Tag: Atiku Abubakar

  • Kaduna PDP campaign media director’s bail suffers setback

    A federal High Court sitting in Kaduna has given a transfer order on the case between the Department of State Security (DSS) and the director general Media and Publicity of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Campaign Council in Kaduna State, Mr. Ben Bako.

    Bako was arrested by operatives of the DSS in Kaduna for allegedly inciting the public at a rally in Kafanchan, Kaduna State and has been in detention in one of the organisation’s facilities in Abuja since then.

    The accused, who was represented by Barrister Baba Lawal Aliyu and former Attorney General of Kaduna State, Barrister Mark Jacob, applied on behalf of their client to be released on bail for the enforcement of his fundamental human right pending when hearing on the matter would commence.

    The counsel sought an order enforcing the applicants fundamental Human Rights as guaranteed by section 34,35 andb36 of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended), Order 2 of the Fundamental Rights(enforcement procedure)rules 2009, Article 3,4,5 and 6 African Charter on human and peoples Rights for same being breached by the Respondents.

    It also sought an Order releasing the Applicant on bail pending his arraignment before a court of competent jurisdiction and such further order as may be deemed fit to make by the court.

    Read Also: PDP takes protest to INEC

    As the arguments on the bail application commenced, counsel to the DSS opposed the bail application saying his reply is supported by a sworn affidavit, which highlighted the offense allegedly committed by the applicant bordering on national security and added Bako is being detained in order to avert a breakdown of law and order.

    The DSS also made it clear that it had filed an exparte application on the matter at another federal High Court in Abuja.

    The Presiding Judge, Justice Peter Manloung, observed that since the matter is before a court of competent jurisdiction in Abuja, he may not want to continue with it, saying all he could do is to transfer the bail application to Abuja for reassignment by the Chief justice of Nigeria, CJN.

    Counsel to Bako then pleaded that since the Judge became aware of the ex-parte application in Abuja, the transfer order should go with an order direction the DSS to allow the counsels access to their client, who is with the DSS.

    But the judge, who said the best he could do in the circumstance was to only grant the transfer order, said every other applications could be directed accordingly.

  • Breaking: Tribunal opens hearing in Atiku’s motion to inspect election materials

    The Presidential Election Tribunal has commenced the hearing of a motion ex-parte filed by the Presidential Candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Atiku Abubakar and his party to be allowed to inspect materials used for the February 23 presidential election.

    A three-man panel led by Justice Abdul Aboki is currently taking argument from the lawyer of Atiku and PDP, Chris Uche (SAN).

    Details shortly…

  • We’re eager to meet Atiku in Court, says Keyamo

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) was prepared and eager to meet the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar in court to prove the 2019 election was devoid of rigging, its Director Strategic Communication of the APC Presidential Campaign Council Festus Keyamo (SAN) has said.

    Keyamo, in a statement in Abuja, explained that resorting to court was the only democratic way of ventilating his perceived grievances about the election.

    He stressed the council was not in any way prevailing on the former Vice President not to challenge the outcome of the exercise in court.

    Keyamo denied reports the council has written to some international organisations and development partners to prevail on Atiku not to challenge the outcome in Court.

    He said the body that wrote the letter was not known to the council and does not speak for it and the President.

    According to him: “Our attention has been drawn to some news item and posts on social media reporting that we wrote a letter to some international bodies to prevail on Alhaji Atiku Abubakar not to proceed to court to challenge the result of the 2019 Presidential Election.

    “Our investigation reveals that a letter to that effect was purportedly written by a certain ‘Buhari Campaign Organisation’.

    “This is the second time we will be informing the public that the said ‘Buhari Campaign Organisation’ does not act at the behest of the APC Presidential Campaign Council nor does it represent the Muhammadu Buhari Campaign Organisation in any way.

    “As a result, whatever it has released does not represent the position of the APC Presidential Campaign Council or President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “Our official position is that we believe that Alhaji Atiku Abubakar has a constitutional right to seek redress in court and we do not seek in any way to curtail that right.

