Tag: Ango Abdullahi

  • Fresh call for restructuring: Ango Abdullahi, Yakassai tackle Clark, other southern leaders

    Fresh call for restructuring: Ango Abdullahi, Yakassai tackle Clark, other southern leaders

    Former Presidential Adviser, Professor Ango Abdullahi, has poured scorn on the latest call for the immediate restructuring of Nigeria and the implementation of the recommendations of the 2014 National Conference by southern leaders under the auspices  of the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly (SNPA).

    The ex-vice chancellor of the Ahmadu Bello University,Zaria said the view in some quarters that the North constitutes a pest on the rest of the country is hogwash.

    Abdullahi and two other leading Northern voices -veteran politician, Alhaji Tanko Yakasai and Second Republic Governor of the old Kaduna State,Alhaji Balarabe Musa ,believe that the repeated demand for the restructuring  of the country by southerners is out of place.

    Yakasai called it ‘trivial and politically motivated’, while Musa branded the restructuring agitation as  mischief.

    “The North has sustained Nigeria from 1914 till today,” Abdullahis declared in reaction to the frustration expressed  by Ijaw leader,Chief Edwin Clark at the SNPA’s  last meeting that a zone that produces the resources of the nation benefits very little or nothing, compared to another zone that does not contribute anything significant to the national treasury.

    Profesor Abdullahi took exception to the  view that the North is contributing little or nothing to the economy yet it is  monopolizing power.

    He said: “What I want to tell whoever cares to listen is that the North has sustained Nigeria from 1914 till today. They should go and check their records. So, anytime anybody is tired of being part of Nigeria, he is free to go away.

    “We don’t care whether any zone feels it produces whatever, but our position is that the  North has sustained Nigeria since 1914 till today. So, anybody who feels Nigeria should not exist should feel free to walk away.

    “They can call for anything, we are ready. In fact, which resources are they talking about? There is oil everywhere for the North to buy. We can get as much oil as we want from Niger Republic here, we can get it from Chad, we get it from anywhere we want.”

    Yakasai, who spoke to our reporter in Kano, asked  southern leaders to channel their complaints  of alleged marginalization, lopsidedness, inequality and favouritism by the Buhari  administration to the right channel.

     “Whoever is thinking of restructuring Nigeria should realize that he is talking about the fate of over 180 million Nigerians  who are entitled to know what the details of this restructuring are,” he said.

    “ Nigerians need to know the blue-print of the so called restructuring of Nigeria.  Over 180 million Nigerians will also like to know how Nigeria will look like after the restructuring, because nobody will determine their future without their knowledge and without their consent.

    “I know that for some years, some individuals have been going about, talking about restructuring of Nigeria. I know of the former Vice President, Chief Alex Ekwueme talking about restructuring of Nigeria. I know of Prof. Ben Nwabueze talking about restructuring of Nigeria. I know of Pastor Tunde Bakare talking about of Nigeria. All those I have mentioned are yet to present their blue-print on how a restructured Nigeria will look like in their dreams.

    “I am a Nigerian. I am involved, and I will like to know what will be my fate in a restructured Nigeria. Other Nigerians will also like to know what a restructured Nigeria will look like because they are affected. My appeal to whoever wants Nigeria to be restructured is that he should be bold enough to bring out his own modules of a restructured Nigeria so that the proposal will be debated by Nigerians.

    “This restructuring of Nigeria if it is going to happen at all, should involve changing the Nigerian Constitution in one way or the other. Nobody can change the Constitution of Nigeria except in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution of Nigeria.

    “It is wrong for anybody to wait until President Muhammadu Buhari agrees to implement the recommendations of the 2014 Constitutional Conference before making a move for restructuring or whatever change in the Constitution of Nigeria. Every Nigerian has a right to initiate a bill that will either make a law through the due process of changing the Constitution of the country; or prepare a bill that can be sent to the National Assembly for legislative action. Every Nigerian has his representative in the National Assembly (both in the House of Representatives and the Senate), that can help his bill sail through the debate in the National Assembly. So, I advise those clamouring for restructuring to follow the due process and the right channels, if only restructuring the country is the answer to whatever problems we are currently facing.”

    In his own response, first Executive Governor of the old Kaduna State, Alhaji Abdulkadir Balarabe Musa said : “the agitations and counter agitations are ill-timed. We have been together for over 100 years and it is very difficult for us to path ways.

    “Those people making noise are not ordinary people, they are privileged Nigerians who have nothing to lose if Nigeria remains together. They are just making mischief.

