battle for the soul of Nigeria in 2019.

    A good public relations’ outing that the PDP should benefit from was Atiku’s April 25, 2018 Chatham House lecture titled, “Next Generation Nigeria: The Importance of Strengthening States’ Economic Management.” It was a clear-headed understanding of how to effectively manage the economy of a restructured Nigerian federation. Which other presidential aspirant in the PDP has the capacity to operate on equal wavelengths with Atiku in terms of strategic politics and exposure within and outside Nigeria?

    The opposition party should leverage on Atiku’s audacity and the series of intellectual engagements internationally to counter whatever global image laundering that President Muhammadu Buhari may have embarked upon, such as his recent meeting with President Donald Trump, which is largely interpreted as “security-equipment-purchase-for-public-relations” rapprochement between Nigeria and the US. The fact is that only Atiku has the clout to take on Buhari. With due respect, the other northern aspirants in the PDP are provincial in their outlooks.

    On the occasion of the workers’ celebration on May Day, Atiku had called on the labour union to take on the Federal Government on minimum wage, industrialization, education, healthcare delivery and pension as the bases of 2019 engagement. I know what Atiku is calling for. He is calling for robust national conversations, which he has already got involved in and also obligatory presidential debates that presage and prepare Nigerians to make their well-considered final choice(s) of president in 2019.

     

    • Ojeifo, editor-in-chief of The Congresswatch magazine, contributed this piece via ojwonderngr@yahoo.com
  • 2019: APC can’t lose sleep over Atiku against Buhari – El-Rufai

    2019: APC can’t lose sleep over Atiku against Buhari – El-Rufai

    Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai has said that, All Progressives Congress ( APC ) is waiting for the former Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar to come and contest the 2019 presidential seat against President Muhammadu Buhari, saying that, they cannot lose sleep over Atiku’s ambition.

    El-Rufai also said that, Atiku lied by saying he financed the APC campaigns in 2015. He however challenged the former Vice President to prove his claims.

    Kaduna State Governor stated this in an interview with the Hausa service of the Voice of America (VOA), which was monitored in Kaduna on Wednesday.

    Also featured in the short interview on the VOA Hausa service programme ‘Democracy Today’ were the former Vice President Atiku Abubakar himself and former Jigawa State Governor, Alhaji Sule Lamido, who has since declared intention to contest the presidential ticket under the platform of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    When asked about his intention to contest in 2019, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar simply said, he has not made up his mind, saying that, “when I decide, I will let the world know”.

    But, Sule Lamido in his reaction to Atiku’s return to PDP said, they were happy to have him back, and that, he is not threatened by Atiku’s return.

    According to Lamido, “We are happy that former Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar is back to PDP. PDP made him and that he is back to the party is our joy. Not only him, in fact, we want others who left the party like the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki and former Governors to come back”.

    Asked whether he is not threatened by Atiku’s return, Lamido said, he is not threatened, but his prayer is that, best Presidential candidate will emerge for PDP. “If our interest is to see the progress and development of Nigeria, then, we should also prayer that everyone who left should return home”.

    However, El-Rufai while tongue-lashing Atiku said, “We in the APC were aware from onset that Atiku was going to leave APC back to PDP in the December and we thank God that, he left in November.

    “Atiku had seen that, we in the APC, especially the APC Governors had resolved to support President Muhammadu Buhari to run again in 2019. That is why he left APC, since he was only looking for where to contest for presidency.

    “Even in the 2015 APC primary election, Atiku didn’t come second, he was floored by Kwankwaso. So, even if President Buhari decides not to contest, Atiku knows that the APC ticket is not sure for him. Majority of the APC Governors have endorsed President Buhari as our candidate for 2019.

    “And we thank God, God has continued to improve the health condition of the President. Each time I see him, I thank God and I still pray that God continues to give him sound health.

    “So, by 2019, we are waiting to see Atiku contest, we are waiting to contest against him and see what happens. But, I cannot lose sleep because Atiku wants to contest, because by God’s grace, this is the reign of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “Agreed, in politics if you lose even only one person, it should worry you, but the utterances of the former Vice President that, APC used his money, who did he give the money to? For me, I know those that supported us with their money and property that we used during election, and I never heard the name of Atiku that he brought a dime. If Atiku said he brought money, who did he give? Let him come and say it and how much did he give and what was it used for?

    “And in fact, if Atiku brought money, I ought to know, because I am part of the leadership of the party and during campaign, myself and former Governor Rotimi Amaechi were at the centre of the presidential campaign. Therefore, we are supposed to know. So, let him mention whom he gave the money and how much?

    “Asked about large number of APC members who are likely to follow Atiku to PDP, El-Rufai said, “Sure, we know that, we cannot rule out the possibility of some greedy people following him, those that are following material things. But, if people will consider how we can work for the progress of our country, everybody knows that you cannot compare Atiku with President Muhammadu Buhari”, El-Rufai said.