    “In fact, it is the resort to court that is the only democratic way to ventilate his perceived grievance and any attempt to restrict or discourage the exercise of such right would be an invitation to anarchy.

    Read Also: Atiku, PDP seek tribunal’s nod to inspect election materials

    “In addition, we are very anxious to meet Alhaji Atiku Abubakar in court in order to show the world in a conclusive manner the free and fair nature of the comprehensive defeat of Atiku at the polls. An election is not termed ‘rigged’ only by the mere claim of it by the loser.

    “That is what Atiku and the PDP want to ram down our throats. Unfortunately for them, international, continental and sub-regional observers (who can be seen as neutral by all standards) ALL declared the election to be free, fair and credible. No ego-massaging narrative can change that.

    “We therefore totally disassociate ourselves from the letter purportedly written by one of, perhaps, many support groups of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “They may have a right to their opinion, but it does not represent our official position.

  • Petition against Buhari ’ll fail, says Ekiti ARG

    THE Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG), Ekiti State Chapter, has advised the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, to shelve the idea of resorting to litigation to challenge the outcome of the just concluded election.

    The Pan-Yoruba socio-cultural and political organisation said the petition against President Muhammadu Buhari would fail because the electioneering process was devoid of any form of electoral malfeasance and its variance.

    The group dispelled the insinuation by the opposition parties that Muhammadu won the February 23 presidential election through fraudulent means.

    It said Buhari won the election because of his culture of integrity and honesty.

    The PDP had last week rejected the results of the election, branding it a sham and fraught with irregularities.

    A statement by ARG Publicity Secretary, Prince Michael Ogungbemi, in Ado-Ekiti yesterday, urged the PDP candidate and major opponent in the election, Atiku, to support President Buhari in building a virile nation rather than pursuing futile mission.

    “Though, the ARG and APC knew that the proposed petition against Buhari will fail, going to court is not patriotic because it will constitute distraction to governance.

    “The petition is already dead on its arrival because it lacks merit and could not witness the test of justice,” it said.

    On the victory of APC in the three senatorial and six House of Representatives seats in Ekiti, ARG hinged the feat on Governor Kayode Fayemi’s performances in office within the last four months.

    Read also: Buhari, governors, others step up campaign

    The group said Fayemi has been able to bring expertise and experience to governance to correct the ills perpetrated by the former administration in the areas of education, social investment policy, security and infrastructure.

    “We congratulate President Buhari, who had once again enjoyed the legitimate mandate of Nigerian people in recognition of his honesty and integrity.

    “Also, we congratulate all senators-elect and House of Representatives members-elect into the 9th Assembly. We look forward to having a season of robust, responsible and purposeful legislation, as well as non-rancorous and harmonious relationship between the Executive and Legislature to engender good governance.”

  • Why we arrested Atiku’s son-in-law, by EFCC

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ( EFCC ) said it had begun investigation of alleged money-laundering by the Finance Director of Atiku Abubakar’s group of companies, Alhaji Babalele Abdullahi.

    Acting Spokesman of EFCC, Mr Tony Orilade, stated this in Abuja on Monday and confirmed to News Agency of Nigeria that Abdullahi was in the commission’s custody.

    “We are investigating a case of money laundering against Abdullahi.

    “We shall speak at the appropriate time,” Orilade said.

    He declined to disclose the figure involved in the laundering allegation against Abdullahi, but NAN investigation revealed that it was about 150 million Euros.

    Read Also: My son-in-law, lawyer detained for supporting me, says Atiku

    Abubakar, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the just-concluded Presidential election, few days ago raised an alarm over the arrest of Abdullahi by EFCC operatives, who invaded his residence.

    In a statement in Abuja by his Media Aide, Mr Paul Ibe, the former Vice President alleged that in a “desperate move” to make him concede and congratulate President Muhammadu Buhari, EFCC invaded the Maitama residence of Abdullahi.