  • $2.1bn arms deal: Jonathan right to keep mum for now —Ango Abdullahi, Coomassie, SANs

    Former Presidential Special Adviser, Professor Ango Abdulahi, former Inspector General of Police Ibrahim Coomassie, two Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) – Chief Ladi Williams and Chief Niyi Akintola – say former President Goodluck Jonathan is right to be silent for now on the $2.1billion arms scandal .

    A number of  top government officials and  military officers who served under Jonathan have been indicted for swindling the nation of billions of naira originally earmarked to buy arms for the armed forces in the fight against terror sect, Boko Haram.

    The funds were allegedly disbursed by the former President’s National Security Adviser, Colonel Sambo Dasuki (rtd),  who said he acted under instruction from Jonathan who said during the week in Geneva, Switzerland that he could not comment on the issue for now since some of the suspects have been charged to court.

    Reacting, Professor Abdullahi, who spoke to Saturday Nation in a telephone interview, said since the EFCC had told the world that there is no documented evidence linking President Jonathan with the diversion of the $2.1bn, he (Jonathan) should be left out of the scandal.

    He said: “My recollection of that aspect of the present issue  is that the investigating body, that is, EFCC, has told the public that, as of now, they have not seen any documented evidence that links the former President to the expenditure which was intended for arms purchase, but which was allegedly diverted to other issues. All the documents they said they got are approvals which they said he gave specifically for money intended for purchase of arms for our military.

    “They said there is nothing that has connected the former President to expenditure that has appeared to be a diversion from what the money he approved was intended for. That is what they said and that is why I will advise that since the EFCC has not found any document connecting him (Jonathan) to expenditure of the $2.1bn, he should be left alone. Why should he talk?

    “I am not his spokesman, but I am saying, logically that, all these investigations on Sambo Dasuki and all those that are so far connected to the issue have been mentioned specifically by EFCC, so, maybe at a later stage, EFCC will have evidence to say that the former President is involved, but until then, he should be left alone.” Professor Ango said.

    Alhaji Ibrahim  Coomasie who is  the Chairman,Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF),   in his own reaction  said Jonathan’s decision to remain silent  “should be respected by the EFCC. But, at appropriate time, when it becomes necessary, they will contact him. So, it is not wrong for him to say he will not talk until the right time.

    “So, EFCC should give him (Jonathan) time to put his own evidence together. This is what I advise, but I know, somehow the authority investigating will get to him. So, let us fold our arms and watch the development.

    “Former President Goodluck Jonathan has the right to remain silent for now, until he is called upon by the appropriate authority.”

    Chief Ladi Williams (SAN) said: “ It was clever of the former President to have refrained from  making comments on the issue. Whatever he says would be prejudicial. Whoever advised him against it did the right thing. Aside from being prejudicial, whatever he says at the moment has the tendency of heating up the polity.”

    He, however, noted that the former President is not immune from being investigated if there are reasons for such to be done.

    “The EFCC can invite him for a chat if it has sufficient reasons to do that. They can subpoena and put him in the witness box to be a witness if there is need for that as well. In  fact, he can be prosecuted if there is substantial evidence against him.”

    Chief Niyi Akintola also applauded the former President for the decision to keep quiet on the arms scandal. He, however, took exception to his invitation by the EFCC.

    “Whatever the former president says would have great implication on the polity. If they have anything against him, they can confront him but we should respect the office he held before. Nothing stops the EFCC from inviting him but I will not advise that they do that. There is more to the matter than meets the eyes.

    “Mr President should borrow a leave from former military head of state, General Ibrahim Babangida, who took on his enemies one at a time.”

    In the same vein, the Ohanaeze Youth Council (OYC) commended Jonathan for eschewing to make comments on the scandal, urging the EFCC to fish out more culprits in the  scam.

    The president of  the group, Mazi Okechukwu Isiguzoro, said: “The former president took a wise decision by choosing not to make any comment on the issue because it is still in court. That shows that he has deep respect for the judiciary.  Aside from his respect for the judiciary, the decision from our point of view is also  in the best interest of the country as whatever comment he makes on the issue is capable of aggravating the polity.

    “We, therefore, urge President Buhari and the EFCC to respect the former president’s decision and ignore pressures from every quarter to bring him into the ongoing probe. We appreciate and support President Buhari’s anti-corruption war and want to urge him and the EFCC to stop at nothing in fishing out other culprits in the scam. All those that were given a certain period of time to respond to the charges against them should be made to return to the courts to give their sides of the story.