    “The EFCC agents numbering about two dozen came in two regular vehicles, an 18-seater Toyota bus with registration number Abuja CS 522 RSH and a Hilux van.

    “They came with a warrant to search the house and office of Abdullahi and found nothing incriminating.

    “They then proceeded to his office at Oakland Centre in Maitama and found nothing incriminating there.

    “However, they took away some documents of landed property. Not done, the EFCC officials stormed his Wuse residence where they again found nothing incriminating after searching.

    “Afterwards, Abdullahi was taken away to the EFCC office in Wuse to make a statement,” Abubakar said.

  • Group blames Wike for Atiku’s defeat

    …congratulates Buhari

    A group known as Niger Delta Freedom Volunteer Force (NDFVF), has blamed Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers state for allegedly causing the defeat suffered by the presidential candidate of  the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar in the just concluded presidential election.

    They also congratulated President Muhammadu Buhari at his re-election in the poll and called on Alhaji Atiku and the PDP to accept the defeat as the sincere outcome of the exercise.

    They stated these in a communiqué issued at the end of emergency meeting in Port Harcourt last weekend and traced the failure to the party in the just held Presidential polls to the party’s national convention held in Port Harcourt, the state capital, last year.

    The document jointly signed by the President and the Secretary of the group, Harry Lawson and Preye Wilson respectively, alleged that Governor Wike hijacked the convention and installed an incompetent leader who could not deliver victory to the party in the Presidential election.

    Read Also: Atiku made no demand on Buhari – PDP

    They said, “Atiku simply lost because Wike and Secondus hijacked the party structure to themselves before the elections, former governor of Ogun state and Director General of Atiku’s presidential campaign, Otunba Gbenga Daniel was nowhere to be found close to him again. It was just impossible for PDP to have won.

    “Wike and Secondus in their selfishness sold out the party in Kano state where they would have secured more votes, by insisting that former governor of the State, Rabiu Kwankwaso take fifty five percent (55%) of the state PDP exco.

    “This decision infuriated another former governor of the State, Ibrahim Shekarau and forced him out of the party to join the All Progressive Congress (APC), where he delivered the state to President Muhammadu Buhari and the APC, producing the highest votes from all states in the country,” The group said.

    They congratulated President Muhammadu Buhari, on his victory and urged Alhj. Atiku, the PDP and the entire South-South, to accept outcome of the February 23rd presidential election and work with the president to move Nigeria forward.

    They also condemn the wild spread violence that claimed several innocent lives during the presidential and national assembly elections in South-South especially in Rivers state, and called for a peaceful and credible governorship and state assembly elections in the region come Saturday, March 23, 2019.

  • Atiku made no demand on Buhari – PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has dismissed media reports that its presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, made some demands on President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Describing the reports as fabrication being peddled by the Buhari presidency and the All Progressives Congress (APC), the PDP urged the public to disregard such reports, describing them as absolute falsehood and outright lies.

    A statement yesterday by the spokesman for the PDP, Kola Ologbondiyan, the party said Atiku Abubakar had not, and will never make or accept any condition from President Buhari regarding the February 23 presidential election, which the PDP insisted Atiku won. The statement said, “The Buhari presidency and the APC know that their electoral robbery cannot stand before any noble justices and are now attempting to use all sorts of blackmail and shenanigans to derail the quest by Nigerians to reclaim the stolen mandate at the tribunal.

    “However, let it be known to President Buhari and the APC that Atiku Abubakar and the PDP are standing shoulder to shoulder with Nigerians in this collective determination to take back the stolen mandate and we are not ready for any form of negotiation with anybody on this matter. Our party and candidate remain committed to the huge sacrifices made by Nigerians in ensuring our collective victory as delivered at the polling units across the country; we are mindful of the pains that Nigerians are passing through since the subversion of their will at the polls; we are sensitive to the expectations that millions of compatriots place on our shoulders in this struggle and we will never let Nigerians down.

    “We have all the authentic results from all the polling units as well as forensic evidence of manipulations by the APC and INEC. We will bare them all at the tribunal and the court will give justice to Nigerians. On that note, the PDP states unequivocally that nothing will change its resolve to pursue this despicable electoral fraud, unknown in our political history, to its end. We shall devote every energy necessary to reclaim our mandate and have Atiku Abubakar declared president, in line with the will of the people as delivered at the polling units on February 23, 2019.”

  • Reward for honesty

    REFERENDUM on honesty”. That was the way The New York Times captured President Muhammadu Buhari’s victory in the February 23 presidential election. It could not have been more apt. Unfortunately, this was the point missed by those who had been hallucinating about an Alhaji Atiku Abubakar victory at the poll. I had made the point several times; that Atiku and Buhari are not mates when it comes to electoral contest. Atiku may have all the money, he may have been in the trade for decades; but money and experience alone cannot ensure victory for him in an electoral contest with a man like Buhari, given the fanatical support Buhari enjoys, especially among the talakawa (the poor) who constitute the majority of voters in the north.

    I have said it several times , and it bears restating that whatever might be Buhari’s shortcomings in the last three and a half years, Atiku cannot be the solution. I cannot imagine a Nigeria in the hands of an Atiku. A major point that Atiku’s backers missed and continue to miss, and to their own peril, is that Atiku’s baggage is too much of an albatross. It is immaterial whether the baggage is real or perceived. That perception has come to stick; and unfortunately so. To the extent that Atiku has not succeeded in shaking off that tar, he would keep losing elections to a man like Buhari again and again.

    Buhari’s victory only shows that there are some things money cannot buy. The victory is indeed a victory for democracy with its ‘one man, one vote’. Left to the country’s rich, Buhari would not have had the opportunity of even a first coming. And if by some error he got that, they would make sure he never got the revalidation of the mandate. Those of them in the north who know the consequences of openly opposing Buhari after the announcement of the result have since held their peace. They know that denying Buhari’s victory would attract sanctions of unimaginable proportions from the talakawa that they (the political elite in the region themselves bred).

    Indeed, to say that Buhari is a movement, especially in the northern region, is saying the obvious. So, that he got  15,191,847 votes to defeat Atiku who had 11,262,978 should not have come as a surprise to any rational observer of his antecedents since 2003 when he had been contesting for the office of president, before he finally made it in 2015. In 2003, he had 12,710,022 votes; in 2007, he had 6,605,299 votes; in 2011, 12,214,853 votes and in 2015, he had 15,424,921 votes. Except in the 2007 elections which were known to be generally flawed, Buhari had been reaping millions even when he was not in power. So, what is the hue and cry all about now that he had 15,191,847 votes?

    Pray, where did the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) get its 24.4 million votes in 2003; 24.6 million votes in 2007 and 22.4 million votes announced for it in 2011? In all those elections, Buhari believed he was elbowed out by the powers that be. In all of those years alone, over 35 million voters were recorded for the PDP and Buhari on the average. Yet, his was a lone voice in the wilderness. The man was in and out of courtrooms in his efforts to seek redress for what he saw as electoral injustice. He got none; until Dr Goodluck Jonathan was magnanimous enough to concede defeat to him in 2015. And now that he repeated the feat by getting the same 15 million plus votes that he had in 2015, Atiku is crying foul. What happened was that apart from retaining his hold on the north, Buhari was able to use the power of incumbency to garner votes from other regions, including the southeast and south-south where some of the political bigwigs there aligned with his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). That did not happen in 2105, or before.