  • Ango Abdullahi’s escape

    Ango Abdullahi’s escape

    Former Vice Chancellor of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, and now spokesman of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF), Ango Abdullahi, had a narrow escape last week on his way to Bauchi State University, Gadau. His car was shot at many times by soldiers escorting a convoy said to be conveying sensitive materials. Prof Abdullahi’s sin was that his car overtook the slow-moving convoy. It was an affront, the soldiers said after demobilising his car and missing the professor and his driver by a whisker. A few months in February, security men believed to be policemen were alleged to have extra-judicially murdered another ABU professor, Ahmed Mustapha Falaki, an agronomist, whom they mistook for a Boko Haram suspect.

    It was not clear why the soldiers believed the load they were escorting was more sensitive than Prof Abdullahi’s life and his driver’s. Nor is it understandable why even after demobilising the professor’s car the soldiers still felt remorseless about how close they came to needlessly killing innocent people. The Army is reported to have sent a representative to apologise for the soldiers’ misbehaviour, with a promise to investigate and bring to book the offending culprits. As in the case of Prof Falaki, few believe justice will be served in any way.

    Until Nigerian security agents are fully and intelligently reoriented to do their jobs professionally, and until they recognise they are not an occupation force, such incidents as visited on Profs Abdullahi and Falaki will recur. In 2009, the extra-judicial killing of Boko Haram leader by policemen stoked the fire of the revolt in the Northeast, a fire yet to be extinguished after more than 13,000 people have died and billions of naira in property destroyed.

  • Jonathan trip to Borno, political – Ango Abdullahi

    Secretary of Northern Elders Forum (NEF), Prof. Ango Abdullahi , has described the Thursday’s visit of President Goodluck Jonathan to Borno State as a political move to get votes from people that are yet to be killed by Boko Haram.

    He lamented that a visit the President could not make in four years of killings in the Northeast, is now considered necessary barely 30 days to presidential election.

    Abdullahi, who is a one- time Vice Chancellor of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, told The Nation in on telephone that President Jonathan’s visit to Borno is too late.

    He said,” Mr. President knows quite well that thousands of people have lost their lives and property worth hundreds of millions of naira have been lost to insurgency in the northeast.

    “In addition, thousands have been internally and externally displaced in their own country. And it has taken Mr. President more than four years to go and see things for himself.

    “Therefore, to me, my interpretation of his going there is that he wants the remaining people of Borno State who are still alive to vote for him‎. I think his visit is political and he thinks the Borno People and people of the Northeast are that stupid.

    “Even by the account of the deputy governor who addressed the President during his visit to one of the Internally Displaced Persons’ camps, NEMA has done virtually nothing to alleviate the sufferings of the people since the beginning of the crisis.”

  • North and funding of Nigerian oil industry

    Oil Prospecting Funds

    In an interview published at pages 48 and 49 of The Punch of February 1, Professor Ango Abdullahi, a northern elder and power-must-return-to-the-North diehard, claimed that the Nigerian oil industry was developed with money from the North. According to him, “It is the North that developed the present day oil industry in this country. It is northern money; it is northern leadership that developed the oil industry.”

    Perhaps, by constantly repeating this delusional lie, the northern political and intellectual elite think it will stick in Nigeria’s collective consciousness as the truth. The truth is that the northern elite is addicted to the proceeds of Niger Delta oil and gas. They have completely abandoned any pretence at productivity and internally generated revenue. The North is now completely dependent on the monthly federal allocation, which is the same thing as Niger Delta oil proceeds. The blatant falsehood about northern funding of the initial stages of the industry, arises out of the psychological need to justify this total dependence on Niger Delta oil proceeds for survival and for virtually every need of daily existence. The reasoning goes like this. Oil exploration in the Niger Delta was financed by Northern groundnut proceeds and therefore the North is equally entitled to Niger Delta oil proceeds as the Niger Deltans themselves. But what is the truth?

    The first oil prospecting in Nigeria was by a German company known as the Nigerian Bitumen Company. It commenced operations in 1908 and wound up its activities in Nigeria at the commencement of the First World War in 1914.

    The second attempt at oil prospecting in Nigeria was in 1937 by a company known as Shell D’Arcy.

    Shell D’Arcy also stopped operations in 1940 because of the 2nd World War. In 1946 Shell Company was joined by British Petroleum (BP) to establish the Shell BP Company which finally discovered oil at Oloibiri in 1956. These companies were later joined by Elf, Texaco, Agip, Gulf Oil, Mobil Producing and other oil prospecting and producing companies.