    The problem with many of our politicians, especially the moneybags, is that they find it difficult to believe that there is nothing money cannot buy. Ask the Late M.K.O. Abiola, he would tell you that he knew money was shamed when, in spite of his billions, all he could do was watch his dear wife (Simbiat) die slowly in the hands of some of the world’s best physicians that money can assemble. One needs to be close to these politicians and their foot soldiers to know how the latter flatter the former at election times, just to get money from them, ostensibly for their campaign. I guess this is one of the things that happened to Atiku that kept giving him the impression that he could floor Buhari. He had probably been deceived by his campaign handlers that the entire country was in his pocket. I do not know how much Atiku committed to this battle of his life; but I know it must have been humongous. Just as I predicted in my column last Sunday, Atiku has indicated interest in seeking redress in court. I wish him whatever he deserves.

    But then, it is pertinent to ask who Atiku’s campaign managers were that gave him the audacity to be hopeful. Senate President Bukola Saraki was the director-general of his presidential campaign organisation. Former Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, led the South-west axis.

    We have now seen that Saraki is only living on past glory; he is indeed a spent force. ‘O to ge’ has silenced him in Kwara State. How could someone who could not save himself in his state and got mercilessly shellacked all round in the presidential and National Assembly elections there have been chosen to lead the campaign of a serious presidential hopeful? If Atiku did not see what happened to his campaign director-general coming, he must have been naïve indeed. Then, what is Fayose’s political worth in the southwest? Atiku aligned with all the spent forces in the region, including Afenifere whose members cannot win elections even in their homes, and hoped to win election. Things don’t work that way. Even former President Olusegun Obasanjo who endorsed Atiku after saying God would never forgive him (Obasanjo) if he ever supported Atiku, has always been a political Lilliputian in his sphere of influence. As a matter of fact, the way things are, anyone supported by Obasanjo is likely to lose in the southwest. The people are too sophisticated to be led by a man who is swinging support at every turn. The dynamics have since changed from the perception of Obasanjo of 2015. It is too bad if Atiku did not reckon with this too. We can go on and on.

    The point is; only Atiku has the kind of money to throw away on a dicey mission as challenging Buhari, with all of the latter’s imperfections. Others who might have coveted Buhari’s job saw through the futility and decided to keep whatever was left of their money for something viable. Even if someone else had emerged as the PDP presidential flag bearer, it was unlikely Atiku would support the fellow financially the way he did himself. This is only natural. Hence, they all conceded to Atiku at the party’s primaries on the ground that the exercise was transparent and fair, as well as pledged their support to him. Indeed, they had no choice; they have a common enemy in Buhari who they could not predict what he could do to them if he got a second term.

    In essence, therefore, Atiku failed to understand that with the massive captive kind of supporters that Buhari has, it would be difficult to push him over in an electoral contest, despite how sunk values have even in our country. It is the kind of thing that money cannot buy. Let Atiku shut the tap of funds, look behind him and see how many ‘yes orchestra’ would still be following him. The opposite is true of Buhari; his supporters are simply crazy about him and would follow him come rain, come shine. In sickness and in health.

    I do not know what Atiku is looking for in court beyond exercising his democratic right to seek redress for real or perceived injustice in the election. I would rather suggest that he does forensic audit of the cash he disbursed to his campaign managers for onward transfer to his supporters. I guess Atiku himself is not a nincompoop in this business. He knows that many of those given cash for sharing to party supporters are not honest enough to share everything. As a matter of fact, those of them who shared between 40-50 percent of the money would have been deemed very honest indeed. What is more? In most cases, these people ‘edit’ such money into their pockets when they know that their principals do not have any chance of winning. So, they want to take care of their pockets so they do not lose out completely when the results are eventually announced. Meanwhile, they would have started addressing their principal as ‘Mr President’, ‘His Excellency’ for governor, or ‘My Chair’, depending on the office the principal is seeking. The good news for Atiku from me is that I have the rare gift to sniff out such people and what they had embezzled, and I am hereby offering myself for this noble service. But that is only for a fraction of what he spent on the election! Or, am I not entitled to that?