    From these early beginnings in 1908 to the present moment, that is 2014, the Nigerian State, including Northern Nigeria, has never spent one kobo in oil prospecting and oil producing, with funds other than from proceeds of petroleum products. The Nigerian federal government has at all relevant times been a beneficiary of the petroleum proceeds from the investments and activities of the oil multinationals. The so-called NNPC investments in oil prospecting has only occurred in northern part of the Nigeria, namely, the Benue trough, the Chad Basin and in Bauchi State. The funds utilized by the NNPC in these northern areas were obtained from proceeds of the Niger Delta oil operations.

    Therefore rather than the federal government investing money in Niger Delta oil operations, it is the proceeds of the Niger Delta petroleum that is fueling state, power and activities in Nigeria and supplying all the funds for the NNPC’s prospecting of petroleum in northern states.

    By and large, all initial expenses for prospecting and producing are borne exclusively by the foreign multinationals. The federal government spends nothing of its own funds in the industry, except for cash calls which are paid for by proceeds of Niger Delta petroleum.

    Thus if the federal government itself spent nothing in the development of the oil industry, except to plough back Niger Delta oil proceeds earlier collected by it, how and in what circumstances did the North per se fund the operations of the oil industry?

    (ii) Pre-Petroleum Economy of Nigeria

    Another misinformation that needs to be exorcised is the assertion that the Nigerian state survived solely on groundnut and cotton from the North before oil was produced in commercial quantities. This is patently false. The West produced cocoa, the Mid-West produced rubber, palm oil, palm kernel and timber, and the East produced palm oil and timber. In each case, the producers of these natural resources sold their produce and pocketed their proceeds for their personal use. By contrast the oil and gas of Niger Delta is taken away 100 per cent by the federal government leaving the producing communities and the owners of that resource nothing but environmental degradation and pollution. In the pre-oil economy of Nigeria, it was only the export duty of the agricultural products that was shared on the basis of, 50 per cent derivation and 30 per cent distributable funds for all the regions. The federal government got 20 per cent.

    It could thus be seen that every part of Nigeria contributed to the pre-petroleum economy of the country. Most importantly, individual producing farmers sold their products and pocketed the proceeds for the benefit of themselves and their families alone. This is not applicable to the people of the Niger-Delta whose oil and gas has been appropriated completely by the federal government without any consideration of the right and interest and future of the people on whose land the oil and gas are found.

    Indeed, under the revenue allocation formula of the 1st Republic, it was the North that benefitted financially from the contributions of the other three regions and not the other way round. It will be recalled that by Section 140 of the 1963 Constitution, 50% of oil proceeds went to the region from which they were extracted, 20 % went to the federal government, and 30% was paid into a distributable pool.

    In the allocation of the 30% from the Distributable Pool Account, the North received a disproportionate share which effectively meant contributions from the other regions. Thus, out of the 30% of the resources of all the four regions paid into that account, the percentage paid to each region was as follows:

    (a) Northern Nigeria – 40% (b)Eastern Nigeria – 31%

    (c) Western Nigeria – 18% (d) Mid-Western Nigeria – 6%

    (Section 141, 1963 Constitution)

    Thus, at all periods, since 1914, the North has been and continues to be the major beneficiary of the financial output of the whole country.

    We must not forget what motivated the British Colonial Power to bring about the amalgamation of 1914.

    The reason behind the decision of the British government to amalgamate the two territories (North and South) was purely financial or economic. The Northern Protectorate was not economically viable. It had become a great drain on the British tax payer. On the other hand, the Southern Protectorate was not just economically buoyant, it was producing surpluses every year. The British design was therefore to remove the northern financial burden from its own neck and hang it on the neck of the hapless Southern Protectorate.

    According to Lord Harcourt, the British Colonial Secretary, unification of Nigeria demanded both “method” and “a man”. The man was to be Lord Lugard and the method was to be the “marriage” of the two entities. According to Lord Harcourt:

    “We have released Northern Nigeria from the leading strings of the Treasury. The promising and well conducted youth is now on an allowance on his own and is about to effect an alliance with a Southern lady of means. I have issued the special license and Sir Frederick Lugard will perform the ceremony. May the union be fruitful and the couple constant”.

    The comparative economic situation of the two halves of Nigeria has not changed in the last 100 years. Rather the economic power of the South has continued to increase vis-à-vis the North. This explains the fierce opposition of the northern elites to true federalism, and a National Conference, which might bring this about.

    On the issue of funds and funding of the federal government, states and local governments, I think the northern political and intellectual elite should be grateful to the South, particularly the Niger Delta, the great provider.

     

  • Northern elders and Ihejirika

    Northern elders and Ihejirika

    It is our duty to raise an alarm when birds cease to cry like birds. That is why we are worried by the statement credited to the Northern Elders Forum (NEF) to the effect that the immediate past Chief of Army Staff, Lt-Gen. Azubike Ihejirika should be dragged to the International Criminal Court (ICC) over military operations against terrorists in the North.