    Anyway, since Atiku has decided to go to court, I guess it is time for lawyers and probably judges who are yet to get their billions to smile to the bank. God probably wants to bless some of them too. By his decision, Atiku is only exhibiting one of the known traits of our politicians; they are incurable optimists. And who would blame him if the money in his arsenal is crying to be spent? Even the international community that seemed to be on his side has since abandoned him, seeing the futility of his agitation. That is how, one after the other, his backers would continue to thin out till he remains the only man standing for himself. Such is life.

    Finally, I enjoin Atiku and his supporters to go and read the The New York Times editorial after the election. Buhari’s victory was a referendum on honesty. No more, no less. Honesty is one of the few things money cannot buy. It was one of the major determinants of the presidential election. Ordinary Nigerian voters took the bull by the horns and seized their destiny from a tiny minority living on our rentier economy that has held them down for decades. Buhari happens to be the face of these hapless hoi polloi.

     

  • A look at APC’s loss in Oyo State

    One of the biggest shocks for Nigerians during the 2019 presidential election is that President Muhammadu Buhari of the APC was defeated in Oyo State by PDP’s Atiku Abubakar.

    That the state has an APC government in control makes it more embarrassing for the ruling party that had enjoyed massive support since 2011. More devastating, is that Governor Abiola Ajimobi was so much trusted and relied upon by the APC national, that he was made to play leadership roles in proffering peace within the party in other states.

    The question party leaders would be asking themselves now is how did we get here? How did APC lose its goodwill in Oyo State?

    In 2018, when Governor Ajimobi made known his intention to return to the Senate, many wondered if he had any idea how risky that would be for his party.

    Obviously, the governor had begun to overrate his own popularity and his political clout, and we can blame that on his ability to break the second term jinx in 2015.

    What the governor failed to consider is that he rode on the Buhari wave of 2015 to break that jinx as his victory then had less to do with reward for performance. Another consideration for his second term success which should not have been underrated was the quality of candidates APC paraded in Oyo South for the Senate and House of Reps. The collective efforts of Soji Akanbi as the Senatorial candidate who already enjoys massive sympathy across Ibadan metropolis could not have been underestimated.

    Moving on, with the second term victory and having won the three senatorial districts, the expectation was that the governor would consolidate on that victory by winning the people over. But then, he did not feel he had lost them in the first place? He felt the victory was as a result of his smartness and not a collective effort.

    Oyo State people continued to get the arrogant vibe and the height of it was his resolve to get the APC ticket for the Oyo South senatorial election and deny the incumbent, Sen. Soji Akanbi an opportunity to return.

    Here was the problem. Akanbi had succeeded in winning the hearts of multitudes of Ibadan people with his performance in the red chamber and his closeness to the grassroots.

    A senator who would move around town without any security or air of arrogance, mingle with his people and comfortably sit at a vendors’ stand and relate with the people should never be underrated.

    Ibadan holds the key to winning Oyo South and indeed Oyo State in any election and when the 2019 results started rolling in, this reality hit them.

    Ordinarily the battle for the Oyo South senatorial seat would have been between APC and PDP, and as usual, it would have been no contest in APC’s favour, but Senator Akanbi would not be bullied by the governor. With a resolve to sustain his legacies, He went into the race on the platform of African Democratic Congress (ADC).

    He had the least financial muscle compared to APC and PDP, with a newly created party whose logo is still unidentifiable, and he had just three months to build a new structure. Anyone, in Ibadan watching the scenario of his campaigns would know how intense and deep the team performed.

    At the end, Akanbi lost that battle but ensured that Ajimobi, the sitting governor lost the war.

    PDP’s candidate, Dr. Kola Balogun won with 105,720 votes, a far cry from about 147,000 votes Soji Akanbi scored in 2015 to win the seat.

    Oyo South became the only senatorial seat APC lost in Oyo State and the party became the biggest loser in the game of courage.

    Despite the Atiku wave, the PDP would have needed about 36,296 votes to match APC if they had stayed as one house and not discarded Akanbi.

    The truth is that PDP could never have knocked APC out in Oyo South Senatorial District if Akanbi had not injured them first.

    PDP’s inability to win other senatorial seats explains the cost of APC’s division in Oyo South.

    And it got worse for the APC as the PDP went ahead to win the presidential poll by a painfully narrow margin with votes garnered from Ibadan metropolis – the Oyo South votes.

    The Akanbi factor also ensured that in a presidential race that ADC had an unknown candidate, they scored 40,830 votes e and finished third nationally with 97,874 votes.

    Akanbi’s resolve not to chicken out of the battle with Ajimobi just validated the chieftaincy title conferred on him by the Olubadan as the Okanlomo of Ibadan land. Okanlomo means “the rare son” to whom they are now grateful.

    The bad news for the PDP as well is that the Atiku tsunami has been badly deflated by their loss of the presidential election to President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The bad news for both parties is that both Adelabu and Makinde have similar qualities- both are fresh, young, exposed, well-educated and successful in their careers. However, Makinde has been on ground since 2007 and thus wins more sympathy across the state than Adelabu, who is a fresher.

    Now, it is time for both parties to fall back on Akanbi of Oyo South to secure an alliance that can greatly help them to capture Ibadan metropolis, as a loved son of the soil.

    Whoever misses out on him must not miss out on former governor and governorship candidate of the ADP, Adebayo Alao Akala who also offers great influence in Oyo North with votes from Ogbomoso. However, it should also be noted that Ogbomoso votes cannot match Ibadan votes if well consolidated.

    However, a reunion in the APC now can change the game in their favour, but will PDP allow the reunion to happen? This is a game to watch out for.

     

    • By Keni Akintoye

    Ibadan.

     

  • IBB congratulates Buhari

    Sets agenda for him to address

     

    Former Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida has congratulated President Buhari over his re-election to lead the nation for the next four years.

    In a statement signed by his and made available to Journalists in Minna, Babangida said the President should confront with renewed vigour the most urgent problem confronting Nigeria.

    He stated that the insecurity of lives and property is one of the most urgent problem  confronting the nation as the Boko Haram insurgency remains a threat to many Nigerians particularly in the North East sub region adding that kidnapping and armed banditry remain a national menace.

    “Now that the President has won his re-election bid, he should confront with renewed vigour the most urgent problem confronting Nigeria: ‘insecurity of lives and property’.

    “The Boko Haram insurgency remains a threat to many Nigerians particularly in the North East sub region, whiles the twin evils of kidnapping and armed robbery/armed banditry remain a major national menace. The president must pay priority attention to these security issues”, the statement read.

    The Elder statesman further averred that  the economy of the country must also occupy the president’s urgent attention.

    “There is the need to be more creative in formulating policies that will improve the nation’s economy, create employment opportunities and give hope to our teaming youths.

    Read Also: US, China congratulate Buhari

    He also urged the President wish to heed to the yearnings of reasonable Nigerians for restructuring and seek all constitutional means to devolve some powers presently exercised by the Federal Government to the other tiers of government.

    Commenting on the outcome of the elections, Babangida called on the President to resist the temptation to see his co-contestants as enemies along him to work at healing the wounds of campaign exchanges.

    “The newly elected president should heal the wounds of the heated campaign exchanges by embracing those who contested alongside with him. The President must resist the temptation to see them as enemies; not even opponents, but fellow compatriots who merely disagreed with him on how best to move our country forward.”

    He expressed his admiration of the former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for his doggedness urging him to work with President Buhari to move the country forward.

    “I was particularly impressed with the gallant and audacious spirit of the main challenger in the presidential race, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar GCON.

    “I was not surprised that even though he lost the most exotic position of the land, his doggedness and pattern of support cut across ethnic, religious and regional lines that earned him the second position of the last Presidential election.

    “I call on the former Vice –President Atiku Abubakar to close ranks and work with the winner of the election in an objective and constructive manner so that democracy will continue to thrive in our country at this crucial period of renaissance.”