    Chairman of the NEF, Professor Ango Abdullahi, had said in a statement that the group would take Ihejirika to the ICC for “extra-judicial killings by soldiers in Bama and the act of strangulating civilians in Giwa Barracks, using an underground detention centre, while depositing the corpses in hospital.”

    Expectedly, the statement has attracted criticisms and, understandably, one of the first critics of the NEF is Senator Uche Chukwumerije who, at a forum in Abuja dared the NEF to go ahead with its plan adding however that should the NEF go ahead with its threat, it would be a good opportunity for other aggrieved regions and people in the country to knock at the doors of the ICC for redress over one form of injustice or the other.

    These included the Igbo who would take the massacre of over two million Ndigbo during the civil war to the court, while the other groups would also table their own cases before the international court. “As Ango Abdullahi’s team opens the doors and walks into the hall of the world court, let them realise that they have at last opened the Pandora’s Box”, Chukwumerije said.

    We are however happy that the pan-Northern socio-political organisation, Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), is not in agreement with the position of the NEF. Indeed, we align with every point raised by the ACF in dissociating itself from the NEF position on this matter. This tells us that the thinking of the elders’ forum may not necessarily be the position of the entire northern region on the matter; which is heartwarming.

    As the ACF rightly noted through its National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Anthony Sani,:”The campaigns by the military against the insurgence could not reasonably be personalised against the former Chief of Army Staff. And that is why the military has its own way of bringing to book those soldiers who cross the line in any of such campaigns”. The elders’ forum did not tell us the basis of its conclusion or why the former chief of army staff should be held personally responsible for whatever crimes the soldiers might have committed.

    This issue is similar to the claims of marginalisation that nearly every region in the country has been complaining about. If, as Senator Chukwumerije noted, any group decides to approach the ICC for redress over any matter, a lot of past wounds will be reopened because hardly is there any group or section in the country that does not have one grievance or the other to report at the international court. We particularly deplore the ethnic flavour introduced into the matter by the elders’ forum and commend the ACF for its timely dissociating with the forum’s position.

    What we would urge, and indeed insist on, is strict compliance with rules of engagement in all military campaign, especially the ones against insurgents, whether in the north or any part of the country for that matter. Where there are breaches, the military should be able to decide those and address them appropriately. This is what we expect the elders to demand instead of fanning the embers of hatred and disunity. It’is high time elders started acting in a statesman-like manner and as the true elders that they are.

     

  • North must claim presidency in 2015, says Ango Abdullahi

    The North on Tuesday  gave an indication of a heated Presidential race in 2015 saying that either through rotation or its population, it will take back the Presidency from President Jonathan.

    Secretary of the Northern Elders Forum and Former Special Adviser to President Olusegun Obasanjo on Food Security, Prof. Ango Abdullahi told newsmen in Kaduna that the various groups in the region were already working together to ensure that power return to the north in 2015.

    He also said that former President Olusegun Obasanjo begged the north to allow him have a second term since the original arrangement for rotational presidency did not include having two terms, adding that the north had to allow Obasanjo to serve two terms in line with the constitutional provisions.
    Prof. Abdullahi said that if the north cannot claim the Presidency through rotation, it intends to do so relying on its massive population, adding that based on population alone, the north can hold on to power in the country for as long as they wish to do so.
    He said “I want to make it absolutely clear to you that the ACF and all these other groups that have emerged in the recent past are committed to the interest that underlies northern interest.  There is no question about that.
    “The north is determined and is insisting that the leadership of the country will rotate to it in 2015 and I am making that very clear to you. On behalf of all of us, ACF in front because they have been the oldest group and the Middle Belt Forum (MBF) and our other groups that have been very active and strong.
    “All of us are likely to have this very tough and common agenda. Not that the north and power blind, no, it will be argued on the rational argument that are on ground today. The north on the basis of one man, one vote can keep power indefinitely in the present Nigeria state,” Abdullahi stated.
    “If it is on the basis of one man, one vote, the demography shows that the north can keep power as long as it wants because it will always win elections”.
    The former Vice Chancellor noted that the issue of rotational presidency between the North and South was accepted many years ago at the 1987 Political Reform Conference, where it was resolved that every part of the country should be part of the leadership.
    He said that the north has always made sacrifices in the course in the interest f the country, adding that “some of us who participated in conferences- constitutional conferences from 1987 until the last one- the Political Reform Conference, it was accepted that every part of this country should feel part of the leadership and these are the basis of the acceptance of the rotation between the north and the south